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Watch: National and Labour MPs team up to get slavery bill heard

Source: Radio New Zealand

National and Labour are joining forces to get modern slavery legislation into Parliament, using a new process to skip the biscuit tin for the first time.

National’s Greg Fleming and Labour’s Camilla Belich have agreed to co-sponsor the bill.

The bill strengthens reporting to Parliament, brings in public naming and potential liability for directors and senior managers, along with fines up to $200,000 for companies that fail to report on modern slavery.

The move marks the first time Parliament has used a new rule allowing a bipartisan majority to have a member’s bill progress without being pulled from the ‘biscuit tin’ ballot.

It would also introduce civil penalties of up to $600,000, give the Human Rights Commission a formal role and create a public register of reports.

A capacity for future reviews would include the potential for establishment of an anti-slavery commissioner.

Camilla Belich (Labour) and Greg Fleming (National). Samuel Rillstone / RNZ

In a statement, Fleming said the issue of modern slavery was close to his heart and he had been working on the legislation since coming to Parliament.

“It’s time that New Zealand has a coordinated framework to deal with modern slavery, and this bill does just that,” he said.

Belich said the legislation would also bring New Zealand into line with partners like the United Kingdom and European Union.

“Workers in New Zealand and around the world should never face the horrors of modern slavery. It’s time New Zealand stood with other countries and acted,” she said.

“When we signed free trade agreements with these partners, we said we would act on modern slavery, and through this joint Bill we are keeping that promise. I’m proud that both sides of the House have come together to stand against exploitation, and grateful to the advocates, organisations and businesses who have pushed for this change.”

Parliament’s internal rules – called standing orders – were updated as part of a 2020 review with a new process enabling the automatic introduction of a member’s bill if it gets formal expressions of support from at least 61 non-executive MPs – those who are not ministers or Parliamentary under-secretaries.

The bill was lodged this morning, and with that rule – standing order 288 – invoked, it will be introduced to Parliament on the next sitting day, 10 February.

Thousands enslaved

One tracker estimated 8000 people in New Zealand were living in modern slavery, comparatively low compared to other countries – placing it 148th out of 160 states for slavery prevalence.

Police in August last year said they had 31 ongoing investigations into the matter.

World Vision found in 2019 that 5 percent of New Zealand’s total imports were shown to be linked to child labour or forced labour.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Te Araroa grandmother describes harrowing escape from wall of floodwaters

Source: Radio New Zealand

Philippa Wright says they’re “extremely lucky” the water didn’t go inside their home. Supplied / Philippa Wright

A grandmother who fled rising floodwaters with her moko is overwhelmed by the scale of destruction in her East Coast community.

“I’ve probably walked around in circles a thousand times,” Philippa Wright told RNZ from her Te Araroa home, “not really knowing where to begin”.

Logs have ended up on the property. Supplied / Philippa Wright

As a digger shifted mud and logs on the property, Wright said she, her 10-year-old grandson, and husband Steve were “extremely lucky” to survive the storm that laid waste to the township last week.

“Seeing what they’re digging out … I knew it was deep, but it’s deep alright, and you couldn’t see the logs for the mud, but now … they’re scraping them all out.”

As the rain came down on 21 January, Wright and her moko sat in the car, poised to evacuate.

She periodically flicked the headlights on watching the water, while her husband monitored the levels from inside their tiny home.

The property, which now had a few dwellings and a deck, was just a bare paddock with some trees when they bought it five years ago.

“And as soon as we walked on this land we just knew it was us,” Wright said, and after years of work, they had finally made it their off-the-grid dream.

“Punaruku Stream is our boundary between us and the camping ground, and it was just a little trickler.”

That night, however, her neighbours told her that the stream was climbing up the bridge – and that this time, the rain and the water levels were different.

“The first thing I noticed was the smell changed, the earth, the debris.

“I flicked on my lights and all I could see was this wall of water – logs, debris, in the neighbour’s section come flying towards me … and I just planted it.”

Supplied / Philippa Wright

On the phone to Steve, she yelled at him to “get the hell out of there”.

“He just heard the logs hitting our tiny home. He couldn’t go out the front door because of the water level and the debris.”

While he escaped with the dog out the back, Wright and her grandson found a “pocket” at the base of the hill – but with slips in front of them and the bridge impassable behind them, they were trapped.

“There were slips going all around us, so we were having to shuffle backwards and forwards because we could hear the crackling and stuff coming down.”

It was a sleepless night.

Wright’s neighbours had escaped with their five children onto the roof of their house and on the phone to Te Araroa Civil Defence, all she could do was flash her headlights at them.

“They were asking us if we could see them, and thankfully … one of them had a high-vis on … so I could tell them, “Yes, they’re still on the roof”.”

Huia Ngatai and her family, the youngest only three-years-old, survived their ordeal and were evacuated by helicopter the next morning.

Wright said their property was “total devastation”.

Gerald Holden ‘Boots’ arrived from Gisborne on Wednesday and volunteered his mahi to dig out the Wrights’ buildings. Supplied / Philippa Wright

A Givealittle page dedicated to the Ngatai family’s recovery has received numerous donations and messages of support.

To Wright’s surprise, a page had also been set up for her and Steve – by their daughter – detailing what they had lost and the tough clean-up ahead.

“She didn’t tell me she was doing it, I didn’t request it at all. I’m totally humbled by it and just so grateful for people’s love and support.

“[There] are so many people that need help, we’re just one of many [families]. It’s not just us.”

Wright said she had evacuated to the Hinerupe Marae the morning after the storm, where she had been well looked after.

“They’re very beautiful people, they’ve been amazing. I’m so glad I’ve moved to a community where people are just amazing, and make you feel so loved.

“In these times just a hug’s all you need.”

Supplied / Philippa Wright

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Ex-Education Ministry staffer says new school curriculum heavily politicised

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

A former Education Ministry employee says development of the new school curriculum was heavily politicised, causing extensive rewrites and sidelining subject experts.

Claire Coleman made the allegations during a submission to Parliament’s Education and Workforce Select Committee on the government’s Education and Training (System Reform) Amendment Bill.

She told the committee the bill would politicise the education system by giving the government more direct control over the curriculum and over teachers’ professional standards.

“I know from my recent experience at the Ministry of Education the dangers of allowing a public service to be politicised,” she said.

“As a curriculum writer, I was asked to disregard the evidence, the research, and decades of my own experience.

“I watched colleagues run back and forth to the Beehive for approval, watched academics and sector experts be removed from writing teams in favour of corporate resource creators, and saw curriculum documents change radically over a matter of hours in response to the latest red-pen notes from ministers.

“Public servants and their expertise were routinely disregarded, bullied, and removed for not aligning with a predetermined outcome.”

There has been widespread criticism of curriculum development, including leaked emails showing concern within the ministry that some curriculum writers were not being appointed on merit.

The Education Ministry told RNZ ministerial approval of curriculums was normal.

“The ministry is responsible for writing the curriculum and has taken advice and worked with a wide range of local education experts, teachers and other stakeholders over a long period, to produce a knowledge-rich curriculum grounded in the science of learning,” it said.

“The curriculum-writing process is rigorous and includes multiple cycles of review and refinement. It combines evidence, insights, and experiences over the last 20 years with formal feedback and input from a wide range of groups from across the education sector.”

“Ministers have always been responsible for the curriculum sign-off as part of the process.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Work continues to reopen significantly damaged state highways

Source: Radio New Zealand

Damage to State Highway 35 from a landslide. Supplied / NZTA

Work is continuing on opening roads in the North Island after last week’s severe weather wreaked havoc on the transport network.

Slips and flooding have significantly damaged State Highway 35 on the East Coast and State Highway 25 in the Coromandel.

NZ Transport Agency regional transport services manager Mark Owen told Morning Report crews were making progress and a section of State Highway 25 at Kuaotunu had reopened.

However, the highway remained closed between Whangamatā and Whiritoa.

“Quite a lot of major work in there and we’ll have an update later this week when we hope to have that section of State Highway 25 open,” Owen said.

Owen said there were dozens of slips through the Waioweka Gorge, which connected Gisborne and the Bay of Plenty.

“State Highway 2 is closed through the Waioweka Gorge between Ōpōtiki and Mātāwai, unfortunately there’s been massive damage in there. Crews are beavering away at each end, they’re doing a full assessment and once we know more we hope to be able to give some indications later this week as to when it may open,” he said.

“If and when it does it will still probably be many sections of one lane, and lots of longer term recovery work required through the gorge.

“Teams are working, we’ve got all the expertise we need, it’s just going to take some time.”

Owen said crews were also carrying out remediation work.

“When we put back we do try and put back better. We do sort of try and factor in the fact that we’re getting more of these intense weather events,” he said.

“The good news is what we’re seeing post Cyclone Gabrielle is a lot of those areas we have repaired have stood up really well. So it’s not now other more vulnerable sections of the highway that have been impacted.”

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Volunteers use quad bikes to deliver essentials to cut-off residents in storm hit East Cape

Source: Radio New Zealand

A landslide at State Highway 35, Punaruku, on the way to Hicks Bay on the East Coast. Supplied

A crew of volunteers on quad bikes are delivering essentials and doing welfare checks for residents with cut off homes in the flood-hit East Cape.

The volunteers had been dropping off gas bottles and food to residents along with helping clear up rubbish and debris from the area.

Te Hemara Rau-Hihi, was one of those volunteers, he told Checkpoint, Wednesday involved a run to the dump for volunteers who went over to the rural community of Horoera to collect everyone’s rubbish.

He said he didn’t have many words to describe the devastation to the East Cape.

Slip clearing on the East Coast’s SH35 between Tikitiki and Te Araroa. Supplied/ NZTA

“Some have said it’s a war zone… I think we’re lucky it was only a whole day’s worth [of flooding], and we’ve actually had a lot of sunshine since. Right now it’s dusty.”

Rau-Hihi said many gardens which residents used to grow food had been water-logged and there was stock which hadn’t been accounted for due to fences being knocked over in the storm.

People in the area were used to cutting tracks, he said.

“We’ve got farmers and daredevils to a certain point, but we’re cutting a track as a lifeline to someone who is 90 plus years old needing their medicine and so on…”

Many of the problem areas were the same problem areas from previous storms, Rau-Hihi said, which he said was “not good enough”.

Aerial view of Onepoto, one of the areas where evacuations are underway. Supplied/Ben Green.

“The money that comes through isn’t enough. I’m no expert on roading but if stuff keeps on happening in the same places there’s something wrong there.”

The East Cape community was however, resilient, he said, and a proud community who had been in the area for generations.

“So regardless of what the weather will bring these people are going to be here for 100 more years, so it’s problem-solving on how we can limit the problems that arise.”

What the community needed most at the moment from the general public was donations, Rau-Hihi said.

“People here are not keen on putting their hand out and saying ‘I need this, I need that’, but donations count, any little resource counts. I know for a fact that it’s just not good enough what our situation at the moment is.

He noted a fund had been set up by Manaaki Matakāoa to help with essential supplies, fuel, recovery efforts and heli-transport for goods and stranded whānau and there was a Givealittle for a family who had to be rescued from their rooftop in Punaruku.

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Police recover bodies of pilot, passenger from helicopter crash near Paekākāriki Hill

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police at the helicopter crash in Paekākāriki Hill on Wednesday. RNZ/Samuel Rillstone

Police have recovered the bodies from a fatal helicopter crash north of Wellington.

The crash happened near Paekākāriki Hill on Wednesday morning.

Both the pilot and a passenger were found dead.

Kāpiti-Mana Area Commander Inspector Renée Perkins said in an update on Thursday that a significant recovery operation took place to recover both victims from the crash site.

“Police are working to formally confirm the identity of those who were recovered, but are unable to do so at this stage of the investigation,” Inspector Perkins said.

“Our thoughts remain with their families and friends at this time.”

The area where a helicopter crashed on Wednesday. RNZ/Samuel Rillstone

A witness told RNZ he understood the helicopter was involved in goat culling in the area.

The man, who was first to reach the crash, said he was checking a body for vital signs as the Westpac rescue chopper arrived.

He said he could not find any sign of life before he made the call to get clear of the aircraft.

The man said the Westpac crew soon spotted another body in thick scrub, on steep terrain some distance from the wreckage.

Cordons remain in place around the Battle Hill campground while police examine the scene.

Civil Aviation Authority investigators have completed their preliminary scene examination.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Watch live: National and Labour MPs team up to get slavery bill heard

Source: Radio New Zealand

National and Labour are joining forces to get modern slavery legislation into Parliament, using a new process to skip the biscuit tin for the first time.

National’s Greg Fleming and Labour’s Camilla Belich have agreed to co-sponsor the bill.

The bill strengthens reporting to Parliament, brings in public naming and potential liability for directors and senior managers, along with fines up to $200,000 for companies that fail to report on modern slavery.

The move marks the first time Parliament has used a new rule allowing a bipartisan majority to have a member’s bill progress without being pulled from the ‘biscuit tin’ ballot.

It would also introduce civil penalties of up to $600,000, give the Human Rights Commission a formal role and create a public register of reports.

A capacity for future reviews would include the potential for establishment of an anti-slavery commissioner.

Labour’s Camilla Belich and National’s Greg Fleming. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone / Phil Smith

In a statement, Fleming said the issue of modern slavery was close to his heart and he had been working on the legislation since coming to Parliament.

“It’s time that New Zealand has a coordinated framework to deal with modern slavery, and this bill does just that,” he said.

Belich said the legislation would also bring New Zealand into line with partners like the United Kingdom and European Union.

“Workers in New Zealand and around the world should never face the horrors of modern slavery. It’s time New Zealand stood with other countries and acted,” she said.

“When we signed free trade agreements with these partners, we said we would act on modern slavery, and through this joint Bill we are keeping that promise. I’m proud that both sides of the House have come together to stand against exploitation, and grateful to the advocates, organisations and businesses who have pushed for this change.”

Parliament’s internal rules – called standing orders – were updated as part of a 2020 review with a new process enabling the automatic introduction of a member’s bill if it gets formal expressions of support from at least 61 non-executive MPs – those who are not ministers or Parliamentary under-secretaries.

The bill was lodged this morning, and with that rule – standing order 288 – invoked, it will be introduced to Parliament on the next sitting day, 10 February.

Thousands enslaved

One tracker estimated 8000 people in New Zealand were living in modern slavery, comparatively low compared to other countries – placing it 148th out of 160 states for slavery prevalence.

Police in August last year said they had 31 ongoing investigations into the matter.

World Vision found in 2019 that 5 percent of New Zealand’s total imports were shown to be linked to child labour or forced labour.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

In his last book, Julian Barnes circles big ideas and reflects on his shortcomings

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Patrick Flanery, Chair in Creative Writing, Adelaide University

Julian Barnes, author of 14 previous novels, ten volumes of nonfiction, and three collections of short stories under his own name, plus four crime novels under the pseudonym Dan Kavanagh, has announced that his new novel, Departure(s), will be his last. The narrator – who both is and is not Barnes – tells us this directly and the information has accompanied advance notice from his publisher. This kind of framing necessarily invites the reader to judge the book as a capstone to his career.


Review: Departure(s) – Julian Barnes (Jonathan Cape)


For more than four decades, in ways distinct from near contemporaries like Martin Amis and Ian McEwan, Barnes has tried to awaken the English novel from its long fantasy of isolation, reminding it of its relation to European – and particularly French – literature.

For many years, his novel Flaubert’s Parrot (1984) was a foundational work in undergraduate courses in postmodern literature. But it has always felt to me as though this obscured the importance of the intervention Barnes was making.

His close reading of French literature translated formal experiment from the continental into the late-20th century English novel. Doing so, he opened the avant-gardism of anglophone late-modernism once again to the possibilities of a more European sensibility.

