Bay of Plenty traffic expert defends te reo signs

The stop/go sign in te reo Māori at roadworks on Matapiro Rd, Hawke's Bay. Photo / Jack Riddell

The pioneer of te reo Māori stop-go signs says he wants to make it loud and clear that they pose no threat to the public.

Rotorua’s David Taui – the owner of Dāmel Traffic Management – previously used te reo signs in 2021 at the intersection of State Highways 2 and 30.

Te reo signs were reported to Hawke’s Bay Today by a motorist who saw them in use on Matapiro Rd off the Napier-Taihape Rd on Friday, May 9.

In a Hawke’s Bay Today article, he said the signs were dangerous for foreign tourists and that most countries used English on their stop, on-road signs.

Taui disagreed.

“Not every country uses English stop-go signs, but most people understand that red means stop and green means go,” Taui said.

Taui has worked in traffic management since 1994.

Taui said most people understood what green and red signs meant at roadworks.

He had watched more cars speeding than not when a temporary speed limit was in place, he said.

“I’m going to tell you that 97.9% of all drivers who go through the roadworks site do not do 30km/h.”

He simply wanted to save the lives of tangata whenua and all Kiwis driving.

“They [te reo signs] are more respected by Māori than the Stop sign,” he said.

“Because nobody likes to be stopped. Stop is a command, and human beings do not like to be commanded to do something.” Taui said.

Taui said he knew the rules and regulations around signage very well and that any signs could be used in risk management, as long as a plan was in place.

“Every sign is not approved until it gets approved, and that is when you write the traffic management plan.”

He said that if more road signs were in te reo or closer to his designs, there would be fewer accidents because people would pay more attention to them.

 The stop/go roadworks sign in te reo Māori on Matapiro Rd, Hawke's Bay. Photo / Jack Riddell

A spokesperson for NZ Transport Agency Waka Kōtahi said it valued te reo Māori as an official language of New Zealand and would continue to use it, a spokesperson said in an email.

“Safety on the road is non-negotiable and the use of approved signs is critical to ensuring all road users and traffic crews remain safe around work sites,” the NZTA spokesperson said.

The only official sign under the traffic control devices (TCD) rule is the Kura sign for schools.

“This was introduced in 2022 and remains on our roadsides and is legally required to be used, as specified in the TCD rule.”

The TCD rule was a transport regulation, and the Minister of Transport was responsible for it, the spokesperson said.

“NZTA cannot change it on its initiative.”

NZTA must follow the law as a road controlling authority and only used signs specified in the TCD rule.

There were only a small number of traffic signs in the Traffic Control Devices rule conveying a message just in te reo (eg, Marae, Kōhanga Reo, Tangi), according to the spokesperson.

“Most traffic signs are presented in English,” the spokesperson said.

The new Government policy statement on land transport 2024 has been finalised, and bilingual and te reo Māori traffic signs are not identified as the Government’s priority, the spokesperson said.

 

18 comments

!?!Confusing!?!

Posted on 23-05-2025 14:17 | By Poe's Lawyer

People won't know what to do when confronted with these signs! What could the colours red and green possibly mean in the context of the road???? Expect deaths as people just go ploughing through roadworks, while waving their arms in utter confusion at these unreadable words...


What ?

Posted on 23-05-2025 14:48 | By Fred Bear

" ... pose no threat to the public." Ye Gods - Of course non-compliant (illegal) safety signs are unsafe. The most vulnerable drivers on our roads are likely to be foreign tourists who have 'swatted-up' on our road signs. They already have trouble keeping left on our roads and trying to read second-language destination signs, so let's not confuse them further with new 'lollypops'.


Taui is obviously an idiot

Posted on 23-05-2025 15:06 | By Kauritatahi

As other commenters on this issue have noted - it's a serious safety matter. What about people who are colour-blind?? The colours Green and Red cannot be distinguished by some people, hence the safety signs must be written in ENGLISH which is the main official language of New Zealand. It's not a time to tolerate virtue-signaling self-aggrandising publicity stunts by maori activists - just stop messing with our road signs !!!!


The real reason.

Posted on 23-05-2025 15:25 | By Justin T.

The real reason people speed through road works is because we have become so accustomed to finding road work signs and cones left out for months on end with no workers there, no work done, no work being done and no obvious reason for signage other than being too lazy to pack it up.
Usual story of the boy who cried wolf.


