logo
Billboard camera footage used by transport agency to spot cars and trucks

Billboard camera footage used by transport agency to spot cars and trucks

RNZ News2 days ago
NZTA Waka Kotahi has used privately-owned automated number plate recognition cameras to identity number plates. File photo.
Photo:
123RF
Footage from cameras in billboards at city intersections have been secretly used by the NZ Transport Agency for the first time to spot cars and trucks.
NZTA Waka Kotahi's trial started in February, and is designed to combat fraud by illegal garages issuing warrants of fitness to cars, or passing trucks.
Two sources close to the vehicle inspection industry say the move is surprising and questioned why the agency would do it, especially with using third-party technology systems.
Police already tap into privately-owned automated
number plate recognition
(ANPR) cameras to identity number plates hundreds of times a day.
But this is the first known use of that power by another state agency.
"The ANPR donor cameras in the trial are not being used 'to spy on mechanics issuing warrants', nor would they be capable of being used for that purpose," NZTA told RNZ.
"These cameras are typically located in billboards at urban intersections.
"The trial is simply looking at the potential for using images gathered by these cameras to be used as proof of the location of a particular vehicle at a point in time."
An inspector who claimed they had checked a car in Auckland at a certain time could be exposed if the car was spotted at a Christchurch intersection at that time, it said.
It "could be of benefit in supporting investigations into specific cases where fraudulent or illegal activity is suspected".
A well-connected industry source told RNZ: "Yeah, that has been a bit secret."
NZTA might not have wanted to tip people off, the source said.
"For the purpose the agency is stating, I don't have much issue with that, but the way they have gone about it is what alarms me. Especially because it's third-party [cameras and ANPR system].
"What else might they use them for?"
NZTA Waka Kotahi said it was not using the images in any actual fraud investigations, but only as a test for potential future use.
The test is separate from how the agency is taking over many speed and red-light-runner cameras from police, and replacing some with higher-tech models, which it will own.
A second source active in the industry was appalled by the move.
"Oh my god," they said.
"It is part of your right to know the audit process you go through. You can't sabotage your process because of a trial."
Months of inquiries by RNZ in 2018 showed up mass deficiencies in NZTA's oversight of how truck certificates of fitness were being issued. The systems were reviewed and changed.
There have been further reports of inspectors anonymously recounting examples of how they feel they have been subject to unfair targeting by the agency.
"You have got layers and layers of issues here," said the second source.
"What's the limit [of surveillance]?"
They questioned why was the camera sting even needed when fraud would "show up in paperwork. There will be tons of other evidence that can be used against people".
Many supermarkets, petrol stations, other businesses and councils have a total of thousands of cameras that link into ANPR software systems run by two Auckland companies - Auror and SaferCities.
The new trial uses
SaferCities vGrid system
, NZTA said.
Its system covered electronic billboard operators such as LUMO, which had built-in cameras with ANPR software, and CCTV operators including councils, individual businesses and car park operators, the agency said.
Police accessed the vGrid system more than 400,000 times last year.
"NZTA only has access to still images from ANPR donor cameras whose owners have specifically agreed to our usage," Waka Kotahi told RNZ in the OIA response.
"Currently, this only includes LUMO and more recently, Hamilton City Council."
RNZ approached LUMO for comment.
As of 2022, the country had at least 1400 digital billboards and screen-posters, many of them with
smart technology and ANPR cameras
.
The police tapped the ANPR systems 700,000 times last year.
In October, two district court judges dismissed legal challenges to the police using them so much without a warrant, though it is expected there will be at least one appeal against that finding.
The fraud camera trial comes at the same time Waka Kotahi is
reviewing the WOF-COF
system to reduce how often collectors of old vehicles, and motorhome users, have to get a warrant.
The agency has been increasing a lot of the fees it charges motorists since 2023. Another batch of rises is due next January that are expected to
push up total fees collected by $10m to $264m
.
Camera footage could be used where it was suspected that WoFs or CoFs had been issued to vehicles which had not been inspected at the time or place recorded by a vehicle inspector, the transport agency said.
It gave a hypothetical scenario to RNZ:
"If NZTA was investigating a vehicle inspector suspected of fraud, and if the inspector had issued a WoF to a vehicle which was recorded as having been inspected at a WoF garage in Auckland at 2pm on 1 July, 2025, and we were able to access a still image from a donor camera of the same vehicle driving past a billboard located in Christchurch at 3:30pm on 1 July, 2025, this could potentially be used as evidence to prove that the WoF had been issued fraudulently, because the vehicle was not in Auckland at the time of the recorded inspection."
This would not be a part of regular compliance monitoring, it said.
Regular compliance monitoring included scheduled reviews where compliance officers visited inspection sites, as well as 'mystery shopper' activity.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Study finds whānau businesses offer path to economic success for Māori
Study finds whānau businesses offer path to economic success for Māori

