"The rule is you have to stop at the yellow line but people don't have a care," McKie said.
"It's frustrating."
He said it was especially bad after hours as people from Hastings came through and were held up at the Brookfields Rd bridge.
McKie was frustrated as cars that were forced to stop by the car in front of them, wouldn't stop again and would follow the car in front.
Hawke's Bay Today conducted its own survey with McKie over a half hour period on Thursday morning.
Traffic was steady and of the 36 cars which came up to the stop signs on either side, only four came to a complete stop - about 11 per cent.
A spokeswoman for Napier City Council acknowledged the intersection had a "high crash rate", which had included a fatality.
She said work on a major intersection improvements at this site were due to begin in 2027, with $2 million budgeted in the Long Term Plan 2021-2031 for this.
Some changes, including improving the signage and road marking, had already been made in the past three years.
"If any resident is concerned that motorists are not obeying the stop signs we can certainly carry out further monitoring to add to our data."
The council spokesperson said they had not received a complaint about the intersection from McKie.
The council recently conducted video monitoring of the intersection of Hastings St and Vautier St, in Napier, and found that less than 10 per cent of drivers came to a complete stop at the signs.
A temporary roundabout is now being trialled at the busy intersection over the next three months.