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ACT chief of staff resigns

Source: Radio New Zealand

Andrew Ketels joined David Seymour’s office in 2017. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

The ACT Party’s chief of staff has announced his resignation, after more than a decade in Parliament.

In a LinkedIn post, Andrew Ketels said he felt “very fortunate” to have worked at Parliament for 12 years, for five ministers, and as ACT’s chief of staff for five years.

“There really is no place like it, but I’m looking forward to making a bit more time for my two boys,” he said.

Ketels said he was “extremely proud” of how far the party had come over the last eight years, “from a party struggling to make the 6pm news and polling below 1% to a caucus of 11 MPs and sitting at the Cabinet table”.

Ketels said he would be finishing up this month “to move on to my next challenge”.

Prior to joining David Seymour’s office in 2017, Ketels had worked for National MPs Louise Upston and Maggie Barry.

Ketels is not the only party chief of staff to step down this year, after the Greens’ Eliza Prestidge-Oldfield resigned in September.

She was replaced by former Green MP Kevin Hague, who started in the role last month.

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Greens say applications for advanced benefit payments ‘skyrocketed’ last year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Minister for Social Development Louise Upston RNZ / Angus Dreaver

The Greens say the number of applications for advanced support being denied has “skyrocketed” during the last year and people are being denied assistance for basic essentials.

But the Minister for Social Development Louise Upston says there’s been no policy change and she’s not concerned because “advances create greater hardship down the track”.

Data provided by the minister shows the number of declined applications for payment advances to help with clothing has doubled and declines for help with electricity costs has more than doubled compared to the quarter ending June 2023.

Advance payments of a benefit is a one-off payment to help pay for essential or emergency costs. MSD can help with costs such as electricity, dental treatment, essential home repairs, glasses, washing machines, car repairs and more.

Between June 2023 and June 2025 there has been an increase in declined applications of:

  • 72% for appliances: 327 applications declined in June 2023 compared to 564 declined in June 2025
  • 91% for bedding: 366 compared to 699
  • 82% for beds: 375 compared to 684
  • 65% for car repairs: 1551 compared to 2556
  • 102% for clothing: 1515 compared to 3060
  • 36% for dental treatment: 1317 compared to 1785
  • 160% for electricity: 300 compared to 780
  • 83% for essential home repairs: 54 compared to 99
  • 52% for fridge/ freezer: 219 compared to 333
  • 86% for furniture: 342 compared to 636

Some of the most common reasons these applications are denied include whether the circumstances could have reasonably been foreseen, the person had already received help for the same or similar need in the past, or that it wasn’t a qualifying need.

The reason advances were declined because circumstances could have been reasonably foreseen, and declined because it was not a qualifying need, have both doubled compared to June 2023.

Upston appeared before the Social Services Committee during Scrutiny Week, where Green MP Ricardo Menendez March asked why the decline for advances for assistance like clothing and electricity had “skyrocketed” under the past financial year.

Green MP Ricardo Menendez March VNP/Louis Collins

He asked whether the minister was “comfortable” with increased unemployment and hardship in communities while decline rates had doubled.

Upston said she was aware there had been an increase in the number of declines, but confirmed there had been no policy change in regards to granting advances.

Her key concern though was the nature of advance payments themselves, because it meant people had less than their benefit in the weeks from then on.

“I’m not sure that benefit advance is necessarily a good idea when people turn up to MSD with challenges.”

Upston said she would be surprised if Menendez March was advocating for a larger number of advances because “that pushes people into more financial hardship in the weeks and months ahead”.

Menendez March said people access advances because they “just simply cannot make ends meet and cover the costs in front of them”. He said advances were one of the few tools to prevent people losing access to electricity, for example.

Upston acknowledged “we’ve got very challenging times,” and “no one around this table would be surprised” there are people who are finding the cost of living challenging at the moment, “which is why it is the primary focus of our government to get it under control.”

“We need to stick with our plan focusing on reducing inflation and reducing the cost of living, but I accept that there will be households who are finding it tough right now.”

Asked by reporters after the Scrutiny Week hearing why there had been an increase in declines, Upston said that was a question for MSD. RNZ has approached MSD for comment.

She said she wasn’t concerned about the increase, and when asked why she wasn’t concerned, repeated that “advances create greater hardship down the track in the weeks and months ahead”.

“It may well have been that they were too lenient in the past, but as I said, there have been no policy changes around any form of hardship.”

Asked whether MSD was taking cues from the government’s rhetoric of getting tougher on beneficiaries, Upston rejected that assumption.

“We are focused on reducing the number of people on job seeker benefit and supporting them into work.”

Menendez March told RNZ under Upston’s watch more people were being declined assistance for “basic essentials.”

“At a time of a cost of living crisis, it’s morally corrupt to run a regime where more people are being declined for assistance.

“Advances are often a last lifeline for people in hardship unable to cover the cost of bills, clothes and bedding which allows them to live dignified lives.”

Government target ‘at risk’

The chief executive of the Ministry of Social Development, Debbie Power, also appeared before MPs for questioning.

NZ First’s Jamie Arbuckle asked whether MSD was on track to meet the government’s goal to reduce Jobseeker numbers to 140,000 by 2030.

Power responded that it was “fair to say” the target was “probably a bit at risk”.

“That’s what you would expect given the economic conditions. But what I can say is we are absolutely committed to ensuring that New Zealanders and our clients get access to jobs as they come up.”

Power said 42 percent of people who came on a benefit last year in New Zealand were “really highly skilled”, so it was important to make sure they get access to jobs in the labour market.

“And when the economy turns making sure our clients are at the front of the queue to take advantage of their economic recovery is something that we are absolutely committed to.”

Power was also asked by Labour’s Priyanca Radhakrishnan whether changes to jobseeker payments for 18 and 19 year olds would get the government closer to that target.

From November next year, young people wanting to get Jobseeker Support or the equivalent Emergency Benefit will have to take a parental income test, to see whether their parents can support them instead of the taxpayer.

Power said she didn’t think that was the “intent” of the policy, but acknowledged MSD was expecting 4000 18 and 19 year olds to be impacted by the change.

National’s Paulo Garcia also asked for an update on the government’s traffic-light warning system, which sets out clear consequences for beneficiaries who fail to meet certain requirements.

Jobseekers will have to reapply for the benefit every six months – instead of annually – and any transgressions will remain on their record for two years, twice as long as they do now.

The law change will also allow new sanctions, such as mandatory community work or money management payment cards.

Power said currently, 98.5 percent – 345,000 people – were in the green setting, meaning “no problems, meeting obligations, all good”.

There are 0.6 percent – 1,953 people – in orange, and 1 percent – 3,189 people – in red. She acknowledged that was a small number of people. Power said what she’d heard from the front line was that staff and clients appreciated the transparency of the colour arrangements to better understand what was expected of them.

In regards to the mandatory community work or money management payment cards – the non-financial sanctions MSD had been able to apply in the last six months since the law came into force – Menendez March asked how many had been applied.

Power said there’d been about “a dozen.”

Menendez March said the minister often spoke about these sanctions as being a “better alternative”, and questioned why only 12 had been applied while financial sanctions had remained the majority.

Power said there was particular criteria in terms of accessing non-financial sanctions, such as being in case management, having dependent children, failing an obligation then attending an appointment with the case manager.

“It significantly reduces the size of people where those sorts of sanctions will apply.

“So it’s a tool that we can use for the right circumstances.”

Menendez March pushed back, asking “if only 12 people have been given a non-financial sanction, does that say that the circumstances are almost never right?”

Power rejected that saying it was because “we’re just starting.”

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

Foodbanks warn of closures if government fails to give ongoing funding

Source: Radio New Zealand

Woman stands in front of shelves with boxes and paper bags filled with food.

Auckland City missioner Helen Robinson says some foodbanks would close without government funding. Photo: RNZ Insight / Sarah Robson

*This story has been updated to correct the amount of funding that is for monitoring and evaluating the impact of the programme.

The country’s biggest foodbanks are warning of substantial closures if the government does not provide ongoing funding next year.

The Salvation Army, Auckland City Mission and Food Network are among the organisations that received one-off grants till mid-2026.

They are renewing their call for ongoing government funding as they look ahead to next year.

Salvation Army food security manager Sonya Cameron said planning started now for stocking foodbanks next year and the future was uncertain.

“It’s a very high risk. Salvation Army will stay open … but other organisations are even more vulnerable, we’ve already seen a lot of foodbanks close down in the past,” Cameron said.

“I don’t know how many would close down but I suspect it would be substantial.”

She said without ongoing government funding, the Salvation Army would have to reduce the amount of food given out from its 60 foodbanks.

More than half a million New Zealanders rely on foodbanks and food rescue organisations for support.

The Salvation Army's food security manager Sonya Cameron.

Sonya Cameron without government funding the Salvation Army would have to reduce the amount of food its foodbanks distribute. Photo: SUPPLIED/The Salvation Army

Auckland City missioner Helen Robinson said they provide food every day to people who cannot make ends meet.

“Every year we’re left wondering if we’ll be funded. It’s unsustainable,” she said.

“We need to plan, staff, and stock our foodbanks with confidence. That’s impossible when we’re constantly having to re-justify our existence every year to secure funding.”

Robinson said if government funding stopped, some foodbanks would close doors.

“While we will always be there to support whānau, when other services close, it increases pressure on everyone and ultimately means some whānau who are hungry will not be able to access food.”

The Salvation Army and Auckland City Mission are among food banks and hubs that received one-off government grants this year, for the mission that meant it did not have to reduce the number of food parcels it distributes.

That funding, through the Ministry of Social Development’s Food Secure Communities programme, runs till the end of June 2026.

It was renewed after a collective of foodbanks wrote to Social Development Minister Louise Upston asking for ongoing sustainable funding before the May budget announcement.

Foodbanks started to receive direct government funding in 2020 during the pandemic, and over the following four years more than $200 million was invested in the sector. Since then it had been on a one-off basis only.

Food security funding was extended with one-off grants to 13 providers last year, including the mission, which received a one-off $700,000 from the ministry for food parcels.

Earlier this year, the ministry said it was reviewing the way foodbanks were funded.

Aotearoa Food Rescue Alliance head, Tracey Watene, told Midday Report rescued food is a crucial part of what foodbanks offer.

“If funding drops off, thousands of meals will disappear, millions of kilos of edible kai will be wasted, staff will be lost and services will close,” she said.

“The entire food support network, foodbanks, community groups and food rescue, will be weakened just when New Zealanders need it most.”

The alliance received some MSD funding and had diversified to bolster its books.

“Food rescue isn’t the long term fix but it’s what keeps families fed while we work on those bigger economic and food system challenges. Until we address the route causes we need stable funding to keep whanau well.”

She said it took them time to advocate for annual grants which were needed every year.

“Multi-year funding means stability and stability means more kai reaching more whanau,” Watene said.

“Zero funding means that places close and our community and our whanau are doing it extremely tough at the moment.”

New Zealand Food Network chief executive Gavin Findlay said the lack of a multi-year commitment from government meant providers were left in limbo.

“Christmas is a time when many think about giving, but hunger isn’t seasonal. More than 500,000 New Zealanders rely on foodbanks and food rescue organisations for support.”

He said frontline teams across the country were seeing familiar faces return regularly, including families who were working, budgeting carefully and still unable to afford enough food.

“Food security relies on a whole ecosystem, from national distributors to local foodbanks, food support and food rescue organisations,” Findlay said.

“Our role is to keep that system strong and responsive, including during emergencies. That can be done much more effectively and efficiently when funding is stable and allows everyone to plan ahead.”

He said the pressure on foodbanks had intensified in the last year, especially for those on the lowest incomes.

MSD’s General Manager for Pacific and Community Capability Programmes, Serena Curtis, said the ministry has invested more than $200 million through its Food Secure Communities (FSC) programme since 2020.

“We have always been clear with the sector that funding for the FSC Programme is time-limited.”

Curtis said $100,000 of the additional funding was for monitoring and evaluating the impact of the programme.

“This work is underway, and we expect to receive an evaluation report in early 2026,” Curtis said.

The FSC programme has funded the creation and maintenance of national and regional food distribution infrastructure.

“Community food providers are now better connected and can support each other through the national partner organisations we have invested in, such as the New Zealand Food Network, Kore Hiakai Zero Hunger Collective, and the Aotearoa Food Rescue Alliance.”

From July to September this year, MSD provided $32.5m to provide 327,705 food grants.

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Trump’s ratings recover a little after slump; Australian Labor retains large poll leads

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adrian Beaumont, Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne

Donald Trump’s net approval is up a little after a slump to a term low on November 23, as Republicans hold a federal seat at a special election. In Australia, Labor continues to hold large leads in federal polls, but received just 8.3% at the Hinchinbrook Queensland state byelection.

In analyst Nate Silver’s aggregate of United States national polls, Trump’s net approval is -13.5, with 54.8% disapproving and 41.3% approving. His net approval fell from -7.6 on October 20 to a term low of -15.0 on November 23. Since then, he has gained 1.5 points.

Trump’s net approval on the four issues tracked by Silver is -7.0 on immigration, -16.7 on trade, -19.8 on the economy and -32.5 on inflation. His net approval on the economy and inflation have both dropped since late October, with a slight recent rebound. On immigration, his net approval has dropped steadily since October.

Silver has historical ratings for presidents since Harry Truman. Trump’s net approval is only ahead of Trump’s own first term at this stage of past presidencies. Joe Biden’s net approval was the next weakest.

In November 2026 all 435 House of Representatives seats and one-third of the 100 senators will be up for election at midterm elections. In Fiftyplusone’s aggregate of the generic ballot, Democrats lead Republicans by 4.2 points, a slight gain for Democrats since October.

The benchmark US S&P 500 stockmarket index
had slumped 5.1% from its October 29 peak on November 20, but has rebounded strongly to just 0.9% below its peak. Stockmarket gains may explain Trump’s modest ratings recovery.

Republicans today retained a federal House seat in Tennessee, although there was a large swing to the Democrats. With nearly all votes counted, the Republican led the Democrat by 53.9–45.1, an 8.8-point margin. Trump had defeated Kamala Harris in this district in 2024 by 22.3 points. I covered this special election and Canadian and Chile electoral events for The Poll Bludger.

Large-sample Redbridge Australian poll gives Labor 54–46 lead

The Poll Bludger reported
a national Australian Redbridge and Accent Research poll for The Financial Review, conducted November 7–26 from a sample of 4,775, gave Labor a 54–46 lead, a two-point gain for the Coalition since the regular Redbridge November 7–13 poll (fieldwork dates overlap).