Illness and memory

It is no surprise to open Departure(s) and find Barnes employing fragmentation, lists, notes and quasi-philosophical musings, while refusing almost entirely to engage with any narrative structure that might resemble a plot.

There is a story of sorts, and the narrator tells us early on that one will be coming, though it is, he says, a story with no middle. Indeed, the five-part form of Departure(s) bookends and bisects the “story”. There is a central section about Barnes himself, and meditative opening and closing sections that reflect on larger questions – not only in relation to literature, but life more broadly.

This makes sense for a writer whose life over the past 25 years has been marked by great career successes – including the Booker Prize for The Sense of an Ending (2011), after a succession of shortlistings – as well as the tragedy of his wife Pat Kavanagh’s sudden death from brain cancer in 2008 and, more recently, his own chronic illness.

In 2020, Barnes, and the semi-fictional Barnes who narrates Departure(s), learned he had a form of blood cancer. He tells us that it will be with him until the end of his life, even if it is not the disease that kills him.

Grappling with this new condition, he turns to last things: to an accounting of his own shortcomings and to memory more generally.

Here we have reflections on Proust’s madeleine-induced stream of recollection, alongside Barnes’s thinking about the phenomenon of Involuntary Autobiographical Memory, or “IAM”. Barnes notes the case of a stroke victim, who claimed that eating a piece of pie released recollections of every pie he had ever eaten in order of consumption. He is at first horrified by the prospect of experiencing such a thing, until he realises that “IAMs would certainly help with autobiography”, particularly when recalling “moral actions and inactions”.

The novel’s “story” proper, when we get to it, concerns the narrator’s role in twice bringing together a couple: Stephen and Jean. He met them when all three were students at Oxford in the 1960s, and they met again 40 years later. Their “friendship”, such as it was, lasted little more than two periods of a year and a half either side of that 40-year gap.

The Barnes character had once been Jean’s lover, and his “moral actions and inactions” come to the fore in his account of these friends, now dead, for he promised Stephen and swore to Jean on a Bible that he would never write about them. There is here a return to some of Barnes’s longstanding interests as a novelist. Gaps in characters’ knowledge of one another become points of fixation or rupture.

One of the fears besetting some novelists is that they may fall victim to their own Rumsfeldian “unknown unknowns”. We know what we know about characters, story, theme, and so on. And we think we know what we don’t know (the discernible limits of our knowledge). But there is always the risk of a work being fractured internally by a force whose presence has remained beyond thinkability. This might be as simple as a hole in a plot, or as significant as an ideological blind spot.

Tics and irritants

Though I suspect Barnes would assert that he was in total control of this book, there were moments when I wondered. For instance, odd tics create a distancing effect where they might have been intended to do the opposite. Barnes has a habit of addressing the reader with self-conscious asides (“don’t you find?”) that feel more conversational than writerly.

There is also a curious refusal to name the male anatomy by its proper terms (though not so with the female). He uses schoolboy constructions such as “bum cancer”, rather than, say, “colon” or “rectal”. This is despite his being medically precise about his actual illness, its names, and its diagnosis and treatment.

There are also a few uncomfortable moments referring to homosexuality. We have “old Muckface, who turned out gay in the end”. The narrator suggests it would have been especially disturbing to find “a collection of dildos with dried blood on them” in Stephen’s home and refers to “schoolmasters we thought dodgy”. The latter are the only examples of gay people the narrator claims to have encountered as a child.

Julian Barnes.
Urszula Soltys/Penguin Random House

Barnes hastens to welcome progress that makes society more accepting, but this does not, for this reader, counterbalance the implied equation of “dodgy” character or predatory habits with homosexuality, nor his vivid and horrified amusement when imagining his friend might have a secret inclination towards anal eroticism.

In another vein, we have the narrator choosing to call Uluru by its colonial name, almost intentionally, it seems, to irritate a certain kind of reader.

These demurs might suggest significant irritation, but this is not the case. What I want from a writer of Barnes’s intelligence, however, is a handling of identity and representation worthy of his mind and talent.

I’m on Barnes’s side for much – though certainly not all – of the book. It is refreshing to open a contemporary novel in English and find that story and plot are second-order concerns, and that revealing the story in a review would not risk ruining the pleasure – and interest – of reading the book. Spoilers spoil nothing here.

But then I reach a conundrum, for Barnes offers this summary of a writer’s aims:

All writers want their words to have an effect. Novelists want to entertain, to reveal truth, to move, to provoke reverie. And beyond? Do they want their readers to act as a result of their words? It depends.

This seems to sketch the limits of Barnes’ aspirations for his art, assuming he thinks of his novels as art and not as mere entertainments. What, for me, is missing from that list is the possibility that a novelist might want to make readers think about the larger questions in more than a state of “reverie”, a word that implies the amorphousness of daydream.

Barnes appears to be placing himself in a tradition running parallel to but separate from that of British novelists-of-ideas of an earlier generation like Iris Murdoch, or his contemporary Ian McEwan, and younger writers like Zadie Smith. For all of these writers, I suspect that provoking serious thought is as important – and likely more important – than producing an emotional response (its own kind of thought, to be sure) or simply to entertain.

It is an odd final manoeuvre because Barnes is a novelist interested in thinking and thought. He has made a career of circling big ideas. But in the end, assuming this is truly the end, it is hard not to feel that he seems embarrassed to find himself so seriously interested in those larger questions, or so interesting to the readers who may continue to turn to his books for more than mere reverie.

The Conversation

Patrick Flanery does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. In his last book, Julian Barnes circles big ideas and reflects on his shortcomings – https://theconversation.com/in-his-last-book-julian-barnes-circles-big-ideas-and-reflects-on-his-shortcomings-270652

Students learn better in uniform, headmaster says, brushing off cost concerns

Source: Radio New Zealand

School uniforms can cost hundreds of dollars. RNZ / Richard Tindiller

The head of an Auckland high school is defending high uniform costs, arguing it is in students’ best interests.

Westlake Boys High School headmaster Paul Fordham told Morning Report while he acknowledged the start of the year was an expensive time for families, wearing a uniform was more economical long-term.

“It’s a high-quality uniform that we believe to be quite accessible. The fact that it’s high-quality means it lasts longer.

“I know there’s some commentary around school uniforms and the cost attached to that, but it means there’s no other clothing required to be purchased for school throughout the year.”

The Westlake Boys uniform set, which includes a formal blazer, costs roughly $550 a year – a similar cost to several other high schools.

Fordham said there were also social and cultural benefits to requiring a uniform.

Students at Westlake Boys. Facebook

“Boys at our school are proud to wear the uniform. It gives them a strong sense of identity and belonging.

“It aligns with our school image. We consider ourselves a relatively high-performing, conservative, traditional boys’ school.

“The uniform being a shirt, a tie, and a blazer, when the boys put that on to come to school each day, they’re prepared and ready to go and understand the expectations of the school and the school day ahead of them.

“I believe it contributes to a better learning environment.

The school also expected students to wear their blazers at assemblies twice a week and at special events throughout the year.

“They also wear them as extra layers of clothing,” Fordham said.

“They might wear that as an alternative to a jersey or a jumper in winter. It’s a really warm garment to be wearing.”

He said the school sold second-hand uniforms at a lower cost and families could both buy and sell uniform pieces.

Education Minister Erica Stanford told The Post on Tuesday it was up to “individual schools to make sure that school uniforms are affordable for families, and it’s my expectation that they do that”.

“I have noticed that other countries are moving in that direction, and it’s certainly something I’ll take a look at.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Strong three years for KiwiSaver members, as new player takes top spot

Source: Radio New Zealand

The media KiwiSaver balanced fund returned 1.7 percent for the quarter. (File photo) Unsplash

Warnings of impending share market doom didn’t play out in 2025, and the year ended with solid returns for KiwiSaver investors – and some change at the top of the performance tables.

Actuarial firm MJW has released its latest investment survey for the December quarter, which shows most funds, both within KiwiSaver and outside the scheme, had a small but positive return in the three months and solid performance over a longer period.

It said the median KiwiSaver balanced fund returned 1.7 percent for the quarter, after costs and before tax, and 9.8 percent for ther year.

“This caps a particularly healthy three-year period with the median growth, balanced and conservative KiwiSaver funds returning 13.3 percent, 10.9 percent and 7.4 percent per annum respectively.”

MJW principal Ben Trollip said developed markets equities were a big driver of results.

“In local currency terms, the MSCI World Index rose 3.4 percent over the quarter. While US markets did well, stronger performance came from Japan, up 12 percent, and the UK, up 6.2 percent. Emerging markets were led by India which rose 6.2 percent.”

The New Zealand dollar weakened compared to most currencies which meant that the returns were better in unhedged terms.

Trollip said although a lot of the noise in the year was about the performance of the US tech giants – such as Nvidia – the MSCI Emerging Index, which tracks companies in countries such as China, Brazil, Taiwan and India, had returned 30 percent, compared to 20 percent for the Nasdaq over 2025.

In KiwiSaver, Simplicity was first in growth, conservative and balanced funds for the quarter.

Over a year, Westpac was first in the growth and balanced categories, with 12.8 percent and 11 percent respectively, and AMP was first in moderate, with 9.5 percent. ASB was first among conservative funds, with 7.6 percent.

Over three years, Simplicity was first in the growth funds, with returns of 15.7 percent a year, ASB first in balanced, with 12.6 percent, AMP first in moderate with 10.9 percent in its moderate/balanced fund and ASB first in conservative with 8 percent.

Over 10 years, Milford was first in growth, with 10.2 percent, and balanced, with 8.1 percent a year, AMP was first in moderate with 5.8 percent and Milford was first in conservative with returns of 5.1 percent a year.

Trollip said the survey only assessed the largest KiwiSaver providers.

It did not include new entrant Sharesies, which said it had received 10 percent of all scheme transfers in October.

“In global markets, for example, there was a bit of a sell-off from memory in around November, and then things rebounded,” Trollip said.

“Also, in a similar vein, New Zealand interest rates fell quite sharply on the back of a weak GDP number, and then have subsequently risen back. So there was a bit of a down and then back up again over the three-month period.

“But zooming out, it was a pretty solid year and capping a solid three-year period.”

He said the returns over three years were more than many people would expect.

He said it was noticeable that Simplicity had topped the growth category, whereas providers that had traditionally been strong, such as Generate and Milford, had a weaker quarter.

Simplicity could have been helped by its global allocation being higher than others in the growth category, he said.

“I think the other thing that might have helped them is that their New Zealand fixed interest – I think that’s where they put their home loans, things like that. With interest rates moving around it was a bad quarter for traditional New Zealand fixed interest but Simplicity’s allocation to home loans and the like might have been what drove their better performance relative to their peers.”

But he said there could be a lot of movement in three-month periods, and it was better to take a longer view.

He said Milford’s active growth fund, which has been a long-term top performer, had grown from $3.3 b million in December 2022 to $8.5b.

Trollip said it was noticeable that five or 10 years ago, New Zealand shares were outperforming global equities.

But that had not been the case for the last three to five years.

“And New Zealand equities still have been less volatile than global equities, but they haven’t given you much of a return boost.

“In fact, they’ve been quite a drag on performance. So, one of the things I’ve been contemplating with potentially the New Zealand economy turning around low interest rates and all that, is the sector poised for a rebound or not? But it’s very hard to pick the timing of that, I think.”

The report said Indeed, over the long term New Zealand equities had brought useful diversification from global equity markets with little give-up in return.

“Add to that the fact that local investors may have an advantage in picking (and monitoring) good active managers, and may have a tax advantage, and the case for a home bias feels somewhat stronger despite the poor recent run from our domestic bourse.

“Moreover, with global equity markets becoming even more concentrated on the AI thematic, a little diversification would seem welcome. Worries abound given the strong run in US equities in particular, with that geography representing some 70 percent of global indices due to its strong momentum.

“As 2025 drew to a close, there was increasing fear of a correction in the value of technology stocks. In fact, going on search traffic alone, one would say enthusiasm peaked in September 2025.”

Sign up for Money with Susan Edmunds, a weekly newsletter covering all the things that affect how we make, spend and invest money.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

How much would you pay for school to provide your child with lunch every day?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brittany Johnson, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Caring Futures Institute, Flinders University

Peter Cade/Getty Images

Most Australian children bring their lunch to school through a “lunchbox system”. But there is a growing push for schools to provide students with lunch.

Despite decades of efforts to promote better nutrition, it is estimated nearly half (44%) of the foods Australian children eat at school are energy-dense and nutrient-poor (or “discretionary foods”). This is alarming as our previous research with children aged nine to eleven shows an association between a poor diet and lower NAPLAN scores.

School programs providing students with a nutritious lunch are common around the world. Research shows school-provided lunches can increase social equity and improve nutritional, health and learning outcomes.

Pilot school lunch programs have begun in Australia, including Tasmania, New South Wales and Victoria.

But wider school lunch programs would be a significant change to how children access food at school in Australia.

In our new research, we look at what parents think about school lunch programs. If school lunch programs are going to work in Australia, families’ support will be crucial.

Our research

In our study, we surveyed almost 400 parents of primary school students across Australia, to seek their views about school lunch programs. We recruited parents through paid social media advertisements. They came from a range of backgrounds and household incomes.

Based on different school food programs in the United Kingdom, France, Sweden and Australia, we tested six key components of a school-provided lunch model:

  • cost

  • nutrition and quality

  • environmental sustainability

  • menu options

  • access (should programs be optional or provided to all students regardless of their background)

  • a whole-school approach (is the lunch program integrated with classroom learning and other school messaging).

We also asked parents how much they would be willing to pay for different lunch approaches.

Most parents are keen on school lunch programs

We found 93% of parents surveyed were interested in school-provided lunches.

Parents told us nutrition and food quality was the key driver of their interest in a school lunch program. It was also the most important consideration when designing a school program.

Menu variety was the next most important consideration, with a strong preference for having two meal options. This was similar to our previous findings, which show parents and children value choice for school-provided lunches. Parents in the new study also expressed an interest in children trying a wider range of foods.

The next most important consideration for parents was taking an environmentally sustainable approach to the food program, followed by integrating food education and healthy eating across the school day.

Many parents in our survey were also motivated by the idea all children would have access to the same meal, with 70% saying they valued the potential for equal and stigma-free food provision.

Parents would pay about $6 per day

Globally, national school meal programs vary in payment models, ranging from free to subsidised/means tested or fully paid by students and families.

Parents unsurprisingly preferred lower-cost options over higher-cost options. But they also showed a willingness to pay more for programs that focused on food quality, sustainability and links to the curriculum – not just filling bellies.

Parents in our study currently spent around A$6 per day on lunchboxes (most spent between $4–10). They said they were happy to pay a similar amount for a school-provided lunch.

Most were even willing to pay a little more to subsidise lunches for others to ensure all children receive a meal or larger portions for older children.

Why this matters

Packing lunchboxes can be a real slog, putting lots of pressure on families.




Read more:
Swap muesli bars for homemade popcorn: 5 ways to pack a lower-waste lunch box


In another study we did, parents have talked openly about their “lunchbox guilt”. Parents have to pack lunchboxes as they balance busy work and family lives, children’s preferences and social expectations of “what’s OK to send to school”.

We also know many kids end up at school with food that is not healthy.

Our research suggests Australian parents are willing to invest in a different approach to school food. By highlighting what matters most to them – food quality – we get an important insight into what is more likely to make new programs successful and sustainable.

These results give policymakers valuable guidance on what families consider essential for a school-provided meal program.

The Conversation

Brittany Johnson receives funding from The Hospital Research Foundation Group, the Australian Research Council (LP240200796) and The Channel 7 Children’s Research Foundation for a project that involves School Food Matters (Tasmania) and The School Food Project (NSW) as partner organisations.

Alexandra Manson has received funding from the Australian government Research Training Program Scholarship and the King and Amy O’Malley Trust Postgraduate Research Scholarship, and receives funding from the Heart Foundation South Australian Kick Start Fellowship.

