Page 46

Analysis: NZ’s housing funk sows doubts on reliable investment strategy, drags on economy

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Lucy Craymer, Reuters

ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner. ABC / Luke Bowden

Analysis – A dramatic boom-bust cycle in New Zealand’s housing market has left many Kiwis and investors scarred and an economy struggling to fire, turning what was once a trusted strategy for creating wealth into a period of unease and potentially smaller future returns.

New Zealand has traditionally relied on housing as an engine of growth, but the current shakeout in the property sector has been particularly telling on the economy, dragging it into contraction in three of the past five quarters.

Two and a half years of flat to falling house prices has basically just been a heavy wet blanket on top of the economy, said ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner.

The current gloom in the sector is rooted in more than a decade-long affordability crisis that came to a head during the pandemic, as house values soared around 40 percent to sky-high levels in an 18-month period through to November 2021, fuelled by sharply lower interest rates and government stimulus.

When the bubble burst, a combination of aggressive interest rate hikes by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and an increase in housing supply saw prices crumble by nearly 20 percent, and as much as 30 percent in some cities.

The collapse in house prices, which are still 15 percent below their peak in 2021, has brought much-needed relief for first-home buyers but has also raised questions about future returns as low net migration, rising unemployment and the government’s tight fiscal stance depress demand.

Satish Ranchhod, senior economist at Westpac, said the market dynamics have changed as the post-pandemic building boom increased the supply of homes, while slower population growth has kept inventory high.

It does mean quite a different supply and demand balance, said Ranchhod, tipping house prices to rise 5 percent in each of 2026 and 2027, a modest uptick in the context of recent sharp falls and compared with historic rates of growth.

New normal of modest resterns?

For a generation of New Zealanders, who have enjoyed average annual returns of roughly 7 percent in housing over the last three decades, the decline in prices for three consecutive years since 2021 is unprecedented.

In fact, property values dropped in only two of the years since 1990, making investment in housing a sure bet for Kiwis and a major driver of economic growth.

That certainty of steady capital gains has been eroded by several factors, not least by unemployment at a nine-year high and slow net migration growth even as the central bank has sharply reduced rates to a 3-1/2-year low since August last year.

Analysts note that with over half of New Zealand’s household wealth tied up in property, the downturn has had a chilling effect on consumption and the economy.

Kelvin Davidson, chief economist at Cotality, said that activity had started to pick up but this was off a low level, adding that a weak economy, an overhang of listings and concerns about employment continue to weigh.

You’d probably still call it a buyer’s market, said Davidson, predicting limited house price growth next year despite an improved outlook.

That view was underscored by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s latest forecasts released this week, with capital gains of 3.8 percent and 3.7 percent projected for next year and 2027, respectively.

While first home buyers have returned to the market, the number of houses available is higher than the historical average. Investors have also scaled back activity buyers of multiple homes are now 35.9 percent of the market, down from a recent high of 39.5 percent in 2021, according to data from Cotality.

The number of houses for sale in October was 33,588, up from 19,260 when the market peaked in November 2021, according to the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand, an organization representing the sector.

Tim Horsbrugh, a property investor with 13 rental tenancies, said a few years ago a group of investors he knew were flipping houses – the practice of buying a property at a low price and selling it for a profit after making improvements.

But not anymore, as the people that were doing it have lost money.

“Going for capital gains now is tough. Real tough,” he said. “And I don’t think people are going to be back into that market for a long, long time.”

Structural shift underway?

In an effort to shore up demand and revive the frail economy, the central bank has slashed its cash rate 325 basis points to 2.25 percent, having delivered the latest 25-basis-point cut on Wednesday. It has also eased some housing loan rules to lure back buyers.

The government campaigned on reducing house prices to improve affordability, yet the current property market downturn is putting a dampener on the economy.

Jarrod Kerr, chief economist at Kiwibank, said housing is by far the largest asset owned by New Zealanders, with two-thirds owning their own homes, and that means house price increases play a big part in sentiment.

If house prices are up, you know, 2 percent to 5 percent next year, then I’ll be saying that the economy will be climbing higher, because consumption will simply come back, Kerr said.

New Zealanders though may take some time to come to terms with a shift in the housing market.

“It’s too early to call a structural change in the housing market but there are some indications that might have happened,” said Paul Conway, chief economist at the RBNZ.

– Reuters

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

Climber and American lawyer Kellam Conover died alongside guide on Mt Cook

Source: Radio New Zealand

Aoraki Mt Cook. FLORIAN BRILL

The climber who died on Aoraki Mt Cook alongside guide Thomas Vialletet was American lawyer Kellam Conover.

The pair were roped together, climbing from Empress Hut to the summit when they fell from the mountain’s west ridge on Monday night.

Mountain guide Thomas Vialletet died on Aoraki Mt Cook. Supplied

Two other members of the climbing party who survived were flown from the mountain on Tuesday morning.

Conover was a Stanford Law School graduate who lived in Washington DC and worked for international law firm, King & Spalding.

Vialletet lived in Wānaka and was a married father-of-two, who co-owned the mountain and ski guide company Summit Explorers with his wife Danielle.

More than $90,000 dollars has been raised so far through a Givealittle page to support his wife and young children following his death.

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

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

Auckland swelters during hottest November day on record

Source: Radio New Zealand

MetService warns intermittent rain will add to the city’s humidity. RNZ/ Mohammad Alafeshat

MetService has confirmed Thursday is officially Auckland’s hottest November day since records began.

MetService meteorologist Lewis Ferris said, for the first time in the month of November in Auckland, temperatures had surpassed 26 degrees celsius at its recording station.

“Auckland Airport reached 26.2 degrees this afternoon, which has broken its November maximum record temperature, sitting at 25.9 degrees.”

