logo
Officials warn Govt's boy-racer car-crushing powers threaten judicial discretion

Officials warn Govt's boy-racer car-crushing powers threaten judicial discretion

NZ Herald4 days ago
Ministers Chris Bishop and Mark Mitchell announced new offences and penalties in Rotorua on Sunday, with Rotorua Mayor Tania Tapsell. Video / Kelly Makiha
Listening to articles is free for open-access content—explore other articles or learn more about text-to-speech.
The Government is pushing ahead with a bill designed to target boy racers, despite concerns it could compromise judicial discretion.
Transport Minister Chris Bishop and Police Minister Mark Mitchell today announced that the Anti-Social Road Use Legislation Amendment Bill had been introduced to Parliament and would have its first reading next month.
The bill contains new powers, announced in May, that include establishing a presumptive sentence of vehicle destruction or forfeiture for anyone participating in street racing, burnouts and intimidating convoys, as well as any vehicle owner who refused to identify offending drivers.
Exceptions would be made if the offender didn't own the car, if crushing the vehicle was manifestly unjust or would cause extreme hardship.
A draft Cabinet paper, released today, noted justice officials were concerned the 'very high threshold' for not applying a sentence could result in 'outcomes perceived to be unfair'.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Car hits pedestrians on Auckland's Queen Street, driver flees
Car hits pedestrians on Auckland's Queen Street, driver flees

RNZ News

time28 minutes ago

  • RNZ News

Car hits pedestrians on Auckland's Queen Street, driver flees

Police say the driver fled on foot. Photo: RNZ / Patrice Allen A person has been seriously injured after a vehicle crashed into three pedestrians on Auckland's Queen Street. Police say the driver fled on foot shortly after colliding with them around 6am on Sunday between City Road and Karangahape Road. One person had serious injuries, while the two others sustained minor injuries. Two people have since been arrested. Police said they were considering charges. Cordons were in place and the Serious Crash Unit was examining the scene. "Police would like to hear from anyone who was in the area at the time of the crash and who witnessed what unfolded," Inspector Nick Poland said. "If you can help, please use our 105 service and quote reference number P063367159." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Car hits pedestrians on Auckland's Queen Street, two arrested
Car hits pedestrians on Auckland's Queen Street, two arrested

RNZ News

time28 minutes ago

  • RNZ News

Car hits pedestrians on Auckland's Queen Street, two arrested

Police say the driver fled on foot. Photo: RNZ / Patrice Allen A person has been seriously injured after a vehicle crashed into three pedestrians on Auckland's Queen Street. Police say the driver fled on foot shortly after colliding with them around 6am on Sunday between City Road and Karangahape Road. One person had serious injuries, while the two others sustained minor injuries. Two people have since been arrested. Police said they were considering charges. Cordons were in place and the Serious Crash Unit was examining the scene. "Police would like to hear from anyone who was in the area at the time of the crash and who witnessed what unfolded," Inspector Nick Poland said. "If you can help, please use our 105 service and quote reference number P063367159." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

The NZ economy is still sick, doubts are growing about the Govt prescription
The NZ economy is still sick, doubts are growing about the Govt prescription

