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Travel Safe

Travel Safe is an all-ages community focused approach to road safety in Tauranga and the Western Bay of Plenty.

A joint initiative between Tauranga City Council, Western Bay of Plenty District Council, NZ Police, and NZ Transport Agency. The Travel Safe team partner with and work alongside communities, schools, parents, caregivers, volunteers, and students, to deliver programmes and initiatives to reduce accidents and improve road safety.

The programmes are developed to address identified high risks for targeted audiences.

Travel Safe is driven by guiding principles:

  • listening to communities
  • keeping it simple and flexible
  • developing community and school ownership at the beginning
  • strengthening community action
  • developing personal skills
  • creating supportive environments
  • supporting building healthy public policy
  • valuing volunteers

Find out more using the links below and follow Travel Safe on Facebook for updates.

Rail Safety Week 2025

Stay safe on the region’s 86 railway level crossings by always expecting the unexpected and watching out for trains.

Bay of Plenty students lead the way for Rail Safety Week

Share with care

Share with care on our pathways. Whaia te ara. Stay left, slow down, keep dogs close.

Let’s share our pathways with care

Stay bus smart

A video campaign reminds students how to stay safe when catching the bus to and from school.

Students urged to stay bus smart with new safety campaign

Latest news

Show some restraint – it’s the law

Restraints, seatbelts, safety belts, child seats - whatever you call them their importance cannot be overstated, quite simply they save lives. 
 
Seatbelts support you if you’re in a crash or when a vehicle stops suddenly. During a crash the force on seatbelts can be as much as twenty times your weight - this is how hard you'd hit the inside of your vehicle without a restraint!
 
When people choose not to wear their seatbelt, they put themselves in greater danger of being fatally or seriously injured. Sadly, in the last five years over three hundred people have died on New Zealand roads because they weren’t wearing a seatbelt. In fact, simply bucking up that seatbelt will increase your chances of surviving a crash by forty percent. 
 
The simple safety message is underlined from a police perspective by Senior Sergeant Wayne Hunter from the Tauranga Police. 
 
Seatbelts save lives, if someone does make a mistake on the road, they are less likely to be killed or seriously injured if they are wearing a seatbelt correctly,” said Sergeant Hunter. 
 
This isn’t just advice, it’s the law. Front and back seats in all modern cars must be fitted with seatbelts and if you sit in a seat with a belt it must be worn. 
 
When it comes to children, requirements vary depending on age, with the onus falling directly on the driver of the vehicle. 
 
Children must be seated in child restraints that are correctly secured into the car to keep them safe. It is the driver’s responsibility to make sure all children in the vehicle are correctly using an appropriate child restraint, said Sergeant Hunter.
 
In New Zealand the law says you must correctly secure your child in an approved child restraint until their seventh birthday. Approved child restraints include baby capsules, child car seats for older babies, toddlers and preschool children; and booster seats and/or child harnesses for school-aged and some preschool children. 
 
You’ll know your child has outgrown their car seat when they’re over the manufacturer’s recommended weight or height restrictions for that model of child restraint and making the move to a booster seat depends on your child’s height and weight, not their age.  Child restraint technicians and medical professionals recommend that you keep your baby in a rear-facing restraint until as old as practicable or at least until they are two. 
 
For more information and resources about correct us of restraints please visit the NZTA website
 
This community safety message is brought to you by Travel Safe. Travel Safe is an integrated approach to sustainable road safety outcomes that covers Tauranga and the Western Bay of Plenty.
 
Child being clipped into a car seat.
Posted: Jun 14, 2021,

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