Primary votes were 35% Labor (down three), 26% Coalition (up two), 18% One Nation (steady), 10% Greens (up one) and 11% for all Others (steady). Labor led by 56–44 in New South Wales, 54–46 in Victoria and 58–42 in Western Australia, but trailed by 52–48 in Queensland.

In the youngest generation, the Greens had 37% of women and 18% of men, with Labor getting 44% among men and 31% with women, while the Coalition had 20% among men and 16% among women. In the second oldest generation, One Nation had 26% with men and 17% with women.

Labor retains 50–44 lead in Essential

A national Essential poll, conducted November 19–23 from a sample of 1,020, gave Labor a 50–44 lead including undecided by respondent preferences, unchanged from the October Essential poll.

Primary votes were 36% Labor (steady), 27% Coalition (up one), 15% One Nation (steady), 11% Greens (up two), 7% for all Others (down one) and 6% undecided (steady). All Others had 15.0% at the 2025 election, but only get 7% in this poll. By 2025 election preference flows, Labor would lead by about 55.5–44.5.

Most polls that have asked for respondent preferences have had Labor doing worse than by 2025 election preferences, but the recent large-sample Morgan poll had Labor doing 1.5 points better with respondent preferences than 2025 election flows.

Albanese’s net approval improved three points to +4, with 47% approving and 43% disapproving. Ley’s net approval slid two points to -13.

On climate change, 53% (down one since March) thought climate change is happening and is caused by human activity, while 31% (down four) said we are just witnessing a normal fluctuation in the earth’s climate. On addressing climate change, 36% (up one) thought Australia was not doing enough, 30% (down four) doing enough and 20% (up one) doing too much, a record high for this poll.

By 45–39, respondents did not think the world would be able to prevent dangerous levels of global warming.

On gambling advertising, 40% said the government should ban all gambling ads, 23% heavily restrict gambling ads, 28% moderately restrict gambling ads and 9% said the government doesn’t need to restrict gambling ads.

On best to lead the Liberals, Ley had 15% (up one since October), Jacinta Price 11% (up one), Andrew Hastie 8% (down two), Angus Taylor 5% (down two) and Tim Wilson 5% (up two), with 10% for someone else (down two) and 45% unsure (up three). Among Coalition voters, Ley had 21%, Hastie 17% and Price 12%.

Australian Election Study is flawed

The Australian Election Study (AES) released its report on the 2025 federal election on November 26. This used a sample of 2,070 taken months after the May election. However, the surprise Labor landslide at the election likely influenced the results, leading to a more negative opinion of then-Liberal leader Peter Dutton.

It would be far better for the AES to do this poll in the week before the election and use the election results to adjust poll estimates. United States exit polls do this, such as for the 2024 presidential election.

The Poll Bludger had a wrap of the AES results.

LNP gains from Katter party at Queensland byelection

A byelection occurred on November 29 in the Queensland state seat of Hinchinbrook, after Katter’s Australian Party (KAP) member Nick Dametto resigned to successfully run for Mayor of Townsville. The Liberal National Party (LNP) gained Hinchinbrook from the KAP, winning by 53.8–46.2, a 16.9% swing to the LNP since the 2024 Queensland election.

Primary votes were 41.2% LNP (up 13.0%), 30.2% KAP (down 16.2%), 13.4% One Nation (up 8.8%), a dismal 8.3% for Labor (down 5.7%) and 3.5% Greens (up 0.3%). Hinchinbrook is a regional seat that hasn’t been held by Labor since 1957. It contains some of Townsville, and the federal Townsville-based seat of Herbert
has swung strongly to the LNP since Labor won it very narrowly in 2016.

Liberals slide in Tasmanian EMRS poll

A Tasmanian state EMRS poll, conducted November 17–21 from a sample of 1,000, gave the Liberals 34% of the vote (down four since August), Labor 25% (up one), the Greens 17% (up four), independents 19% (steady) and others 6% (steady). Tasmania uses a proportional system for its lower house elections, so a two-party estimate is not applicable.

Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliff’s net favourability slumped 19 points to -1, while Labor leader Josh Willie’s net favourability slid eight points to -4.

Given a choice between the Liberals, Labor and Greens on best manager of various issues, most issues recorded gains for the Greens and “none of these” since August at the expense of both major parties.

The Conversation

Adrian Beaumont 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. Trump’s ratings recover a little after slump; Australian Labor retains large poll leads – https://theconversation.com/trumps-ratings-recover-a-little-after-slump-australian-labor-retains-large-poll-leads-270567

Like night and day: why Test cricket changes so much under lights

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Vaughan Cruickshank, Senior Lecturer in Health and Physical Education, University of Tasmania

Cricket’s first Test match was played between Australia and England in 1877.

The next Ashes match, starting at the Gabba in Brisbane on Thursday, will be Test number 2,611.




Read more:
The ‘Bazball’ game style has revolutionised English cricket. Australia should be nervous


It will also be the 25th day-night Test.

Many people criticised the introduction of day-night Tests – including challenges posted by the pink ball (not red, as used in day clashes), visibility issues during twilight, and concerns that cricket is putting commercial interests ahead of the sport’s integrity.

But just how are day-night Tests different from traditional day matches?

History of day-night Tests

Australia and New Zealand played the first official day-night Test at the Adelaide Oval in 2015.

Day-night matches were introduced to increase the popularity of Test cricket and to play it at a time when it could attract larger crowds and a greater primetime audience on television.

From a commercial angle, the move has worked. Evening sessions draw larger crowds and television audiences.

Australia has embraced day-night Tests more than any other country, playing in 14 of the 24 completed day-night Tests. England is next with seven.

Australia has also hosted 13 of the day-night Tests, eight of them in Adelaide. India is next with three.

Cricket Australia and various state governments negotiate summer schedules and venues, with only Adelaide, Brisbane and Hobart hosting day-night Tests so far.

Australian dominance

The Australian team’s familiarity with day-night cricket may partly explain its outstanding record of 13 wins and one loss.

In contrast, England has only won two of its seven day-night Tests, losing all three against Australia.

Familiarity and more opportunities have contributed to Australian dominance of day-night Tests. The top four leading wicket-takers in day-night Tests are Australian.

Mitchell Starc leads (81 wickets in 14 Tests) while the best by an English player is the now-retired James Anderson with 24 wickets in seven Tests.

Australia also has the top five run scorers in day-night Tests.

Marnus Labuschagne (958 runs in nine Tests) is the current leader and has the chance to be the first player to score 1,000 runs in day-night encounters. Joe Root (501 runs in seven games) is the top Englishman at sixth on the list.

How things change under lights

Day-night games have several key differences to day Tests, such as the ball, the conditions and tactics used.

To make day-night Tests work, manufacturers had to develop a ball that’s visible under floodlights, yet durable enough for Test conditions.

Traditional red balls are too difficult to see at night, whereas white balls (used in shorter cricket formats) become dirty and discoloured too quickly.

After years of experimentation with orange and yellow versions, the pink ball emerged as the best compromise. It was trialled in domestic competitions and one-day internationals before being used in Tests.

Batting and bowling under lights is very different from daytime play because the pink ball behaves differently.

Its thicker coating keeps it shiny for longer, which gives fast bowlers more swing and seam movement.

This is most obvious when the ball is new and also during the twilight session, when dew can add extra moisture to the pitch.

Additionally, more grass if often left on the pitch to help reduce damage to the ball.

This all makes life more difficult for batters.

Spinners, though, often struggle because the ball’s harder coating and extra dew reduce grip and turn.

Players have also spoken about the difficulty of adjusting their eyes as daylight fades and floodlights take over. Fielders can also lose sight of the ball against the dusky sky.

In day Tests, the average runs per wicket increases slightly from session one to session three, with scoring rates also increasing slightly across the day. This pattern suggests batting becomes easier as the ball softens and the pitch flattens, while bowlers tire and conditions remain stable across daylight hours.

In contrast, session two is the easiest to bat in during day-night Tests. Batting is much harder in session one (when the ball is often new) and in session three under lights.

Pink ball scoring rates are similar to daytime matches but bowlers strike more often.

What about tactics?

Teams have learned to plan around the evening session (session three), when the fading light and cooling air can make batting harder.

Captains often time their declarations or new-ball spells to coincide with the twilight period and choose to bat first.

Fast bowlers in particular relish the chance to attack under lights and many batters say adapting footwork and timing against the moving pink ball is more difficult.

Comparing results

In short, day-night Tests are harder for batters. Fewer runs are scored, wickets fall more quickly, and games generally finish earlier.

When comparing all Tests from the past ten years, teams in day-night matches score about 150 fewer runs per game and bowlers need ten fewer balls to take each wicket.

Day-night Tests also tend to end with a result sooner, with matches on average being around 50 overs shorter. Notably, none of the 24 day-night Tests played so far has ended in a draw, compared with 14% of day Tests.

Thursday’s second Ashes Test at the Gabba will be the fourth day-night Test at the Queensland ground.

The Australians lost the previous day-night Gabba Test, to the West Indies last summer, which will give England some hope after their disastrous loss in the opening Ashes clash in Perth.

The Conversation

The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Like night and day: why Test cricket changes so much under lights – https://theconversation.com/like-night-and-day-why-test-cricket-changes-so-much-under-lights-267320

Thunderstorms are noisily kicking off summer in NZ – what’s driving them?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By James Renwick, Professor of Physical Geography (Climate Science), Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

The rumble of thunderstorms across the country this week is a noisy reminder that summer is arriving – and with it, the mix of heat, humidity and unstable air that fuels these bursts of wild weather.

Strolling to the Meteorological Society of New Zealand’s annual conference in Hamilton this morning, I could sense this atmospheric shift about me.

These early storms sit in a transition zone, where strong daytime heating combines with lingering spring volatility. Put the ingredients together and thunderstorms can form readily.

The influence of La Niña, now present in the tropical Pacific, can also provide northern parts of the country with background conditions that make for heightened mugginess, heavy downpours and thunderstorm activity.

But this is a weaker event than the La Niña summers earlier in the decade – which helped set the stage for Cyclone Gabrielle and the Auckland Anniversary floods – and it may well fade by season’s end.

Sea surface temperatures, however, have recently increased sharply, with widespread and abnormally warm marine heatwave conditions returning to our coastal waters.

This ocean heat is likely to last through summer, with the potential to boost evaporation and humidity, and add energy to the lower atmosphere. When weather systems arrive from the north, that extra moisture can drive heavier rain and more vigorous convection.

These conditions may point to a greater risk of significant rain events later in summer, especially for the North Island, with a normal or slightly elevated chance of ex-tropical cyclone interactions.

In short: expect more heat, more humidity and occasional bursts of very heavy rain.

So how do thunderstorms like this week’s fit into the mix – and what does a warming climate mean for them?

How thunderstorms build their power

Thunderstorms form when warm, moist air rises into cooler layers above.

As the air ascends, water vapour condenses into cloud droplets, releasing heat that adds buoyancy and lifts the air further. This fuels a strong up-and-down circulation inside the storm.

Within this turbulent environment, electrical charges separate. Collisions between droplets, ice particles and graupel (soft hail) build positive charges near the top of the cloud and negative charges near the base.

When the atmosphere can no longer insulate that imbalance, lightning discharges. The air around the lightning channel is heated to tens of thousands of degrees – hotter than the surface of the Sun – and the rapid expansion generates the shock wave we hear as thunder.

As impressive as this latest event has been – Metservice has counted more than 3,600 lightning strikes since midnight, of which nearly 730 reached the ground – New Zealand’s thunderstorms are usually small by global standards, often measuring just a kilometre across.

Most are single convective cells, though they can occasionally line up into squall lines that bring intense local rain, strong winds and small tornadoes. Lightning deaths are extremely rare here.

Climate change means more active weather

According to the World Meteorological Organisation, 2025 is likely to finish up as the world’s second or third warmest on record, with record greenhouse gas concentrations continuing to drive severe heatwaves, melt glaciers and warm oceans.

A warmer climate also means more energy and moisture in the atmosphere, making it easier for thunderstorms and heavy rain to develop when conditions allow.

Air holds about 7% more water vapour for every degree of warming, and when that moisture condenses, it releases heat that strengthens the storm’s updrafts. That draws in even more warm, moist air from below, allowing rainfall totals to exceed the 7% rule of thumb, especially in short, intense bursts.

NIWA (now part of Earth Sciences New Zealand) has estimated that every degree of warming leads to a median 13.5% increase in hourly rainfall in a one-in-50-year event.

Atmospheric rivers – long, narrow plumes of tropical moisture – are also expected to become more frequent and intense in a warmer climate and already drive many of our heaviest downpours.

Attribution studies, meanwhile, are increasingly showing the handprint of human-driven climate change. Scientists have found this made for more intense rainfall in the Canterbury and West Coast flood events in 2021, and during Cyclone Gabrielle in 2023.

This signal translates directly into losses: nearly a third of the damage from New Zealand’s 12 most costly flood events between 2007 and 2017 – about NZ$140 million – was directly attributed to climate change.

Yet, how a warming planet is likely to affect the frequency of thunderstorms themselves is still uncertain. International studies suggest increases in some regions, but the processes are complex and not yet well understood for New Zealand.

The broader picture, however, is straightforward: warmer seas and a warmer atmosphere mean more moisture, more energy in the system, and possibly more instability in the atmosphere. When thunderstorms do form, they have more to work with.

Weather systems like this week’s will come and go, but the wider, long-term trend is something we all need to be concerned about.

We are tipping the odds toward more intense downpours – and the challenge now is acting quickly enough to spare future generations a much warmer, wetter world.

The Conversation

James Renwick receives climate research funding from the NZ MInistry for Business, Innovation & Employment.

ref. Thunderstorms are noisily kicking off summer in NZ – what’s driving them? – https://theconversation.com/thunderstorms-are-noisily-kicking-off-summer-in-nz-whats-driving-them-271195

Black Ferns set for three-Test showdown vs France at home in 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand celebrate during the Women’s Rugby World Cup third-place match against France, 2025. ADRIAN DENNIS / AFP

The Black Ferns will resume their rivalry with France for a three-Test home series in 2026, as part of the new WXV Global Series.

The series headlines a four-match home schedule between August and the end of October, which includes a Test against Australia where New Zealand will look to retain the O’Reilly Cup.

The Black Ferns, fresh off beating France in the 2025 Women’s Rugby World Cup bronze final, will host the world’s fourth ranked side in Hamilton, Whangārei and Christchurch.

GM Professional Rugby and Performance Chris Lendrum said they were pleased to secure four homes Tests next year.

