All Ministry of Education-contracted vehicles used to transport special needs children will have cameras installed following the case of a driver who sexually assaulted a girl he was tasked with driving to and from her school.
The Herald revealed last week that Dennis James Dredge was jailed for two years after he repeatedly indecently assaulted a 17-year-old girl with the mental age of a 10-year-old.
The court heard Dredge assumed the girl did not have the capacity to "tell" on him. But his offending was discovered when she sent a chilling text message to her mother that read: "Why does the taxi driver like to put his hands down my pants and touch my bottom?"
Yesterday the girl's parents sent a personal letter to Associate Education Minister Nikki Kaye and Prime Minister John Key appealing for mandatory cameras in vehicles used for transporting school children.
Last night they heard back from Ms Kaye, who said cameras would soon be a "requirement" in all vehicles contracted by the ministry for special-needs transport.