Drinkers have been ignoring liquor ban signs in the Kawerau town centre and Kawerau Mayor Malcolm Campbell says it will lead to people getting hurt.
At a Kawerau District Council projects and services committee meeting he said the signs put up around town were too small and people were drinking underneath them.
He mentioned the access area behind Caymans Bar as an area he had seen people drinking in the past week.
"Most people, by the time they are haurangi (intoxicated) can't read the blimmin' things.”
There had been two near fatalities in the backyard area behind the bar in recent years.
'We were told by [police] that the signs were going to sort the problem out; that we needed the signage.
In October 2020, a man was stabbed in the neck behind the bar in an incident that police at the time said involved members of the Mongrel Mob.
Before that, there was another serious beating in the backyard area.
The liquor ban signs were put up at the end of last year, but Mr Campbell is critical of the signs saying it looks as though the council isn't doing its job properly.
'I think the signage is wanting, to be brutally frank. These people are sitting under the sign drinking booze. You can see for yourself, there is two cameras right above them as well.”
He took fire at Caymans Sports Bar, saying people shouldn't be allowed to come and go with alcohol through the back door of the bar.
The back entrance of Caymans Bar where Mayor Malcolm Campbell says he has witnessed people drinking alcohol off the premises. Photo supplied.
The Beacon spoke to Caymans Bar owner Colin Bowler who said he had concerns about people drinking in the street outside his bar too and was doing everything in his power to stop it.
He said it had improved during the time he had owned the bar.
He said the back door was kept locked at night and the bar had 18 cameras set up which could be monitored from a screen behind the bar. He spot-checked it regularly.
'There are signs up and if we catch them going out there they're told if they do it again they will be trespassed. We've already had about 13 people trespassed.
'The problem is that people arrive and try to bring alcohol in. They drink out the back in their cars, which I went and saw the police about some time ago. Nothing ever gets done about it.
'I have no control about people in the car park or people in the front of the bar in Jellicoe Court if they decide to stand around on the grass drinking alcohol. We're doing everything we can, but people walk around this town all the time, drinking everywhere. The only way it could be stopped is for police to do regular checks.”
Mr Bowler said better signage would be a big help.
Regulatory and planning group manager Michaela Glaspey said she was working together with Kawerau Police Senior Sergeant Tristan Murray.
'He and I did a walk around recently. We acknowledge the signs are too small and we are looking at bigger signs. We are in the process of coming up with a plan for that.
Committee chairwoman Carolyn Ion asked for the matter to be added as an urgent action item for staff and called for a progress report on the issue with police.
'This is about the health and safety of our community,” Mrs Ion said.
-Local Democracy Reporting is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air
2 comments
Good luck with that
Posted on 16-02-2022 11:59 | By Kancho
First premise can they read or understand. Second when driving or even walking do you observe signage? I certainly tend to filter out most as we are subjected to lots of signage. I understand if you climb a fence which may have a no trespass sign you still have to be ordered off the land as you may have entered anywhere and not read any signs. And do drunk people care anyway ? Signs are for honest people who care
Lawless
Posted on 16-02-2022 14:25 | By Potofstu
I worked in kawerau for 7mths last year and the lawlessness vandalism &general intimidation would make most peoples eyes water. Inter generational benefits have caused this
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