NZ Herald

time4 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

The NZ economy is still sick, doubts are growing about the Govt prescription

Are these the right antibiotics? Are the antibiotics making me feel sick? I do feel a little better I think. But it's taking longer than I expected. Maybe I should see the doctor again. Or am I just being impatient? Ugh, so much uncertainty. Hopefully, those who've tuned in for a fresh read on the state of the economy can see where this is going. Never let a metaphor go by, I say! Anyway, here's me and the New Zealand economy, both sick in the midst of a miserable wet winter and worrying about whether our recoveries have stalled. A run of negative data has knocked the wind out of the nation's sails. The bad vibes are being pushed along by a strong political current. Both the left and right are telling us that the Government has prescribed the wrong medicine. The left blames the Government for cutting spending into a downturn. The logic is pretty simple. Any good Keynesian will tell you, when demand in the private sector falls, that's the time for the Government to come to the party. Borrow a bit more, don't slash and burn civil service, hire more teachers and nurses, build more stuff ... it won't be inflationary because it won't be crowding out private sector competition, which is in recession. The trouble is, we're still in the aftermath of the last big spend-up, which went on too long. Labour's stimulus, once we got through the initial Covid shock, did clash with a private sector boom and exacerbated inflation. That muddied the political narrative. It made it inevitable that the incoming centre-right coalition would cut back despite the extra damage that would do to economic growth. In the context of using fiscal policy to drive economic prosperity, you can make a good case that successive governments have got things completely arse about face. You'd expect this argument from the left. But Christopher Luxon and Nicola Willis are being savaged even more aggressively from their right flank. The monetarists, the supply-side guys, the neo-liberals, (whatever you want to call them) are berating the Government for not dealing with the national debt and Crown deficit by administering a Rogernomics-style reboot of the whole economy. I doubt that would make the current downturn any more pleasant, but they argue it couldn't be much worse. And the payoff would be longer-term gains as the economy found a more productive and financially secure baseline. Both arguments can be compelling and, if nothing else, add to the concern that the current strategy of subtle market-oriented tweaks risks underdelivering on all sides. But through all of this gloom, one thing we need to remember is that most economists still believe the foundations of recovery are in place. Step back a bit from the mess of ugly recent economic data – the second quarter sucked, we get it! What are we actually experiencing? The labour market is tough. Unemployment is rising, and new job creation is almost non-existent. But this is not a surprise. In fact, while economists do get things wrong, they've been forecasting unemployment to be about where it is now for more than a year. We know it's one of the last pieces of data to turn in any recovery. Unfortunately, it is now overlapping with an unwanted and unexpected spike in inflation. Like a jump scare in the final scene of a horror movie, food prices (with rates and power, and insurance) have conspired to pause Reserve Bank rate cuts and rattled our faith in the recovery. Then there are tariffs and global unrest and all of that. It's not really surprising that it all feels bleak. So it's a bit ironic to be writing an optimistic take on the economy, especially given the rough week stuck at home that I've just had. My view wouldn't have been so upbeat if I hadn't been woken from my sick bed on Friday morning by a text from investment bank HSBC's Australian head of communications. He was asking how far away I was from my scheduled meeting with their global chief economist, Janet Henry and and Australia-New Zealand chief economist Paul Bloxham. Oops ... I was a long way away. But they kindly let me Zoom in later, and I'm very glad I did. As anyone with Australian cousins will know, sometimes it's healthy to be slapped in the face with a slightly condescending, external view of the New Zealand condition. Bloxham told me his forecasts currently make him one of the gloomiest economists on Australian growth. However, he's one of the most positive on New Zealand growth. Last year, New Zealand had the single largest contraction of any economy in the developed world, Bloxham points out. That inevitably comes with a hangover. But if you believe in the fundamentals of the New Zealand economy, which he does, there is no reason to assume the cycle won't turn. 'I suspect why I'm a little bit more upbeat than others is I sit in Sydney and watch it from the outside and go: hey, you've got two big forces at work that are set to continue to lift growth and give you a recovery.' No prizes for guessing those two forces – falling interest rates and booming agricultural commodity prices. The money flowing into the rural economy must eventually flow through to the cities and lift growth, Bloxham says. It won't happen overnight, but it will happen (my words, not his). We've had a big downswing, which means we're due a pretty big upswing to get back to trend, he says. And we've got monetary policy and the terms of trade in place to drive that cyclical upswing. 'All cycles look different. We always ask the same question going through: oh, it's not quite happening as quickly as we thought. 'The question you ask yourself is: is that because it's not working? Is it that interest rates aren't going to have the same effect? That a positive-terms-of-trade shock won't have the same effect? Or are things just a bit different this time around?' Great question. And look, the sun's finally out and I think my head's clearing. Time to go for a walk and ponder it all. Liam Dann is business editor-at-large for the New Zealand Herald. He is a senior writer and columnist, and also presents and produces videos and podcasts. He joined the Herald in 2003.

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