A retired Southland police officer has condemned the road
policing policy he says has too much focus on revenue
gathering.
Phil Robertson, a senior constable at Te Anau, retired last
week after 34 years on the force, to take up a job with St
John but also because of dissatisfaction with road policing
policy.
He said as a highway patrol officer there was a preoccupation
with tickets , an "easy route" that was not the only way to
stop driving offences and road deaths.
"I just don't see monetary fines or a requirement for every
officer to issue, on average, 1500 tickets a year as being
enough of a deterrent."
More needed to be done to change driver behaviour and the
existing policy was not working, he said.
Southern police district road policing manager Inspector
Andrew Burns rejected Mr Robertson's claims, though he
acknowledged there was an expectation for highway patrol
officers to issue an amount of tickets.
But it was one of several performance measures for staff,
indicating an officer was where they were meant to be
anddoing their job, he said.
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