“There’s a real rivalry between the Black Ferns and France, so hosting them as part of the WXV Global Series is exciting. The Black Ferns have won eight of the last thirteen Tests between these two nations and these teams faced off in the 2021 and 2025 RWC playoffs too, which adds significant intensity to the match-up. 2026 also marks 30 years since these two teams first played against one another, so there is new and old history here that we know fans will get behind and celebrate,” Lendrum said.

The Black Ferns will play 10 test matches in total next year, with three Tests against Pacific rivals in April, which will include the traditional Pac4 fixtures.

As part of the WXV Global Series, the Black Ferns will play six Tests in a home and away format against some of the top 12 teams in the world.

Black Ferns co-captain Kennedy Tukuafu said the side had plenty to prove.

“We have a great mix of Tests here at home and overseas. We’ve always said we want to play as much rugby as possible, so with so many Tests overseas and at home next year we want to make the most of those,” Tukuafu said.

“We look forward to playing in four different venues across the motu (country) to see as many of our incredible fans as possible. For me personally having a Test at home in Hamilton is going to be special, and when we take the field, it will have been two years since the Black Ferns last played there.”

Previously played through March and April, Super Rugby Aupiki will now take place between June and August, with six regular season games and a grand final.

Black Ferns four home Test matches in 2026:

  • Black Ferns v Australia, Saturday 22 August, Go Media Stadium, Auckland
  • Black Ferns v France, Saturday 17 October, FMG Stadium Waikato, Hamilton
  • Black Ferns v France, Saturday 24 October, Semenoff Stadium, Whangārei
  • Black Ferns v France, Saturday 31 October, One NZ Stadium, Christchurch

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Hikers ignoring warning signs and risking lives on Hooker Valley track

Source: Radio New Zealand

Advisory sign for Hooker Valley track. Department of Conservation

Up to 20 people a day are risking their lives venturing into closed areas of a popular Aoraki/Mt Cook National Park track, where construction and explosive work is underway to build a new bridge, the Department of Conservation says.

DOC said staff working on the 189-metre suspension bridge on the Hooker Valley Track had repeatedly seen people ignoring safety barriers and gates and were often downing tools to tell people to leave.

On one occasion staff had to stop a helicopter pouring concrete to tell walkers to go, DOC said.

Signs warning walkers of construction on the Hooker Valley Track. Department of Conservation

DOC Aoraki/Mt Cook operations manager Sally Jones said there were already signs on the track and at White Horse Hill car park warning people not to go past barriers but some people were ignoring them.

“People are taking real risks by climbing fences and in some cases even attempting to cross the Hooker River – its bloody freezing let alone fast and furious,” she said.

“They’re doing this all to get to the closed Hooker Bridge which is not safe.”

Jones said the river bank holding the piles for the old bridge had eroded, further increasing risk of it collapsing.

“People are putting their lives at risk. We all want the new suspension bridge on the Hooker Track open as soon as possible and the construction workers need to be able to get on with the job without having to worry about the public,” she said.

Erosion on the Hooker Valley Track. Supplied/DOC

She said as the upper section of the track was a restricted access site, so trespass notices could be issued.

“We just want visitors to respect the information we are giving them. Staying on tracks in general is important as our environment can be very challenging and we want people to have a safe trip,” she said.

“We sometimes see visitors putting themselves at risk to get that one photo, near a drop-off or way off track. People can also trample over the unique and precious alpine vegetation and don’t seem to notice what they are destroying.”

DOC was installing security cameras to try to keep visitors on track.

Hooker track lookout over Mueller Lake. Department of Conservation

Jones said aerial predator control operations were also due to begin in the park, involving temporary closures of Tasman Valley Road and lower Hooker Track from the first suspension bridge.

“We want to ensure there is minimal disruption to people’s plans. There are plenty of other walks in the park which have spectacular views of Aoraki including Kea Point, Sealy Tarns and lovely nature walks like through Bowen Bush and the Governors Bush walk,” she said.

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Cars torched at popular Invercargill park

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police believe the cars were deliberately torched. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

Police are investigating a fire where four vehicles appeared to be deliberately torched in a popular Invercargill park.

Detective Sergeant John Kean said it was reported in Queens Park in Windsor shortly before 12:30am on Wednesday.

He said no one was injured but it appears four vehicles were set alight.

Police are asking anyone who may have seen anything unusual in the area last night or early this morning to get on touch.

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Police seek information after man stabbed in Wellington car park on Sunday

Source: Radio New Zealand

The incident occurred in a Wellington car park in the early hours of Sunday morning. RNZ / REECE BAKER

Wellington police are appealing for information after a young man was stabbed in the Wellington’s suburb of Te Aro in the early hours of Sunday morning.

Police said the incident happened about 4.10am in a car park between Wakefield Street and Tory Street.

The victim sustained multiple stab wounds to the arm and back and was taken to hospital where he remains in a stable condition.

Detective Senior Sergeant Tim Leitch said the victim’s wounds had the potential to be fatal.

“This could have very easily been a homicide investigation,” he said in a statement.

“What we know is there were a significant number of people in the surrounding area when this happened – we need to hear from these people.”

Leitch urged anyone with footage, or who witnessed the incident, to contact police as soon as possible.

Anyone with information which may assist, is urged to contact police online or by calling 105 and using reference number 251130/5482.

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Notorious criminal charged with historical serious sexual assault

Source: Radio New Zealand

The man has appeared in the Auckland District Court. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

One of the country’s most notorious criminals has been charged with a serious sexual assault from nearly 40 years ago.

The man made his first appearance in the Auckland District Court on Wednesday before Judge Kirsten Lummis where he was granted interim name suppression until March 10.

He entered a not guilty plea through his lawyer.

The man, aged in his 70s, is charged with a serious sexual assault of a woman in Auckland’s Onehunga in 1988.

Detective Inspector Scott Beard confirmed to RNZ police had charged a man over a historical stranger sexual assault in Auckland during the late 1980s.

“An investigation was carried out at the time when the alleged rape occurred in Onehunga on 18 June 1988.

“Enquiries available to detectives at the time were unable to identify the perpetrator.”

Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

In May this year the complainant contacted police to review her case.

“This was assigned to an investigator in the Auckland City Adult Sexual Assault Team.”

Police had since charged the man.

Beard was unable to go into the specifics of the 2025 enquiries given court proceedings are under way.

“However, it is pleasing that we can bring this matter to the courts on behalf of the complainant, given there is no statute of limitations on this sort of offending.”

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ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for December 3, 2025

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on December 3, 2025.

How Starlink is connecting remote First Nations communities – and creating new divides
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Daniel Featherstone, Senior Research Fellow, RMIT University Daniel Featherstone In the Cape York community of Wujal Wujal, local service providers used to hold their breath every time a big storm rolled in. Cloud cover could knock out their satellite internet just when they needed it most. Since

Politics with Michelle Grattan: Tim Ayres on the AI rollout’s looming ‘bumps and glitches’
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra The federal government released its National AI Strategy this week, confirming it has dropped its earlier proposal for mandatory guardrails for high-risk artificial intelligence (AI). In responding to AI, the government has found itself caught between the unions, which have

Coral reefs have orchestrated Earth’s climate for 250 million years
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tristan Salles, Associate Professor, School of Geosciences, University of Sydney When we think of coral reefs, we picture bright fish, clear water and colourful corals. But reefs have also shaped the planet in deeper ways. Our new study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,

The way Australia produces food is unique. Our updated dietary guidelines have to recognise this
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By David Masters, Adjunct Professor in Agriculture and Environment, The University of Western Australia Mandy McKeesick/Getty You might know Australia’s dietary guidelines from the famous infographics showing the types and quantities of foods we should eat to have a healthy diet. Last updated 12 years ago, the National

When did people first arrive in Australasia? New archaeogenetics study dates it to 60,000 years ago
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Martin B. Richards, Research Professor in Archaeogenetics, Department of Physical and Life Sciences, University of Huddersfield The question of when people first arrived in the land mass that now comprises much of Australasia has long been a source of scientific debate. Many Aboriginal people believe they have

It’s not you – some typefaces feel different
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Andrea Piovesan, Lecturer in Psychology, Edge Hill University Roman Samborskyi/Shutterstock Have you ever thought a font looked “friendly” or “elegant”? Or felt that Comic Sans was somehow unserious? You’re not imagining it. Typefaces carry personalities, and we react to them more than we realise. My work explores

The tiny clue that reveals if an animal has been illegally smuggled
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ricky Spencer, Professor, Western Sydney University Ricky Spencer, CC BY-ND If someone mentions criminal gangs, you might think of drug trafficking or financial crime. But one of the most persistent illegal trades in the world flies largely under the radar: wildlife smuggling. The illegal wildlife trade drains

Adults like to talk about ‘big school’. This can make the change seem scary for some children
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kelly Simpson, Associate Lecturer in Education , Southern Cross University Starting school is a time of great anticipation and excitement for young children and families. The buildup can last for months as children go to orientation days, and families prepare with new uniforms, bags and lunch boxes.

With a sneaky tweak, the government has made welfare recipients guilty until proven innocent
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Zoe Staines, Senior Lecturer in Law and Social Policy, The University of Queensland In the flurry of action in Parliament House in the final moments of the sitting year, the government passed a bill that escaped the attention of most. New changes to social security law mean

What’s working from home doing to your mental health? We tracked 16,000 Australians to find out
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jan Kabatek, Research Fellow, Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, The University of Melbourne Nes/Getty Working from home has become a fixture of Australian work culture, but its effect on mental health is still widely debated. Can working from home boost your mental health? If

The clock is ticking on a golden opportunity for real change in Australia
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Aruna Sathanapally, Chief Executive, Grattan Institute The May 2026 federal budget will mark one year since the Albanese government’s unexpected landslide win at the last election. That budget is arguably the most important one for this term: setting the agenda for the government’s final two years and

Oh. What. Fun. is a light, frivolous Christmas comedy – about motherhood and female rage
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rachel Williamson, Senior Tutor in English, University of Canterbury Prime Video With less than a month to go, the telltale signs that Christmas is coming have begun appearing in shops and malls around the country. Fairy lights and tinsel adorn store displays while Mariah Carey’s All I

Albanese government shies away from tougher recommendations from ‘jobs for mates’ inquiry
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra An independent inquiry has strongly condemned the politicisation of appointments to government boards, declaring present processes have “let down the Australian people” and are not fit for purpose. In her report former public service commissioner Lynelle Briggs has recommended a

Giving men a common antidepressant could help tackle domestic violence: world-first study
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tony Butler, Professor and Program Head, Justice Health Research Program, UNSW Sydney MChromatique – Own work/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY In April 2024, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese declared domestic and family violence a “national crisis” calling for proactive responses that “focus on the perpetrators and focus on prevention”.

Taking a drug like Ozempic? What you need to know about risks of suicidal thoughts and contraception failure
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nial Wheate, Professor, School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University The rise of GLP-1 drugs such as Ozempic and Mounjaro has been nothing short of meteoric. Originally developed to treat diabetes, these drugs are now widely used for weight loss and have become household names. But alongside headlines

Australia’s national AI plan has just been released. Who exactly will benefit?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jake Goldenfein, Senior Lecturer, Law and Technology, The University of Melbourne Igor Omilaev/Unsplash Today, the Albanese Labor government released the long-awaited National AI Plan, “a whole-of-government framework that ensures technology works for people, not the other way around”. With this plan, the government promises an inclusive artificial

Euphemisms and false balance: how the media is helping to normalise far-right views
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Imogen Richards, Senior Lecturer in Criminology, Deakin University This year, a series of rallies organised by neo-Nazi groups in Australian cities sparked public outrage and concern about the extreme right. Yet, some media coverage of the rallies downplayed the role neo-Nazis played in what they called “anti-immigration

In 1939, a Royal Commission found burning forests leads to more bushfires. But this cycle of destruction can be stopped
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Philip Zylstra, Research Associate, University of New South Wales, and Adjunct Associate Professor, Curtin University A planned burn near Perth, Western Australia. Posnov/Getty Every year, government workers around Australia start fires in the bush. The idea behind these prescribed burning programs is that removing dry leaves and

What makes a healthy and safe boarding school culture?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Paul Kidson, Associate Professor in Educational Leadership, Australian Catholic University Nick David/ Getty Images Last week, police confirmed four students at Victorian boarding school Ballarat Grammar had been cautioned over a series of “strappings” of younger students. This followed other allegations of hazings and abuse at the

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for December 2, 2025
ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on December 2, 2025.

Iwi file urgent Waitangi Tribunal inquiry over education Treaty changes

Source: Radio New Zealand

Veteran Māori broadcaster Waihoroi Shortland. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Northland iwi Ngāti Hine and hapū Te Kapotai are calling for an urgent Waitangi Tribunal inquiry after the government removed school boards’ legal obligations to give effect to Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

The claimants say the amendments to the Education and Training Act 2020, and the reset of the New Zealand Curriculum – Te Mātaiaho, undermine Māori rangatiratanga, partnership, and equity in education.

A statement of claim was filed on 19 November 2025 on behalf of Te Kapotai (Wai 1464/1546) and Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Hine (Wai 682/49), alongside a joint application for urgency.

The claimants argue the legislative and curriculum changes are inconsistent with Te Tiriti o Waitangi and cause “significant and irreversible prejudice” to Māori including:

  • Schools being unable to uphold treaty guarantees of tino rangatiratanga and partnership.
  • Unilateral Crown decision-making affecting Māori children and their whānau.
  • Immediate damage to the Treaty relationship between Māori and the Crown.
  • Loss of cultural safety, erosion of kaupapa Māori foundations, and disproportionate harm to tamariki Māori.
  • Unequal access between Māori children to te reo Māori, tikanga, and mātauranga across schools.
  • Increased resourcing burdens on the sector and school boards to adapt to the changes.

Claims submitted to the Tribunal state that the legislative and curriculum changes remove, weaken and deprioritise Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

Veteran Māori broadcaster Waihoroi Shortland said that the legislative changes amounted to a modern re-enactment of the Treaty Principles Bill “by stealth,” effectively eliminating Te Tiriti from the statute book.

He argued the Crown’s actions form part of a “long pattern of removing Māori nationhood from law and policy.”

Kara George said the Crown had failed to engage with hapū, creating “culturally unsafe, assimilationist educational environments” and affecting tamariki Māori language, identity, and well-being.

Tumuaki Maia Cooper said the changes had led to burnout for kaiako, removed kaupapa Māori foundations from school practice, and eroded equity settings for tamariki Māori.

Educator and grandparent Arona Tipene said the changes were destabilising for Māori whānau and kaiako, led to a loss of cultural safety in schools, and disproportionately affected Māori children who rely on Te Tiriti obligations for protection of their identity, belonging, and well-being.

She said the removal of these foundations could cause permanent harm to current and future generations.