Rebecca Golley receives funding from The Australian Research Council (LP240200796) and The Channel 7 Children’s Research Foundation for a project that involves School Food Matters (Tasmania) and The School Food Project (NSW) as partner organisations.

ref. How much would you pay for school to provide your child with lunch every day? – https://theconversation.com/how-much-would-you-pay-for-school-to-provide-your-child-with-lunch-every-day-274513

Your sense of self is deeply tied to your memory – here’s how

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Shane Rogers, Senior Lecturer in Psychology, Edith Cowan University

You might say you have a “bad memory” because you don’t remember what cake you had at your last birthday party or the plot of a movie you watched last month. On the other hand, you might precisely recall the surface temperature of the Sun any time when asked.

So, is your memory bad, or just fine? Memory is at the very heart of who we are, but it’s surprisingly complex once we start looking at how it all fits together.

In fact, there’s more than one type of memory, and this determines how we recall certain facts about the world and ourselves.

How do we classify memory?

Cognitive psychologists distinguish between declarative memory and non-declarative memory. Non-declarative memories are expressed without conscious recollection, such as skills and habits like typing on a keyboard or riding a bike.

But memories you’re consciously aware of are declarative – you know your name, you know what year it is, and you know there is mustard in the fridge because you put it there.

However, not all of our memories are stored in the same way, nor in the same place in our brains. Declarative memory can be further broken down into semantic memory and episodic memory.

Semantic memory refers to general knowledge about the world. For example, knowing that cats are mammals.

Episodic memory refers to episodes of your life, typically with elements of “what”, “where” and “when”. For example, I remember cuddling my pet cat (what) in my home office (where) just before sitting down to write this article (when).

A sense of self-awareness is strongly involved in episodic memory. It’s the feeling of personally remembering.

For semantic memories, this sense is not as strong – you can have detached knowledge without the context of “how” and “when”. For instance, I know that Canberra is the capital city of Australia (semantic memory), yet I can’t remember specifically when and where I learnt this (episodic memory).

Lessons from amnesia

In the mid-20th century, famous case studies of amnesic patients were the early evidence of this distinction between semantic and episodic memory.

For example, Henry Molaison and Kent Cochrane both experienced brain damage that severely impacted their episodic memory abilities.

They couldn’t recall events from their lives, but knew many things about the world in general. In effect, their personal past had vanished, even though their general knowledge remained intact.

In one interview after the accident that caused his brain damage, Cochrane was able to describe how to change a flat tire in perfect detail – despite not remembering having ever done this task.

There have also been reports of cases of people whose ability to recall semantic memories is largely impaired, while their episodic memory abilities seem mostly fine. This is known as semantic dementia.

Your age affects how your memory works

Young children have both memory systems, but they develop at different rates. The capacity to form strong semantic memories comes first, while episodic memory takes longer.

In fact, true episodic memory ability may not fully develop until around the age of three or four years. This helps explain why you have scant memories of your earliest childhood. We gain greater self-awareness around the same age too.

While episodic memory ability develops more slowly in early life, it also declines more quickly in old age. On average, older adults tend to remember fewer episodic details compared to younger adults in memory recall assessments.

In older adults with more severe cognitive decline, such as dementia, the ability to recall episodic memories is typically much more affected, compared to semantic memories. For example, they might have difficulty remembering they had pasta for lunch the day before (episodic memory), while still having perfect knowledge of what pasta is (semantic memory).

Ultimately, it all works together

Brain imaging studies have actually revealed that overlapping areas of the brain are active when recalling both semantic and episodic types of memories. In a neurological sense, these two types of memory appear to have more similarities than differences.

In fact, some have suggested episodic and semantic memory might be better thought of as a continuum rather than as completely distinct memory systems. These days, researchers acknowledge memory recall in everyday life involves tight interaction between both types.

A major example of how you need both types to work together is autobiographical memory, also called personal semantics. This refers to personally relevant information about yourself.

Let’s say you call yourself “a good swimmer”. At first glance, this may appear to be a semantic memory – a fact without the how, why, or when. However, recall of such a personally relevant fact will likely also produce related recall of episodic experiences when you’ve been swimming.

All this is related to something known as semanticisation – the gradual transformation of episodic memories into semantic memories. As you can imagine, it challenges the distinction between semantic and episodic memory.

How our memories form over time.
Shane Rogers/The Conversation

Ultimately, how we remember shapes how we understand ourselves. Episodic memory allows us to mentally return to experiences that feel personally lived, while semantic memory provides the stable knowledge that binds those experiences into a coherent life story.

Over time, the boundary between the two softens as specific events are condensed into broader beliefs about who we are, what we value, and what we can do. Memory is not simply a storehouse of the past. It’s an active system that continually reshapes our sense of identity.

Shane Rogers does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Your sense of self is deeply tied to your memory – here’s how – https://theconversation.com/your-sense-of-self-is-deeply-tied-to-your-memory-heres-how-241261

Why is my migraine worse in summer?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lakshini Gunasekera, PhD Candidate in Neurology, Monash University

K8/Unsplash

For people with migraine, summer can be a double-edged sword. You may be able to relax more, sleep in, enjoy the sunshine, and spend time with family and friends.

But other factors – such as glare, heat, and changes to sleeping and diet – can make migraine attacks more likely or more severe.

Migraine is a disabling neurological disorder affecting 5 million Australians. In addition to a throbbing headache, it can cause hypersensitivity to light, sound, smells or movement.

Triggers for attacks vary from person to person and seasonal changes don’t affect everyone. But if you find your migraine attacks are worse or more likely in summer, knowing why can help you prepare.

The effect of hot weather

Normally when it is hot, you sweat more to regulate your core temperature. Your body becomes cooler when sweat evaporates off your body.

In summer when the air is hotter and there is more humidity, your brain’s hypothalamus causes blood vessels close to the skin to dilate so that heat can escape.

But people with migraine often have hypersensitive nerves and blood vessels. When blood vessels dilate in the heat, it can irritate nearby nerves and cause inflammation, which the migraine brain interprets as pain. This is due to the brain’s stress response, not an infection.

Dehydration

Sweating helps regulate your core body temperature, cooling you down as the sweat evaporates off your skin. But when the air is hot and humid, it’s harder for the sweat to evaporate and cool us down.

This can lead to dehydration – another potent trigger.

Why is dehydration so bad?

Imagine your brain like a sponge that is floating in spinal fluid within your skull. If you are dehydrated, the brain shrinks like a dry sponge and pulls on the attachments to the skull, which can trigger pain.

If you are well hydrated, the brain can expand to fill the space within the skull so there is less “pulling” and therefore less pain.

Sensitivity to light

For many people with migraine, glare is more than a minor annoyance – bright lights and reflection can cause pain and trigger attacks.

When light enters the back of the eye, special cells (retinal ganglion cells) process this signal and send messages to the brain’s sensory centre (the thalamus).

In migraine, these sensory pain pathways involving the thalamus are hypersensitive. Any extra light – or flickering or moving lights – is perceived as pain, rather than merely brightness, and can also lead to dizziness.

Glare also reduces the contrast of incoming light signals, so the brain’s visual centre (the visual cortex) needs to work extra hard to process signals. Certain wavelengths can also be harder to process (including blue and fluorescent light, or sunlight reflecting off screens). This can cause pain.

Disrupted routines

The migraine brain does not like change. But longer days in summer can mean changes to our routines.

Changes that might trigger a migraine include sleeping at inconsistent times on holidays, skipping or delaying meals, or changes in stress levels. This means new stress, increased stress – or even relaxing after a stressful period.

Changes in sensory information that the brain processes can also worsen migraine. This may include new smells (such as sunscreen or insect repellent), louder noises (excited children on holidays), and brighter light or glare.

Even exercising more than usual may be a trigger for some people.

Thunderstorms

Pollen, humidity and thunderstorms trigger allergy flares in people with asthma, hayfever and eczema. This makes the immune system release chemicals called histamine, which can trigger migraine attacks in some people.

Asthma and allergy action plans are doubly important for wellbeing in this group.

Sudden changes in air pressure (in aeroplanes and during storms) can also be a strong trigger for some people. Your friend who says they can predict the weather by their migraine symptoms may be right.

Know your triggers

Regardless of the season, being prepared is the key.

Keep a diary of your headache days and impacts of weather (temperature, humidity, glare) or activities (for example, how much you’re socialising or exercising). Headache neurologists can use this data to give you a targeted migraine plan.

In summer, you can also:

  • plan outings for cooler days of the week or times of day

  • limit sun and pack a hat and sunglasses. Lenses that are polarised or FL41-tinted may help beat glare

  • carry water bottles and electrolyte-rich fluids to avoid dehydration

  • set phone alarms so that you go to bed and wake up at consistent times

  • try to maintain regular balanced meals, without excess sugar, alcohol and processed foods.

Taking care of your medication

It’s also important to plan and correctly store your migraine medication, especially if you’re going on a trip. You should:

  • take acute migraine medications with you and make sure they’re up-to-date

  • check your scripts are current and you have repeats left

  • protect medications from heat. Don’t store them in the glovebox or bag in the sun for long periods. Injectable medications should be stored in the fridge below 4°C until use.

When travelling, you may need to adjust timing of doses or use a cooler bag to keep medication cool.

If you think you’re sensitive to seasonal changes, it’s best to talk to your neurologist about a migraine management plan. This can help you identify and manage key triggers and prevent and treat acute attacks.

Dr Lakshini Gunasekera receives funding from the Victorian Government Catalyst grant program to investigate hormonal therapies for menstrual migraine.

Dr Elspeth Hutton works for Alfred Health, is the President of the Australian & New Zealand Headache Society and has collaborated with Migraine and Headache Australia and Migraine Australia. She has previously served on advisory boards for Abbvie, TEVA, Lundbeck and Novartis, and received funding for an investigator-led study from Ipsen, as well as engaging in industry-sponsored clinical trials. She receives no current funding outside of salary.

ref. Why is my migraine worse in summer? – https://theconversation.com/why-is-my-migraine-worse-in-summer-268088

Fossil fuels are doomed – and Trump can’t save them

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Wesley Morgan, Research Associate, Institute for Climate Risk and Response, UNSW Sydney

The past three years have been the world’s hottest on record. In 2025, Earth was 1.44°C warmer than the long-term average, perilously close to breaching the Paris Agreement goal of 1.5°C.

This warming is fuelling Australia’s current record-breaking heatwave. Other consequences are visible globally, from Iran’s crippling drought to catastrophic wildfires and unprecedented floods in the United States to deadly cyclones hitting southern Asia.

We know what to do to tackle the climate crisis: replace fossil fuels with clean energy technologies such as solar, wind, electric vehicles and batteries. We are well on our way. Globally, the power produced by renewables overtook coal last year.

Petrostates such as Saudi Arabia and the US have made trillions from oil and gas. Now they are fighting a rearguard action to prolong fossil fuels. The US is pushing European nations to buy its gas, for instance.

But most countries have seen the writing on the wall. In November, the COP31 climate talks in Turkey are expected to deliver a global roadmap away from fossil fuels. Dozens of countries will meet in Colombia in April to fast-track the transition. The road ahead is bumpy. But the end of fossil fuels may finally be coming into view.

No holding back clean energy

There’s no one trying harder to slow the clean energy transition than US president Donald Trump. During his bid to return to the White House, Trump pressed oil executives for US$1 billion (A$1.4 bn) in campaign finance, promising a windfall in return.

In 2025, he increased subsidies for fossil fuel producers, weakened environmental laws, gutted Biden-era support for clean energy and moved to block clean energy projects, even some near completion. The US is now one of the world’s biggest exporters of liquefied natural gas (LNG) and oil.

But clean energy growth has proved difficult to kill. Despite Trump’s efforts, domestic solar generation is still expected to grow 46% in the next two years while electricity output from fossil fuel plants falls.

Trump is betting fossil fuels are the key to future American power. He made no secret of the fact the US military raid on Venezuela earlier this month was aimed at increasing oil production. He has implored US oil companies to invest billions to revive the country’s battered oil infrastructure. The response was lukewarm. ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods said Venezuela was “uninvestable”.

Developing Venezuela’s oil reserves assumes there will be demand for decades to come. But the world now faces an oversupply of oil, even as sales of electric vehicles grow strongly in many countries. Last month, battery electric vehicles outsold petrol cars for the first time in Europe.

Electrostates rising

While the US doubles down on 20th century fossil fuels, China is betting on an electric 21st century. It is emerging as the first electrostate, dominating production and export of solar, wind, batteries and EVs. China is now the world’s biggest car exporter. Most new Chinese cars are powered by batteries, not oil.

China’s manufacturing might has driven down the price of batteries, the main cost of EVs. As EVs get cheaper, emerging economies are finding they can leapfrog fossil fuels and move straight to solar panels and EVs – even if the national power grid is limited or unreliable.

Commodity price trends show surging global demand for copper, silver and other metals needed for mass electrification. Worldwide, investment in clean energy technologies first overtook fossil fuel investment ten years ago. In 2025, clean investment was more than double the investment in coal, oil and gas. Clean energy is where the world is headed, whether Trump likes it or not.

China, India and Pakistan are rapidly making the shift to renewable power. Developing nations from Nepal to Ethiopia are taking up electric transport to slash the cost of importing fossil fuels.

China dominates production of clean energy technologies such as solar, wind, batteries and EVs.
CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images

A new roadmap away from fossil fuels

This week, the US formally withdrew from the Paris Agreement. But no other country has followed.

For decades, the COP talks have focused on “cutting emissions” without dealing directly with the use of coal, oil and gas. But at the 2023 talks, nearly 200 countries agreed to “transition away from fossil fuels”.

At last year’s COP30 talks, host nation Brazil proposed a roadmap to phase out fossil fuels. More than 80 countries backed the idea, including Australia, but pushback from Saudi Arabia and Russia kept it out of the final outcomes.

In response, Brazil is working to develop a roadmap for phasing out fossil fuels. This – or something similar – may be formally adopted at the next climate talks in November.

While COP31 will be held in Turkey, Australian climate minister Chris Bowen will have a key role as “President of Negotiations” and will steer global discussion ahead of the summit.

Bowen plans to lobby petrostates to support a managed shift away from fossil fuels, drawing on Australia’s experience as a major exporter of coal and LNG facing its own transition. Korea – Australia’s third largest market for thermal coal – will retire its entire coal fleet by 2040.

Government modelling suggests Australia’s coal and gas exports could plummet 50% in value in five years as global demand falls. Independent modelling suggests the decline for coal could happen even faster if countries meet their climate targets. Policymakers must plan to manage this transition.

Coalitions of the willing?

Frustrated by slow progress, a coalition of nations is separately discussing how to phase out fossil fuels. The first conference will take place in April in Colombia. Here, delegates will discuss how to wind down fossil fuels while protecting workers and financial systems. Some nations want to negotiate a standalone treaty to manage the phase-out. Conference outcomes will also feed back into the UN climate talks.

Pacific island nations aim to be the world’s first 100% renewable region. Ahead of COP31, Australia and island nations will meet to progress this.

Progress is happening

In an ideal world, nations would rapidly tackle the existential threat of climate change together. We don’t live in that world. But it may not matter.

The shift to clean electric options has its own momentum. The question is whether the shift away from coal, oil and gas will be orderly – or chaotic.

Wesley Morgan is a fellow of the Climate Council of Australia

ref. Fossil fuels are doomed – and Trump can’t save them – https://theconversation.com/fossil-fuels-are-doomed-and-trump-cant-save-them-273798

How much would you pay for school to provide your child with lunch everyday?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brittany Johnson, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Caring Futures Institute, Flinders University

Peter Cade/Getty Images

Most Australian children bring their lunch to school through a “lunchbox system”. But there is a growing push for schools to provide students with lunch.