Ferris said MetService’s temperature records for the Auckland region began on 31 December 1965.

He said many parts of the country had experienced warm weather on Thursday, some exceeding 30 degrees.

“With record or near-record temperatures turning up in parts of the country, it’s not too surprising to see Auckland actually get up there as well, because a lot of these temperatures are being driven by very warm, humid air being dragged down from the north,” Ferris said.

“Auckland being closer to there, they are going to be feeling those effects and people have probably been wondering why it felt so swampy, so humid the last couple of days.

“It is that warm, humid air being dragged down, and it does look to hang around, as we make our way through the rest of this week and into next week.

“There will be some intermittent rain as well, so it is just going to make it feel a little bit more humid.”

Ferris said sea-surface temperatures to the northwest were already above average and similar windflows would likely make its way to New Zealand in the coming weeks.

“These warm, humid days could be something we see a little bit more of, as we head through December.

“Won’t be warm every day, though. You know, December is a little bit of a copout, when it comes to summer.

“There probably will be some cooler southerly air, but I think holding onto these days and thinking that they will be more of them as we make our way through December is probably not a bad idea.”

Ferris said warm, humid air did provide a good amount of low-level moisture, which could turn into afternoon showers and potentially thunderstorms.

“Conditions in the upper atmosphere aren’t always ripe for that kind of stuff, so people will need to be keeping up with the forecast to see if those showers are going to be turning up in the afternoon.

“You might think it’s a lovely day, it’s warm, let’s get out the barbecue for the evening and that could just be when some of those showers turn up.”

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

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for November 27, 2025

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on November 27, 2025.

Why is bamboo used for scaffolding in Hong Kong? A construction expert explains
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ehsan Noroozinejad, Senior Researcher and Sustainable Future Lead, Urban Transformations Research Centre, Western Sydney University At least 44 people have died and more than 270 are missing after a major fire engulfed an apartment complex in Hong Kong’s Tai Po district. The fire, which swept through multiple

Life insurers soon won’t be able to discriminate against you based on your genes
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jane Tiller, Ethical, Legal & Social Adviser in Public Health Genomics, Monash University FG Trade Latin/Getty A bill that would ban life insurers from discriminating against Australians based on results of genetic testing has been introduced to parliament this week. If passed into law as expected, the

Better policies; better leader: new study reveals why Labor won the 2025 federal election
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sarah Cameron, Senior Lecturer in Public Policy, Griffith University The 2025 Australian federal election was a resounding win for the Australian Labor Party. Labor won 94 seats in the House of Representatives and a commanding majority. The Liberal-National Coalition was reduced to just 43 seats in the

Your dog is not a doomsday prepper. Here’s why they hide food and toys
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mia Cobb, Research Fellow, Animal Welfare Science Centre, The University of Melbourne Have you ever seen a dog focused on nuzzling their expensive treat under a blanket, behind a couch cushion, or into a freshly dug hole in the backyard? You might think they are behaving like

Two teens have launched a High Court challenge to the under-16s social media ban. Will it make a difference?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Luke Beck, Professor of Constitutional Law, Monash University Two teenagers are taking the federal government to the High Court. They argue the ban on social media accounts for under-16s is unconstitutional because it interferes with free political communication. The ban is due to take effect on December

Māori face harsher sentences than NZ Europeans for similar drink-driving offences – with lasting consequences
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alexander Plum, Senior Research Fellow, New Zealand Policy Research Institute, Auckland University of Technology Sandra Mu/Getty Images People of Māori descent account for just a fifth of Aotearoa’s population, but are overrepresented at every stage of the criminal justice system. They comprise 37% of people prosecuted by

Fiji MP: Violence against women and girls ‘permeates every dimension of society’
RNZ Pacific Fiji marked the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women and Girls  this week with the government saying the day is a reminder that for too many women and girls violence is a daily reality — not a headline or a statistic. The day also kicked off 16 days of activism

Can bigger-is-better ‘scaling laws’ keep AI improving forever? History says we can’t be too sure
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nathan Garland, Lecturer in Applied Mathematics and Physics, Griffith University Milad Fakurian / Unsplash OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman – perhaps the most prominent face of the artificial intelligence (AI) boom that accelerated with the launch of ChatGPT in 2022 – loves scaling laws. These widely admired

Your risk of catching COVID is at its lowest since 2020 – but here’s why you should still get boosted for Christmas
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michael Baker, Professor of Public Health, University of Otago Joe Raedle/Getty Images As the Christmas season looms, with its crowded end-of-year parties, family gatherings and busy travel schedules, many New Zealanders might be asking a now familiar question: should I get another COVID-19 booster? After nearly four

Rural Australians are 13% less likely to survive cancer. Here’s what needs to change
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Charlene Wright, Research Fellow, Equitable Cancer Outcomes across Rural and Remote Australia (ECORRA), Deakin University If you live in rural or remote Australia and are diagnosed with cancer, you’re less likely to survive than someone in the city with the same disease. Our research shows people in

Men earn nearly $10,000 more than women in bonuses and overtime pay, fuelling the gender pay gap: new data
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Leonora Risse, Associate Professor in Economics, University of Canberra Men are earning on average A$9,753 more than women each year in the form of performance bonuses, allowances and overtime pay. That’s according to the latest gender pay gap data released on Thursday by the Workplace Gender Equality

Activists slam Mayor Brown’s ‘free beer’ cavalier response to Palestine genocide issue
Asia Pacific Report A news report highlighting Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown yelling “free beer” at pro-Palestine protesters at an Auckland Council governing body meeting on Tuesday has stirred an angry response over the failure to face up to a serious human rights issue. Mayor Brown was called a ”shameful man” by protesters after they were