The claimants argued there is no alternative remedy for these breaches of Te Tiriti, and that urgent Tribunal intervention is required before the amendment comes into force in November 2026.

The Tribunal has directed the Crown and other interested parties to respond by Wednesday, 3 December.

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All Whites to play at home before 2026 World Cup

Source: Radio New Zealand

All Whites captain Chris Wood will be back in Auckland before the FIFA World Cup. Shane Wenzlick / Phototek.nz

The All Whites will play two final home games ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026, with New Zealand set to host its first ever FIFA Series in March.

The FIFA Series brings together four competing nations to play international fixtures against other top sides.

Which teams will travel to New Zealand for the event are yet to be confirmed.

The All Whites took part in the inaugural FIFA Series in 2024, held in Egypt, where they faced the hosts as well as Tunisia.

Due to travel and competition requirements, all matches will be played in Auckland, but New Zealand Football are exploring options to bring the team back later in the year, after the World Cup, with at least one game in the South Island.

New Zealand Football chief executive Andrew Pragnell said one of the requirements of hosting was a sole location to “maximise training time ahead of the FIFA World Cup”.

“This is massive, we know how excited people are for the FIFA World Cup 2026 already, and to have two final games at home against strong international opposition and properly see the team off is huge.”

The FIFA Series games will be played during the 23 – 31 March international window with exact dates and venue information still to be announced.

The matches are supported by the Government’s Events Attraction Package.

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Police charge another teen with murder in relation to killing of Kyle Whorrall

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kyle Whorrall was attacked at an Auckland bus stop and later died in hospital. SUPPLIED

Police have made another arrest in relation to the murder of American PhD student Kyle Whorrall.

The 33-year-old man was attacked at a bus stop in Meadowbank on 19 April and later died in hospital.

Police say they have arrested a 17-year-old male who has been charged with murder and aggravated robbery.

… More to come

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Andrew Coster breaks silence after resigning from Social Investment Agency

Source: Radio New Zealand

Andrew Coster pictured during his time as Police Commissioner. (File photo) RNZ / Nick Monro

Former Police Commissioner Andrew Coster has broken his silence after resigning as chief executive of the Social Investment Agency.

RNZ revealed on Wednesday Coster had resigned after the police watchdog’s damning report into police’s response to allegations of sexual offending by former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming.

In a statement to RNZ, Coster said his resignation was “a result of my acceptance of full responsibility for the shortcomings” identified in the Independent Police Conduct Authority’s report.

“I regret the impact on the young woman at the centre of this matter and sincerely apologise to her for the distress caused.

“I accept that I was too ready to trust and accept at face value Deputy Commissioner McSkimming’s disclosure and explanations to me. I should have been faster and more thorough in looking into the matter.”

Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

Coster acknowledged he should have more fully investigated the allegations when they were brought to his attention, “rather than assuming that their previous disclosure to senior Police staff a few years earlier would have resulted in an investigation if necessary”.

“It is clear that Police’s handling of the whole matter was lacking and that I was ultimately responsible for those matters. It was sobering to read of a number of missed opportunities which should have proceeded differently and more appropriately.”

Coster welcomed Sir Brian’s acknowledgement that the report made no finding of corruption or cover-up, nor did the IPCA find any evidence of any actions involving officers consciously doing the wrong thing or setting out to undermine the integrity of the organisation.

“I made decisions honestly. I acted in good faith. I sought to take all important factors into account with the information I had at the time. While it is not possible to alter past events, I am prepared to take responsibility – I got this wrong.

“I want to apologise to all members of the NZ Police. They work hard every day to keep our communities safe. I know they have been adversely affected by these events.”

Coster said it had been a “very challenging time” for his family and himself.

“The support we have received has been deeply appreciated. I have devoted my professional life to the service of others – it is my intention to do so again at some point in the future.”

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Intense rain, blustery wind and thunderstorms hit Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Jessica Hopkins

MetService is forecasting downpours across the North Island on Wednesday, with possible thunderstorms in some places, and a number of watches and warnings in place.

A heavy rain warning is in place from 11am until 11pm on Wednesday for Bay of Plenty and Gisborne/Tai Rāwhiti north of Ruatoria and the inland ranges, thunderstorms and downpours are also possible in these areas.

MetService a severe thunderstorm warning for the areas of Rodney, Gulf and Albany.

Just after 1pm, the MetService weather radar detected severe thunderstorms near Warkworth, Puhoi, Kaukapakapa, Kaipara Flats and Ahuroa.

These severe thunderstorms are moving towards the southeast, and are expected to lie near Orewa, Whangaparaoa and Silverdale at 1.37pm and near Auckland and Inner Hauraki Gulf at 2.07pm.

The agency says these thunderstorms are expected to be accompanied by very heavy rain.

Meanwhile, there are reports that a tornado went through a motor camp in rural Manawatū and overturned a caravan.

Emergency services were called at 12.36pm and Fire and Emergency has confirmed that there is at least one person is injured.

Meteorologist Mmathapelo Makgabutlane said the most notable warning was for Bay of Plenty, with 80 to 120 millimetres of rain set to fall before the end of the day.

“With thunderstorms in the mix we could see shorter periods of more intense rain bringing those possibilities such as flooding as well as slips and difficult driving conditions.”

Thunderstorms may also occur in Taranaki and Whanganui, she said.

MetService has issued weather warnings and watches for much of the North Island on Wednesday. Supplied / MetService

A severe thunderstorm watch is in place for a large part of the North Island including Coromandel Peninsula, Waikato, Bay of Plenty and Taupo from 1pm-6pm on Wednesday.

Some of these thunderstorms may become severe on Wednesday afternoon with localised downpours of up to 40mm/h, large hail and strong wind gusts of up to 90km/h.

MetService said there was even a slight chance of a tornado, but that thunderstorm activity was expected to ease by Wednesday evening.

Northerly winds are forecast to turn southwesterly with gusts of up to 90km/h forecast.

Heavy rain watches are in place for a number of places throughout the day including Northland, Auckland, Great Barrier Island and Coromandel Peninsula, Taranaki, Wairarapa, the eastern hills and ranges in Wellington, and central North Island areas including Waikato and inland Whanganui.

There are also strong wind watches in place later on Wednesday for Northland, Auckland, Taranaki, Horowhenua to Wellington, parts of the Tararua and Hawke’s Bay districts and Wairarapa.

In the South Island heavy rain watches are in place for the Kaikōura Coast and the Chatham Islands, where a strong wind watch is also in place.

There may also be thunderstorms in Central Otago on Wednesday afternoon or evening.

Wind watches are also in place for Marlborough and parts of the Nelson region from 5pm Wednesday until 3am Thursday.

Makgabutlane said things were set to improve from Thursday onwards.

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Lewis Clareburt leaving NZ to chase LA 2028 Olympics swimming medal

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lewis Clareburt during the Men’s 400m Individual Medley Heats at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Photosport

Two-time Olympian Lewis Clareburt is leaving New Zealand to chase his dream of a swimming medal at the LA 2028 Olympic Games.

The 2024 400m Individual Medley World Champion has announced he’s moving from Auckland to Melbourne where he’ll join Nunawading Swim Club in January 2026.

Clareburt will be coached by internationally renowned coach Jolyon Finck, and will train with Olympic athletes who also specialise in the medley disciplines.

The double Commonwealth Games swimming champion was forced to relocate to Auckland at the end of 2023 when he struggled to get lane space at the Wellington Regional Aquatic Centre, which was shared by other sports and the public.

Clareburt won gold in the 400 medley and the 200 butterfly at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham and made the 400 medley final at the Tokyo Olympics.

“We’re looking to create a really strong medley training group in Melbourne,” Clareburt said.

“At the moment there’s a really successful medley training group in the US and they’re winning all the medals internationally. If medley swimmers from Australia and New Zealand want to be on the podium we need to have a similar group in the southern hemisphere and that’s what we’re looking to set up.

“Being surrounded by this group day-in day-out is going to allow me to keep developing my swimming and pushing myself. I’m also 26 and have lived in New Zealand all my life, so this is an exciting opportunity for me and my partner to live in another country and experience a different culture.”

The 26-year-old paid tribute to the team which has supported him in Auckland.

“I can’t speak highly enough of my time in Auckland. Mitch Nairn has been an amazing coach and my physios and strength and conditioning team have been awesome,” he said.

“I’ll still be racing for New Zealand and I’ll be back home quite often for competitions and camps so it’s going to be a great mix for me and I’m excited for a new challenge which should help me reach my goals.”

Swimming New Zealand head of high performance Graeme Maw said the organisation was looking forward to supporting Clareburt as he builds toward LA2028.

“We’re excited to see Lewis continue to develop and chase his goal of a podium finish in LA,” Maw said.

“Swimming New Zealand has a strong and supportive relationship with Lewis and with his new coach in Melbourne, and he will remain fully supported by SNZ as he builds toward upcoming pinnacle events.”

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

First live show for new Christchurch stadium revealed

Source: Radio New Zealand

Six60 and Synthony will perform in Christchurch on 16 May, the first live music set at the city’s brand new One New Zealand Stadium.

The Once in a Liftetime event will culminate in a collaboration between the twin headliners performing Six60’s biggest hits, event organisers confirmed on Wednesday.

The long-awaited 30,000 multi-use arena in the central city is due to open in April.

Six60, the Dunedin set which has become one of the biggest New Zealand bands of all time, said it was a “real honour” to play the first ever show at the venue.

“Christchurch has backed us from day one, it was the first ever city to book us for a live gig, so being able to open a venue built for its future is really special. We can’t wait to put on a night that Christchurch deserves.”

Synthony, the music and light extravaganza centred around orchestral reworkings of dance and electronic tracks, has become an international phenomenon.

Duco Events promoter David Higgins said it was a privilege to for the New-Zealand-born project to be part of the historic night.

“This show is a landmark moment for live entertainment in Aotearoa, a new world-class venue, and an all-NZ bill. It’s the kind of night that will define what’s possible here,” he said.

Fresh off selling out the Christchurch Town Hall last month, the lineup also includes local country singer-songwriter Kaylee Bell. Christchurch up-and-comers Cassie Henderson and Castaway are also slated to perform.

Wednesday’s announcement coincided with details unveiled by the government around its $70 million major event fund.

Tourism and Hospitality Minister Louise Upston said the Six60 and Synthony double-header would receive funding through its Events Boost fund.

“Today’s acts and events are just the start, offering something for hundreds of thousands of fans and visitors, along with a big boost to New Zealand’s economy,” Upston said.

Events in 2026 including the Auckland concert of American nu-metal icons Linkin Park and the electronic music festival Ultra Music Festival in Wellington would also be supported through the fund.

“From music to sports fans to art enthusiasts, we’re investing in an exciting and diverse line-up because major events don’t just attract visitors – they inject life and energy to cities and town, creating vibrant communities and unforgettable experiences,” she said.

“The economic benefits are huge – hotels fill up, restaurants and cafes thrive, tills ring in our shops, and local businesses see a surge in customers.”

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

Tornado reportedly tears through Manawatū motor camp

Source: Radio New Zealand

File picture. Connor Diver

Fire crews have rushed to a motor camp in rural Manawatū after reports a tornado went through and overturned a caravan.

Emergency services were called to Dudding Lake at 12.36pm.

FENZ shift manager Murray Dunbar said a fire truck was at the scene alongside ambulance staff who were assessing four patients.

Dunbar confirmed at least one person had injuries.

St John said a patient has been taken to Whanganui Hospital in a moderate condition.

Rangtikei District Council said it had been informed of a tornado and asked people to avoid the area until otherwise advised.

The council said its staff was assessing damage and would keep people updated as more information came to hand.

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

Police yet to recover pendant allegedly swallowed at Auckland jewellery store

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police say the pendant has not yet been recovered. SCREENSHOT

Police have not yet recovered a Fabergé egg pendant after it was allegedly eaten during a theft at an Auckland jewellery store.

A 32-year-old man is before the courts, accused of swallowing the necklace worth more than $33,500.

Inspector Grae Anderson told RNZ the man underwent a medical assessment at the time of his arrest and an officer had been assigned to constantly monitor him.

“Given this man is in police custody, we have a duty of care to continue monitoring him given the circumstances of what has occurred,” he said.

Anderson said, at this stage, the pendant had not been recovered.

An online listing for the locket said it had been crafted from 18ct yellow gold and set with 60 white diamonds and 15 blue sapphires.

A golden octopus inside the locket was set with two black diamonds for eyes.

The man was expected to appear in Auckland District Court next week charged with theft.

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

Linkin Park are coming to New Zealand

Source: Radio New Zealand

American rock band Linkin Park will visit New Zealand next year for one show in Auckland.

Mike Shinoda, Dave ‘Phoenix’ Farrell, Joe Hahn, Colin Brittain and new vocalist Emily Armstrong will bring theirFrom Zero World Tour to Auckland’s Spark Arena on 18 March.

Last year the band revealed in a statement they had “quietly began meeting up again in recent years” and rather than “trying to restart the band” they worked with numerous musicians and “found a special kinship” with Armstrong.

In announcing the March show on Wednesday Shinoda said: “Getting back out on the road has been incredible”.

“The fans’ support is overwhelming, and we’re ready to bring this energy to New Zealand. From Zero is a new chapter for us, and we’re so excited to share it with everyone on a bigger scale.”

Linkin Park rose to fame with the album Hybrid Theory in 2000. They released a new single, ‘The Emptiness Machine’ and a new album, From Zero in November.

The title of From Zero refers to Linkin Park’s original band name, Xero, and “refers to both this humble beginning and the journey we’re currently undertaking,” Shinoda said.

Linkin Park also announced the departure of drummer and founding member Rob Bourdon in 2024.

Stepping in on the drum stool was Brittain, a multi-instrumentalist, producer and mixer whose clients include Australia’s G Flip, Papa Roach and All Time Low.

“The more we worked with Emily and Colin, the more we enjoyed their world-class talents, their company, and the things we created,” Shinoda said.

Tickets go on sale 12 December at 1pm.

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

How Starlink is connecting remote First Nations communities – and creating new divides

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Daniel Featherstone, Senior Research Fellow, RMIT University

Daniel Featherstone

In the Cape York community of Wujal Wujal, local service providers used to hold their breath every time a big storm rolled in. Cloud cover could knock out their satellite internet just when they needed it most.

Since installing Starlink’s low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite service, however, everything from video calls to uploading files has become far more reliable – even in heavy rain. People report there is now no lag, whereas with the previous service, Sky Muster, even cloud cover could cause the internet to stop working.

Reliable connectivity is crucial in an emergency. When nearly half the buildings in Wujal Wujal were destroyed by the December 2023 flood following Cyclone Jasper, and the fibre-optic cable was broken, Starlink provided the only reliable communications in the aftermath.