Despite decades of efforts to promote better nutrition, it is estimated nearly half (44%) of the foods Australian children eat at school are energy-dense and nutrient-poor (or “discretionary foods”). This is alarming as our previous research with children aged nine to eleven shows an association between a poor diet and lower NAPLAN scores.

School programs providing students with a nutritious lunch are common around the world. Research shows school-provided lunches can increase social equity and improve nutritional, health and learning outcomes.

Pilot school lunch programs have begun in Australia, including Tasmania, New South Wales and Victoria.

But wider school lunch programs would be a significant change to how children access food at school in Australia.

In our new research, we look at what parents think about school lunch programs. If school lunch programs are going to work in Australia, families’ support will be crucial.

Our research

In our study, we surveyed almost 400 parents of primary school students across Australia, to seek their views about school lunch programs. We recruited parents through paid social media advertisements. They came from a range of backgrounds and household incomes.

Based on different school food programs in the United Kingdom, France, Sweden and Australia, we tested six key components of a school-provided lunch model:

  • cost

  • nutrition and quality

  • environmental sustainability

  • menu options

  • access (should programs be optional or provided to all students regardless of their background)

  • a whole-school approach (is the lunch program integrated with classroom learning and other school messaging).

We also asked parents how much they would be willing to pay for different lunch approaches.

Most parents are keen on school lunch programs

We found 93% of parents surveyed were interested in school-provided lunches.

Parents told us nutrition and food quality was the key driver of their interest in a school lunch program. It was also the most important consideration when designing a school program.

Menu variety was the next most important consideration, with a strong preference for having two meal options. This was similar to our previous findings, which show parents and children value choice for school-provided lunches. Parents in the new study also expressed an interest in children trying a wider range of foods.

The next most important consideration for parents was taking an environmentally sustainable approach to the food program, followed by integrating food education and healthy eating across the school day.

Many parents in our survey were also motivated by the idea all children would have access to the same meal, with 70% saying they valued the potential for equal and stigma-free food provision.

Parents would pay about $6 per day

Globally, national school meal programs vary in payment models, ranging from free to subsidised/means tested or fully paid by students and families.

Parents unsurprisingly preferred lower-cost options over higher-cost options. But they also showed a willingness to pay more for programs that focused on food quality, sustainability and links to the curriculum – not just filling bellies.

Parents in our study currently spent around A$6 per day on lunchboxes (most spent between $4–10). They said they were happy to pay a similar amount for a school-provided lunch.

Most were even willing to pay a little more to subsidise lunches for others to ensure all children receive a meal or larger portions for older children.

Why this matters

Packing lunchboxes can be a real slog, putting lots of pressure on families.




Read more:
Swap muesli bars for homemade popcorn: 5 ways to pack a lower-waste lunch box


In another study we did, parents have talked openly about their “lunchbox guilt”. Parents have to pack lunchboxes as they balance busy work and family lives, children’s preferences and social expectations of “what’s OK to send to school”.

We also know many kids end up at school with food that is not healthy.

Our research suggests Australian parents are willing to invest in a different approach to school food. By highlighting what matters most to them – food quality – we get an important insight into what is more likely to make new programs successful and sustainable.

These results give policymakers valuable guidance on what families consider essential for a school-provided meal program.

Brittany Johnson receives funding from The Hospital Research Foundation Group, the Australian Research Council (LP240200796) and The Channel 7 Children’s Research Foundation for a project that involves School Food Matters (Tasmania) and The School Food Project (NSW) as partner organisations.

Alexandra Manson has received funding from the Australian government Research Training Program Scholarship and the King and Amy O’Malley Trust Postgraduate Research Scholarship, and receives funding from the Heart Foundation South Australian Kick Start Fellowship.

Rebecca Golley receives funding from The Australian Research Council (LP240200796) and The Channel 7 Children’s Research Foundation for a project that involves School Food Matters (Tasmania) and The School Food Project (NSW) as partner organisations.

ref. How much would you pay for school to provide your child with lunch everyday? – https://theconversation.com/how-much-would-you-pay-for-school-to-provide-your-child-with-lunch-everyday-274513

Antihero Marty Supreme is sociopathic in his pursuit of glory. Why do we want him to win?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Oscar Bloomfield, PhD Candidate in Film Studies, Deakin University

A24

Marty Supreme is a frenetic tale inspired by Marty Reisman, the charismatic American table tennis champion of the 1950s.

Charged by Timothée Chalamet’s electric lead performance – alongside a stellar supporting cast (including Gwyneth Paltrow), and director Josh Safdie’s signature, anxiety-inducing aesthetic – the film captures a young man’s all-or-nothing quest for greatness.

Marty Mauser is a morally ambiguous protagonist with a sociopathic, self-obsessed pursuit of glory. But Safdie invites the audience to champion his quest. In this, Marty emerges as a particularly compelling entry into Hollywood’s longstanding tradition of unlikable heroes.

Marty follows in the footsteps of other Safdie antiheroes – the reckless Howard Retnar (Adam Sandler) of Uncut Gems (2019) and the manipulative Connie Nikas (Robert Pattinson) of Good Time (2017). His do-or-die attitude stems from the ambition to escape his circumstances.

A Jewish kid from New York’s Lower East Side, he works at his uncle’s shoe store in order to fund his global table tennis ambitions. Refusing to listen to those around him, Marty seems aware that his self-delusion and performativity will ultimately propel him to success.

Marty compulsively lies, commits petty theft and willingly disregards the wellbeing of those close to him to fulfil what he believes to be his destiny.

Despite his problematic moral compass, Safdie’s protagonist ultimately wins over the audience’s support.

The Hollywood antihero

Hollywood is no stranger to popular antiheroes, from Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver (1976) to Arthur Fleck in Joker (2019). The Safdie brothers focus on recognisably ordinary characters caught in the chaos of their everyday existence.

Marty Supreme is Josh Safdie’s first solo directorial project since parting ways with his brother Benny. The pair have long been fascinated with figures who, despite their moral shortcomings, are inherently human.

The signature Safdie arc appeared in their indie film Daddy Longlegs (2009). Loosely based on Josh and Benny’s own experiences with their divorced father, the film crafts an honest, sympathetic portrait of a highly irresponsible (yet loving) parent trying to do his best.

In an emblematic action, Lenny (Ronald Bronstein) gives one of his sons a sleeping pill in order to allow him to return to his job at a local cinema. The misguided and neglectful act is still shown as a genuine attempt to keep his son safe and out of harm’s way.

Lenny’s traits of misdirected affection are observed throughout the Safdie protagonists.

Following an unsuccessful robbery, Good Time’s Connie frantically attempts to break his developmentally disabled brother, Nicky (Benny Safdie), out of prison and a psychiatric facility.

In Uncut Gems, Howard is driven by greed and lust but demonstrates a genuine care for his family, repeatedly insisting his ambitions are guided by the need to provide for them.

Like Lenny, Howard and Connie, Marty has the capacity to do what is right and care for those he loves. But his egotistical, self-absorbed quest to gain status ultimately clouds his ability to comprehend the consequences of his actions.

The universality of struggle

How does Josh Safdie succeed in creating a protagonist who – despite lying that his mother died during childbirth and neglecting his pregnant girlfriend – nonetheless wins the audience’s support?

Marty’s championing is undoubtedly in part due to Chalamet’s star-image and onscreen charisma. And his quest for greatness depicts the triumphant tale of a figure who, against all odds, continues to pursue his dreams with obsessive belief.

At its core, Marty Supreme is a stylised, high-octane reworking of the familiar “David versus Goliath” narrative.

Here, “Goliath” evokes both the American Dream and the Immigrant Dream, uphill battles where the odds are stacked against the individual.

This idea is prominent across other Safdie brothers films. In Good Time, “Goliath” is the criminal justice system, shown as a particularly dehumanising institutional structure for marginalised individuals. In Heaven Knows What (2014) – a gritty tale based on Arielle Holmes’s autobiography of addiction, love and struggle – substance dependency is presented as the ultimate obstacle.

Marty’s ambitions of table tennis stardom are neither recognised nor respected by those around him. This drives him to go to greater lengths in order to fund his career.

While his extreme measures may be unsympathetic – and perhaps unforgivable – Marty’s fundamental desire to transcend his circumstances remains relatable.

Marty’s ambitions of table tennis stardom are neither recognised nor respected by those around him.
A24

Within the film’s spiralling chain of events, Marty Supreme captures the hardship of pursuing a dream only you recognise.

Marty is neither one-dimensional nor simplistic. Rather, the film allows his humanity to surface throughout his self-absorbed and destructive journey.

Marty’s unrelenting commitment to his dream catalyses his moral failing. But he is nonetheless a figure capable of tenderness. Far from a role model, Marty is a complex character. Despite being capable of caring for those he loves, he blindly priorities the fierce pursuit of his dreams.

Marty’s antihero persona reflects not only the lengths required to realise one’s aspirations, but also the consequences of pursuing those dreams at any cost.

While Marty Supreme dramatises the egotistical pursuit of its flawed protagonist, it ultimately explores the universal ambition to dream big – and questions what is worth sacrificing in order to achieve success.

Oscar Bloomfield does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Antihero Marty Supreme is sociopathic in his pursuit of glory. Why do we want him to win? – https://theconversation.com/antihero-marty-supreme-is-sociopathic-in-his-pursuit-of-glory-why-do-we-want-him-to-win-274418

Man critically injured after overnight assault in Hamilton

Source: Radio New Zealand

The man was taken to hospital where he remained in a critical condition. (File photo) RNZ / Richard Tindiller

A man has been critically injured in an assault in Hamilton overnight.

Detective Sergeant Johnathon O’Byrne said the man was found by police on Avalon Drive at 2.40am on Thursday and he had significant injuries consistent with an assault.

The man was taken to hospital where he remained in a critical condition.

O’Byrne said police were investigating a “violent incident” they believed was linked a a property on Lyon St at 12am.

Police remained at the Lyon St house, guarding the property and O’Byrne said residents could expect to see a police presence in the area while the investigation continued.

O’Byrne asked anyone with information to come forward and get in touch with police via 105, quoting file number 260129/1915.

Information could also be provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

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Concern business costs may spiral in wake of competition law reforms

Source: Radio New Zealand

File pic 123RF

The unintended consequences of proposed changes to competition law could add unnecessary cost to mergers and acquisitions, while undermining investor confidence, a prominent law firm says.

Chapman Tripp said some of the changes to the Commerce (Promoting Competition and Other Matters) Amendment Bill were positive, but others were problematic.

“Setting aside the several changes that we think have the potential to be really positive, for the ones we have concerns about, there are probably two categories,” Chapman Tripp competition and antitrust partner Lucy Cooper said.

“One is that they will add unnecessary uncertainty, time and cost to the Commerce Commission processes.

“And the other one . . . is the Commerce Commission will get a lot more discretion or power without solid process protections, or the ability to really scrutinise its work.

“I don’t intend that to be a criticism of the current Commission at all. It’s more that in general, as you know, proper process is absolutely critical to making sure we can see that the service we are getting from the Commerce Commission is robust and fair.”

She said a specific concern dealt with Commission’s ability to retroactively take action against a series of acquisitions that would, in hindsight, be found to have a cumulative effect of lessening competition.

“The focus should remain on the lawfulness of the marginal transaction, rather than allowing the Commission to retrospectively impugn earlier transactions that would otherwise be lawful if considered in isolation.

“Allowing the Commission to treat a sequence of separate transactions as a single transaction and find them all unlawful on the basis of their combined effect could also undermine investor confidence.”

Cooper said the Commission had an existing power to block a transaction, when it had potential to put a company or organisation in the position of becoming a dominant player in a particular market.

“The Commission already enforces against serial acquisitions, as demonstrated by successful action against Wilson Parking in local parking markets. We see no evidence that the Commission is unable to intervene in serial acquisitions.”

Chapman Tripp set out five factors of concern that “may, without limitation, be relevant” in determining whether a person had a substantial degree of influence.

The five factors were:

  • Shareholding or voting rights that provide the ability to influence key decisions of the other person
  • The right to appoint or remove directors or key executives of the other person
  • Veto powers over strategic decisions of the other person
  • Financial arrangements that create economic dependency on the part of the other person and,
  • Contractual agreements, informal arrangements, or historical patterns of deference.
  • [EL]

    Cooper said Chapman Tripp would be setting out its concerns in a submission to the Parliamentary Select Committee, with submissions closing on 4 February.

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Auckland homeowners facing further flood risk head to court

Source: Radio New Zealand

Damage from the Auckland Anniversary Weekend floods, from top left: Derek Judge’s Swanson home was flooded by the rapidly rising Waimoko Stream; houses in Swanson sit abandoned and vandalised in November; Andrew Marshall’s red-stricken house in Swanson is still being hit by vandals a year on from the floods; Julie Armstrong’s Northcote home was badly damaged by the flood waters. RNZ and supplied

Three years since Auckland was hit by double storms that took lives and displaced hundreds, some homeowners facing ongoing flood risk are heading to court.

They either want a buyout or stormwater problems fixed.

Auckland Council has deemed 1038 homes too risky to live in and bought them, with another 50 agreements expected to be settled.

West Auckland is Flooding spokesperson Lyall Carter said the $1.2 billion scheme offered jointly by the council and government worked for the majority, but not everyone.

“There’s still a number of people that are in challenging circumstances and I think that is to be expected to an extent.”

West Auckland is Flooding spokesperson Lyall Carter. RNZ / Kate Newton

The buyout scheme is wrapping up and some people whose homes are considered safe to live in have watched as neighbours houses are removed.

“They’re the forgotten people in this story, the ones that didn’t get bought out that have to live with the dread of flooding happening again and being re-traumatised all over again, having to live with their kids on that street while people pull down houses,” Carter said.

Among them are Brendon and Stephanie Deacon whose house in Huapai is one of the last standing in their cul-de-sac – nine were bought out.

Lawyer Grant Shand is representing them in a legal claim filed against Auckland Council – asking to be bought out.

“The Deacon judicial review proceeding, where they’re the category one house on the street and everyone else essentially is category three, hopefully that gets a hearing and gets resolved this year,” Shand said.

“Hopefully that also brings out other people who can see that they’re in the same position and may well have a claim also.”

Stephanie and Brendon Deacon’s house in Huapai is one of the last standing in their cul-de-sac. RNZ / Luka Forman

He said there were also homeowners in Hawke’s Bay who may bring claims related to their regional buyout scheme to court.

Shand expected there were others who could have cases against developers or councils.

“There probably are people who had damage, loss in the floods who may well have claims against people for the floodings themselves, such as bad drainage, bad management of the water in the area. They may well come out of the woodwork.”

Such as Kumeū homeowner Theresa Smith, whom he was representing in legal action filed against Auckland Council, Auckland Transport and a developer.

She said her property had become an overland flow path for stormwater due to changes in the road and footpath from a nearby development.

“I’m just getting no resolution from the council and the fact that they are devaluing our property by putting an overland flow path on it, when they have allowed infra to go in that is a channel for the water to be diverted onto our property.”

Smith was worried it could get worse.

“These overland flowpaths do devalue people’s properties and also it’s almost like a licence to keep diverting water as you progressively develop the area.”

Lawyer Grant Shand is representing some families asking to be bought out. Nick Monro

Meanwhile, the council had four major flood resilience projects underway, including two in Māngere due to be completed this year.

It had also confirmed the first stage of a somewhat controversial project to reduce flooding in Wairau, restore wetlands at AF Thomas Park while still allowing for golf.

Group recovery manager Mace Ward said this year marked a transition for the recovery programme.

“We’re now at the tail end of a huge recovery programme, with thousands of individual repair and recovery initiatives delivered across the region by Auckland Council group,” he said.

“Some of the hardest work hasn’t been the physically visible stuff, it’s been supporting Aucklanders to make incredibly difficult decisions about their future.”

