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Police anger Wellington residents by taking carparks

Author
Thomas Coughlan, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 22 Feb 2022, 5:41pm
Car parks have been taken by the police while they respond to the protest outside Parliament. Local residents are displeased. Photo / Supplied.
Car parks have been taken by the police while they respond to the protest outside Parliament. Local residents are displeased. Photo / Supplied.

Police anger Wellington residents by taking carparks

Author
Thomas Coughlan, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 22 Feb 2022, 5:41pm

Police have angered residents of Wellington's Molesworth St by cordoning off public car parks outside their national headquarters for their own use. 

The street is already under partial blockade thanks to the parliamentary protest, and residents are frustrated at further disruption caused by the police taking some of the few remaining car parks for themselves. 

The car parks, which are for the public and managed by Wellington City Council, have been the subject of a long battle between police and local residents. 

It is understood residents are frustrated at the fact the police often take over the car parks using traffic cones, despite an abundance of commercial parking nearby. 
 
When alert level 2 restrictions were in place in Wellington, police took over the car parks, citing "a staff safety issue for returning to distant cars late in the evening". 

The police took over the car parks during alert level 2 using an agreement with the council that they could use parking when the city was in Covid restrictions. Local residents were frustrated that a perk which was designed to help the police when Wellington was in lockdown, was being used to give staff free parking when the city was at a lower alert level. 

A spokeswoman for the police said the response to the Wellington protest was being " managed from the Major Operations Centre at Police National Headquarters" on Molesworth St. 

They said the car parks allowed "direct and immediate access to the building for staff working on the operational response, including police staff from other policing districts who were brought in to support the response". 

A spokesman for Wellington City Council confirmed the council had "given over a number of car parks for police use, given the special circumstances presented by The parliamentary occupation". 

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