Vitamin B6 products are set to be restricted. Here’s what you need to know
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Vasso Apostolopoulos, Distinguished Professor, Professor of Immunology, RMIT University Lech Pierchala/Pexels On Tuesday, Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) announced a raft of changes to how products containing vitamin B6 are packaged and sold. The TGA decision is based on an extensive review, prompted by widespread concerns earlier

Inflation jumps in October, adding to pressure on government to make budget savings
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Stephen Bartos, Professor of Economics, University of Canberra Annual inflation rose to a 16-month high of 3.8% in October, adding to pressure on the government as it seeks to make savings across the public sector. When governments, whether Commonwealth, state or local, increase spending it adds to

Will Help to Buy give first home buyers a leg up? Here’s what we can learn from the UK
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rachel Ong ViforJ, John Curtin Distinguished Professor & ARC Future Fellow, Curtin University New national figures have reiterated what most already know: buying a home in Australia is more unaffordable than ever. The report from research group Cotality found home prices have risen by almost 50% since

Why is bamboo used for scaffolding in Hong Kong? A construction expert explains

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ehsan Noroozinejad, Senior Researcher and Sustainable Future Lead, Urban Transformations Research Centre, Western Sydney University

At least 44 people have died and more than 270 are missing after a major fire engulfed an apartment complex in Hong Kong’s Tai Po district. The fire, which swept through multiple high-rise towers, is still burning.

The exact cause of the blaze, which broke out just before 3pm local time on Wednesday, is still unknown. Hong Kong Police have arrested three construction company executives on suspicion of manslaughter.

The apartment blocks are 31 stories tall. Opened in 1983, they were undergoing renovations at the time of the blaze, and were covered in bamboo scaffolding and green protective mesh.

Bamboo scaffolding has been a feature of the city for centuries. But why? The answer is part history, part engineering and part economics.

But the recent tragedy has sharpened the focus on fire safety, and when and where bamboo should be used.

A fast-growing grass

Bamboo is a fast-growing grass with hollow, tube-like stems (known as “culms”). Those tubes give it a high strength-to-weight ratio. A pole is light enough to carry up a stairwell, yet strong enough, when braced and tied correctly, to support platforms and workers.

Crews lash poles together in tight grids and tie them back to the buildings with brackets and anchors. Properly designed, a bamboo scaffold can resist wind and working loads.

Hong Kong’s Buildings Department and Labour Department publishes clear guidelines on the design and construction of bamboo scaffolds.

Bamboo scaffolding is also used in parts of mainland China, India, and across Southeast Asia and South America.

A cheap and flexible material

There are three main reasons why bamboo scaffolds are used in Hong Kong.

First, speed. An experienced team can “wrap” a building quickly because poles are light and can be cut to fit irregular shapes. That matters in tight streets with limited crane access.

Second, cost. Bamboo is a fraction of the price of metal systems, so contractors can keep bids low. The material is also easy to source locally, which keeps routine repairs and repainting within budget.

Third, tradition and skills. Bamboo scaffolding features in a famous piece of Chinese art, Along the River During the Qingming Festival, painted by Zhang Zeduan who lived between 1085 and 1145. Hong Kong still trains and certifies bamboo scaffolders, and the craft remains part of the city’s construction culture.

These factors explain why bamboo has remained visible on the city’s skyline even as metal systems dominate elsewhere.

Unlike metal made in blast furnaces, bamboo also grows back, and turning a stalk into a pole takes little processing. This means its overall climate impact is smaller.

What are the risks?

There are two main risks of bamboo scaffolding.

The first, as this tragedy in Hong Kong highlights, is fire.

Dry bamboo is combustible, and the green plastic mesh often draped over scaffolds can also quickly burn.

In the Tai Po fire, footage and reports indicate the fire quickly raced up the scaffolding and mesh, and across the facade of the buildings.

This is why there are calls for non-combustible temporary works on occupied towers – or at minimum, flame-retardant nets, treated bamboo, and breaks in the scaffold so fire can’t easily jump from bay to bay.

The second risk of using bamboo scaffolding is related to variability and weather.

Bamboo is a natural material, so strength varies with species, age and moisture. Lashings can loosen and storms are a common risk.

Hong Kong’s updated guidelines and code try to manage this with material rules (such as age, diameter and drying), mandatory ties to the structure, steel brackets and anchor testing, and frequent inspections – especially before bad weather.

A high-rise apartment covered in bamboo scaffolding and white mesh.
Bamboo has been used for scaffolding in Hong Kong for centuries.
Frank Barning/Pexels

A shift to metal

In March 2025, Hong Kong’s Development Bureau directed that metal scaffolds be adopted in at least 50% of new government public-works building contracts. It also encouraged metal use in maintenance where feasible.

Subsequent government replies to the Legislative Council in June and July reiterated the 50% requirement and described a progressive transition based on project feasibility.

Private projects may still use bamboo under existing codes. But for public works the baseline is now metal, signalling a move toward non-combustible systems.

The lesson from Hong Kong is not that bamboo is “good” or “bad” for scaffolding – it’s about context. It has clear advantages for small-scale, short-duration, ground-anchored work where streets are tight and budgets are lean. But on tall, occupied residential blocks, especially with mesh-wrapped facades, its fire risk and variability demand much stronger controls.

Bamboo scaffolding helped build Hong Kong’s skyline because it was fast, clever and affordable. The science behind fire and the realities of high-rise living now demand a tighter line: use the right tool for the job, and when the risks climb, switch to non-combustible systems.

That way the city can honour a proud craft, while keeping people safe in the homes those scaffolds surround.