The recovery office would deliver an overview of lessons learned mid-year, covering its advice for recovery planning.

As for the vacant plots left from houses bought and removed in Auckland, Ward said it would take years to decide the long-term use for that land due to the complexity of safety issues.

Lyall Carter said after all they had been through, communities needed a say.

“What happens with that land, the voice of the people has been missing from decisions especially in west Auckland for a long time when it comes to these areas that have been impacted by flooding. Their voices need to be paramount in what happens to that land that is left.”

He was concerned the city’s leaders had not learned to future-proof for flooding and natural hazards.

“We’ve had areas that have been fast-tracked to be built in areas we know flood, why? We have that on one hand and on the other hand there’ll be no more bail outs. Who’s responsible?”

Meanwhile, a lengthy inquest looking into the 19 storm-related fatalities in 2023 nationwide continues in February.

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Cop-turned-author drops his fake pen name

Source: Radio New Zealand

For his latest novel, Softly Calls the Devil, Chris Blake has stepped out from behind the pseudonym he used for his debut.

He published The Sound of Her Voice – a double finalist in the 2018 Ngaio Marsh Awards – as Nathan Blackwell, a name he adopted to keep his writing separate from his role managing behavioural analysts and psychologists for the New Zealand Police.

The decision was driven by self-doubt and fear, Blake tells Nine to Noon.

The Sound of Her Voice by Nathan Blackwell.

Supplied / Orion

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Businesses in Mount Maunganui reopen, thoughts remain with landslide victims

Source: Radio New Zealand

Colin McGonagle, front left, with friends at Side Track cafe in Mount Maunganui. RNZ / Lauren Crimp

There’s been a small glimmer of positivity in Mount Maunganui with part of the cordon near Mauao relaxed, allowing about a dozen businesses to reopen six days after the deadly landslide.

But just a few hundred metres around the corner, the recovery effort to find those buried continues – and that continues to weigh heavily on locals’ hearts.

By 7am on Wednesday, a table of 20 had already parked up at Side Track cafe on Marine Parade which has now reopened to pedestrians.

Colin McGonagle was one of them.

“This group of people here, they call us regulars, we’re almost family, we come down here every morning … we trickle in, we make up our table, it’s got the big reserved on it, they know who we are.”

The cordon in Mount Maunganui following the deadly landslide is covered in tributes for the people who lost their lives. RNZ / Lauren Crimp

McGonagle was emotional about the return to the daily routine he’s held since 1999. But there was something missing – the walk around or up the maunga, which usually precedes the coffee.

“It’s our church, it’s our religious moment here, for people it’s their healing … Maree down there, she gets to the top, she always talks to her dad who’s passed. r4

“They’ve all got stories and unfortunately, the DNA of us is a little bit changed.”

Through tears, McGonagle said the six people killed and their families would be in their hearts forever.

“We’ll never forget them.”

Side Track cafe owner Mike Waghorn had too put his business closure into perspective.

“We’ve just lost some business, but people have lost lives.”

But he was still worried about the future of his cafe, and being able to pay his staff.

Side Track cafe owner Mike Waghorn. RNZ / Lauren Crimp

The money he makes in January helps the cafe survive through winter, and he’s not expecting nearly as many patrons now.

“All our business comes from the hot pools, the campground, the surf club, walking around the Mount.

“All that’s gone now, and looks like it’s gone for the rest of the year at least.”

A few doors down, Coffee Club owner Janet Kim – who’s already had a staff member resign, anticipating the lack of hours – wanted Tauranga City Council to step up.

Coffee Club owner Janet Kim. RNZ / Lauren Crimp

“Somebody [has] to be brave, to make a decision, and just release the funds … helping shop owners pay the staff,” she said.

Mayor Mahé Drysdale said the council was considering how it might support affected businesses, and would be meeting with them to discuss that.

Locals have committed to backing them, too.

Customers Stacey Jones and Emily Bailey were enjoying their morning cuppa at Mount Break Cafe after a bike ride, which is part of their regular routine.

“For the whole community, it’s just a horribly sad time … just to come and support these guys, it means a lot to us. [It’s a] special place for all of us,” Bailey said.

“I just feel really grateful to be able to come down, and then just really happy for the vendors that they can reopen, big smile on his face this morning … it’s been a tough time,” Jones said.

RNZ / Lauren Crimp

The community was also doing its best to be there for those who lost loved ones in the landslide.

The pile of flowers at the cordon stretches wider and deeper each day, and pieces of plywood are crammed with condolences.

One reads: “There are no words, just love, to heal your heartbreak.”

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US agents involved in Minneapolis shooting placed on leave – reports

Source: Radio New Zealand

A photo of Alex Pretti is displayed at a makeshift memorial in his honor in the area where he was shot dead by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on January 26, 2026. AFP / OCTAVIO JONES

At least two federal agents who were involved in Saturday’s fatal shooting of a US citizen in Minneapolis have been placed on administrative leave, two US media outlets say.

The Department of Homeland Security said the two immigration agents who discharged their weapons during the deadly encounter with Alex Pretti were put on leave as part of standard procedures, Fox News reported on Wednesday (Thursday NZT).

MS NOW earlier reported that agents involved in the shooting of Pretti were being put on leave, citing an unnamed source.

Representatives for DHS could not be immediately reached to confirm the reports.

Immigration agents on Saturday fired multiple shots at Pretti, an ICU nurse at a hospital for veterans. His death was the second fatal encounter between Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and US citizens in Minnesota this month, sparked a national uproar.

US Customs and Border Protection has said it is reviewing the shooting.

More to come…

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Fire and Emergency faces tough questions over decision to ground its watercraft

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ngāruawāhia volunteer fire station’s jet skis assist police with a water rescue during Cyclone Hale in 2023. Supplied

Fire and Emergency New Zealand (FENZ) faced tough questioning at the Governance and Administration Select Committee in Parliament on Wednesday, much of it focused on the organisation’s banning of all powered watercraft used by local fire stations during water emergencies.

FENZ chief executive Kerry Gregory acknowledged that the decision not to deliver a service was tough on communities, but said the organisation had to prioritise what capabilities they were willing and able to invest in.

He also said that FENZ was trying to work with the local councils, iwi and other community groups in Waikato to see if the Ngāruawāhia and Huntly rescue vessels could be run by someone else.

“There’s no doubt that those vessels add value into the community, the question is whether it’s Fire and Emergency’s [job] to allocate resource and financial impact into there to build that capability or whether that sits somewhere else in the community,” Gregory said.

He said it would cost millions to build that capability for New Zealand.

Waikato MP Tim van de Molen, who was on the committee, pushed back against this.

He said the brigades had built their own capability and had never asked FENZ for financial support or resources.

“In this instance we are not asking you to spend millions of dollars. The community fund-raised for the boat themselves, it funded all their own training requirements, they get donations to fund the fuel for it, it’s zero cost on FENZ to operate that and it has been operating safely for decades, why will you not let it continue?” van de Molen asked.

He suggested that FENZ was putting a checklist ahead of the safety of the community.

Kerry Gregory acknowledged that the decision not to deliver a service was tough on communities. File picture. RNZ

Gregory rejected that assessment.

“It’s not a checklist, it’s a responsibility of the organisation and we take that very seriously, the safety of our people, because they work in such dangerous situations,” he said.

FENZ deputy national commander Megan Stiffler told the committee she had international recognition for swift water rescue work. She suggested that the vessels used by Ngāruawāhia and Huntly volunteer fire stations were unsuitable.

“The motorised watercraft that I have seen you would never build in a swift water or water rescue programme of work,” she said.

Instead, she said FENZ supplied unmotorized watercraft to provide water rescue. This included land-based rescue where firefighters might throw a bag to someone in the water for them to grab, or paddled inflatables which can travel over shallow water.

Gregory said that what was offered by local stations was a legacy of a time before urban and rural fire services where unified under a new funding model and legislation in 2017.

“Eight years in it’s the right time to look at our organisation and say ‘are we fit-for-purpose, are we right-sized, where do we need to invest, where do we need to divest in and how to we make sure we are sustainable as an organisation going forward so that we can support New Zealanders’ so that’s what we are focused on,” he told the committee.

Van de Molen did not seem to accept this when it came to the grounding of Ngāruawāhia and Huntly’s watercraft.

“They’re both volunteer brigades, they have had for several decades motorized water response capabilities, they have had sign-off for that from the CEO of FENZ post-merger, they have compliance certificates from Maritime NZ to operate that, they have skipper courses for the personnel that operate that, they have MOSS system [Maritime Operator Safety System] – have a certificate of compliance for that – so I’m interested in what has changed?” he asked Stiffler.

She replied that FENZ had to authorize and task the crews for rescue and they would not be building that capability.

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Babyboomers and middle-aged New Zealanders struggle with UK’s new border rules

Source: Radio New Zealand

Older New Zealanders with British heritage are grappling with border rule changes. 123RF

Older New Zealanders with British heritage are grappling with border rule changes – and question marks over citizenship – as they prepare for visits to see relatives in the United Kingdom.

UK migrants have discovered they need to get British passports to go on holiday to Britain, or to visit elderly parents and grandparents, from the end of next month.

Many families emigrated in the post-war period. Their children can be citizens by descent but others will not because of when and where they were born, said British High Commissioner Iona Thomas on Wednesday.

Travellers should check online if they are uncertain about their citizenship or their children’s, she added.

Younger generations of UK migrants have discovered they may need to get British passports for their families, too. Citizens can instead get a certificate of entitlement, but that is more expensive than buying a UK passport.

Wellington-based Thomas said the change to ETAs and passport rules from 25 February is for security reasons. “I do understand that travelling can be very stressful and making arrangements for travel can be difficult. And so I am sorry that people are finding these changes difficult but it is important that people travel with the right documentation all the time.”

British High Commissioner to New Zealand Iona Thomas (L) and Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro in 2022. Supplied

In the numbers

The High Commissioner did not say whether demand for passports had risen, what processing timeframes now looked like, or who was classed as a citizen.

The UK’s Office for National Statistics figures from its 2021 census showed New Zealanders were the most likely migrants in the UK to have dual citizenship (49.2 percent), ahead of South Africa (49.0 percent) and Australia (47.4 percent).

The proportion of dual citizenship among non-UK-born other passport holders has increased since 2011.

In 2008, the United Kingdom’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) estimated the country’s diaspora population, finding that at least 80 percent of New Zealanders had some British ancestry – higher even than Australia.

“Some 17 percent (estimated) are entitled to British passports,” said the FCO, adding “Britain remains a favoured destination for young New Zealanders for their ‘Overseas Experience’.”

If accurate, the estimate would mean 765,000 people in New Zealand needed passports if they wanted to visit Britain.

The New Zealand census showed UK citizens numbered about 208,000 in 2023, although it is not known how many people instead chose the ‘New Zealand European’ option in the count.

Across the Tasman, with a larger population, more people were affected by the passport changes. About 1.1 million people there were born in the UK, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics’ 2024 figures. Their median age was 59.4 years. The British still made up the biggest foreign-born nationality in both countries.

One traveller said social media comments from Australia in particular suggested the ‘£10 Poms’ – named after the postwar Brits who emigrated to both New Zealand and Australia after the Second World War – were badly affected.

“A lot of these people are now in their 70s, their 80s, and they’re really, really stressing about trying to get paperwork together to go, essentially, to visit family or the relatives that they haven’t seen in decades for the last time,” she said. “It’s just all been very rushed through.”

Her primary concern, however, was knowing whether children would need British passports to travel to the UK.

“[They’re] essentially being forced to get British citizenship or get a passport now to enable their family to go and visit grandparents,” she said. “There’s lots of families that are already booked to go back and see relatives in the Easter holidays, in the July school holidays. And they don’t know whether they can actually enter the UK on their New Zealand passport. So they’re at the moment panicking and going and getting British passports because nobody can get an answer out of the British government.”

Asked for clarification on that point, Thomas said: “All British citizens must travel on UK passports. If that child is a citizen, they cannot use an ETA, and will need a British passport.”

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Biggest bank downgrades house price forecast

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s biggest bank has downgraded its forecast for house prices this year. RNZ

New Zealand’s biggest bank has downgraded its forecast for house prices this year, but new research shows not everyone is feeling the same way.

ANZ said house prices had been broadly flat for three years and there was clear evidence the economy had improved in the second half of 2025, which should be a tailwind for the housing market.

“However, house prices are starting 2026 with little momentum, and uncertainty from the upcoming election – including the prospect of a capital gains tax – may keep some buyers on the sidelines this year,” the bank’s economists said.

“Moreover, the OCR [official cash rate] looks set to rise sooner rather than later after growth and inflation have both come in hotter than the Reserve Bank expected.”

They had brought forward their expectation of the first upward movement in the official cash rate, to December. Previously, they had thought it would happen in February next year.

“As OCR hikes draw closer, mortgage rates are shifting from a tailwind to a headwind for the housing market. Weighing it all up, we have reduced our house price inflation forecast for 2026 to 2 percent from 5 percent previously.”

They said there was clear divergence between different parts of the country. Wellington prices were down 4 percent over six months. Auckland’s had also fallen, but not as much.

Canterbury, Otago and Southland prices continued to rise.

“Indicators of the balance between demand and supply suggest prices will continue to be flat through the early part of 2026. The ratio of sales to inventories is a useful indicator of heat in the housing market and tends to give a three- to six-month lead on house price momentum. It is flat as a pancake, suggesting prices will be too.”

Meanwhile Cotality research had found that survey respondents from real estate, banking and related sectors expected price growth this year, and 14 percent expected price rises of more than 5 percent.

Head of research Nick Goodall said while sentiment had lifted from recent lows, expectations remained more conservative in New Zealand than in Australia, reflecting a weaker economy and jobs market and persistently high levels of homes for sale.

Cotality head of research Nick Goodall. Supplied / Cotality

“The survey provides an important industry pulse on how confidence is rebuilding across housing after a prolonged period of subdued conditions,” he said.

“Sentiment around price direction has clearly improved, but expectations remain grounded with the majority of respondents anticipating modest gains rather than a rapid rebound, which reflects the cautiousness of borrowers and the stuttering economy.

“Supply is still high, but I think demand’s coming back, interest rates have obviously come down, and are set to stay low for a wee bit, even though there’s a bit of doubt as to how long that wee bit is. And so that sort of brings more, not just willing but able buyers to the market who will be a bit more active.

“I think also the lending restrictions loosening up mean more people are going to be coming forward.”

He said the gap between New Zealand and Australian expectations highlighted the different stages of recovery across the two markets.

Canterbury was the most confident region, with 87 percent of respondents expecting prices to rise and almost two-thirds forecasting growth above the national average.

Auckland sentiment had improved but remained cautious, with 73 percent anticipating price growth amid concerns around employment conditions, affordability and lending appetite.

Wellington continued to lag, with 63 percent expecting prices to rise, though only 7 percent foresaw growth above 5 percent and most expected underperformance relative to the national trend.

“On the whole New Zealand’s housing market is showing tentative signs of improvement, but the same rate of recovery can’t be applied everywhere, it’s quite fragmented,” Goodall said.

“Improving confidence is being tempered by affordability constraints, the jobs outlook and cautious lending conditions, particularly in larger urban markets.”

Planning reform had added a layer of longer-term optimism to New Zealand’s housing outlook. Almost half of respondents believed recent changes to planning laws and the Resource Management Act would benefit their region over the next two to three years, though most said it was too early to assess the impact on development activity or housing supply.

Goodall said the reforms were expected to support supply over time, but there would be limited immediate impact and market conditions would continue to be affected by demand-side constraints.

“Policy reform has the potential to improve total housing supply with greater build intensification, but the effects are likely to be gradual rather than immediate,” he said.

“In the short term, price outcomes will continue to be driven by sales volumes, listing levels and borrowing capacity.”