RNZ News

time38 minutes ago

  • RNZ News

Study finds whānau businesses offer path to economic success for Māori

Professor of Māori Business Management at the University of Auckland Jason Mika. Photo: Supplied/William Chea/University of Auckland A new study has found that whānau-led businesses could be one of the most immediate ways to improve livelihoods within Māori communities. Published in the book Te Ahunga atu ki ngā Ōhanga Oranga Māori: Towards Māori Economies of Wellbeing , the study on whānau enterprise is co-authored by Professor Jason Mika and PhD candidate Xiaoliang Niu of He Manga Tauhokohoko, University of Auckland's Business School. Mika said for the purposes of the study a Māori-led business is a business that was owned and operated by Māori for the benefit of whānau, hapū or community. "These are the businesses that are formed by Mum and Dad teams, but actually end up roping in the extended whānau as either co-owners or employees." Mika (Tūhoe, Whakatōhea, Ngāti Awa, Ngāti Kahungunu ki te Wairoa) said what distinguishes these from other Māori-led businesses such as iwi authorities and large pan-tribal entities such as Sealord is first scale, they tend to be small- to medium-sized, and second they tend to be formed around using business to serve the needs of the whānau. These whānau enterprises offer a promising path towards economic success for Māori, he said. "One of the most immediate ways to improve livelihoods and wellbeing for whānau is what the whānau can do for themselves, through enterprise." The Māori Economies of Wellbeing research draws on case studies, interviews, and long-term engagement with Māori-led businesses. The investigation found that whānau enterprises demonstrate: One case study was Whangārei based company North Drill, whose work includes utility instillation, renewable energy instillation and drainage. But Mika said their mission was intergenerational wealth and wellbeing for their whānau and that extends to te Tai Tokerau in general. It also reinvested profits into collective goals like housing, education, and leadership development. "What they're really concerned about is providing opportunities particularly for rangatahi... you know school is not where they want to be or they've got abilities, they've got good values, they've got good ethics but are just looking for an opportunity," he said. Mika said North Drill was providing more than just employment to rangatahi but also education on financial literacy. "And in that way they are really concerned about how do they give back to their community." Mika said the goal was that young Māori could see a pathway in business once they left school, a path that ended not just with a job but with business ownership. He is calling for investors to recognise the potential of whānau businesses and said there were various organisations which were currently working to raise the investor profile of whānau businesses, so investors knew what they were looking at and what the opportunities were. "I think there's still a bit of a disconnect, I think the access to capital problem for whānau enterprise and Māori enterprise in general is still a challenge to be solved." Mika said whānau businesses had a point of difference, they could draw on mātauranga and Māori values to do business in a different manner. "One of the major things that sets the whānau enterprise apart is our identity as Māori, our values, our reo, our tikanga, kaupapa, mātauranga Māori. All of those are assets, they are cultural assets which whānau have available to them." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Woman hit by dirtbike: 'Someone's going to get killed in that park'
Woman hit by dirtbike: 'Someone's going to get killed in that park'

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

Woman hit by dirtbike: 'Someone's going to get killed in that park'

The dirt bike involved in a collision with a cyclist in Porirua's Bothamley Park in 2022. Photo: Supplied A woman who was off work for a year after she was seriously injured in a head-on collision with a speeding dirt bike on a cycle track believes someone will be killed unless more is done to stop the problem. Joanne was cycling on a bike track at a Porirua Park in 2022 when she was wiped out by a dirt bike rider, and has only just had the metal plate inserted in her leg after the accident removed. She told Checkpoint the fact she survived the crash makes her consider herself lucky. "I was cycling along and it wasn't really even on a corner, a blind corner or anything like that, but suddenly I saw a motorbike coming towards me and I couldn't do anything about it because he was coming so fast... I sort of tried to swerve but couldn't. The next thing [that] went through my mind, this is going to be bad." The bike collided with her head on, and she was thrown into the air. "I ended up with a broken leg. It was a spiral fracture of my tibia. And I had to have that fixed in surgery so they put a plate in my leg." After the accident she had to take a year off from her job as a kindergarten teacher. "I need to be able to jump up and run across a playground... the healing just took a really long time." Joanne recently had to take a further three weeks off work to get the plate removed from her leg, which was giving her pain. The rider who caused the accident was never found, and after a few months of searching Police closed the file. "They sent the dogs out as I was being loaded onto the ambulance. I saw a policeman with a sniffer dog and he was, you know, trying to find the guy. But yeah, they never found him." Three years on, Joanne said she is still haunted by the noise of motorbikes. "I'm terrified. If I hear a motorbike even not close by... I haven't quite got over that." She said it was not until after her accident that she realised how big of an issue dirt bikes were. "That's a known problem in the park. People who live nearby, have the bikers going through their properties and cutting through alleyways and stuff because it's a big park and you just can't close every exit... the entry I took into the park is closed to dirt bikers, but other places aren't." Now Joanne believes dirt bikers need dedicated areas where they can go "rip up the park", to avoid more accidents. "I've heard of other people being hurt in that park. I heard of a young mum with a pram... someone's going to get killed in that park or somewhere else in New Zealand." Sonia lives in Hamilton near a scenic walkway, where like the park where Joanne was hit, she said dirt bikes are a serious accident waiting to happen. She told Checkpoint she has had to call police multiple times over fears about dangerous riders. "The dirt bikes [are] going back and forth up on the Te Awa River Ride where you have cyclists, people walking, walking dogs, loads of people and they just treat it like their personal playground." "The riders don't tend to have helmets. So they've got balaclavas or caps and they're doing wheel stands... it's undulating so the visibility is not always good and I kind of half expect them to take someone out." "But the worst was seeing them ride one handed, holding like a toddler, maybe two or three years old on the petrol tank." Sonia said the bikes are travelling at speeds of up to 60km/h, which has lead her to worry about the injuries they may cause. "There's just high foot traffic and young families and things like that that, they might not be able to get out of the way of one of these bike... they could definitely cause some massive, massive catastrophe." She said while police had responded to her calls in the past, nothing was done to stop the dirt bikers. "It seemed like 10 minutes later they were back out riding you need impound them when they're doing stuff like that." New Zealand Police told Checkpoint that communities needed to come forward and proactively provide them with information - including who was involved and the addresses that they were coming and going from. Police said without this information their capability to respond was severely limited. They want to hear reports of any unlawful or dangerous riding behaviour, and ask people to gather as much information as safely possible - including registrations, bike descriptions and any video footage that can be safely captured. They said if bikes are in the neighbourhood and it is happening now, call 111 or, if they have left the area or it happened previously, call 105. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store