New Zealand to replace 'sexist' road signs after 7-year-old girl's plea

Zoe Carew took issue with a "linemen" hazard sign because "women can be line workers" too, which she wrote in a letter to the head of the New Zealand Transport Agency. PHOTO: TWITTER/NEW ZEALAND TRANSPORT AGENCY

KUALA LUMPUR (REUTERS) - New Zealand's transport authority said on Tuesday (July 31) it would adopt gender-neutral signs after a 7-year-old girl said it was "wrong and unfair" to suggest only men could work on roadside power lines.

Zoe Carew spotted a "linemen" hazard sign - to warn drivers about workers repairing or installing electricity and telecommunications cables - when she was en route to her grandparents' house last month.

She took issue with the sign because "women can be line workers" too, which she wrote in a letter to the head of the New Zealand Transport Agency, Fergus Gammie.

"Why does the sign say 'linemen' when the people working on the lines may be men or women?" she wrote in the letter, which her mother, Caitlin Carew, shared on the social media site Twitter this week.

"I think that this sign is wrong and unfair. Do you agree?" she asked Gammie.

In a letter of reply posted to the agency's official Twitter account on Tuesday, Gammie promised that authorities would replace old signs as they wore out with new ones reading, "line crew".

Gammie cautioned that "this may take some time," and praised Carew for speaking up.

"I commend you for your suggestion and for taking action where you think something unfair should be fixed," he said, offering to have a photo taken with both of them and the new sign.

The agency also said in a Twitter post that it was happy to take on Carew's suggestion as "great ideas can come from anyone, including seven-year-olds".

Carew's mother declined to comment further, while the transport agency was not available.

New Zealand has long had a progressive reputation and was the first nation to give women the right to vote in 1893. Its current prime minister Jacinda Ardern is the country's third female leader.

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