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Why do we have ‘meet the teacher’ days and how do you get the most out of them?

Source: Radio New Zealand

So, what’s the point of meeting my child’s teacher or Wānanga?

“It’s about strengthening the home-school partnership,” explains education consultant and former high school teacher Mark Osborne.

“We talk about the golden triangle or the magic triangle between the child, the teacher, and the family … research shows that when parents are actively involved in their child’s education those kids are likely to have better outcomes from education.”

Mark Osborne, education consultant and director of Leading Learning.

Supplied

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Small businesses not exempt from cyber-attacks, internet watchdog Netsafe says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Small businesses are not exempt from cyber-attacks, internet watchdog says. 123RF

An internet watchdog has reminded small businesses they are not exempt from cyber-attacks, after a law firm in Napier was hit in January.

Langley Twigg Law said it was hit by a cyber attack affecting internal information about the firm as well as client documents on 11 January.

The firm said it was working with digital forensics and cyber specialists over the attack.

Netsafe’s chief online safety officer Sean Lyons said the attacks were not always targeted and could be random.

“It can happen in two ways, it can absolutely be targeted, somebody could decide that a particular entity is holding information that they want.”

Lyons said many of the attacks occured when a hacker found out a method or a mechanism they could breach and then took a scatter-gun approach to try and find places that were vulnerable.

“That might be sending out emails with fake invoices or attachments, it might be sending other messages, it might be getting them to click on pages on compromised websites.”

Lyons said once a hacker was in, their criminal intent took over.

“Once they are in they will be trying to find out just about everything about that organisation and see what’s of value in there, that they can take to either sell or exploit the original owners of that information to blackmail them into giving them money.”

He said it was often harder for small business to keep protected, as bigger organisations often had their own cyber-security departments.

“For smaller businesses, it is being aware that these things can happen, that the data they store is of value to other people.

“Some people might think what could be the value, why could I be a target, but like I said, people aren’t always initially a target, but the information that is in there could be of value to somebody, and blackmailing organisations might be a good way for a criminal to make money,” he said.

Netsafe chief online safety officer Sean Lyons. RNZ

The attack came not long after the Law Society sent out advice to its members on how to best manage them, and how to keep safe.

Chief executive Katie Rusbatch said attacks among the sector were becoming more common.

“We’ve seen this on the rise recently and we have identified a need for some guidance and training in this particular area and that’s been a focus for us.

“So really in terms of the guidance that we’ve shared, it’s focusing on how these things like cyber attacks can happen, what those common threats to law firms are, whether that’s things like e-mail compromise or phishing and things like that.

“And then some also some guidance that law firms and lawyers can take to minimise the risk and create an environment for stronger security.

“So providing some really practical guidance in that space so that lawyers can be prepared and also create a culture where they have an awareness of what those risks are.”

Practical steps available

Rusbatch said there were simple things firms could do to keep safe.

“So things like secure access and authentication, there is a lot talked about now about multi-factor authentication for things like emails, trust account systems that law firms might have, keeping systems up to date, so regularly applying software and security updates.

“Training, testing your people, so really making sure that staff have an awareness of phishing and safe e-mail practices and running through some tests in that regard so that people are able to see how they respond if there might be a phishing e-mail.

“So really creating awareness with your staff and then planning for incidents as well, if something does happen, making sure that you have an incident response plan that you know who to contact that who the cyber specialists are that you might need to contact.

“And then other things that backup and recover systems, making sure you have backups offline and the secure cloud and that sort of thing as well,” she said.

The Office of the Privacy Commissioner confirmed Langley Twigg Law had been in touch about the incident.

“We will continue to work with them as they further investigate this incident, including ensuring they are aware of their legal obligations in relation to a privacy breach that either has caused or is likely to cause anyone serious harm.

”We would expect Langley Twigg to provide any further detail they would want to share in relation to this,” a statement said.

The police said they were also investigating.

The attack came about a month after a major breach of patient health information portal ManageMyHealth.

The service connected patients with clinicians and allowed people to access their medical records.

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$35k lost in online car sale scam

Source: Radio New Zealand

A man who lost $35,000 buying a car that turned out to be stolen has complained to the Banking Ombudsman. 123RF

Consumer NZ is calling for scam protection to apply to online marketplaces, after a man lost $35,000 buying a car that turned out to be stolen.

The man complained to the Banking Ombudsman about the scam.

He transferred $35,000 from his account into someone else’s, trying to buy a car online.

But the car was later proven to be stolen. He reported the fraud to the bank and the police. His bank tried to retrieve his money, the ombudsman scheme said, but was unsuccessful.

He complained the bank had not acted quickly enough to recover the funds, did not keep him informed and did not reimburse him.

He also asked why the transaction was not identified as suspicious.

The ombudsman scheme investigated and said the payment did not raise any suspicions that should have prompted the bank to make further inquiries.

“The bank was not therefore obliged to reimburse his loss. We also found the bank made reasonable efforts to recover the money. It contacted the receiving bank within 30 minutes of [the man] notifying it about the scam and asked for the money to be recalled. It also confirmed to [him] that it had taken this step.

“It contacted the receiving bank several more times, but the receiving bank eventually advised that it could not recover the money. In short, it acted promptly and communicated reasonably throughout.”

His complaint was not upheld.

Consumer NZ spokesperson Jessica Walker. Supplied / Consumer NZ

Consumer NZ spokesperson Jessica Walker said it was an awful situation.

“Even the new scam reimbursement policy that the banks kicked off in December wouldn’t protect this person. We want protections to extend to online marketplaces. We also want social media and digital platforms to take accountability for scams that are happening on their watch. In the meantime, we urge ultra caution for anyone making purchases online. Because if things go wrong, right now there’s not much you can do.”

Banking Ombudsman Nicola Sladden said the scheme was seeing fewer scam-related complaints this year.

“However, the financial impact of scams remains significant, with losses continuing to rise – reminding us that scammers are adapting quickly, and we must stay vigilant.

“Scammers target people of all backgrounds and ages. If you share personal information like bank account passcodes online, you could be at risk of a scam. You also need to be on guard when it comes to buying things online. Be wary of people or organisations advertising online. Check who you are paying before sending any funds.

“We encourage anyone who thinks they’ve been scammed to contact their bank as soon as possible. If you are not satisfied with the bank’s response, you can contact the Banking Ombudsman scheme.”

At the end of last year, updates to the Code of Banking Practice introduced new protections.

Banks now gave pre-transaction warnings for certain payments, offered confirmation of payee to check that an account number matched, identified high-risk transactions or unusual activity, offered a 24/7 reporting channel for customers who thought they had been scammed and shared scammer account information.

If they did not meet the commitments, they must compensate customers for all or part of their losses. They also compensated customers whose bank account was accessed without the customer’s authority.

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Doing stretches in your warm-up? Don’t.

Source: Radio New Zealand

​When Dr Paul Marshall, a sports and rehab research fellow from the University of Auckland, warms up before a tennis match, he plays some tennis.

No pretzel-like stretching. No weird movements. He might jog a lap or two of the court, and slowly increase the intensity of the warm-up hits, but that’s it, really.

“…I personally spend 20 to 30 minutes in the activity with a graded increase in activity so it starts quite light with small movement, progressing forward.”

Walking or a slow job is the ideal way to warm up for a faster, longer run.

Unsplash / Fellipe Ditadi

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NZ Warriors speedster Alofiano Khan-Pereira turning heads during NRL off-season

Source: Radio New Zealand

Alofiano Khan-Pereira brings a whole new level of speed to the Warriors roster. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

Andrew Webster knows there’s one thing even he can’t coach and he’s added to his stocks of this precious commodity for the upcoming NRL season.

Pure, unadulterated speed.

Last season, before his untimely knee injury, halfback Luke Metcalf reportedly held bragging rights over his NZ Warriors teammates in this regard, but as he rehabs towards a competitive return maybe seven rounds into the schedule, he may have lost his crown.

The arrival of fleetfooted winger Alofiano Khan-Pereira from Gold Coast has added a whole new dimension of velocity to the roster.

“He is very fast,” the Warriors mentor marvels.

Faster than Metcalf?

“Definitely,” Webster insists. “That will upset Luke.

“Fast guys, it’s effortless for them. It’s really easy and they’re gliding, then they just put their foot down and run away from everyone.”

Khan-Pereira, 24, is in that class.

In 2023, his NRL rookie campaign, he became the first Gold Coast player to score 20 tries in a season. The following year, he crossed 24 times to lead the competition in four-pointers.

Along the way, he equalled the club single-game record, when he piled on four against the Warriors in a 66-6 rout.

Last season, Khan-Pereira seemed to fall off coach Des Hasler’s selection radar, playing just 10 games, and became a player desperately seeking a fresh start.

The Warriors may have let their share of homegrown talent slip through their fingers over the years, but they have also proved a fertile environment for outcasts needing to resurrect careers.

Alofiano Khan-Pereira celebrates one of four tries for Gold Coast Titans against the Warriors in 2024. DAVE HUNT/Photosport

Khan-Pereira has followed the trail of breadcrumbs left by former Titans teammates Erin Clark and Tanah Boyd. Back at his junior club, Clark emerged from last season as the Dally M Lock of the Year, while Boyd was NSW Cup Player of the Year, leading the Warriors reserves to an interstate championship.

“I didn’t have one of the best years, I really wanted to turn that around and try somewhere new,” Khan-Pereira says. “I was fortunate to end up talking to Webby.

“It was a great chat and not too much about rugby – he just really wanted to know me as a person first. I really respect that and he got me excited about where the club was headed.”

Last season, the Warriors were stretched for depth along their backline, with a revolving door at centre and back-up fullback Taine Tuaupiki also the next best option on the wing.

Both Roger Tuivasa-Sheck and Dallin Watene-Zelezniak missed games through injury, and by the end of the year, DWZ copped much of the blame for a leaky right-edge defence destabilised by the constant changes further infield.

Webster insists his new recruit has the ability to snatch a starting spot off his two veterans.

“Lofi’s obviously very fast and the boys are loving how he plays,” he says. “He’s been exceptional and gives us plenty of competition in that area.

“It allows us a little bit of X factor – he can make a break and turn a half chance into a full chance.

“It’s up to him and it’s up to the other two not to let him in the door.”

After falling out of favour with Hasler, Khan-Pereira knows his attacking prowess won’t be enough to earn a regular role under Webster.

“I’ve really been nailing my focus down to getting a really good defence and good combinations with the boys I’ve been working with,” he says.

“Nothing’s ever given, you’ve got to earn it and that was one of the chats I had with Webby. I knew it wasn’t going to be easy and I can only put my best foot forward.

Alofiano Khan-Pereira will challenge incumbent Dallin Watene-Zelezniak for a spot on the Warriors wing. Brett Phibbs/www.photosport.nz

“You’ve got Dall and Roge there, two experienced wingers and two great wingers in my eyes. I’ll definitely be trying to push my way up there.

“I really want to become a consistent first-grader and get out of my comfort zone. My defensive movements and my decision-making are something I want to work on.”

Khan-Pereira – who is Samoan/Māori on his father’s side and Indigenous/Pakistani on his mother’s – adds to an already eclectic cultural mix at the Warriors.

He’s arrived at Mt Smart with a big reputation, but insists he hasn’t gone looking for early scalps on the training field.

Khan-Pereira has taken some time to scope out his new running mates, and with Metcalf still finding his way back to full fitness, he’s identified Watene-Zelezniak and teen sensation Leka Halasima has worthy rivals.

“I’m more like someone who sits back and scans the area for a bit,” Khan-Pereira grins. “It is great to have that skill, that speed, but you’ve got boys like Dall and Roge, when you try to run around them, their experience comes into play as well.

“I think they’ve caught on a bit and they’ve taken an extra step to the outside – it does get harder and harder for me to get around them.”

Webster warns of another newcomer that may yet challenge for speed honours – former Newcastle Knights half Jye Linnane.

“I reckon Jye is close,” he reveals. “I think he’s faster than Luke.”

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Ardern among Ockham Book Awards contenders

Source: Radio New Zealand

Forty-four titles have been announced for this year’s Ockham New Zealand Book Awards longlist.

Nine debut authors appear in the list – three in each of the poetry, illustrated non-fiction and general non-fiction categories – including Dame Jacinda Ardern for her memoir, A Different Kind of Power.

Ten books have been nominated for the coveted Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction, including two-time winner Catherine Chidgey for her ninth novel, The Book of Guilt, which was the subject of an international bidding war.

Author Catherine Chidgey has won the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction twice – in 2023 for The Axeman’s Carnival and 2017 for The Wish Child.

Ebony Lamb Photography

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Family found body of Tekanimaeu Arobati, man swept away by Mahurangi River

Source: Radio New Zealand

It took three days of dedicated searching by authorities but eventually it was his family who found the body of their loved one.

Tekanimaeu Arobati was reported missing during the severe storm that lashed eastern areas of the North Island.

Described as a kind, strong, and straight-talking man, he was deeply loved by his family.

Tekanimaeu Arobati was swept away by the swollen Mahurangi River, north of Auckland. Nick Monro

The 47-year-old was in his car with his nephew, heading to work at a nearby greenhouse.

But as they crossed the swollen Mahurangi River, north of Auckland, they were swept into the water.

His nephew managed to escape after being pushed out by Arobati, but he was washed down the river and disappeared from view.

Flowers at the scene where the car was washed away. Nick Monro

Local police and specialists from Search and Rescue scoured the water and banks of the river for Arobati but it was his brother-in-law Kai Tenanoa who found his body.

“Tekanimaeu is my best friend, I call him my brother,” he told RNZ.

“I fight for the goal to find him, and the success, we thank God he brought him back to us.”

The pair went to school together in Kiribati, along with the woman who Arobati would eventually marry.

Tenanoa said the community had rallied around the family.

“I think they are very lovely people,” Tenanoa said.

“We didn’t ask them ‘come and join us’, they all came straight to the wife, and said we want to come with you,” he said.

Kai Tenanoa. Nick Monro

It was Tenanoa and others who found Arobati in the river.

“I thank God, and I thank all the Kiribati communities in Rodney for their support to find him.

“We thank police for everything, for the searching, but now we succeed because of God, of love.”

Search crews had scoured the area from Falls Road in Warkworth along the river for any sign of Arobati.

He was found roughly 200 metres from the crossing where Tekanimaeu disappeared.

His car is yet to be found.

Police are still searching for Tekanimaeu Arobati’s car. Nick Monro

His wife, Tirutinia, was thankful for all the help her family had received.

“I would like to give my special thanks to my community, because they were the first one to see my husband, and they were the ones … [to] call to the policemen … they found him after three days,” she said.

“I should thank my brother-in-law, my sister’s husband is the one that first saw my husband, with my firstborn son and other boys.

“I’m really thankful for all the Kiribati community because they all came that time, and they did their best.

“I know it’s a risky place to walk along, but they still took their steps to look for my husband, and fortunately, they found him at last.”

She said the Kiribati community had helped her get back on her feet.

“They’re very supportive,” she said.

“They came, and they told me ‘You’ll be a single wife, but remember that your husband is still there’.”

Arobati’s death has been referred to the coroner.

A Givealittle page has been set up to support the Arobati family, with more than $3000 raised so far.

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Wellington Phoenix A-League women’s player Ella McMillan passionate on and off the field

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ella McMillan playing for the Wellington Phoenix Reserves. Masanori Udagawa / www.photosport.nz

Wellington Phoenix A-League women’s player Ella McMillan is passionate about helping the next generation step into the space she is in at the moment.

The 20-year-old is juggling two fledgling careers – as a professional footballer, and a second-year sports scientist.

McMillan moved to the capital at the start of 2022 when she was just 16 to join the Wellington Phoenix Academy.