The Conversation

Dr Ehsan Noroozinejad has received funding from both national and international organisations. His most recent funding on integrated housing and climate policy comes from the Australian Public Policy Institute (APPI). He also serves on the Executive Committee of the Early- and Mid-Career Academic and Practitioner (EMCAP) Network at Natural Hazards Research Australia, the Australian government-funded national centre for natural hazard resilience and disaster risk reduction.

ref. Why is bamboo used for scaffolding in Hong Kong? A construction expert explains – https://theconversation.com/why-is-bamboo-used-for-scaffolding-in-hong-kong-a-construction-expert-explains-270780

Review: Star power can’t save flawed Clooney flick

Source: Radio New Zealand

Looking back on the big films of 2025, one thing is abundantly clear, the old Hollywood star system isn’t what it used to be. Of all the year’s hits, hardly any were particularly dependent on who was in them.

The few A-Listers in this year’s Top 20 list were subservient to the movie’s other elements.

Jurassic World featured Scarlett Johansson, and dinosaurs. F1 was as much Formula 1 cars as Brad Pitt. All right. I’ll make an exception for Tom Cruise in the final Mission Impossible. But these days even Cruise has to be in a familiar role, whether it’s Mission Impossible or Top Gun. This year, it seems, star status alone won’t guarantee a hit.

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

Life insurers soon won’t be able to discriminate against you based on your genes

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jane Tiller, Ethical, Legal & Social Adviser in Public Health Genomics, Monash University

FG Trade Latin/Getty

A bill that would ban life insurers from discriminating against Australians based on results of genetic testing has been introduced to parliament this week.

If passed into law as expected, the legislation would ban life insurers from taking into account the results of genetic tests that gauge your risk of disease when choosing whether to provide cover and how much to charge for it.

The bill, which was introduced to the House of Representatives on Wednesday, has broad bipartisan support. It follows almost a decade of research, consultation, community pressure and political efforts to end this form of genetic discrimination.

What happens currently?

There are many forms of life insurance, including death cover, income protection, trauma, and disability insurance.

Life insurers can legally discriminate based on health and other risk information, including genetic test results showing someone’s future risk of disease. This means they can decline to cover a person altogether, increase the cost of their premiums, or place conditions on their cover.

But our previous research showed fear of insurers discriminating based on their test results deters people from having genetic testing.

Genetic testing to identify the risk of diseases that can be prevented or detected and treated early can save lives. This includes variants in genes such as BRCA1made famous by Angelina Jolie – which lead to a high risk of breast, ovarian and prostate cancer, and at younger ages.

Genetic testing for someone’s risk of disease also includes gene variants that lead to a high risk of other cancers and heart disease, among others.

After genetic testing shows someone is at high risk of a particular disease, they can enter surveillance programs, take preventive medication or access other preventive measures.

For example, Jolie chose surgeries to prevent cancer.

So genetic testing can dramatically change the future for people at risk of preventable disease.

Protection is more important than ever

Currently, most genetic testing to assess someone’s risk of disease is done reactively. This includes if someone has a strong family history or personal diagnosis of a particular disease.

But if we move towards population DNA screening – offering screening to all for high genetic risk of preventable diseases – many more people will be offered genetic testing and will have to consider the benefits and risks.

Pharmacogenomic testing gauges the likely reaction to certain medications, including antidepressants, pain medications and ones to manage your cholesterol or heart health. And this is also becoming available more broadly.

So in the future, protection from genetic discrimination will become more important than ever.




Read more:
Health insurers are offering DNA testing to see how some medicines might work. What to know before you opt in


What is set to change?

The bill is set to amend insurance, and disability discrimination legislation. If passed, it will remove the current exemption for life insurance companies being able to discriminate on the basis of “protected genetic information”.

This includes all genetic tests, including testing for someone’s risk of future disease, pharmacogenomic testing, genetic testing sold directly to consumers, and testing for research purposes.

Protected genetic information also includes information about whether an individual or their genetic relative has had, intends to have, or has been recommended to have a genetic test.

But protected genetic information excludes diagnoses of disease, even if that diagnosis was made through a genetic test.

So if an applicant has been diagnosed with a disease using a genetic test ordered by their doctor, insurers would continue to be able to use this information in underwriting. Insurers would also still be able to use a clinical diagnosis, even if made without a genetic test, to calculate someone’s premiums or make decisions about offering cover.

The bill does not apply to private health insurance, which is already community-rated in Australia. This means that while health insurers can apply waiting periods for people with existing health conditions, they cannot decline cover or change the cost of premiums for people based on health data.

One issue that has arisen with the bill is that once the legislation is in force, it would apply to all new life insurance contracts. However, it would not apply to anyone with current contracts that contain penalties or discriminatory terms.

Insurers could re-underwrite this group. However, that process may be disadvantageous for people if they are significantly older than they were when they first took out their insurance policies.

This has been a long time coming

In 2018, a parliamentary inquiry first recommended the government ban the use of genetic information in life insurance.

In 2023, following years of research and advocacy, my research group recommended to government that it should introduce a legislative ban on the practice.

Later that year, the government held a public consultation, with almost all the submissions supporting a total ban. In 2024, the government announced it would legislate a ban.

The bill introduced this week must still pass through the House of Representatives and then the Senate. Given this is the last parliamentary sitting week of 2025, this is expected to happen early next year.

The bill is expected to come into effect six months after it is passed. This would allow time for life insurers to update their processes.

The Conversation

Jane Tiller receives funding from a National Health and Medical Research Council Investigator Grant and previously received research funding from the Australian Government Genomics Health Futures Mission.

ref. Life insurers soon won’t be able to discriminate against you based on your genes – https://theconversation.com/life-insurers-soon-wont-be-able-to-discriminate-against-you-based-on-your-genes-270564

More queen yellow-legged hornets found in Auckland’s North Shore

Source: Radio New Zealand

Yellow-legged hornets (Vespa velutina) have recently been sighted in the Auckland region. Biosecurity NZ

Biosecurity New Zealand says they’ve uncovered more queen yellow-legged hornets in Auckland’s North Shore, with the tally reaching 26.

