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Urgent Duty Driving
Policy statement and principles
What
Operating a Police vehicle, especially when engaged in urgent duty driving, including
when driving above the speed limit or the natural flow of traffic and at intersections,
can increase the exposure to risk of injury to Police employees and the public.
Urgent duty driving must be able to be justified in response to the threat, and wherever
possible, lights and sirens are continually used unless a tactical response is undertaken.
Ensuring a continuous risk assessment (TENR – Threat – Exposure-Necessity-
Response) while operating a Police vehicle, will assist in minimising risks to all.
Why
Prioritising safety by driving with a high standard of care to minimise exposure to risk
is critical to reducing road trauma, and ensuring trust and confidence in Police vehicle
operation.
How
Police ensure this by:
• prioritising Police and public safety when driving,
• enforcement officers prioritising safety by driving with a high standard of care,
• recognising that no duty is so urgent that it requires the public or Police to be
placed at unjustified risk,
• enforcement officers being aware that they are individually legally responsible for
their actions,
• using the Police risk assessment tool TENR, when deciding whether to commence
and continue urgent duty driving
• continuously using lights and sirens, where fitted, unless a tactical approach is
justified.
Overview
Introduction
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Urgent duty driving increases risks to public and Police safety and is often subject to
considerable scrutiny. Enforcement officers must prioritise safety by driving with a
high standard of care, with appropriate use of warning devices, in a manner
appropriate to the situation, and in accordance with the Land Transport (Road User)
Rule 2004 and the Land Transport Act 1998. Enforcement officers must be able to
justify their manner of driving taking into account all of the circumstances that existed
at the time.
Overriding principles
The overarching principle is that public and police employeesafety takes precedence
over the necessity to undertake urgent duty driving.
Additional principles are:
• public and police employee safety must be prioritised;
• urgent duty driving must be conducted in the safest possible manner;
• enforcement officers must drive at a speed and manner appropriate to the
circumstances;
• enforcement officers are individually legally responsible for their actions;
• enforcement officers will use a risk based assessment (e.g. TENR); and
• category A vehicles are preferred for urgent duty driving as they are more visible.
Note: Where it is necessary to use a vehicle other than a category A, enforcement
officers must factor this into their risk assessment. No additional or different
legal exemptions exist. The driver must be able to justify their actions based on all
of the circumstances that existed at that time.
No duty is so urgent that it requires the public or Police to be placed at unjustified risk.
Note: Enforcement officers must assess the risk of carrying non-constabulary
passengers before undertaking urgent duty driving.
What is urgent duty driving?
Urgent duty driving is when an enforcement officer on duty is driving above the speed
limit or the natural flow of traffic, and may not be complying with certain traffic rules
and is:
either. . .
and. . .
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either. . .
and. . .
• responding to a critical incident
are relying on the defences under the
• gathering evidence of an alleged
Land Transport (Road User) Rule
offence
2004 (RUR) and the Land Transport
• apprehending an offender for an
Act 1998 (LTA ()) for not complying
alleged traffic or criminal offence
with certain traffic rules and
• apprehending a fleeing driver
regulations which would prevent the
• providing security to, and facilitating
execution of that duty.
the movement of, an official
motorcade as part of an operation (as
established in the relevant Operation
Orders)engaged in activities approved
by the Commissioner in writing.
What is a 'critical incident'?
A 'critical incident' includes situations where:
• force or the threat of force is involved
• any person faces the risk of serious harm
• Police are responding to people in the act of committing a crime.
Factors to consider
Drivers must take all of the circumstances into account including the following factors
when deciding to commence or continue urgent duty driving and to determine the
appropriate speed and driving manner:
• time of the incident (is it in progress?)
• nature and seriousness of the incident
• proximity of incident
• proximity of other units to the incident
• environment, e.g. weather, traffic volume, road type, speed limit and pedestrians
etc
• driver classification, vehicle classification and vehicle passengers
• whether warning devices are activated or a 'tactical approach' is being used
• vehicle type.
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Situations may change, meaning drivers and enforcement officers who are passengers
must constantly re-assess the situation considering all of the factors, including those
above, in line with TENR. The manner and speed of driving must be adjusted
accordingly (e.g. environmental conditions, incident seriousness or road speed limit).
Warning devices
Police
must use red and blue flashing lights and siren at all times (continuously) while
undertaking urgent duty driving unless a 'tactical approach' is used.
Police must not rely on road users to take evasive action when warning lights and
sirens are activated - they do not guarantee safety.
What is a 'tactical approach'?
A 'tactical approach' refers to urgent duty driving without the activation of either
warning lights and/or sirens. Undertaking urgent duty driving without the activation of
warning lights and/or sirens increases the road safety risks to public and Police.
Therefore, using a tactical approach is the exception rather than the rule. Vehicle speed
and manner of driving
must reflect and take into account the increased risks resulting
from the absence of warning devices.
A tactical approach can involve:
• adjusting vehicle speed
• turning off or not activating the siren
• turning off or not activating the warning lights.