Think again....

Posted on 23-05-2025 16:30 | By Batch

“Not every country uses English stop-go signs, but most people understand that red means stop and green means go,” Taui said.

Well Mr Taui...seeing as most people understand that red means stop and green means go....then you had better warn your lollipop workers of colourblind drivers and seeing as you state "most" people understand etc...also warn your workers that "most" doesnt mean 100% of drivers.
Can we also have the lollipop signs written in Vietnamese..Samoan..Chinese...Thai....Vanuatuan....Japanese....Malaysian...etc..as there plenty of those drivers circulating NZ roads.


Again

Posted on 23-05-2025 17:39 | By Alan G

Another example of an entitled minority raising middle finger to the rest of the populace


Not much of an expert

Posted on 23-05-2025 17:44 | By Jules L

He is not much of a "traffic expert" if he deliberately uses illegal road signs. NZTA should investigate his company's illegal actions and stop using that company forthwith.


Cool

Posted on 23-05-2025 17:49 | By PetePete

What a good idea.
Let’s spread the happiness.
Just a pity some people can’t cope.


What's Next!

Posted on 24-05-2025 06:02 | By Thats Nice

Spot on Justin T. I'm on the road every day and see coneitis in a lot of areas and nothing happening and so the familiarity begins. These signs in my view, are a major safety concern that will only cause confusion. If it's not broken ...........


Typical pakeha

Posted on 24-05-2025 07:07 | By Om1987

Karens again. One big one at the top comment on this article. Go back to Europe. Maori is official language. Don't like it leave it learn it u entitled pakeha


Selfishness

Posted on 24-05-2025 10:41 | By k Smith

What a lot of selfish whinging over a small thing. If you cant distinguish and international road sign RED & GREEN you will need to resit your licence. Some mentioned tourists: we get tourists who don't speak english, they know what this means. This is great for tourists, lot of them will most likely take photos. Someone said this is road safety, stick to the speed limits written in english problem solved. This good NZ culture.
Two words: Whats your problem?


Typical pakeha

Posted on 24-05-2025 11:54 | By WSTAKL

These comments are exactly what I would expect from Tauranga residents.


Embarassing

Posted on 24-05-2025 12:17 | By JohnHeb

I read the comments just to see what nonsense the white supremacist minority are spouting today. But to be honest it is really embarrassing being Pakeha in Aotearoa sometimes. Comments like Poe's Lawyer are bizarre. What could the colours green and red mean on the road? Apart from every traffic light! Te Reo Maori is an official language in this country. And some fragile Pakeha had to report it. Really? Aren't there more important things in Aotearoa today than taihoa-haere/stop-go signs being used. Stop being so entitled and fragile and embrace that and celebrate it. And yes I am using Pakeha and Aotearoa just to annoy you whingers. Get over yourselves.


Perfect title !

Posted on 24-05-2025 13:44 | By Kotanga

BOP traffic EXPERT ?
Fits the definition exactly

X
being the unknown factor -
SPERT
being a drip under pressure.


Are these signs really safe?

Posted on 24-05-2025 14:28 | By Leprechaun

Mr. Taui, appears to have forgotten that some people, including overseas visitors, are vision colour deficient, (colour blind) especially to red/green. This is even more confusing as the signs do not confirm to the international shape (hexagonal for stop).
Therefore such signs would surely not be legal, let alone safe?


Who paid for these

Posted on 26-05-2025 08:23 | By an_alias

I sure as hope it was our taxes ?
Why would you create signs that only a tiny portion of the population can read and expect people to respect you ?
Its like the media using unknown Maori names for critical boating alerts, I mean what a silly thing to do and could cause people to be harmed.
You heard of colour blindness at all ?


@JohnHeb

Posted on 26-05-2025 16:10 | By This Guy

"Poe's law is an adage of Internet culture which says that, without a clear indicator of the author's intent, any parodic or sarcastic expression of extreme views can be mistaken by some readers for a sincere expression of those views." - I don't think the person calling themselves "Poe's Lawyer" is being serious with their absurd comment.


@ John Heb

Posted on 26-05-2025 18:19 | By k Smith

Great post, there are Tourists visiting us not english speaking so how do they get on? Maybe colour blind as well. We don't hear any complaints from them. This Poe's law is a waist of time just a lot of dribble about nothing. Stick with the facts. There are people operating these signs. Move on.


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