A week-long police crackdown on cellphone driving offences has seen a surge in the issuing of tickets.
Police dished out 790 tickets nationally during the seven-day blitz last month, pushing the November total to 1736. October's total was 1156.
Superintendent Carey Griffiths, the national road policing manager, said yesterday the latest results reflected the effort put into the blitz by his patrols rather than the extent of offending against the ban on using hand-held cellphones while driving.
But he was particularly disappointed that the number of drivers caught dividing their attention between phone calls or text messages and the perils of the road had continued to rise steadily during the three years of the prohibition.
There have been at least 28 phone-related road deaths since early 2007, including two this year and that of a woman killed after allegedly sending 19 text messages during a 45-minute trip by herself from Rotorua to Tirau three days before last Christmas.