A political podcast discussion featuring National's Mark Mitchell and Labour's Ginny Andersen critiques Auckland's housing intensification plans, proposes reform of alcohol trading laws to allow pub openings during Easter and Anzac Day, and highlights innovative police technology
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Yeah, yeah, absolutely. And they had a sensor, well there's two parts of it, they had a sensor on the roof. that now actually on the ceiling that actually will actually monitor the person's respiratory rate and heartbeat to see if they're getting stressed and they also had the police dogs section out there though the police dogs we have they've got body armor and they've now got a very powerful directional speaker that they can attach to the body armor which means that the dog handler can actually give instructions remotely to both the dog and an offender that's been caught And the trial that they've said that what's done unintentionally is that someone under the influence of drugs or alcohol actually think the dog's talking to them and they'll become confused, they'll become compliant or they either try to engage with the dog in conversation.
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innovative, effective, and potentially transformative
Pollies: National's Mark Mitchell and Labour's Ginny Andersen on the Auckland housing intensification plan, India Free Trade Agreement, alcohol trading lawsSpotted something wrong on this page? Report a correction.