Cone Down NZ
Safer roads. Smarter spending. Less waste.
New Zealand does not just have a road cone problem. It has a value for money problem. Road cones have become the most visible symbol of waste, over compliance, weak accountability, duplicated approvals, and inflated project costs. Vote8 will fix the system behind the cones.
The Core Mission
Cut unnecessary traffic management, reduce infrastructure waste, speed up approvals, improve contractor accountability, and make every taxpayer dollar go further.
Why This Policy Matters
What People See
- Cones on empty roads
- Roadworks with no visible progress
- Repeated disruption on the same streets
- Ratepayer and taxpayer money disappearing into process
What Is Really Going Wrong
- Too much one size fits all traffic management
- Weak cost control on contractors and public works
- Duplicated council and approval systems
- Too little use of proven lower cost methods
The Policy
1. Cone Justification Rule
Every traffic management setup for publicly funded work must be justified by actual risk, actual need, and actual cost. If there is a simpler safe option, that option should be used.
2. Risk Based Traffic Management
Low risk work should use minimal controls. Medium risk work should use targeted controls. High risk work should still receive full protection. Safety should be smart, not excessive.
3. Traffic Management Cost Transparency
Every major public job must publish how much of the total budget is being spent on traffic management, how long it is in place, and how that compares with the actual work being done.
4. Build Once, Disrupt Once
Councils, utilities, and contractors must coordinate projects so roads are not dug up again and again. If a road is opened, all planned work should be done at the same time where practical.
5. Roading Benchmarking and Value Review
Before major road projects are approved, costs must be benchmarked against comparable New Zealand and overseas projects. The public should know if they are paying too much.
6. Contractor Warranty and Defects Register
Major public works must have a public defects and warranty register showing completion dates, defects found, remedial work required, and whether the contractor paid for the correction.
7. Use Proven Overseas Methods Faster
New Zealand should actively test and adopt proven lower cost technologies, materials, and project methods from overseas rather than always reinventing the wheel.
8. Approve Once NZ
Standard house designs and repeated building systems should not be re assessed from scratch by every council. Nationally accepted standard designs should move faster and cost less.
9. Growth Must Pay for Growth
Existing ratepayers should not quietly subsidise infrastructure costs created by new development. Growth related infrastructure charges should be transparent and fairly allocated.
10. Shared Council Services
Smaller councils should not all duplicate expensive specialist systems and approval structures. Shared regional services can reduce waste and improve consistency.
What This Should Achieve
Lower Costs
Less money wasted on unnecessary setups, duplicated approvals, and avoidable overhead.
Better Roads
More focus on durable outcomes, contractor performance, and long term value.
Fairer Growth
Clearer infrastructure funding so existing communities do not quietly carry the burden.
Faster Building
Simpler pathways for standard homes and less repeated bureaucratic checking.
Smarter Safety
Proper traffic management where needed, with less overkill where the risk is low.
More Accountability
Public visibility over costs, defects, warranties, and contractor performance.
The Vote8 Standard
Build once. Approve once. Pay once. Measure outcomes.
Vote8 believes public money should work harder for New Zealanders. This policy is about restoring common sense, reducing visible waste, and delivering better value from every public dollar.
Back Practical Change
Vote8 stands for practical solutions, fairer systems, and better value for every New Zealander.
