Auckland mayor Phil Goff has torn a strip off Auckland Transport for not fronting up at a public meeting in St Heliers last night, telling them they are not a dictatorship, but accountable to people.
AT chief executive Shane Ellison turned down an invitation to attend the meeting and explain proposed safety improvements for the seaside village, partly out of fear for the safety of staff and talk of the crowd being "hostile".
More than 600 locals, many of them elderly, overflowed from two meeting rooms at the St Heliers Community Centre and booed when they heard AT had turned down the invitation.
I don't think Aucklanders have a lot of confidence in Auckland Transport and it is our job to help them get that confidence back
Last night's meeting overwhelmingly opposed AT's plans to increase the number of raised zebra pedestrian crossings in the seaside suburb from three to 15, build a new traffic island, widen part of Tamaki Drive and remove 40 car parks to improve safety.