The agency said 16 of the 26 confirmed queen hornets were found with either developed nests or evidence of nesting, while seven worker hornets have been found in nests.

The queen hornets and nests were found the Glenfield and Birkdale areas of Auckland’s North Shore. 

In their last update on 16 November, 10 queen hornets, 2 workers, and 7 nests had been removed.

The agency said they continue to urge Aucklanders to keep a watch for the invasive pest. They said they’ve received nearly 4000 notifications to date.

Biosecurity NZ said they’ve also extended trapping to 5km out from where hornet discoveries have been previously made.

A map of the hornet trap location. Supplied

They said a combination of carbohydrate and protein traps continue to be used, while they’re also looking to deploy advanced tracking technology from the Netherlands to trace hornets back to their nests.

The Ministry of Primary Industries said their Technical Advisory Group (TAG) comprises independent scientific experts from countries that have successfully managed hornet incursions.

MPI said the advisory group continues to support the response ot the invasive pest, with their recommendations shaping Biosecurity NZ’s strategy.

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

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

Better policies; better leader: new study reveals why Labor won the 2025 federal election

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sarah Cameron, Senior Lecturer in Public Policy, Griffith University

The 2025 Australian federal election was a resounding win for the Australian Labor Party. Labor won 94 seats in the House of Representatives and a commanding majority. The Liberal-National Coalition was reduced to just 43 seats in the House of Representatives, more than 30 seats short of a majority and the lowest seat share on record for the combined Coalition parties.

The Australian Election Study is a comprehensive survey of voters fielded after every Australian federal election since 1987. The newly released 2025 Australian Election Study provides insights into what shaped the election result.

A combination of short-term and long-term factors explain this historic win for Labor, and major loss for the Coalition. Short-term factors including the policy issues and leadership are important during the election campaign. Long-term factors, including partisan dealignment, gender influences on the vote, and generational change are gradually reshaping politics in Australia, and having an impact on the relative fortunes of the two major parties.

Short-term influences

The policies in the election campaign set the two major parties apart for voters. In 2025, Labor had the preferred policies on nine of 10 issue areas examined. The only exception being national security, which was not a salient issue in the election.

It is unprecedented for a single party to dominate almost all policy areas. Usually, Labor has the lead as preferred party on environmental and social policy issues, while the Coalition is preferred on economic policy. In 2025, for the first time on record, Labor overtook the Coalition as the preferred party on economic management and taxation. Being the preferred party across a range of policy areas was a clear and unprecedented advantage for Labor in the 2025 election.

Leaders are an important influence on voter behaviour. In 2025, 11% of voters indicated party leadership was the top consideration in their vote. Leaders also shape overall perceptions of the parties and communicate policies to voters. Having a popular or an unpopular leader can therefore make a major difference to a party’s fortunes in the election.

In the 2025 election, voters expressed a clear preference for Anthony Albanese over Peter Dutton. On a scale from 0 to 10 of how much respondents liked the leaders, Albanese had a mean score of 5.1, compared to 3.2 for Dutton. Albanese had the strongest lead relative to the other major party leader on record.

Dutton’s unpopularity continued a trend of declining leader popularity, with more recent elections having less popular leaders. Albanese was also the preferred leader across a range of leadership characteristics, including compassion, honesty, trustworthiness, and inspiration. Qualities that are particularly important to Australian voters are honesty and trustworthiness. Albanese led Dutton on both these traits by 19 percentage points.

Long-term influences

In addition to the short term-factors that made an impact during the campaign, there are several long-term factors gradually transforming politics in Australia. This includes voters no longer being “rusted on” to a particular party, the gender gap in voting, and generational change. These long-term factors also benefited Labor and disadvantaged the Coalition in the 2025 federal election.

Australians have gradually become detached from the two major political parties. Partisanship for Labor reached a record low in 2022, slightly recovering in 2025, with 31% of Australians identifying as Labor partisans.

Liberal partisanship reached a record low in 2025, with just 24% of Australians identifying as Liberal partisans. The proportion of Australians who do not identify with any political party has been steadily growing over time. For the first time on record, in 2025 the proportion of non-partisans (25%) exceeds the proportion of Liberal partisans (24%).

This move away from the major parties contributed to the record high vote for minor parties and independents in the 2025 election. While it has affected both major parties, so far it is the Liberals that have felt its impact in terms of losing previously safe seats to independent candidates.

Another long-term factor shaping the 2025 election result is the gender gap in voter behaviour. In 2025, the Coalition attracted 9% more votes from men compared to women. Labor attracted 5% more votes from women than men.

These patterns are part of a longer-term transformation of how gender influences voter behaviour in Australia. In the 1990s, women were slightly more likely than men to vote for the Coalition. Conversely, men were slightly more likely to vote for Labor.

Over time, the gender gap in voter behaviour reversed and widened. Now women are further to the left in how they vote, and men are further to the right. While both parties have a gender gap in voting, the size of the Coalition gender gap is around double that of Labor’s. The Coalition attracted votes from just 28% of women in 2025, the lowest level on record. It is very difficult for a party to win government with such a low level of support from such a significant group of the population.

A third long-term factor shaping the result is generational change. Younger generations, including Generation Z and Millennials, are further to the left of older generations. These generations are making up a growing proportion of the electorate.

The Australian Election Study shows they are not shifting to the right as they get older. Processes of generational replacement over time are benefitting Labor and creating challenges for the Coalition. The generations that support the Coalition, including Baby Boomers, are a shrinking proportion of the population.

