During the three-hour sting, 43 people were fined $150 for not wearing a seatbelt and a further 23 given an $80 fine and 20 demerit points for using a cellphone while driving.
At noon, a driver not wearing their seatbelt decided to speed off while being ushered by a police officer.
After catching up with him several hundred metres away, he blew a reading of 821 micrograms of alcohol per litre of breath.
It followed another three-hour operation on Tuesday, when three staff caught more than 100 seatbelt and 30 cellphone breaches.
Ross said the numbers were "atrocious".
"I look at some of the sights that we see and I think how the heck do people survive these crashes?
"And it is one simple thing; it's their seatbelt. And then we go to other crashes and they're not wearing it and unfortunately it goes the other way."
He says the sting is not about handing out tickets but more about educating people to change their behaviour.
"Car crashes do kill and it may not be your fault ... but someone else on the other side of the road may lose control and hit you."
Sergeant Kent Gilmore said policing has focused on 100km/h areas for the past two years, but now it was about targeting the urban areas, to ensure good habits are formed before speed becomes a factor.
In partnership with RoadSafe Hawke's Bay, the group was focusing on four key areas; impairment, restraints, distraction and speed.