Examples like this help explain why Starlink has grown so quickly in remote Australia. With high speeds, low latency and data that works in wet weather, it has become the preferred option for agencies and businesses frustrated with older technologies. There are now more than 200,000 Starlink subscriptions in Australia, compared with about 80,000 NBN Sky Muster services.

But our research as part of the Mapping the Digital Gap project shows Starlink is creating a new kind of digital divide in remote First Nations communities – not just between cities and the bush, but within communities themselves. A small minority now enjoy fast, reliable Starlink, while First Nations households predominantly use prepaid mobile services, where mobile is available, with high-priced but limited data.

Twice the rate of digital exclusion – and worse in remote communities

The new Mapping the Digital Gap 2025 outcomes report finds First Nations Australians are twice as likely as other Australians to be digitally excluded.

Nationally, using the Australian Digital Inclusion Index measure out of 100, First Nations score on average 63.4, where non–First Nations Australians average 73.9 – a “digital gap” of 10.5 points. In the very remote communities we visited, this gap more than doubles to 24.2, with three in four people digitally excluded.

Access to reliable and affordable connectivity and devices is the biggest driver. Access scores in very remote First Nations communities sit 42.4 points below those of non-First Nations Australians – far larger than gaps for affordability or digital ability.

There is some good news. Digital ability has improved by nearly nine points in two years, and daily internet use has risen from 44% to 62%. But this still lags far behind other Australians, 95% of whom go online daily.

In short, people are trying harder than ever to get online – but face barriers of infrastructure, pricing and limited digital support.

Starlink for agencies, prepaid mobiles for everyone else

Starlink arrived in northern Australia in late 2022 and spread quickly across our research sites. Schools, councils, health services and police adopted it to get around mobile congestion and weather-related dropouts.

As one coordinator in Wadeye said, “We used to just stop working at three … [now] we’ve all been Elon Musked.”

The rapid uptake shows remote communities are often early adopters. In Wilcannia, café owner Shona Cook says they “went straight to Starlink because we know that it works out in regional areas […] everything you need” now runs on it.

But Starlink remains out of reach for most First Nations households. Across sites such as Wilcannia and Wujal Wujal, only 1–2% had adopted it by 2024. Upfront equipment costs of A$500 to A$600 and monthly fees of A$139 are simply unaffordable.

Instead, nearly everyone relies on mobile phones. In 2024, 99% of First Nations mobile users in remote communities were on prepaid plans.

Many households reported spending more than A$280 a month on data, with large households often exceeding A$400 – for slow speeds, data limits and patchy coverage. Those spending the most, relative to income, often get the worst internet.

A new ‘elite’ infrastructure

This pattern is creating a localised divide. Agencies, contractors and a few higher-income residents enjoy fast Starlink. At the same time, most others are left with congested 4G, legacy satellite services and costly, limited prepaid data.

One Wilcannia resident can now send “massive files within two minutes” and stream reliably, but said: “If there was a cheaper way […] we’d definitely look at that.”

Without intervention, Starlink risks becoming “elite” infrastructure: a premium service for those who can pay, while others juggle multiple prepaid services, share phones, and sacrifice speed and reliability just to stay connected.

How to make Starlink part of the solution

Other low Earth orbit satellite internet businesses are entering the market, too. From 2026, the NBN will be using Amazon’s satellites, and Telstra is providing Starlink services and small-cell mobile services via OneWeb. These may improve reliability, but risk widening the divide if plans aren’t affordable.

The best way to avoid this is policies that treat connectivity as an essential service and design solutions around the realities of remote First Nations households. That could include:

  • targeted subsidies or concessional plans for low-income households

  • prepaid-style broadband products

  • community-based access models, such as mesh Wi-Fi or shared infrastructure

  • ongoing digital skills support within community organisations.

The new First Nations Digital Inclusion Dashboard gives communities and policymakers a powerful tool to track progress and push for change.

Closing the Gap Target 17 aims for equal digital inclusion by 2026. Starlink and other low Earth orbit services could play a transformative role – but only if the benefits are shared equitably, not reserved for the few who can pay.

Daniel Featherstone is affiliated with RMIT University and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making and Society (ADM+S). The Mapping the Digital Gap and The Australian Digital Inclusion Index receive funding from both Telstra – a long-standing project partner – and the Australian Research Council through the ADM+S Centre. The Measuring Digital Inclusion for First Nations Australians project receives funding from the Australian Government. Daniel is a Director of the Australian Communications Consumer Action Network and is an Expert Panel member of the First Nations Digital Inclusion Advisory Group.

Kieran Hegarty receives funding from the Australian Research Council, Telstra, the Department of Government Services Victoria and the Australian Communications Consumer Action Network. He is also a member of the Australian Library and Information Association’s Research Advisory Committee.

ref. How Starlink is connecting remote First Nations communities – and creating new divides – https://theconversation.com/how-starlink-is-connecting-remote-first-nations-communities-and-creating-new-divides-271086

Emissions Trading Scheme: Year’s final auction fails to sell a single carbon unit

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied/ Unsplash – Mudit Agarwal

A market “surprised” by the government has failed to buy a single carbon unit at the final Emissions Trading Scheme auction of the year.

Not a single bidder registered for Wednesday’s auction, making 2025 the second calendar year in which all four quarterly ETS auctions have failed.

The first was 2023.

The managing director of commodities broker Marex, Nigel Brunel said recent climate policy announcements were “primarily responsible” as they signalled that the government was backtracking on climate change.

Emitters captured within the ETS still have to pay for their greenhouse gas emissions – but at the moment it is significantly cheaper to buy carbon units from elsewhere, such as forestry owners.

The minimum price carbon units could be sold for in the auction was $68, but emitters have been able to buy units elsewhere for as little as $40 recently.

Brunel said the market had been spooked most recently by the government’s decision in November to ‘de-couple’ the ETS from New Zealand’s Paris Agreement pledges.

“They could have done it quite differently, instead of just going, ‘Surprise!’”

Markets “hate uncertainty”, he said.

“It was announced without a lot behind it, [or] the rationale for doing it, so it gave the market concern that there were changes happening to the ETS that weren’t well-telegraphed – and the market reacted accordingly.”

However, the market had been weak all year.

“There’s been a number of things that have fed into it…. The fact that [the government] reduced the methane target, the fact that mandatory reporting requirements were weakened, just the continual mantra that we’re not going to do anything in offshore mitigation to meet our [2030 Paris target] kind of sent the signal to the marketplace that …the government was weakening overall on climate change policy,” Brunel said.

That had not been helped by “quips from minor parties that we should withdraw from Paris”.

The units from all 2025 auctions will now be cancelled out of the ETS, meaning they will not be available to emitters in subsequent years.

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

Politics with Michelle Grattan: Tim Ayres on the AI rollout’s looming ‘bumps and glitches’

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

The federal government released its National AI Strategy this week, confirming it has dropped its earlier proposal for mandatory guardrails for high-risk artificial intelligence (AI).

In responding to AI, the government has found itself caught between the unions, which have pushed for stricter regulation to protect workers and their jobs, and business wanting a “light-touch” approach to AI.

To talk about how the government will keep up with effectively managing AI, as well as a long-overdue response to a “jobs for mates” review, we’re joined by the minister for industry, innovation and science, Tim Ayres.

On the government’s decision not to introduce AI-specific laws, Ayres denies the Albanese government ended up going with a “light-touch” approach.

It’s a pragmatic Australian approach that’s about the circumstances that Australia is in, in strategic terms and economic terms. We’ve got an existing regulatory framework now. Australian law applies now.

The [new] AI Safety Institute is about making sure that we support our regulators. Advised, of course, by the best advice, whether it’s in the intelligence communities or security agencies, engaging with the trade union movement and civil society, getting the best advice to make sure that we’re uplifting government capability to analyse threats, to get into the new AI models and make sure that we’ve tested them properly, and supporting government capability across the board.

On whether the rollout of AI will lead to some mistakes as Australian workers and industry get used to the technology, Ayers acknowledges there will be some “bumps”:

I don’t want to be glib about that, but I do think that’s true […] that of course big social and technological changes are rarely free of bumps and glitches. We’re really keenly aware in the government of the human challenges here.

And that’s why I just keep emphasising getting people together and having Australians and Australian institutions working together for a better deal is much better than standing back and letting these developments flow without us rolling our sleeves up and getting involved.

Drawing on examples he’s seen in his role as minister for science, Ayres says AI had could deliver real benefits for Australians over the next five to ten years.

[For example], the capacity of artificial intelligence to dramatically speed up pharmaceutical design so that we get more drugs, more targeted design developed in Australia into pharmacies to support Australians’ health, cancer treatment designs, composite material design. And in the energy sector, being able to […] smartly manage the energy grid so that we can expand renewables and expand electricity capability. There there is almost no area of technological improvement that won’t be touched by artificial intelligence.

But with that rapid expansion comes real costs, including the vast amounts of electricity and water data centres consume.

Ayres said he’ll resume working with state and territory governments on developing “data centre principles” very early next year. The Sydney Morning Herald and others have reported that the government is weighing up making new data centres invest in big wind and solar projects or else build their own batteries on-site.

Ayres says if data centres and new digital infrastructure end up paying for new generation and transmission capability, “that’s a net addition to the electricity system, not a drain on resources”.

Microsoft’s […] recent investment in Australia has been has underpinned and underwritten the development of a massive 300 megawatt solar farm north of Albury at Walla Walla. There are opportunities here if we have a planned approach to make sure that this supports development in the electricity system.

Following week’s release of the review into “jobs for mates” – which the government held onto for two years and now declines to accept all recommendations – Ayres argues Labor “done has a lot to restore integrity” since being elected in 2022.

I think what we saw was the previous government so debauched the process that Australians lost confidence in the appointments process. Now we’ve done a lot to restore integrity and a sense of purpose to these appointments.

[…] The rules that [finance minister] Katy Gallagher’s announced and that the government’s adopted today go a long way towards restoring public confidence. But of course, as every as every day goes on, we will continue to demonstrate that we actually take our responsibility in this area seriously and that our appointments reflect the public interest.




Read more:
Albanese government shies away from tougher recommendations from ‘jobs for mates’ inquiry


The Conversation

Michelle Grattan 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. Politics with Michelle Grattan: Tim Ayres on the AI rollout’s looming ‘bumps and glitches’ – https://theconversation.com/politics-with-michelle-grattan-tim-ayres-on-the-ai-rollouts-looming-bumps-and-glitches-271092

Hawke’s Bay’s Horse of the Year show cancelled for 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

Horse of The Year 2026 has been cancelled. (File photo) 123

The Horse of the Year show in Hawke’s Bay has been cancelled for 2026 due to a lack of financial support.

Held at the Hastings Showgrounds every March, it’s one of the largest equestrian events in the Southern Hemisphere, bringing in millions of dollars to the Hawke’s Bay economy.

Organisers said the decision was made by their board, shareholders Hastings District Council and Equestrian Sports New Zealand.

“Our small team has chased every avenue possible to secure financial support to meet sustained cost pressures that come alongside reduced commercial and trade partnership revenue.

“We are not alone in this struggle – numerous large scale entertainment all over the country have been cancelled in recent months. Without that financial buffer, we just don’t feel we can deliver the event to the standard expected of New Zealand’s premier equestrian show,” a spokesperson said.

Event organisers said they had to make the call now because December 1 was when schedules were due to go out and tickets went on sale.

“This is as devastating for our team as it is for everyone who loves the show as much as we do, but we will be back!

“Thank you to everyone who continues to support our show. We appreciate each and every one of you and let’s all look forward to hearing the HOY anthem ‘Stand up for the Champions’ in 2027.”

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Former police boss Andrew Coster resigns as head of the Social Investment Agency

Source: Radio New Zealand

Former police commissioner Andrew Coster is the chief executive of the Social Investment Agency. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Former Police Commissioner Andrew Coster’s has resigned as chief executive of the Social Investment Agency.

It comes after the police watchdog’s damning report into police’s response to allegations of sexual offending by former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming.

Coster was placed on leave following the release of the Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) report last month.

On Wednesday, after RNZ revealed Coster had resigned, Public Service Commissioner Sir Brian Roche released a statement confirming Coster would be leaving the Social Investment Agency effective immediately.

“I respect Mr Coster’s decision. It was the right thing to do,” said Sir Brian.

“I also acknowledge that the IPCA found no evidence of corruption or cover-up when undertaking their review. While the IPCA found serious leadership failures occurred, there was no evidence of senior officers consciously doing the wrong thing or setting out to undermine the integrity of the organisation.

Do you know more? Get in touch with sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

“What is clear however, is that there was significant evidence of failures within the organisation that Mr Coster was then accountable for. Systems, processes, delegations and behaviours that you would expect to be embedded were not followed.

“Mr Coster acknowledges with hindsight that he should have and could have done better, and as evidenced by his decision, has taken accountability.”

Sir Brian said Coster had made a significant contribution to the operations of SIA during his time there.

“He has performed very well with a strong motivation to both change and strengthen the way social investment and improved outcomes for those in need are achieved.”

The IPCA’s report found serious misconduct at the highest levels of police, including Coster, over how police responded to accusations of sexual offending by McSkimming.

RNZ / REECE BAKER

Earlier, cop turned aviation boss Chris de Wattignar also quit his role at the Civil Aviation Authority.

De Wattignar was one of the other senior leaders referred to in the IPCA’s 135-page report.

The allegations arose from an affair between McSkimming and a woman who was a non-sworn police employee at the time.

The authority said when police did eventually refer the woman’s claims to the authority, several months after it was recommended they do so, senior police attempted to influence the investigation.

RNZ has previously called and texted Coster and received a text with an email address to contact for comment.

RNZ earlier also asked for comment on Coster’s actions, whether he would stay in his role at the SIA, and whether he had a message for the woman who raised the allegations.

A spokesperson replied: “As has been publicly noted by ministers, this is now an employment conversation between the public service commissioner and Andrew Coster. He will not be responding to media ahead of that process.”

Jevon McSkimming RNZ / Mark Papalii

Coster took on the role as secretary for social investment in November 2024, after stepping down as police commissioner.

Public Service Minister Judith Collins earlier said it was agreed between Coster and Public Service Commissioner Sir Brian Roche that Coster would be on leave while Sir Brian undertook his own “investigation”.

She said the report showed a “massive” failure of leadership, and while it was now an employment matter, she said the report spoke for itself.

“If this was me being named in this report, I would be ashamed of myself. And I think that’s what I can say. I would be deeply ashamed.”

Collins said the findings that leadership attempted to influence the investigation into the woman’s complaint and persuade the IPCA that the matter could be resolved quickly were “very serious”.