The Conversation

Sarah Cameron receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

Ian McAllister receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

ref. Better policies; better leader: new study reveals why Labor won the 2025 federal election – https://theconversation.com/better-policies-better-leader-new-study-reveals-why-labor-won-the-2025-federal-election-270678

33kgs of cocaine seized at Port of Tauranga

Source: Radio New Zealand

Thirty-three kilograms of cocaine were seized at the Port of Tauranga. Supplied NZ Customs

Thirty-three kilograms of cocaine – with a street value of around $11.5 million – were seized at the Port of Tauranga on November 20.

Customs said the drugs were found in refrigerated containers on a vessel that had originated from Ecuador, and transited through Balboa, Panama, before arriving in Tauranga.

Customs officers inspected the containers after an x-ray screening of the containers and found anomalies which led to a physical inspection of the containers and their contents.

Seventeen bricks of cocaine were found in one container, and 16 in the other, hidden among legitimate goods.

Customs couldn’t confirm if the two seizures were related.

Customs’ maritime manager Robert Smith said advanced risk assessment and screening technologies, and the expertise of frontline officers are hitting organised crime groups and protecting communities.

He said Customs’ focus at New Zealand seaports is disrupting criminal networks and making it harder for organised crime to exploit our maritime border and legitimate trade supply routes and shipments.

Smith said the cooperation between Police, port companies and industry partners is “an unwelcoming and problematic environment for transnational, serious and organised crime to do business.”

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

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

Location of National Erebus Memorial revealed in Christchurch

Source: Radio New Zealand

Site of Erebus memorial at Cracroft Reserve, Christchurch. Supplied

A Christchurch reserve with views of the Southern Alps has been selected as the preferred location for the long-awaited National Erebus Memorial, commemorating the 1979 Antarctica air disaster.

Cashmere’s Cracroft Reserve has been identified by the Ministry for Culture and Heritage as the best site for the memorial, almost 46 years after the Air New Zealand scenic flight crashed into Mt Erebus, killing all 257 people on board.

Families of the victims have endured an excruciating wait for a national memorial, with some saying they had given up hope of seeing one in their lifetimes.

Two Christchurch sites were formally offered by the council as potential locations this year – Cracroft Reserve in Cashmere and the banks of the Avon River – after an aborted plan to build the memorial in Auckland.

Site of Erebus memorial at Cracroft Reserve, Christchurch. Supplied

Ministry for Culture and Heritage secretary Leauanae Laulu Mac Leauanae said Cracroft Reserve was a fitting place for the memorial.

“Cracroft Reserve has panoramic views over Christchurch and out to the Southern Alps,” he said. “It’s a space where both quiet moments or group gatherings can take place, it’s tranquil, green and has a beautiful outlook.

“It’s been almost 46 years since the Erebus disaster – Aotearoa’s worst civil accident. A memorial is long overdue and what I know for certain is that Erebus families deserve a memorial as soon as possible.

“Avon riverbank is also a very strong site, with many positive attributes. I’ve made the decision to retain the Avon riverbank as an alternative site in the event that we are unable to progress Cracroft Reserve.”

Leauanae said the memorial would be a place for Erebus families, members of Operation Overdue – who were involved in the recovery mission – New Zealanders and international visitors to gather, remember and reflect on those who lost their lives.

The government committed to building a memorial in 2017, but the project has been mired in controversy, protest and delay ever since.

Courtesy of Archives New Zealand

A plan for a memorial at Auckland’s Dove Meyer Robinson Park in Parnell faced major pushback, with objectors claiming it would change the tone of the gardens.

The plan was ultimately abandoned in 2023, after cyclone damage meant the land was unsafe to build on

In July, three potential Christchurch sites were shared with the Erebus families, via online workshops – two council-owned options (the Cracroft Reserve and Avon River sites) and the St James’ Church grounds in Harewood.

Sixty-five percent of people who responded to a survey supported building the memorial in Christchurch, with nine percent conditionally supportive and 26 percent opposed to building it in the city.

Some Erebus families preferred building the memorial in Auckland.

Leauanae said the ministry had explored 50 different sites for the memorial in the greater Auckland area over the past two years, none of which were suitable, and was recently advised that Takaparawhau in Auckland was no longer a potential location.

“I have been heartened by Christchurch’s warmth, generosity and support through the process of identifying potential sites,” he said. “Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei is fully supportive of the memorial being located with Ngāi Tūāhuriri and the people of Christchurch.

“I am confident that Christchurch’s warm welcome to Erebus families, and the city’s experience and understanding of the importance of remembrance will provide the right space for this national memorial.”

Air New Zealand and Qantas began offering sightseeing flights to Antarctica in 1977. By the time the flights ended – Air New Zealand’s at the time of the Erebus disaster and Qantas in February 1980 – more than 10,000 people had taken the trip.

The livestream will start at approximately 1pm.

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

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

Watch live: Location of National Erebus Memorial revealed in Christchurch

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Christchurch reserve with views of the Southern Alps has been selected as the preferred location for the long-awaited National Erebus Memorial, commemorating the 1979 Antarctica air disaster.

Cashmere’s Cracroft Reserve has been identified by the Ministry for Culture and Heritage as the best site for the memorial, almost 46 years after the Air New Zealand scenic flight crashed into Mt Erebus, killing all 257 people on board.

Families of the victims have endured an excruciating wait for a national memorial, with some saying they had given up hope of seeing one in their lifetimes.

Two Christchurch sites were formally offered by the council as potential locations this year – Cracroft Reserve in Cashmere and the banks of the Avon River – after an aborted plan to build the memorial in Auckland.