The young centre-back was a mainstay of the women’s reserves side for the 2023 and 2024 seasons before the academy graduate signed a two-year scholarship contract with the Wellington Phoenix in August 2024.

McMillan grew up in Hamilton so leaving home so young was a huge step. When Ella’s younger sister Libby joined the academy a year later McMillan’s parents moved to Wellington in 2023 to support her and her sibling.

“It was a big decision but really grateful that I did make the move and when I moved down to join the academy, I also started my studies as well,” McMillan said.

McMillan had been interested in sports science for some time, so jumped at the chance to sign up for a Bachelor of Sport, Exercise and Health degree at Auckland University of Technology, majoring in sport and exercise science.

The Wellington Phoenix have a partnership with Auckland University of Technology (AUT) through the School of Sport and Recreation, which provides courses for many academy footballers in Wellington.

McMillan said the academy’s head of performance at the time, Steve Coleman, and technical director Paul Temple were integral in helping her get into the course.

“I ended up actually dropping out of school a year early to join the programme … I was always really interested in going down the sports pathway and being able to continue working in sport alongside playing. I’m really passionate about that kind of stuff so really grateful they let me into the course.”

As part of her course, she completed a 350-hour placement at the Phoenix academy, working alongside head of female sport science Issy Coombes.

McMillan finished the three-year degree at the end of 2024 and was appointed the academy’s youth female sport scientist at the start of 2025.

“It was a great opportunity. I’m really grateful the club was able to take me on, especially knowing they would have to be flexible with my training schedule. I’ve learnt so much over the past year and I just really enjoy working with the players on a day-to-day basis.”

McMillan said opportunities in women’s football had improved significantly over the past decade.

“There is a pathway … when I was younger there was no Phoenix women’s team, now I’m playing and working for the academy.”

McMillan said she liked to take a holistic approach as a sports scientist.

“…On helping the players be the best athletes they can but also the best people, so working with them in the gym, on the pitch, finding what areas of their game, their strengths and weaknesses and how we can look to improve that from a physical perspective. Looking at the mechanics, the technique, and especially with the younger players, that movement base and ensuring that we can reduce the risk of injuries from a young age.”

New Zealand U20 Ella McMillan during an International Friendly – New Zealand Women’s U20 v Australia at Jerry Collins Stadium, Wellington. 11 July 2024. Marty Melville / www.photosport.nz

The Wellington Phoenix women have been hit with three season-ending ACL injuries so injury prevention is top of mind.

“It’s absolutely gutting for those three girls … I just feel for them, it’s a sucky situation to be in. I want to try and do everything in my control to hopefully reduce the risk of players being out for long periods of time. There’s more and more research coming out around that kind of stuff so we’ll just continue to keep learning more.”

At just 20, McMillan is barely older than the athletes she’s working with at the academy, but she sees that as a strength.

“I’m able to relate to them and connect to them better so I don’t think my age has really come into play a huge amount, especially not in this environment. I hope I can use that as a strength, rather than people viewing it as a negative thing.”

McMillan represented New Zealand at the FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup in India in 2022 and was a key member of the Junior Football Ferns side at the 2024 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup in Colombia.

She made two appearances off the bench in her first season as a professional in the 2024-25 summer and admits her first year in the A-league was tough.

“I didn’t get a huge amount of minutes but I learnt so much from a training perspective but also how to handle myself off the pitch and how to continue to be a professional and do everything I can to help the team even if that doesn’t require me on the pitch.”

Opportunities have again been limited in her second season but patience is key for McMillan.

She also wants to utilise her knowledge around strength and conditioning to improve her physical capabilities.

“That was always a bit of a weakness of mine so using my knowledge in that aspect to try and better myself from a physical performance stand point.”

In the off-season the Phoenix recruited the highly credentialed Bev Priestman, who guided Canada to gold at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

“She’s outstanding, her communication is top of the line and her knowledge is really good so I feel like I’m able to learn so much off her to be able to progress as a player and to continue to develop.”

McMillan flats with a couple of team-mates and her sister Libby, who still plays for the Reserves team, lives with her parents in Wellington.

McMillan said the Phoenix women, who sit second on the A-league ladder, were buoyant about their prospects.

“We’ve come into this season with a fresh mindset and we’ve got to see ourselves as title contenders. We’re all really confident in the team and the way we’re playing, I’m really excited for what the rest of the season has install for us, results are starting to click now so really exciting times ahead.”

The Phoenix Women head across the Tasman this weekend, to meet the Newcastle Jets on Sunday.

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Northland woman makes history as part of first all-female crew to sail non-stop around the world

Source: Radio New Zealand

French skipper Alexia Barrier (L) and crew members Dee Caffari, Annemieke Bes, Tamara Echegoyen, Rebecca Gmuer Hornell (C), Deborah Blair, Molly Lapointe and Stacey Jackson celebrate after crossing the finish line of the Jules Verne Trophy, off the coast of Brest, Brittany, on January 26, 2026. LOIC VENANCE

A young Northland woman has made history as part of the first all-female crew to sail non-stop around the world.

Rebecca Gmuer-Hornell, of Ōpua, in the Bay of Islands, is also believed to have broken the New Zealand record for circumnavigating the globe by any sailor, male or female.

Her time, of 57 days, 21 hours and 20 minutes, is more than 16 days faster than the previous 74-day record set by Sir Peter Blake in 1994.

The 26-year-old was competing for the Jules Verne Trophy, awarded for the fastest circumnavigation of the world, and crossed the finish line off the French coast around midnight Monday New Zealand time.

Gmuer-Hornell told RNZ the race was a huge mental and physical challenge.

“But it’s something I’ve wanted to do since I was a little girl, to finally get it done for myself and for the sport. I don’t think I actually realised the magnitude of what we were doing until we came back, the amount of support we’ve had and congratulations from everyone has been insane, and we are super grateful for it,” she said.

“I think it shows that women around the world have been following it and looking up to us. And I hope it inspires young girls to think they can do it, because we were finally able to put this record in the books for women.”

Gmuer-Hornell was part of the eight-strong Famous Project crew sailing on a 31.5-metre maxi trimaran, IDEC Sport.

The vessel was captained by sailing legends Alexia Barrier (France) and Dee Caffari (UK), both of whom had sailed around the world multiple times, solo and crewed; while her crewmates included Olympians Tamara Echegoyen (Spain) and Annemieke Bes (Netherlands).

Gmuer-Hornell said she was surprised an all-female, non-stop circumnavigation had not been done before.

“But it’s just because there hasn’t been the opportunity for women to sail these boats that do high-speed records. It’s definitely a male-dominated thing. So it’s really cool to have been given the opportunity to sail a maxi trimaran for starters, let alone take it around the world.”

She was still trying to take in breaking Sir Peter Blake’s New Zealand record.

“Sailing has come a long way since then, and innovation has been huge since Peter Blake went around the world, but being up in the leagues with him is something I never, ever dreamed of. I think I’m slowly getting my head around it, but it’s been such a whirlwind over the last couple of days, it’s going to take a little while to sink in.”

Gmuer-Hornell was the boat’s rigger and port pitman, and at the last minute was also tasked with the job of drone operator.

Ahead of their 28 November departure, she anticipated the Southern Ocean would be the scariest part of the voyage.

“But it’s such a quick boat we were able to outrun all the low pressure systems. You can position yourself in the Southern Ocean in places that are better for the wind and waves, but coming back up the Atlantic, now it’s winter, there’s a lot of low pressures coming into Europe from the west, and that’s a lot harder to navigate,” she said.

“You have to go through them, you have to be in those eight-metre swells, liquid Himalayas we call them, and you have to be in that 50 knots of breeze. That was probably the most challenging part, the last 1000 miles.”

As for the most memorable part of the journey, Gmuer-Hornell said it was rounding Cape Horn.

“We call it the Everest of sailing. Someone came out with a statistic that only 25 women have rounded Cape Horn, and that fewer people have gone around the cape than have gone up Mount Everest. So it was a pretty big milestone for me.”

Rebecca Gmuer-Hornell (C), from Ōpua, in the Bay of Islands, with her parents Manuela Gmuer-Hornell (L) and Chris Hornell in France after setting two round-the-world records. Supplied

Gmuer-Hornell said conditions were “pretty good” with a three-metre swell and 25 knot winds, giving her a chance to fly the drone around the infamous cape.

“That was another really cool thing to do. Not many people have flown drones from maxi trimarans around Cape Horn. It was amazing.”

Gmuer-Hornell said there were several sailing legends and seven nationalities on board, which made for some “cool cultural dynamics”.

“It worked really well. The boat language was English, so that made it quite easy for me, but communication was easy. We all got on super well.”

Gmuer-Hornell said her advice to girls and young women who wanted to take up sailing was to seize every opportunity that came their way.

“You miss 100 percent of the opportunities that you don’t take. This opportunity was the biggest one I’ve ever been given, and it was one that seemed near impossible, and we managed to pull it off, even though we had a lot of technical issues, and there were a lot of times we thought we wouldn’t make it. But we overcame all of them. You’ve just got to keep trying.”

After 57 days at sea, the first thing she ate in the French port city of Brest was an oyster.

“Freeze-dried food does get pretty mundane after a while. Alexia [Barrier] and I are obsessed with oysters, so we requested that, and our wish came true.”

The Famous Project crew had only been back on land a few days but Gmuer-Hornell said they were already planning their next attempt at the trophy, on another boat.

“Hopefully we’ll be able to push the boat a bit harder than we were this time. We had a lot of technical difficulties, we know where we lost time, and we think we can beat our current record.”

The Jules Verne Trophy course starts and finishes at a line between Cornwall in England and Brittany in France, and takes sailors around the Cape of Good Hope (South Africa), Cape Leeuwin (Western Australia) and Cape Horn (Chile).

There are no restrictions on the type of yacht or number of crew, but the race must be completed non-stop with no outside assistance.

The last attempt to claim the trophy by an all-female crew, led by British sailor Tracy Edwards in the year 2000, came unstuck when her vessel lost its mast in the South Pacific.

The current Jules Verne Trophy holder is Frenchman Thomas Coville, who set a time of just over 40 days on the trimaran Sodeno Ultim 3 earlier this year.

The trophy is named after the French writer Jules Verne, who penned the 1872 novel Around the World in Eighty Days.

Gmuer-Hornell is the daughter of Ōpua couple Manuela Gmuer-Hornell and Chris Hornell, a sailor and outboard mechanic who has driven chase boats in multiple America’s Cup campaigns and more recently with SailGP.

She trained as a yacht rigger in Auckland and recently relocated to the UK, where she finished second in the 2025 Admiral’s Cup, representing the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club, and competed in the Ocean Race Europe aboard Team Amaala.

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New polling shows a quarter of New Zealanders have little or no trust in police

Source: Radio New Zealand

A quarter of New Zealanders say they have little or no trust in the police, new polling shows.

A quarter of New Zealanders say they have little or no trust in the police, new polling shows, but most people’s positions were not rattled by the recent Jevon McSkimming scandals.

Police conduct has recently been in the spotlight following an IPCA report that found serious misconduct at the highest levels.

Former Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming also pleaded guilty late last year to three representative charges of possessing objectionable publications, namely child sexual exploitation and bestiality material.

The latest RNZ-Reid Research poll, conducted from 15-22 January, asked New Zealanders how much trust they had in the police to do the right thing, and whether recent scandals involving McSkimming changed their level of trust.

A quarter of New Zealanders have little or no trust; 70 percent have at least a fair amount

About a fifth of respondents – 20.7 percent – said they had a lot of trust in police, while more than half – 50.5 percent – said they had a fair amount of trust.

Just over 20 percent said they had “not much” trust and a further 5.7 percent said they had no trust at all. Three percent said they did not know.

Trust was lowest among the most left-leaning voters: 48.2 percent of Te Pāti Māori supporters said they had little or no trust, along with 44.1 percent of Green supporters.

Among Labour voters, 28.2 percent either said they had either no trust or “not much”.

Looking at the coalition supporters, a sizeable 36 percent of New Zealand First voters said they had little or no trust in the police.

That compared to just 12.4 percent of National supporters and 18 percent of ACT supporters.

How did the McSkimming scandals impact that trust?

Voters were also asked whether the recent scandals involving McSkimming changed their level of trust in the police.

More than half of respondents – 51.3 percent – said the scandals had not knocked their trust.

That compared to 36.1 percent of voters who said they had.

Ten-point-four percent said they did not know, while 2.2 percent said their trust had increased following the scandals.

“Not everyone in society is going to support or like the police” – Police Minister

Police Minister Mark Mitchell said he was really happy to hear the McSkimming scandals had not shifted the dial significantly when it came to people’s trust levels.

“I said from day one, and I think the public actually came to this place themselves as they recognised the behavior was contained within a very small group of individuals and was not reflective of the overall values of our New Zealand police force.”

Former Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Asked about a quarter of New Zealanders having little or no trust in police, Mitchell said the police had to continually look for improvement, but not everybody was going to support or like the police as “often they may be offending”.

Te Pāti Māori co-leaders were unsurprised their voters had the lowest trust levels, and said various reports also reflected low trust levels in the police, especially for Māori communities.

“We are over monitored, we are over arrested, we are put in prison five times more than non-Māori for the same crime,” co-leader Rawiri Waititi said.

Debbie Ngarewa-Packer said people’s trust had also been diminished by shootings in Taranaki and the lack of “real independent reviews” after the fact.

She said politicians from all parties needed to show leadership and propose transformational change in the justice space.

Greens’ co-leader Marama Davidson said the McSkimming scandals highlighted a problem which stretched beyond “just one person and one police officer”.

“There has long been an acknowledgement of systemic rot across departments, including police, especially when it comes to survivors of violence and abuse.”

But Labour’s Chris Hipkins said he did not believe the case reflected the police as a whole.

“The police leadership let down not just the New Zealand public, but actually all of the serving police officers who had the credibility of the New Zealand Police tested through that.”

Police under scrutiny

In November last year, a scathing report by the police watchdog found serious misconduct at the highest levels of police – including former Commissioner Andrew Coster – over how Police responded to accusations of sexual offending by former Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming.

McSkimming resigned as the country’s second most powerful cop in May amid separate investigations by the Independent Police Conduct Authority and Police.

In response to the report, top government ministers said the public needed to have trust in the police.

The new Commissioner Richard Chambers said trust and confidence were an “absolute priority” given the events.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers (L) and Police Minister Mark Mitchell. Mark Papalii / RNZ

Chambers told RNZ he was pleased there had not been a significant shift in the support for police and the work they did following the scandals.

“I always had confidence in my people. They just get on with the job.

“Kiwis appreciate that the events of late last year, was an isolated and small group of people.”

Chambers had set a goal of reaching 80 percent trust in the police, and had brought in audits to help identify any behaviour that fell short not only of his expectations but that of the public.

“We do have a tough job, and unfortunately, from time to time, people do let us down.”

Asked whether more work needed to be done in regards to trust in the police by Māori, Chambers said there was “a lot of work to do across all communities”.

“There’s always going to be some communities that have have less trust and confidence, or more trust and confidence in policing. That isn’t new.

“None of that comes as a surprise – it just motivates me and my team more to work really hard.”

This poll of 1000 people was conducted by Reid Research, using quota sampling and weighting to ensure representative cross section by age, gender and geography. The poll was conducted through online interviews between 15-22 January 2026 and has a maximum margin of error of +/- 3.1 percent at a 95 percent confidence level.

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Work on $260 million Wairarapa rail upgrade delayed by over a year

Source: Radio New Zealand

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Work on a Wairarapa rail upgrade worth more than a quarter of a billion dollars has been delayed by over a year.

Work on the $260 million upgrade plan began in 2021 and included level crossing and signal upgrades for the region’s rail for new frequent hybrid electric trains to run from 2029.

The work was expected to be completed late last year, but KiwiRail has confirmed to RNZ it now would not be finished until early 2027.