Using a tactical approach can be an advantage, allowing you to bring a patrol car closer
to an offender/incident without alerting anyone of your arrival. This can also provide
you with greater opportunities to gather evidence. Lights, sirens, and engine noise may
alert an offender or aggravate a situation.
For example:
• approaching a scene of a serious crime in progress, or
• attending a report of a suicidal person, or
• obtaining evidence of a speeding offence, where the offender's driving is not
dangerous and the risk of not using the warning devices is judged as low.
Any tactical approach must be proportional to the incident, in line with the TENR
assessment, and be able to be executed safely.
A tactical approach, without lights or sirens whilst exceeding the speed limit or natural
flow of traffic, can only be used in justifiable circumstances.
Notes:
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• You will need to justify your decision to use a tactical approach should there be
any subsequent investigation.
• If neither lights nor sirens are used, then the defences for proceeding against
traffic signals or through intersections do not apply. See 'Legal provisions -
defences'.
Note: A tactical approach cannot be used once a fleeing driver incident is
initiated. Any deactivation of warning devices must be in line with the fleeing
driver abandonment procedure.
Legal provisions - defences
Police involved in urgent duty driving must familiarise themselves and comply with the
law. There is no blanket legal protection when involved in these duties, and Police may
need to justify their actions in civil and criminal proceedings.
Note that some of the provisions cited below require, in order for the exemption to
apply, warning devices to be activated. If warning devices are required but not
activated, or not fitted to the vehicle to use, the exemption will not be available.
The Land Transport (Road User) Rule 2004 (RUR) and the Land Transport Act 1998
(LTA) provide for defences, subject to these conditions.
You may have a
defence for …
if …
any act or omission in
the act or omission was necessary in executing your duty.
breach of the RUR
Note: Where a specific exemption applies (eg proceeding
(under RUR clause 1.8)
against a stop sign), that exemption and associated
conditions override this section.
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You may have a
defence for …
if …
exceeding speed limits
you are either:
(under RUR clauses 5.1
• engaged in urgent duty and to comply with the speed
(3)(a), (b) and (c))
limit would be likely to prevent the duty being
executed
• driving an emergency vehicle in an emergency and
operating a red beacon or a siren, or both (see
warning devices)
• your vehicle is on a road with a speed limit of 60
km/h or more and you are transporting an Executive
Council member (all Ministers of the Crown) on
urgent public business. (This also applies when you
are transporting another person authorised by the
Minister on urgent public business).
Proceeding against a
you are:
stop sign, give way sign
• driving an emergency vehicle displaying blue or red
or traffic signal
beacon (or both) or sounding a siren
(under RUR clause
• not exceeding 20 km/h (see warning devices)
11.18)
• taking due care to avoid collisions with pedestrians
and other traffic.
Note: All of these conditions apply.
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You may have a
defence for …
if …
Proceeding through an
you are:
intersection
• driving an emergency vehicle displaying blue or red
(under clause 11.19 of
beacon (or both) or sounding a siren
the RUR)
• not exceeding 20 km/h (see warning devices)
• taking due care to avoid a collision with other traffic.
Note: All of these conditions apply.
The mandatory 28-day
the vehicle is conveying Police performing an urgent duty,
licence suspension for
and to comply with the speed limit is likely to prevent or
exceeding the speed
hinder that duty being executed.
limit by more than
40km/h
(under section 95(6)(b)
LTA)
Breaches of statute
Note that defences for breaches of the Land Transport (Road User) Rule 2004 are
unlikely to be a defence for contravention of a statute. This particularly applies in
respect of excessive speed giving rise to a dangerous speed charge.
Responsibilities
This table sets out the responsibilities of different roles when Police engage in urgent
duty driving.
Role
Responsibilities
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Role
Responsibilities
Driver
• Complies with the law and drives in a
manner that prioritises public and
Police safety.
Enforcement officer who is a
• Advises the driver about the route,
passenger
situational factors and risks.
• Operates the radio if communications
are required.
Field supervisor
• Manages Police performance relating to
driving behaviour.
• Identifies and manages health and
safety risks to those staff.
• Immediately reports policy breaches to
their superior.
• Investigates and reports crashes
involving a Police vehicle.
Manager
Ensures:
• Sureplan notified of Police Vehicle
crashes
• monitoring of health and safety
obligations
• crash files progressed to the District
Road Policing Manager and District
Police Professional Conduct Manager
for their review.
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Role
Responsibilities
Controlling officer
• Ensures units are directed to the
incident as appropriate.
Note: The controlling officer is a
shift supervisor (office of constable)
at the appropriate Communications
Centre.
Related instructions
This chapter must be read in association with these Police Manual chapters:
• 'Fleeing driver policy'
• 'Police vehicle management'
• 'Professional Police Driver Programme'
• 'TENR-Operational threat assessment'.
More information
For more information contact the Road Policing Support Operations Manager at
PNHQ ().
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