Site of Erebus memorial at Cracroft Reserve, Christchurch. Supplied

Ministry for Culture and Heritage secretary Leauanae Laulu Mac Leauanae said Cracroft Reserve was a fitting place for the memorial.

“Cracroft Reserve has panoramic views over Christchurch and out to the Southern Alps,” he said. “It’s a space where both quiet moments or group gatherings can take place, it’s tranquil, green and has a beautiful outlook.

“It’s been almost 46 years since the Erebus disaster – Aotearoa’s worst civil accident. A memorial is long overdue and what I know for certain is that Erebus families deserve a memorial as soon as possible.

“Avon riverbank is also a very strong site, with many positive attributes. I’ve made the decision to retain the Avon riverbank as an alternative site in the event that we are unable to progress Cracroft Reserve.”

Leauanae said the memorial would be a place for Erebus families, members of Operation Overdue – who were involved in the recovery mission – New Zealanders and international visitors to gather, remember and reflect on those who lost their lives.

The government committed to building a memorial in 2017, but the project has been mired in controversy, protest and delay ever since.

Courtesy of Archives New Zealand

A plan for a memorial at Auckland’s Dove Meyer Robinson Park in Parnell faced major pushback, with objectors claiming it would change the tone of the gardens.

The plan was ultimately abandoned in 2023, after cyclone damage meant the land was unsafe to build on

In July, three potential Christchurch sites were shared with the Erebus families, via online workshops – two council-owned options (the Cracroft Reserve and Avon River sites) and the St James’ Church grounds in Harewood.

Sixty-five percent of people who responded to a survey supported building the memorial in Christchurch, with nine percent conditionally supportive and 26 percent opposed to building it in the city.

Site of Erebus memorial at Cracroft Reserve, Christchurch. Supplied

Some Erebus families preferred building the memorial in Auckland.

Leauanae said the ministry had explored 50 different sites for the memorial in the greater Auckland area over the past two years, none of which were suitable, and was recently advised that Takaparawhau in Auckland was no longer a potential location.

“I have been heartened by Christchurch’s warmth, generosity and support through the process of identifying potential sites,” he said. “Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei is fully supportive of the memorial being located with Ngāi Tūāhuriri and the people of Christchurch.

“I am confident that Christchurch’s warm welcome to Erebus families, and the city’s experience and understanding of the importance of remembrance will provide the right space for this national memorial.”

Air New Zealand and Qantas began offering sightseeing flights to Antarctica in 1977. By the time the flights ended – Air New Zealand’s at the time of the Erebus disaster and Qantas in February 1980 – more than 10,000 people had taken the trip.

The livestream will start at approximately 1pm.

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

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

Pygmy sperm whale stranded at Orewa taken to burial site

Source: Radio New Zealand

There were no obvious signs of the cause of the whale’s death. Supplied / Maddi Newson

The body of a pygmy sperm whale, found stranded at the shore of Auckland’s Orewa, has been taken to a burial site.

The Department of Conservation said the whale was about 3.5-4 metres in length and there were no obvious signs of the cause of death.

DoC said Wednesday’s stranding was the third recorded of a pygmy sperm whale at Orewa, with another previously stranding at Whangaparāoa.

The iwi of the Mahurangi peninsula area – Ngāti Manuhiri – said each stranding was significant and treated with care, and the whale had been taken to their whale urupā (cemetery).

“From a tikanga and mātauranga perspective, strandings and whale deaths are understood as tohu – indicators of environmental change or events occurring within our wider realm,” said Ngāti Manuhiri Settlement Trust chairperson Mook Hohneck. “We observe these carefully and with respect.”

He said all bones of a whale were taonga (treasure), and each iwi and hapū had its own tikanga (customs) for caring for and managing the remains.

“For us, the care of a whale is never about one bone or one moment. It is about honouring the taonga as a whole and upholding the tikanga handed to us by our tīpuna (ancestors),” said Hohneck.

“We appreciate the support of our community and partners in ensuring these remains were treated with dignity.”

DoC Tāmaki Makaurau operations manager Olivia Kean said between 10-20 pygmy sperm whales are found stranded each year on New Zealand’s shores.

While they often occur in Mahia, between Poverty Bay and Hawke’s Bay, they also strand all around the North Island and as far south as Dunedin, said DoC.

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

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

Man wielding hedge trimmer blade threatens mum and baby, tasered by police

Source: Radio New Zealand

The bus stop on Cockayne Rd in Kandallah where the incident took place. Krystal Gibbens

The Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) says Wellington police were justified in tasering an armed man who received a serious head injury after he fell onto the road.

Police were called to reports that a man, who was armed with a blade from a pair of hedge trimmers, had trapped a woman and her baby in a bus-stop on Cockayne Road in Khandallah just after midday on 9 January.

One person who called police told operators the man – referred to in the report as Mr Z – was “out of control”.

“I’ve got a situation at bus stop 4411 on Cockayne Road. I’ve got a bleeding woman with a distraught child. I’ve got a man who’s out of control, he’s violent, he’s tearing up the bus stop,” the caller said.

The authority’s report said “a hacking sound” could be heard over the line as the man struck the bus-stop.

Five police surrounded the bus-stop and the woman was able to slip out with her child as an officer attempted to speak to the man.

As the man tried to follow the woman onto the road an officer fired their taser but the weapon appeared to have no effect.

“[The man] stopped and turned to face the officers, as though he was preparing to confront them. At this point, [he] was approximately three to four metres away from the officers, holding the bladed weapon at a 45-degree angle,” as outlined in a summary of a witness’s cell phone footage.

Officers yelled “Taser! Taser! Taser!” and the footage recorded two loud bangs as two officers fired their tasers at the man.

“In response, Mr Z became rigid and fell to the ground. His head hit the tarmac surface of the road. This interaction lasted about five seconds from the moment Mr Z started following [the woman], until he fell to the ground,” the report stated.

