The Automobile Association has dismissed concerns plans to double police use of speed cameras is a revenue-gathering move, but says fixed cameras should be signposted to alert motorists to their use.
The National Land Transport Programme 2012-15 announced yesterday included a "reserve allocation" of $10 million "to support the increased use of technology to manage speed".
New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) spokesman Andy Knackstedt confirmed the money was earmarked for additional speed cameras.
Associate Transport Minister Simon Bridges indicated the money could pay for more than 60 new cameras. There are 55 currently in use.
But former police officer Hamish Piercy, director of independent crash analysis company Longford Consulting, said there would be a "high degree of cynicism from the general public" about the extra cameras.