“Let’s put it this way. If a minister tried to do that, I’m sure that the prime minister would have them out the door that way.”

Asked whether she thought it amounted to corruption, Collins said, “If it walks like a duck, and it quacks like a duck, it’s not looking good, is it?”

While acknowledging the IPCA report did not say it was corruption, Collins said it was “an extraordinary set of events, and extraordinary facts, and it must never happen again”.

She expressed thanks to the people who did stand up and send the matter to the IPCA as a complaint.

A spokesperson for the public service commissioner earlier said it would be inappropriate to comment on any employment matters.

Social Investment Minister Nicola Willis said she was “shocked and appalled” by the IPCA report’s findings.

“I have conveyed my views to Public Service Commissioner Brian Roche. The matter now sits with him as Coster’s employer,” she said.

Public Service Minister Judith Collins with Police Minister Mark Mitchell and Police Commissioner Richard Chambers RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Police Minister Mark Mitchell said Coster first briefed him on 6 November, 2024, about McSkimming.

“The issues around Andrew Coster, we all now clearly see in that report that yes, without a doubt, he was the leader of the executive. He should be held to account for that, because of what we’re dealing with.”

Labour leader Chris Hipkins said he was “extremely disappointed” in police leadership.

“The report and evidence confirm that senior police failed to hold Jevon McSkimming to account for his actions, or appropriately manage complaints made about him. This is inexcusable and a complete failure of duty. People should have every confidence that if they take a complaint to police it is investigated fully.”

Hipkins, who as prime minister appointed McSkimming as deputy commissioner, said none of this was ever raised during his time as prime minister or police minister, or during the vetting process for the deputy commissioner role.

“If it had he would never have been appointed and further action would have been taken.”

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

Foodbanks warn of closures if government funding fails to give ongoing funding

Source: Radio New Zealand

Woman stands in front of shelves with boxes and paper bags filled with food.

Auckland City missioner Helen Robinson says some foodbanks would close without government funding. Photo: RNZ Insight / Sarah Robson

*This story has been updated to correct the amount of funding that is for monitoring and evaluating the impact of the programme.

The country’s biggest foodbanks are warning of substantial closures if the government does not provide ongoing funding next year.

The Salvation Army, Auckland City Mission and Food Network are among the organisations that received one-off grants till mid-2026.

They are renewing their call for ongoing government funding as they look ahead to next year.

Salvation Army food security manager Sonya Cameron said planning started now for stocking foodbanks next year and the future was uncertain.

“It’s a very high risk. Salvation Army will stay open … but other organisations are even more vulnerable, we’ve already seen a lot of foodbanks close down in the past,” Cameron said.

“I don’t know how many would close down but I suspect it would be substantial.”

She said without ongoing government funding, the Salvation Army would have to reduce the amount of food given out from its 60 foodbanks.

More than half a million New Zealanders rely on foodbanks and food rescue organisations for support.

The Salvation Army's food security manager Sonya Cameron.

Sonya Cameron without government funding the Salvation Army would have to reduce the amount of food its foodbanks distribute. Photo: SUPPLIED/The Salvation Army

Auckland City missioner Helen Robinson said they provide food every day to people who cannot make ends meet.

“Every year we’re left wondering if we’ll be funded. It’s unsustainable,” she said.

“We need to plan, staff, and stock our foodbanks with confidence. That’s impossible when we’re constantly having to re-justify our existence every year to secure funding.”

Robinson said if government funding stopped, some foodbanks would close doors.

“While we will always be there to support whānau, when other services close, it increases pressure on everyone and ultimately means some whānau who are hungry will not be able to access food.”

The Salvation Army and Auckland City Mission are among food banks and hubs that received one-off government grants this year, for the mission that meant it did not have to reduce the number of food parcels it distributes.

That funding, through the Ministry of Social Development’s Food Secure Communities programme, runs till the end of June 2026.

It was renewed after a collective of foodbanks wrote to Social Development Minister Louise Upston asking for ongoing sustainable funding before the May budget announcement.

Foodbanks started to receive direct government funding in 2020 during the pandemic, and over the following four years more than $200 million was invested in the sector. Since then it had been on a one-off basis only.

Food security funding was extended with one-off grants to 13 providers last year, including the mission, which received a one-off $700,000 from the ministry for food parcels.

Earlier this year, the ministry said it was reviewing the way foodbanks were funded.

Aotearoa Food Rescue Alliance head, Tracey Watene, told Midday Report rescued food is a crucial part of what foodbanks offer.

“If funding drops off, thousands of meals will disappear, millions of kilos of edible kai will be wasted, staff will be lost and services will close,” she said.

“The entire food support network, foodbanks, community groups and food rescue, will be weakened just when New Zealanders need it most.”

The alliance received some MSD funding and had diversified to bolster its books.

“Food rescue isn’t the long term fix but it’s what keeps families fed while we work on those bigger economic and food system challenges. Until we address the route causes we need stable funding to keep whanau well.”

She said it took them time to advocate for annual grants which were needed every year.

“Multi-year funding means stability and stability means more kai reaching more whanau,” Watene said.

“Zero funding means that places close and our community and our whanau are doing it extremely tough at the moment.”

New Zealand Food Network chief executive Gavin Findlay said the lack of a multi-year commitment from government meant providers were left in limbo.

“Christmas is a time when many think about giving, but hunger isn’t seasonal. More than 500,000 New Zealanders rely on foodbanks and food rescue organisations for support.”

He said frontline teams across the country were seeing familiar faces return regularly, including families who were working, budgeting carefully and still unable to afford enough food.

“Food security relies on a whole ecosystem, from national distributors to local foodbanks, food support and food rescue organisations,” Findlay said.

“Our role is to keep that system strong and responsive, including during emergencies. That can be done much more effectively and efficiently when funding is stable and allows everyone to plan ahead.”

He said the pressure on foodbanks had intensified in the last year, especially for those on the lowest incomes.

MSD’s General Manager for Pacific and Community Capability Programmes, Serena Curtis, said the ministry has invested more than $200 million through its Food Secure Communities (FSC) programme since 2020.

“We have always been clear with the sector that funding for the FSC Programme is time-limited.”

Curtis said $100,000 of the additional funding was for monitoring and evaluating the impact of the programme.

“This work is underway, and we expect to receive an evaluation report in early 2026,” Curtis said.

The FSC programme has funded the creation and maintenance of national and regional food distribution infrastructure.

“Community food providers are now better connected and can support each other through the national partner organisations we have invested in, such as the New Zealand Food Network, Kore Hiakai Zero Hunger Collective, and the Aotearoa Food Rescue Alliance.”

From July to September this year, MSD provided $32.5m to provide 327,705 food grants.

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

Kaupapa Māori study exposes gaps in prison data and support for Māori

Source: Radio New Zealand

A major three-year study has found Māori are being undercounted in prisons by around six percent, masking the true scale of incarceration and its impact on whānau.

The kaupapa Māori research project, TIAKI, examined the experiences of whānau entering and leaving prisons, combining national administrative data with interviews led by researchers with lived experience of incarceration.

Researchers at University of Otago, Wellington – Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka, Pōneke have completed two studies within the project.

RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

The first found primary care services were not meeting the high health needs of Māori recently released from prison, with cost a major barrier.

The second found Māori were undercounted by around 405 people in prison data because Corrections was not following national ethnicity recording protocols.

Lead author Associate Professor Paula King (Te Aupōuri, Te Rarawa, Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Whātua, Waikato-Tainui, Ngāti Maniapoto) said the undercount affected resource allocation and government policy decisions.

She also criticised the state for failing to monitor the health and wellbeing of Māori both in prison and after release.

“What we expect is state accountability for state harms.”

Māori undercounted in prison

King said the team was guided by kairangahau (researchers) with lived experience of prison to investigate ethnicity data, building on long-standing concerns about Māori undercounting across official datasets.

Corrections’ recording did not align with Stats NZ standards, she said.

“People just aren’t statistics – these are whānau with tamariki, with communities. If you’re invisibilising Māori, you can’t monitor Crown actions or inactions, or accurately assess the impact of policies,” she told RNZ.

Māori were overrepresented at every stage of the criminal justice system: 37 percent of people proceeded against by police, 45 percent of people convicted, and more than half of the prison population at 52 percent – despite Māori making up only 17.8 percent of the population, according to Stats NZ data.

In women’s prisons, the proportion rose to 61-63 percent, King said, and would be even higher when undercounting was considered.

Asian staff constitute the second-largest group of officers in the country’s penitentiaries. RNZ / Blessen Tom

King said the undercount meant governments have underestimated how legislation affected Māori, including recent changes such as the Sentencing Reinstating Three Strikes Amendment Act 2025.

“The government’s got a directive to put more people in prison and for longer… the numbers are increasing.”

A Corrections spokesperson told RNZ ethnicity data was based on what prisoners self-report at reception, and people were encouraged to list multiple ethnicities, ranking them by preference.

“Corrections has proactively released data on the prison population, including breakdowns by lead offence, age and ethnicity dating back to 2009. Given how we present this on our website, for ease of understanding we have typically reported on what prisoners have self-reported as their primary ethnicity.”

RNZ

The spokesperson said Corrections was always seeking to improve its collection and proactive reporting of data, and would begin publishing more detailed tables that reflected multiple ethnicities from early next year.

Data provided to RNZ shows that as at 30 November, 2025, Māori made up 52.3 percent of prisoners using primary ethnicity, and 56 percent when all reported ethnicities were counted.

“Both measures demonstrate Māori are overrepresented in the prison population,” the spokesperson said.

They said Corrections was committed to improving outcomes with and for Māori, “addressing the overrepresentation of Māori in the corrections system, and reducing reoffending”.

Racialised inequities across the system

King said the research reaffirmed long-standing inequities across policing, charging, prosecution, and sentencing.

“It’s longstanding – who the police choose to surveil, who gets charged, who is prosecuted, who gets longer sentences. These inequities are why the numbers of Māori in prison are so high.”

Those released from prison had three times the mortality rate of the general population, with the first month after release most dangerous.

Early deaths were linked to chronic conditions, suicide, alcohol poisoning, injuries, and traumatic brain injury. Mortality was worse for wāhine Māori.

The study found that only 76 percent of Māori released were enrolled with a Primary Health Organisation (PHO), leaving a quarter without access to subsidised care.

RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

King said rules excluding people in prison from PHO enrolment drive that gap.

“Services aren’t meeting the high health needs of people released from prison… Māori providers are picking up the slack but are under-resourced and under-funded.”

A Ministry of Health spokesperson told RNZ they acknowledged the findings showing Māori recently released from prison have poorer health outcomes.

“We note the finding that around three quarters (76 percent) of Māori released from prison were enrolled with a general practice in the 12 months following their release. While most of this group are therefore engaged with a primary care provider, we recognise this level of enrolment is lower than for other population groups.”

They said enrolment was suspended during imprisonment because Corrections operated its own health services under a separate and exclusive funding agreement.

The ministry also said it has discussed prisoner enrolment settings with the Department of Corrections but while this work was underway, had no further comment.

Whānau-led solutions

Through interviews, whānau shared what would help after release: secure housing, employment or training pathways, culturally grounded programmes, and sustained whanaungatanga-based support.

“None of it is rocket science,” King said.

“People want to be well, and they want their whānau to be well… They talked about identity, culture, mentors, having someone walk alongside them, and programmes that prepare people for release rather than focusing on deficits.”

She said Māori providers already offered much of this support but have been underfunded for decades.

“If the highest proportion of people in prison are Māori, then why aren’t kaupapa Māori providers being commissioned to support re-entry? What is funded is overwhelmingly mainstream.”

Research Associate Professor Paula King (Te Aupōuri, Te Rarawa, Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Whātua, Waikato-Tainui, Ngāti Maniapoto) hopes the research supports long-term system change. Supplied / Paula King

Immediate steps the government could take included: removing PHO (Primary Health Organisations) exclusions, following standard ethnicity data protocols and integrating health and disability services across agencies so people did not fall through the gaps, King said.

“At the moment everything is siloed. Someone goes in with health needs, there’s no connection to their community care, and when they come out there’s nothing.

“Under Te Tiriti o Waitangi, [the Ministry of] Health has obligations to ensure Māori can access services and be transparent about their decisions.”

King hoped the research would support long-term system change.

“We’re trying to break cycles of harm for future generations, to create a world our mokopuna can live well in.”

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

Police charge Dunedin man after seizing 820kg of pounamu

Source: Radio New Zealand

The man appeared at the Dunedin District Court and was released on bail. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Police have charged a Dunedin man after seizing 820 kilograms of pounamu.

Officers found the stone, which was cut and ready for sale, during a search on Monday.

The 29-year-old man has appeared in court charged with obstruction.

Police say they are considering laying further charges in relation to the pounamu.

Ngāi Tahu says some of the stolen stone had been hacked and quarried from remote catchments and illegally sold to carvers around the country.

Te Rūnanga o Makaawhio chairman Paul Madgwick said the local hapu Ngāti Māhaki were grateful for the swift police response to what had been an ongoing problem with theft of their taonga.

Ngāi Tahu raised the issue with police after it was brought to their attention on line and via the community, he said.

“This complaint was made due to the person brazenly parading our stolen pounamu as if they have a right to help themselves to it – they don’t, and we are working closely with the Police to prevent further theft of our taonga,” he said in a statement.

All pounamu was easily identifiable and could be traced back to particular catchments, Madgwick said.

Public collecting is only allowed on West Coast beaches, and only small pieces that can be carried in one hand.

Rivers are able to be fossicked by Ngāi Tahu whānau members, but only with a collection permit granted by the kaitiaki (guardian) rūnanga, in this case Te Rūnanga o Makaawhio, being the kaitiaki of South Westland.

“Anyone who is unsure of the rules around pounamu gathering, or has pounamu in their possession and is unclear about ownership, whether they’re the general public or have Ngāi Tahu whakapapa, is urged to reach out to the local Rūnanga or Ngāi Tahu Pounamu to understand what is permissible,” Madgwick said.

The man appeared at the Dunedin District Court and was released on bail.

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

Former police boss Andrew Coster resigns as head of the Social Investment Agency, RNZ understands

Source: Radio New Zealand

Former police commissioner Andrew Coster is the chief executive of the Social Investment Agency. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Former Police Commissioner Andrew Coster’s resignation from his role as chief executive of the Social Investment Agency is expected to be announced shortly, RNZ understands.

It comes after the police watchdog’s damning report into police’s response to allegations of sexual offending by former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming.

Coster was placed on leave following the release of the Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) report last month.

RNZ understands Coster has resigned, with an announcement imminent.

