The police have had a much higher profile in the Far North this week, although they haven't always been immediately identifiable.
They've been using unmarked vehicles, combined with checkpoints and officers stationed outside dairies and bakeries, as part of an operation aimed at driving home road safety messages, particularly focusing on using seat belts and not using phones while behind the wheel.
The four-day operation ends today, and compliant drivers stopped at checkpoints are given Easter eggs, lollipops and pens. The major aim is to achieve a crash-free Easter in Northland.
Superintendent Wayne Ewers, heading the operation, said tickets were a deterrent, but ideally people should just buckle up every time they got into a vehicle, which would reduce the region's road toll considerably.
According to police statistics, 2294 tickets have been issued to phone-using drivers in Northland in the decade since it became illegal, while over the same period 29,518 tickets, generating $4.3 million in fines, were issued to drivers and passengers who were not using seat belts.