| Occupation | |
|---|---|
Activity sectors | Government,road traffic control,vehicle recovery,roadside assistance |
| Description | |
Fields of employment | Motorways and select trunk roads inWales operated byTrunk road agents. |
Related jobs | Road policing unit,Traffic guard |

Welsh Government traffic officers (Welsh:Swyddog Traffig y Llywodraeth Cymru) are civilian staff employed by thetrunk road agents on behalf of theWelsh Government as a means to ease traffic congestion on major trunk roads in Wales. Their role and powers are similar to their English counterparts working forNational Highways, theNational Highways traffic officers.
They were initially established in order to assist police officers fromGwent Police andSouth Wales Police by removing part of their workload with regards to breakdowns and collisions.
In addition to a number of exemptions from the Road Traffic Act and Motorway Regulations (such as stopping on the hard shoulder, driving/reversing on the hard shoulder), traffic officers derive powers from theTraffic Management Act 2004.
Officers must follow the directions of apolice constable,[1] and to exercise their powers, must be on duty and in uniform.[2]
For the purposes of:[2]
a traffic officer may:[3]
Assaulting, resisting or willfully obstructing a traffic officer are offences.[5] It is also an offence to impersonate a traffic officer, or for a traffic officer to claim to have more powers than they do.[5] Traffic officers do not have any powers of arrest, nor do they have the power to search, issue fixed penalties or report for summons for any motoring offence. Traffic officers are not exempt from any traffic laws, and must, at all times, comply with the posted speed limits and all red traffic lights.
Drivers are obliged by theTraffic Management Act 2004 to comply with the directions given by traffic officers.[6] This is briefly explained in theHighway Code:
Traffic Officers have powers to stop vehicles on most motorways and some'A' class roads. If traffic officers in uniform want to stop your vehicle on safety grounds (e.g. an insecure load) they will, where possible, attract your attention by
- flashing amber lights, usually from behind
- directing you to pull over to the side by pointing and/or using the left indicator
YouMUST then pull over and stop as soon as it is safe to do so. Then switch off your engine. It is an offence not to comply with their directions.
This article incorporates text published under the BritishOpen Government Licence v3.0: