Country cop wins national award

Kineta Knight
Kineta Knight
May 24, 2024 |
Senior Constable Ken Terry, this year's recipient of the Road Safety Hero award. Image: Yellow Ribbon Road Safety Alliance.

A new national Road Safety Hero has been crowned – and it is North Canterbury’s Senior Constable Ken Terry.

Terry was awarded the prestigious Annual Yellow Ribbon Road Safety Hero Award at the Yellow Ribbon Road Safety Alliance Hui in Auckland last night.

The award recognises individuals who have demonstrated exceptional dedication to promoting road safety within their communities.

The honour came as a complete surprise to Terry, who didn’t even know he had been nominated.

“It is an absolute thrill to be acknowledged at a national level,” Terry said. “Spreading the message about road safety is so important – too many lives are lost on our roads.”

Terry has been a country cop for most of his 38 years in police and is now a School Community Officer in North Canterbury.

He said road safety plays a big part in his role as a School Community Officer, but it is not road safety that he is most passionate about, it is people.

“Like most cops, I remember every fatal crash I’ve attended vividly, and there have been a lot, too many to count.

“The impact on families and communities is devastating,” he said.

As a School Community Officer, Terry trains and mentors school patrols, kea crossings and traffic wardens in North Canterbury. He also teaches bus safety, bike safety, safe walking and other road safety programmes to primary schools.

In his spare time, he is a mentor for the Community Driver Mentor Programme, supporting learner and restricted drivers to become competent, confident and safe drivers and pass their next driving test.

“We need to start with the kids,” Terry said. “Education on simple principles with simple messages is the way to teach road safety to children and young people.

“It sets them up to be safe road users when they are learner drivers and as adult users of roads in our community.”

Terry was nominated for the award by Mark White, AA Canterbury/West Coast Councillor, who said, “New Zealand Police are very fortunate – as are we as parents and grandparents – to have an individual like Ken who lives and breathes children’s safety.

“Ken’s passion for road safety and his genuine concern for the well-being of our children have made him an invaluable asset to our community. This award is a small but fitting recognition of his tremendous contributions,” White said.

Terry works with the AA Canterbury/West Coast Council on their ‘Be Safe Be Seen’ initiative, which involves distributing cycle lights to school children.

“It has been a pleasure and a privilege to collaborate on this project. We love seeing kids biking and riding to school – it helps build confidence and it’s great for health and well-being too. But more than anything we want them to be safe,” Terry said.

 

SOURCE: Police Ten One Magazine

Kineta Knight
Kineta Knight

Kineta Knight is a highly experienced journalist based in North Canterbury. She has worked as a reporter for radio, TV, digital and print, as well as an editor of lifestyle magazines in NZ and the UK. Kineta is the Head of Content Development at Chris Lynch Media. Contact: [email protected]

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