Do you know more? Get in touch with sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

The IPCA’s report found serious misconduct at the highest levels of police, including Coster, over how police responded to accusations of sexual offending by McSkimming.

Earlier, cop turned aviation boss Chris de Wattignar also quit his role at the Civil Aviation Authority.

De Wattignar was one of the other senior leaders referred to in the IPCA’s 135-page report.

The allegations arose from an affair between McSkimming and a woman who was a non-sworn police employee at the time.

RNZ / REECE BAKER

The authority said when police did eventually refer the woman’s claims to the authority, several months after it was recommended they do so, senior police attempted to influence the investigation.

RNZ has previously called and texted Coster and received a text with an email address to contact for comment.

RNZ earlier also asked for comment on Coster’s actions, whether he would stay in his role at the SIA, and whether he had a message for the woman who raised the allegations.

A spokesperson replied: “As has been publicly noted by ministers, this is now an employment conversation between the public service commissioner and Andrew Coster. He will not be responding to media ahead of that process.”

Coster took on the role as secretary for social investment in November 2024, after stepping down as police commissioner.

Public Service Minister Judith Collins earlier said it was agreed between Coster and Public Service Commissioner Sir Brian Roche that Coster would be on leave while Sir Brian undertook his own “investigation”.

She said the report showed a “massive” failure of leadership, and while it was now an employment matter, she said the report spoke for itself.

“If this was me being named in this report, I would be ashamed of myself. And I think that’s what I can say. I would be deeply ashamed.”

Collins said the findings that leadership attempted to influence the investigation into the woman’s complaint and persuade the IPCA that the matter could be resolved quickly were “very serious”.

“Let’s put it this way. If a minister tried to do that, I’m sure that the prime minister would have them out the door that way.”

Asked whether she thought it amounted to corruption, Collins said, “If it walks like a duck, and it quacks like a duck, it’s not looking good, is it?”

Jevon McSkimming RNZ / Mark Papalii

While acknowledging the IPCA report did not say it was corruption, Collins said it was “an extraordinary set of events, and extraordinary facts, and it must never happen again”.

She expressed thanks to the people who did stand up and send the matter to the IPCA as a complaint.

A spokesperson for the public service commissioner earlier said it would be inappropriate to comment on any employment matters.

Social Investment Minister Nicola Willis said she was “shocked and appalled” by the IPCA report’s findings.

“I have conveyed my views to Public Service Commissioner Brian Roche. The matter now sits with him as Coster’s employer,” she said.

Public Service Minister Judith Collins with Police Minister Mark Mitchell and Police Commissioner Richard Chambers RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Police Minister Mark Mitchell said Coster first briefed him on 6 November, 2024, about McSkimming.

“The issues around Andrew Coster, we all now clearly see in that report that yes, without a doubt, he was the leader of the executive. He should be held to account for that, because of what we’re dealing with.”

Labour leader Chris Hipkins said he was “extremely disappointed” in police leadership.

“The report and evidence confirm that senior police failed to hold Jevon McSkimming to account for his actions, or appropriately manage complaints made about him. This is inexcusable and a complete failure of duty. People should have every confidence that if they take a complaint to police it is investigated fully.”

Hipkins, who as prime minister appointed McSkimming as deputy commissioner, said none of this was ever raised during his time as prime minister or police minister, or during the vetting process for the deputy commissioner role.

“If it had he would never have been appointed and further action would have been taken.”

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

Coral reefs have orchestrated Earth’s climate for 250 million years

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tristan Salles, Associate Professor, School of Geosciences, University of Sydney

When we think of coral reefs, we picture bright fish, clear water and colourful corals. But reefs have also shaped the planet in deeper ways.

Our new study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows reefs have helped regulate Earth’s climate and life for more than 250 million years.

They link geology, chemistry and biology into one grand planetary feedback loop. And their rise and fall over hundreds of millions of years set the pace of recovery from past carbon dioxide shocks, holding vital lessons for today.

From hot to cold

Earth’s climate has swung between hot and cold periods over its long history.

These shifts reflect how carbon dioxide enters and leaves the atmosphere – since more carbon in the air means higher temperatures. Much of this happens through chemical reactions on land and the burial of carbonate minerals in the ocean.

A key part of this balance is ocean alkalinity. This describes the ocean’s ability to neutralise acids and absorb carbon dioxide.

To investigate how reefs have influenced this process, we used reconstructions of ancient geography, river systems and climate, and then ran computer models back to the Triassic Period – about 250-200 million years ago. This was when the first dinosaurs appeared.

These tools revealed that reefs influenced how fast Earth recovered from large releases of carbon dioxide.

Coral reefs, such as those found at Heron Island in the Great Barrier Reef, link geology, chemistry and biology into one grand planetary feedback loop.
Jody Webster, CC BY

Two major modes

We found Earth switches between two major modes depending on the state of corals reefs.

The first mode occurs when tropical shelves (shallow, submerged continental areas in tropical latitudes) are broad and reefs thrive. This causes calcium carbonate – the chemical compound that builds corals – to accumulate in shallow seas. Calcium makes water more alkaline, so when it’s locked up in coral the ocean becomes less alkaline.

With less alkalinity, the ocean loses some of its ability to soak up carbon dioxide. As a result, when carbon levels increase due to things like volcanic eruptions, the atmosphere can take hundreds of thousands of years to recover.

The second state happens when climate shifts, sea level falls, or tectonics restrict shallow habitats, and reefs shrink or disappear. Calcium then builds up in the deep ocean, making it more alkaline.

This means the ocean can absorb carbon dioxide more quickly.

A shift in recovery time

Depending on which mode it’s in, Earth will respond very differently to the same increase in atmospheric carbon levels.

In phases when reefs dominate, recovery slows because shallow seas trap the dissolved minerals, known as ions, that would help the ocean absorb carbon.

In phases when reefs collapse, recovery speeds up because the ocean’s buffering system is stronger and it is better able to absorb carbon dioxide.

These alternating periods have operated for more than 250 million years. They shaped climate rhythms and influenced how marine life evolved.

Mapping coral reefs habitat suitability over the past 250 million years.

The plankton connection

That’s not all that happens when reefs collapse.

When calcium and carbonate ions shift from coastal seas to the open ocean, nutrients follow. This fuels plankton growth.

These tiny algae absorb carbon from near the surface and take it to the bottom the ocean when they die, where it is trapped in deep-sea sediment.

The fossil record shows more new kinds of plankton evolved in periods when reefs collapsed. In contrast, in phases when reefs dominated, evolutionary change was slower because there were less nutrients for plankton in the open ocean.

In essence, the rise and fall of reefs helped set the tempo of ocean biological evolution. And this biological impact made the reefs’ impact on the carbon cycle and global climate even more pronounced.

A message from the deep past

Today, humanity is adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere at a rate comparable to some of the greatest carbon disruptions in Earth’s history. At the same time, coral reefs are declining due to warming, acidification and pollution.

If the current reef loss mirrors ancient reef-collapse events, calcium and carbonates may again shift to the deep ocean. In theory, it could strengthen the absorption of carbon dioxide over the long term. But this would come only after catastrophic ecological loss.

The key lesson is that Earth will recover – but not on human timescales. Geological recovery takes thousands to hundreds of thousands of years.

Tristan Salles receives funding from Australian Research Council.

Laurent Husson 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. Coral reefs have orchestrated Earth’s climate for 250 million years – https://theconversation.com/coral-reefs-have-orchestrated-earths-climate-for-250-million-years-270459

The way Australia produces food is unique. Our updated dietary guidelines have to recognise this

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By David Masters, Adjunct Professor in Agriculture and Environment, The University of Western Australia

Mandy McKeesick/Getty

You might know Australia’s dietary guidelines from the famous infographics showing the types and quantities of foods we should eat to have a healthy diet.

Last updated 12 years ago, the National Health and Medical Research Council is now revising them to consider not only how food affects our health but also how sustainable our foods are. At least 37 other countries have already added sustainability to their dietary guidelines.

Many countries use global load indicators to assess the environmental impact of specific foods, based on the planetary boundaries within which humanity can safely operate. While useful to compare between countries, these indicators don’t match Australia’s environmental risks and priorities.

Unlike many other countries, locally produced food represents around 90% of what Australians eat. The environmental footprint of these foods is shaped almost entirely by the country’s unique landscapes, climates and farming systems.

Our recent research suggests forthcoming guidelines need to take local conditions into account. If global load indicators are the sole way to measure impact, the guidelines won’t capture Australia’s specific environmental challenges in producing food.

Local indicators matter

Global load indicators include greenhouse gas emissions, how much land is used per kilo of food, water use, land and water pollution and biodiversity loss.

This is how we get common figures such as the statistic that it takes 1,670 litres of water to produce 1 kilogram of rice.

While global measures are useful in comparing between countries and products, they don’t always match local environmental risks and priorities.

For example, using 1,670L of water to produce a kilo of rice in the contested and controlled Murray Darling Basin will have a different impact compared to using the same volume in Western Australia’s Kununurra irrigation system, where water is more abundant and has fewer alternative uses. Growing a kilo of rice in Italy will differ again.

If we want dietary guidelines to encourage real improvements on farm and in rural landscapes, environmental indicators must reflect the challenges rural stakeholders actually face.

Consumer preferences have already shifted several food production systems. Rising demand for free-range eggs and grass-fed beef has changed how farmers operate. It’s important to get this right.

One size does not fit all

Australia’s agricultural lands are diverse.

By area, more than 80% of our farmland falls in the rangelands. Here, cattle and sheep graze with minimal human intervention on vast tropical savannas, woodlands, shrublands and grasslands. Low rainfall and poor soils mean livestock are kept at low densities. Other food production options haven’t proved viable.

If we used global load indicators, food from rangelands would be assessed as having a high environmental impact due to large land use, lots of potentially polluting nutrients (dung and urine) and use of rainfall to grow forage vegetation.

But the main environmental issues for Australia’s rangelands are different, including methane emissions from livestock, land degradation, invasive weeds such as buffel grass and biodiversity loss.

map showing different types of farming in Australia.
Australian food production systems are diverse. Rangelands and natural pasture account for the largest area, followed by mixed crop-livestock zones (in light blue and yellow).
Author provided, CC BY-NC-ND

Australia’s next largest area of agriculture is mixed crop and livestock, found in regions such as the Mallee in Victoria and Western Australia’s Wheatbelt. Most crops and 40% of livestock are produced in these areas, characterised by reliable rainfall patterns and low to medium rainfall of around 250–450 millimetres a year.

Farming here can make soils more acid due to high levels of nitrogen from fertilisers, alongside issues such as dryland salinity, erosion, biodiversity loss and greenhouse gas emissions. These issues have degraded some land so much it can’t sustain farming.

For these two types of agriculture, local indicators work better.

By contrast, the intensive and productive irrigated farms of the Murray–Darling Basin have environmental impacts more aligned to global indicators. Environmental issues here include greenhouse gases, competition for land and water use, nutrient pollution (primarily fertilisers) and biodiversity loss.

Good for your health – and the environment?

While previous Australian studies have assessed the environmental footprint of different foods or focused on a narrow description of environmental impact derived from overseas studies, these haven’t accounted for local environmental priorities or trade-offs.

Trade-offs are common. For instance, plant-based diets may result in lower greenhouse gas emissions but can increase pressure on soil health and biodiversity, as crops are commonly grown as monocultures with high fertiliser and pesticide use.

Common Australian diets mixing plant and animal foods can have a lower impact on biodiversity and soil health but higher greenhouse gas emissions, as mixed diets entail a more diverse range of cultivated plants and animals but rely more on methane-producing livestock.

Recognising and balancing these trade-offs will be essential if Australia’s updated dietary guidelines are to support healthy people and a healthy environment.

What’s next?

Ideally, Australia’s updated dietary guidelines will capture the unique pressures and challenges of producing food locally. This won’t be easy, given impacts will vary across different foods, regions and production systems. But the tools are already available.

Farm software can track every aspect of the production in a local environmental context, making it possible to predict impacts on the natural capital of individual farms – if agreements to share and aggregate data can be negotiated.

Gathering these data will allow local environmental indicators to be embedded in dietary guidelines. If this is done, it will become possible to link recommended diets to sustainability reporting. Farms, retailers and banks are increasingly required to report sustainability metrics, which can be linked to foods.

That means Australians could see the environmental credentials of their food on the labels, based not on global averages – but on how the specific farm is doing.

The Conversation

David Masters has previously received research funding from research and development corporations including Meat and Livestock Australia. He is a member of the National Health and Medical Research Council’s Sustainability Working Group. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors alone and do not represent the views of NHMRC or the working group.

David Lemon receives funding from the National Farmers’ Federation.

Dianne Mayberry has received funding from research and development corporations including Meat and Livestock Australia and the Grains Research and Development Corporation.

Sonja Dominik works for CSIRO Agriculture and Food. She has previously received funding from the National Farmers’ Federation and research and development corporations.

ref. The way Australia produces food is unique. Our updated dietary guidelines have to recognise this – https://theconversation.com/the-way-australia-produces-food-is-unique-our-updated-dietary-guidelines-have-to-recognise-this-265734

Charity’s snorkel events under threat after equipment stolen

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Noam Mānuka Lazarus, Massey University journalism graduate

Mountains to Sea Wellington was left without enough gear to run its free school and community snorkel programme in the new year. Supplied / Mountains to Sea Wellington / Kristine Zipfel

A charity providing community dive lessons and marine education says its programmes are under threat after $90,000 worth of equipment was stolen.

Volunteer dive instructors of Mountains to Sea Wellington showed up with a group of students on Monday morning to find that someone had broken into their marine base at Moa Point.

The group said thieves drove off with one of the charity’s two brand-new, white Toyota Hilux trucks, and a trailer containing half of their dive snorkels, masks, wetsuits, and other equipment between Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon.

Co-director and co-founder Zoe Studd said she was “really gutted”.

The charity was without enough equipment to run its free school and community snorkel programme in the new year. “Half is not enough,” she said.

While the truck and trailer had been found, much of the gear was still missing.

The charity worked with thousands of students each year on marine education, experiences and restoration efforts.

“We’re only just managing to keep our school groups going till the end of their term, but it’s a scramble,” Marine lead Jorge Jimenez said.

The charity’s vehicle and trailer had been found and the damage was being assessed. Supplied / Mountains to Sea Wellington / Kristine Zipfel

The vehicle and trailer were insured but the contents were not.

“The costs of replacing our wetsuits and safety gear is well in excess of $25,000, but it also takes time to get the custom-made wetsuits for younger students that are right for our conditions,” said Jimenez.

“It’s just a real kick in the guts,” Jimenez said. “All this comes at a time when many charities are struggling to find funding to keep their work going.”