The rail company’s chief metro and capital programme officer, David Gordon, said changing technology and difficult ground conditions had driven the problems.

Gordon said community consultation also played a role in the delays.

“KiwiRail has also undertaken significant engagement with councils and communities, which resulted in more crossings staying open than originally intended.”

Originally 23 crossings were being upgraded and seven would close, while now the project would see 26 upgraded and four shut, he said.

An artist’s render of the new hybrid electric trains. Metlink

Any cost increases would be managed within budget, Gordon said.

He was confident the work would be done before the new trains arrived.

Greater Wellington Regional Council chairperson Daran Ponter told RNZ he would be asking KiwiRail to explain the delay.

“Let’s remember that KiwiRail is an engineering company – communications is not always their strong suit.

“It would have been good to have known about this earlier but I’m not particularly concerned.”

Ponter said the new trains were four years away so there was still plenty of time, but it was still important the council asked about the delay.

“We want to make sure that when the new hybrid trains are commissioned into service that they’ve got a free run through the Wairarapa.”

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Record number of ambulance calls in 2025

Source: Radio New Zealand

Frontline crews attended 551,399 incidents, up 17 percent since 2020. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

The number of people calling an ambulance reached a record high in 2025, with St John attending more than half a million incidents.

New national ambulance data shows there were 706,194 emergency 111 calls for an ambulance last year, an increase of nearly 30 percent compared to five years ago.

Frontline crews attended 551,399 incidents, up 17 percent since 2020.

St John Deputy Chief Executive Dan Ohs said the increase reflected wider system pressures, an ageing population and rising acuity.

He said people falling over was one of the largest drivers of ambulance demand, increasing eight percent from 2020 to 52,559 incidents, and disproportionately affected older New Zealanders.

“Falls are not just accidents, they are a major and growing health issue.

“Many falls are preventable, and when they do occur, early intervention can reduce long-term injury, loss of independence and pressure on hospitals.”

St John said other preventable incidents increased massively, with drowning and diving incidents up 32 percent from 2020 to 582, animal bites and attacks rising almost 19 percent from 2020 to 1,212.

St John Deputy Chief Executive Dan Ohs. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The number of cardiac and respiratory arrest incidents St John attended also rose five percent from 2020 to 5,750.

“Improving cardiac arrest survival is one of our most urgent priorities,” Ohs said.

“Our data reinforces the importance of early intervention, community CPR training, public access defibrillators and seamless coordination from first call to hospital care.”

In 2025, patients assessed as having serious but not immediately life-threatening conditions accounted for 43 percent of all incidents, and life-threatening cases made up a further 35 percent.

About 10 percent involved patients whose conditions did not appear serious, and 7.4 percent of incidents were resolved through clinical advice over the phone.

Māori patients accounted for 21 percent of all ambulance responses, an increase of 14 percent from 2020.

“This is a good thing from our perspective,” Ohs said.

“We know tāngata Māori can feel hesitant to access healthcare, and it’s great to see they are accessing our services when they need them.”

He said St John was strengthening engagement with iwi Māori, improving culturally appropriate models of care and using data to better target services where inequities are greatest.

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Insurer temporarily halts new policies in Westport due to flood risk

Source: Radio New Zealand

A 2021 flood in Westport left more than 100 homes uninhabitable RNZ / Anan Zaki

A major insurance company has temporarily stopped offering new home insurance policies in Westport because of the town’s flood risk.

A climate change policy expert says AA Insurance’s decision will be the first of many, and is urging insurers to be transparent when they withdraw from an area.

Another researcher specialising in insurance retreat says the company is sending a clear message that it wants investment in flood defences – but warned that could result in a doubling down in Westport, rather than a move out of harm’s way.

AA Insurance, which has approximately half a million New Zealand customers, wrote to Buller District Mayor Chris Russell at the very end of 2025 to tell him the company would halt new business, home and landlord insurance policies for properties in the 7825 postcode, which covers Westport, Carters Beach and Cape Foulwind.

The company said existing policies would stay in place, and it had put a transfer policy in place for anyone looking to buy or sell a house that was currently insured with AA Insurance.

In a statement summarising the letter, published on Buller District Council’s website, Chris Russell said most people would not be directly affected by the company’s decision.

“Whilst not ideal, this does not mark any sort of insurance retreat from Westport.”

Westport has been repeatedly flooded over time, escalating in recent years. A 2021 flood left more than 100 homes uninhabitable.

A tree in the flooded Buller River on 18 August, 2022. RNZ / Niva Chittock

Last March, Buller District Council endorsed a plan that could eventually see the town gradually relocated to higher ground away from the Buller River, by opening up lower-risk land for development.

West Coast Regional Council chief executive Darryl Lew said the first stages of the the ‘Resilient Westport’ project involved building 17 kilometres of stopbanks.

Most of that work was in the planning and design stages, but two sections had been built already.

“That is protecting upwards of 30 houses that had never received protection before. And in the next few months, we’re hopefully going to be progressing more construction of a floodbank, which will result in 50 houses being protected.”

The councils planned to update insurers – who will visit the town at the end of February – as different stages of the flood protection scheme were completed.

“West Coast Regional Council will be advocating on behalf of the Westport community by specifically and intentionally writing to the Insurance Council of New Zealand and all insurance companies, and providing them this updated information,” Lew said.

The councils hoped that would make Westport “much more attractive” to insurers.

Insurer may be exerting influence over flood investment – expert

In a written statement to RNZ, AA Insurance head of underwriting Dee Naidu said if Westport’s flood exposure dropped below its maximum exposure limit in future, the company intended to reopen its books to new customers.

“This decision reflects the elevated natural hazard risk of flooding in the area, and that our exposure has reached a level where a pause on new policies is the most responsible step to ensure we can be there for our existing customers when they need us most.”

Belinda Storey, who heads up the consultancy Climate Sigma, said Australian insurance giant Suncorp, which was the ultimate owner of AA Insurance, had made similar decisions in Australian towns.

It represented a “shift” in approach in New Zealand, where insurers had been reluctant to publicise areas they were no longer insuring.

Belinda Storey says insurance companies have taken a similar approach in some parts of Australia. Supplied / Climate Sigma

Storey was surprised that the halt was only temporary, and seemed to be aimed at new builds rather than existing homes that would likely have insurance in place already.

That suggested the insurer was pushing for an investment in flood defences from either local or central government, she said.

“This is something that Suncorp have definitely done in Australia, where they have withdrawn insurance from a particular town on the condition that massive investment in flood defences is undertaken.”

However, investing in new flood defences, rather than considering other options like managed relocation, could actually increase the danger in Westport, she said.

A stopbank was “effectively a long, skinny dam”, she said.

“Trying to hold back the Buller River, that delivers 27 million cubic metres per hour in full flood, I don’t think we’re considering this potential risk to life of this potential signal we’re getting from the insurers.

“If you build defences, people build new houses. We shouldn’t be building any new houses in Westport, full-stop.”

However, transparency around when and where insurers were withdrawing cover was crucial.

“I’m glad that they’re going public,” she said.

“But I would encourage the Reserve Bank to insist that that information is shared with [it]… It should be shared with the regulator, so that the regulator has a clear understanding of all the locations in New Zealand that this is being withdrawn, not just one area where the insurer is wanting to send a public signal.”

Westport has grappled with flooding since the town was built. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Darryl Lew said work on the stopbanks pre-dated AA Insurance’s decision, and was not the only part of the overall project.

“We know that it doesn’t matter how high we build the flood banks – there could always be a flood that’s bigger than that comes along and inundates the town.”

The councils had just completed a project to improve Westport’s emergency management plan, he said.

“We’ve also commissioned, with Earth Sciences New Zealand, a much more enhanced flood forecasting capability so that we’ve got plenty of flood warning in the town.”

Climate policy expert urges greater transparency

Victoria University emeritus professor Jonathan Boston, who was part of a previous government expert working group on climate adaptation, said AA Insurance’s decision was just the first of many to come.

“There will be more and more situations in which insurers, understandably, say the risks are too great to provide insurance, even with very large excesses, and will pull out.”

He also supported forcing transparency from insurers about areas they were retreating from – either by no longer issuing policies, or raising premiums to a point where they were unaffordable.

“I think there’s a very good case for transparency, because, among other things, it will provide the kind of information we need to understand the seriousness of the challenges we face,” he said.

That might not be popular with insurers or homeowners, he said.

“But that concern should not result in an approach in which we basically turn a blind eye to these problems and refuse to address them.

“On the contrary, it makes it all the more important that we have absolutely transparent processes and really robust policy settings to enable us to respond proactively, effectively and equitably.”

Climate policy expert Jonathan Boston supplied

Not every community threatened by flooding and sea level rise had the same protection options as Westport, Boston said.

“With climate change … there are going to be more and more communities, and more and more postcodes, where it will not be possible to provide protection, and where the only reasonable and effective risk-reduction strategy will be relocation.”

Questions remain over resilience funding

Last year, Climate Change Minister Simon Watts announced the government’s national adaptation framework, which set out four areas of work.

That included developing new national hazard datasets, and a requirement for councils to develop adaptation plans for priority areas.

Watts told RNZ on Wednesday that requirement would be passed into law before the election in November, through an amendment to the Climate Change Response Act.

Two of the framework’s ‘pillars’ are investment in risk reduction and cost-sharing pre- and post-natural hazard events.

There is some money available for resilience, through the $1.2 billion regional infrastructure fund, but only $200 million of that has been ring-fenced for flood protection, for reinforcing existing stopbanks.

The framework requires councils to “weigh up the costs and benefits of adaptation options” but there is no firm guidance on whether costs will lie with central government, local government, or individual homeowners.

Climate Change Minister Simon Watts RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Watts, who spoke to RNZ before RNZ was aware of AA Insurance’s decision, said adaptation involved “a significant fiscal cost … that will need to be shared across society over time”.

Asked again what the funding mechanism would be, he said local councils would need to come up with a plan that weighed all the adaptation options, “and then work with the other stakeholders, which includes central government, in terms of how we transition to that point”.

There was already significant money from the transport fund going into making roading infrastructure more resilient, he said.

Boston said there were still major unanswered questions.

The framework, as announced, does not address the question of who’s going to pay for what, when, and how.

“It doesn’t have clear principles of equity, and it doesn’t kind of provide councils with the confidence and resources that they will need in order to begin to take proactive steps to move people out of harm’s way as harms increase over time.”

Buller District Council growth and development manager Paul Zaanen said it had proven more difficult in general to get insurance in Westport since the 2021 flood.

RNZ attempted to get insurance quotes for a Westport address via several insurance company websites.

Tower did not offer cover for the address, while other major insurers’ websites said a phone call was needed to gather more information before a quote could be provided.

A Tower spokesperson said it took an address-level approach to providing cover.

“We continue to insure, and offer insurance, to lower risk properties within high-risk areas throughout the country, including Westport.”

Insurance Council chief executive Kris Faafoi said it was up to individual insurers to decide what cover they were prepared to offer, in Westport and elsewhere.

He had visited the West Coast in August last year “to give them support in their efforts to reduce risk there”.

“We do want them to make sure that that flood protection and risk reduction is there to protect the community.”

The council was keen to see high-risk areas around the country identified in a consistent manner.

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Pacific women scholars call for ‘radical shift’ in global health systems

By Khalia Strong of PMN News

A new paper by women scholars warns colonial power structures are still shaping health systems across the Pacific region.

They are calling for a radical shift in global health leadership and decision-making.

The call comes from a new paper published this month in The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific, led by researchers from Waipapa Taumata Rau, the University of Auckland, alongside Pacific collaborators.

The paper argues that while global health is framed around fairness and inclusion, Pacific knowledge and leadership are often marginalised in practice.

Dr Sainimere Boladuadua, lead author from the University of Auckland’s Department of Paediatrics: Child and Youth Health, said these power imbalances directly impacted on communities.

“Global Health must stop undervaluing Pacific expertise,” Dr Boladuadua said in a statement.

“When overseas consultants are paid more than local experts, and research extracts knowledge without building local capacity, colonial patterns are reinforced.”

Global health . . . perspectives from the next generation in the Pacific region. Image: Re-imagining Global Health

Colonisation inequities
The researchers have traced current inequities to the history of colonisation in the Pacific, driven by commercial, religious, and military interests.

While many Pacific nations have since achieved political independence, the paper argues that colonial structures persist through unequal trade relationships, labour migration schemes, and externally controlled funding.

Dr Boladuadua said these systems limited Pacific control over health research, policy priorities, and resources, even as communities face growing burdens from non-communicable diseases and climate change.

“Global Health, at its core, is about health equity for all,” she said. “That means prioritising the most pressing problems faced by communities with the least resources.”

Dr Sainimere Boladuadua (centre) at the Fulbright awards ceremony with the US Consul-General Sarah Nelson and Minister of Foreign Affairs and Honorary Chair of Fulbright NZ, Winston Peters. Image: Ōtago University

A plan for change
The paper outlines four action areas to transform global health in the Pacific: strengthening sovereignty through Pacific-led decision-making; integrating Indigenous and Western knowledge systems; building genuine and reciprocal partnerships; and ensuring fair pay, recognition, and leadership opportunities for Pacific professionals.

The authors argue Pacific Island countries must be supported to set their own priorities, including control over funding, research management, data sovereignty, and workforce training.

The researchers also highlight language as a source of power. They say English is often treated as the default in global health, but its use “should not come at the expense of Indigenous Pacific languages and knowledge systems”.

The research places Pacific women at the centre of decolonisation efforts, noting that while colonisation was deeply patriarchal, Indigenous women historically held major leadership roles in island societies.

“Contrary to the control of white women during colonisation, Indigenous women held powerful positions in Island societies,” the research states.

Growing Pacific leadership
Dr Boladuadua said change was already underway, pointing to the establishment of the Fiji Institute of Pacific Health Research and the launch of the Pacific Academy of Sciences in Sāmoa as signs of growing Pacific leadership.

At the academy’s opening ceremony, then-prime minister Fiamē Naomi Mata’afa said the launch marked an important milestone for regional collaboration and would “give voice to science in and from the Pacific Islands”.

The authors argue Pacific-led approaches offer a blueprint not only for the region, but for building fairer and more resilient global health systems worldwide.

Republished from Pacific Media Network News with permission.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

NZ-born rugby test prop Uini Atonio suffers heart attack, forced into retirement

Source: Radio New Zealand

Uini Atonio celebrates after scoring against Wales. ©INPHO/Laszlo Geczo, ©INPHO/Laszlo Geczo

Timaru-born French test prop Uini Atonio has suffered a heart attack, according to a statement released by his club La Rochelle. Atonio in a stable condition in intensive care after being admitted to hospital following the event.

After initially retiring from test rugby after the 2023 World Cup, the 35-year-old tighthead was selected for the French squad for the upcoming Six Nations tournament. However La Rochelle have said the event will mean the end of Atonio’s playing career.

“Uini Atonio was admitted yesterday to the La Rochelle Hospital Centre following a suspected heart problem,” read La Rochelle’s statement.

“Medical examinations confirmed a cardiac event. His condition is now stable, and he remains in intensive care under observation. Following his hospitalisation, Uini will have to undergo a long period of recovery. It is now established that he will not be able to continue his playing career.

“Uini holds a special place in the history and in the heart of our club. This news deeply saddens us. The entire club wishes to express its unwavering and total support to him and his family during this difficult time.”

After growing up in Timaru, Atonio’s family moved to Auckland and he attended Wesley College. At 21 he moved to France and joined La Rochelle after being spotted at in the Hong Kong 10s tournament and has played a remarkable 319 games for the two-time European champions.

In 2014 he became eligible to play for France. At 149kgs and standing 1.96m, Atonio is among the largest players to ever take the field in a test match, having represented his adopted nation 65 times including the French Grand Slam-winning side of 2022.

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