Studd said they’d reached out to supporters and local community members in the hope of retrieving the equipment and reported the theft to police.

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

Mayors challenge FENZ ban on use of watercraft in Waikato River emergencies

Source: Radio New Zealand

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

Three Waikato mayors have written to the chief executive of Fire and Emergency New Zealand (FENZ) urgently requesting the immediate reinstatement of watercraft used in river rescues.

However, FENZ has told RNZ it isn’t going to happen.

In May, FENZ banned the use of all powered watercraft used by local fire stations to rescue people during water emergencies. The decision means Ngāruawāhia and Huntly volunteer fire stations are no longer able to use their jet skis and boat during emergencies on Waikato river.

The three mayors said this decision, in their view, was putting lives at risk.

Waikato District Council mayor Aksel Bech, Waipa District Council mayor Mike Pettit and Hamilton City Council mayor Tim Macindoe said they have had no substantive response on the issue from FENZ leadership since the end of July. They have told FENZ’s chief executive Kerry Gregory that has not been good enough.

“While we appreciate the efforts made to date, we remain concerned that the pace of progress and clarity around next steps has not matched the urgency of the risk – and now what appears to be a firm decision made in isolation of any collaborative approach,” the mayors wrote.

Hamilton mayor Tim Macindoe RNZ / Libby Kirkby-McLeod

Though advocating for their districts, they pointed out that the issue went beyond their borders.

“The Waikato River is a lifeline for many communities – culturally, recreationally, and economically. The ability to respond to emergencies on the river is not a luxury; it is a necessity,” they wrote.

Most appropriate agency needs to respond – FENZ

FENZ deputy national commander Megan Stiffler said Gregory had received the letter and FENZ was working through it.

“However, we will not be implementing an interim agreement or permanent framework because Fire and Emergency does not have the capability to operate powered watercraft safely or in a manner compliant with the Maritime Transport Act 1994 or Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 (H&S). We also don’t have the capacity to stand up this capability.”

The mayors said this was a FENZ problem, not a community one.

“That lack of ability to comply with H&S and Maritime requirements is at the FENZ level, NOT the local Brigades who have obtained all appropriate certifications and we understand have appropriate H&S training and procedures in place,” they wrote.

“Put bluntly, the two local Brigades have taken all appropriate steps and appear to be fully compliant – and have successfully completed many potentially lifesaving rescues. It is FENZ that has taken the decision that it itself is not compliant and have instructed the Brigades not to respond, leaving no alternatives in place.”

Stiffler said FENZ wanted everyone to be safe on the Waikato River, but such incidents needed to be responded to by the most appropriate agency.

“Police, Surf Lifesaving NZ, and Maritime NZ are the lead agencies and organisations for operation and oversight of this activity,” she said.

But the mayors said the local volunteer stations were the only agencies locally who could respond.

“The FENZ claim that others will respond to a swift water rescue is not consistent with our local knowledge; Police are equipped for recovery, not rescue operations in the timeframes required. Coastguard and Surf Lifesaving do not have jurisdiction or any ability to respond. The Harbour Master is not equipped to respond nor is LandSar.”

Stiffler said finding a safe and effective solution for the community involved working with a range of key stakeholders, including councils, which would take time.

Yet with warmer temperatures and more people in the river, the mayors said an interim arrangement was needed that enabled the local stations to respond.

“Our communities expect that together we will find a way to protect lives on the Waikato River and we welcome the opportunity to do so,” they told FENZ.

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

Christchurch mosque terrorist likely to give evidence at Court of Appeal hearing

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The white supremacist terrorist who murdered 51 people in the Christchurch terror attack is expected to give evidence in an attempt to overturn his conviction and life sentence.

Brenton Harrison Tarrant massacred 51 worshippers at Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre during Friday prayers on 15 March, 2019.

He initially denied all charges and planned to stand trial but the Australian-born terrorist entered surprise guilty pleas to 51 counts of murder, 40 of attempted murder and one of terrorism on 26 March, 2020.

He was jailed for life with no possibility of parole – the first time such a sentence was imposed – in August 2020 but he is now seeking to vacate his guilty plea and appeal his conviction and sentence.

The terrorist must first convince the Court of Appeal to hear his appeal.

The court will hear evidence on an extension of time for the terrorist to appeal his conviction and sentence in February next year.

It is likely the terrorist will give evidence during the hearing.

He is also expected to give evidence to the Coroners Court after the High Court cleared the way for him to be called as a witness despite objections from survivors and victims’ families.

The terrorist was previously interviewed by a Royal Commission of Inquiry into the terror attack.

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

Live: Black Caps v West Indies first test: Day two

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Black Caps take on the West Indies for day two of their first test of the summer from Hagley Oval in Christchurch, and it’s advantage West Indies after day one.

New Zealand has played just two Test matches so far in 2025, beating Zimbabwe 2-0 in Bulawayo in August.

Since then they’ve played 17 white-ball games against Australia, England and West Indies.

“The team is clear in their test match identity, they’ve done incredibly well as a unit, so just to fall back into that,” coach Rob Walter said on the eve of the three match series.

New Zealand is ranked fifth in the World Test rankings, with West Indies eighth.

First ball is at 11am.

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Michael Bracewell Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz / Photosport Ltd 2025

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

Intense rain, blustery wind and thunderstorms forecast for much of North Island

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Jessica Hopkins

MetService is forecasting downpours across the North Island on Wednesday, with RELATED] https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/513904/weather-watches-and-warnings-what-they-mean-and-when-they-re-triggered possible thunderstorms] in some places, and a number of watches and warnings in place.

A heavy rain warning is in place from 11am until 11pm on Wednesday for Bay of Plenty and Gisborne/Tai Rāwhiti north of Ruatoria and the inland ranges, thunderstorms and downpours are also possible in these areas.

Meteorologist Mmathapelo Makgabutlane said the most notable warning was for Bay of Plenty, with 80 to 120 millimetres of rain set to fall before the end of the day.

“With thunderstorms in the mix we could see shorter periods of more intense rain bringing those possibilities such as flooding as well as slips and difficult driving conditions.”

At 10.15am, MetService’s weather radar detected severe thunderstorms near Matamata, Waharoa and the Kaimai Ranges.

These severe thunderstorms are moving towards the southeast, and are expected to lie near Matamata, Tirau, the Southern Kaimai Ranges, Te Poi, Okoroire and Hinuera at 10.45am and near Putaruru, the Mamaku Plateau, the Southern Kaimai Ranges, Te Poi and Okoroire at 11.15 am. These thunderstorms are expected to be accompanied by very heavy rain.

Thunderstorms may also occur in Taranaki and Whanganui, she said.

MetService has issued weather warnings and watches for much of the North Island on Wednesday. Supplied / MetService

A severe thunderstorm watch is in place for a large part of the North Island including Coromandel Peninsula, Waikato, Bay of Plenty and Taupo from 1pm-6pm on Wednesday.

Some of these thunderstorms may become severe on Wednesday afternoon with localised downpours of up to 40mm/h, large hail and strong wind gusts of up to 90km/h.

MetService said there was even a slight chance of a tornado, but that thunderstorm activity was expected to ease by Wednesday evening.

Northerly winds are forecast to turn southwesterly with gusts of up to 90km/h forecast.

Heavy rain watches are in place for a number of places throughout the day including Northland, Auckland, Great Barrier Island and Coromandel Peninsula, Taranaki, Wairarapa, the eastern hills and ranges in Wellington, and central North Island areas including Waikato and inland Whanganui.

There are also strong wind watches in place later on Wednesday for Northland, Auckland, Taranaki, Horowhenua to Wellington, parts of the Tararua and Hawke’s Bay districts and Wairarapa.

In the South Island heavy rain watches are in place for the Kaikōura Coast and the Chatham Islands, where a strong wind watch is also in place.

There may also be thunderstorms in Central Otago on Wednesday afternoon or evening.

Wind watches are also in place for Marlborough and parts of the Nelson region from 5pm Wednesday until 3am Thursday.

Makgabutlane said things were set to improve from Thursday onwards.

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

Nark: Solving a murder with no hard evidence, and a dead suspect

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Mike Wesley-Smith

Ross Appelgren Nick Monro / Julie Appelgren

Solving the murder of Darcy Te Hira inside Mt Eden Prison was never going to be easy.

The reason was as apparent to me decades later, doing the Nark podcast, as it was to the team of detectives who arrived at Mt Eden Prison on 6 January 1985. There was no forensic evidence pointing to the killer, meaning police had to extract the truth of what happened from a bunch of criminals. Many had dishonesty convictions, and most were muzzled by an inmate code of silence.

It is a context that must be remembered by anyone who assesses what then happened during the police investigation and murder prosecution of Ross Appelgren. Police and prosecutors bear a considerable legal and social burden to ensure murderers are held to account. Evidence sometimes comes easily, but even when it doesn’t, society still seeks quick justice – particularly when a killing occurs inside a supposedly secure prison.

In the end, the conviction of Ross Appelgren relied entirely on the eye-witness testimony of a fellow inmate – a “nark” to use prison vernacular. His name is suppressed, so in the podcast, he’s called “Ernie”.

Even in 1985, there were rules that detectives and prosecutors had to follow, because building and maintaining a conviction is like building and maintaining a house; it must have a solid foundation and an immovable watertight frame that can stand the tests of time and resist the winds of scrutiny. Because, as in Appelgren’s case, even when the convicted die, their quest for justice doesn’t always die with them.

And don’t be fooled into thinking the case’s age somehow diminishes its relevance – its lessons are just as valuable today as they were then.

Julie Appelgren Nick Monro

My Nark podcast, which has been released over the past six weeks and is now fully available online, has revealed many instances of police and prosecutors failing to follow their own rules. The full list would take me beyond this article’s word limit, but here are just some of the most serious examples Appelgren’s lawyers have discovered in police and court documents:

  • Police failed to record all their interactions with Ernie – including the meeting where they told him he was either a witness or a suspect (something they never told the juries or Appelgren’s lawyers). This was significant, as prosecutors maintained Ernie had no reason to implicate Appelgren other than his desire to see justice done.
  • Prior to taking a formal statement from Ernie, police discussed compensation with him in exchange for his evidence. At the time Ernie was a penniless inmate with over 200 previous convictions for fraud, who’d given conflicting accounts before formally documenting what he had to say.
  • Police assured him of early prison release before he testified.
  • At the first trial, the prosecution failed to disclose Ernie’s initial police statements, including his anonymous note that “I never saw it done”. This resulted in Appelgren’s first conviction being quashed.
  • At the 1992 retrial, the prosecution failed to disclose inmate “Danny’s” confession that he had ordered the hit on Te Hira and that Appelgren was not involved. This led the Governor-General to refer Appelgren’s case back to the Court of Appeal in 1994, because it might have resulted in a miscarriage of justice.

That appeal was never heard before Appelgren died.

Now his widow, Julie, hopes to resurrect it, not just because she believes her husband is innocent, but also because of the police and prosecution failures outlined.

In setting this all out, I am not asserting that the Crown case was without merit. Two juries and two appeal courts found Ernie convincing enough to convict Appelgren.

When I tracked him down and spoke to him for hours, he remained steadfast in his account. It also cannot be presumed that a Court, apprised of all the new evidence that has emerged since the 1992 retrial, would rule Appelgren’s conviction is unsafe. So listen to the podcast and decide for yourself.

Suzanne Young and Darcy Te Hira Mark Papalii / Suzanne Young

Going into my investigation, I knew that I would have a lot of contact with Julie Appelgren and learn a lot about her questions regarding the prosecution case.

What I didn’t know was that I would also come to know Te Hira’s widow, Suzanne Young, just as well. She believes Appelgren is guilty, but I discovered she nonetheless has many long-standing doubts about what happened to her husband. There was so much she only found out for the first time from me.

Suzanne’s perspective, unheard before, was one of the most significant revelations for me in this project. Through her, I finally learned who Te Hira really was. A much-loved husband who is still sorely missed.

Both Julie and Suzanne hoped for different outcomes in this case, but both expected that two trials would deliver the truth, however difficult or painful to hear.

After my years-long experience with this case, I don’t think they or the rest of us yet have that truth. For that reason, I believe Suzanne deserves the answers to her questions and that Appelgren’s appeal deserves its day in Court.

None of this will be easy, but then nothing about this case ever was.

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

Prisoner segragated after allegedly assaulting cellmate at Auckland’s Mt Eden Corrections Facility

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mt Eden Corrections Facility. (File photo) RNZ/Calvin Samuel

A prisoner has been placed on directed segregation after allegedly assaulting his cellmate who remains in hospital with serious injuries.

It comes amid a Corrections review of a risk assessment tool used in deciding whether prisoners are suitable to share a cell, after two suspected murders in nine months.

Mt Eden Corrections Facility general manager Dion Paki confirmed to RNZ staff found a prisoner had been injured at 10.40am on Saturday.

“The prisoner was assessed by on-site medical and taken to hospital for further treatment, where he remains. The alleged perpetrator was immediately secured and placed on directed segregation.”

The prisoner was also subject to an internal misconduct charge.

Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

Police were notified and attended the prison on Saturday. Corrections would carry out a review into the incident, including what risk assessments were done such as the Shared Accommodation Cell Risk Assessment (SACRA).

“Violence in prison is not tolerated and anyone who resorts to this behaviour will be held to account,” Paki said.

“Our staff manage some of New Zealand’s most dangerous people in a complex and challenging environment. Over 80 per cent of the prison population have convictions for violence in their offending histories, and more than 90 per cent have had a lifetime diagnosis of a mental health or substance abuse disorder.

“The safety of our prisons is our absolute priority.”

RNZ earlier revealed there had been two suspected murders, both involving double-bunked cells, in nine months at Mt Eden Corrections Facility.

Corrections used the SACRA tool to review the compatibility of individuals before they were placed in a shared cell.

The SACRA tool identified key risk factors to consider before placing a person in a shared cell.

If a person was deemed not suitable to double bunk, a Not to Double Bunk (NTDB) alert was activated on their profile.

Corrections custodial services commissioner Leigh Marsh earlier confirmed he requested a review of the SACRA process which was under way.

“The review is in its early stages, so we have limited information to provide at this stage.

“However, we can confirm that our Custodial, Pae Ora and Intel teams will be considering the questions asked to inform suitability, the process to determine compatibility, and the review processes relating to SACRA. This will help inform what improvements can be made to the SACRA process.”

Corrections had also taken steps across all prison sites regarding shared cell risk assessments, including instructing that all assessments must be reviewed within 24 hours of completion to check whether any further or outstanding information had been received.

“This is because we often receive people from the courts late in the evening and information can sometimes be limited.”

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