The bus stop on Cockayne Rd in Kandallah where the incident took place. Krystal Gibbens

Judge Kenneth Johnston KC said police acted out of genuine concern for the safety of the woman and child, themselves and other bystanders.

“The video footage shows that Mr Z adopted an aggressive stance, looking as if he was preparing to fight with the officers. Communication with Mr Z was ineffective. Officers cannot be expected to use open-hand tactics against someone armed with a bladed weapon. Mr Z was using the weapon in a threatening manner. Additionally, Officer B correctly assessed that four metres could be quickly closed and locked by Mr Z, which would put the officers at significant risk,” Johnston wrote.

He said officers wasted no time in requesting medical attention for the man once he had fallen.

“Police radio transmissions record that at 12.07 pm, Officer A informed Comms that Mr Z was tasered.

“Sixteen seconds later, Comms was informed that Mr Z had sustained a serious head injury, and a request for an ambulance was made. Comms informed the officers that an ambulance had already been contacted … and was en route to their location,” Johnston wrote.

Johnston concluded he was satisfied the officers had followed police policies on taser use and were justified in their actions.

In a statement, acting Wellington District Commander Inspector Nick Thom said officers assessed the situation and responded accordingly, to ensure the safety of the public.

“Officers deployed their tasers to stop a dangerous situation evolving into something that could have been much worse. Our officers have made good decisions and the IPCA investigation supports that,” Thom said.

Shortly after the incident, Detective Senior Sergeant Tim Leitch confirmed the child was uninjured and the woman had been treated for a minor injury.

The IPCA report said the woman suffered a deep cut to her thumb when – at some point – she pushed the man’s weapon away from her.

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

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

Your dog is not a doomsday prepper. Here’s why they hide food and toys

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mia Cobb, Research Fellow, Animal Welfare Science Centre, The University of Melbourne

Have you ever seen a dog focused on nuzzling their expensive treat under a blanket, behind a couch cushion, or into a freshly dug hole in the backyard? You might think they are behaving like a paranoid doomsday prepper, but dogs aren’t stockpiling their food due to anxiety about impending disaster.

Instead, they’re revealing how their evolutionary past still shapes modern behaviours. This forward-thinking strategy offers us a unique window into how we can help them live well.

Why do dogs cache food, treats and toys?

You might have heard of “caching”, the scientific term for storing food in hidden places for later use. This behaviour is widespread across the animal kingdom, from squirrels, to crows, and wolves.

Caching behaviour generally falls into one of two categories.

One is known as larder hoarding – think of a squirrel stashing nuts in just one or two places to draw from as they get through a long Winter.

The other is known as scatter hoarding. It is where animals make smaller caches of surplus food in many different locations, reducing the chance of losing everything to a competitor or going hungry in lean seasons. It’s mostly seen in wild canids such as foxes and wolves.

This behaviour in modern dogs is an instinctual remnant. It reflects the competitive feeding patterns of their ancestors who lived by hunting, for whom securing food was unpredictable, but crucial for survival.

Dogs appear to rely on a combination of scent and observational spatial memory to remember where they have cached special items, such as food, treats and toys.

A white dog holding a stick in its mouth.
Dogs hide special items, revealing how their evolutionary past still shapes modern behaviours.
Mitchell Orr/Unsplash

Is my dog worried I won’t feed it next week?

When we see today’s household dogs taking their toys to quiet places to hide them, nosing blankets to cover treats, or digging a hole for a bone in the backyard, they aren’t consciously worried that they won’t be fed again.

This behaviour is driven by an inherited survival mechanism. It shouldn’t be considered evidence they anticipate being hungry in the future.

However, dogs who have experienced food scarcity or stress, such as displaced dogs that have been stray, may cache more as coping mechanism shaped by that experience.

It might also be more commonly seen in breeds who were selected for their hunting-type behaviours, such as terriers and hounds.

Is this behaviour a problem?

If you’re finding that caching is a problem behaviour in your home, it’s worth considering the underlying reason.

Our dogs’ behaviour is how they communicate with us, and behaviour we perceive as problematic (such as barking, digging and jumping up), is often just normal dog behaviour that doesn’t suit us in that moment.

When we invite dogs into our homes to live with us, we need to provide suitable outlets for their natural behaviours. These include daily physical activity, social connection they enjoy, and regular mental stimulation.




Read more:
The science of happier dogs: 5 tips to help your canine friends live their best life


Snuffle mats and slow feeding interactive puzzle toys can be a terrific way to provide them with foraging-based behavioural interaction. These let you hide your dog’s food or treats in folds of fabric, compartments or textured surfaces, so the dog then needs to actively “problem-solve” to get at their goal.

This can keep dogs happily engaged, reducing boredom and anxiety. It might also help to satiate the same natural behaviour itch that drives them to dig in the backyard.

If you are experiencing problems with dogs growling or defending their food (behaviour known as resource guarding) from other dogs, or people in the home, you might need to explore strategies to keep everyone safe.

This could include making sure there are more toys or chews available than there are dogs in the environment to reduce any perceived competition. It could also mean giving multiple dogs their own area to eat while separated by a physical barrier (for example, using a door or toddler gate to keep them apart).

If you’re concerned about your dog’s caching behaviours, consult your local vet or ask them to connect you to a professional with suitable animal behaviour expertise.

Next time you see your dog carefully stashing that special item, you can relax, knowing they aren’t worried about an impending apocalypse or protesting against your choice of treat flavour. They are engaging in normal, natural behaviour that speaks to their wild past.

The Conversation

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

ref. Your dog is not a doomsday prepper. Here’s why they hide food and toys – https://theconversation.com/your-dog-is-not-a-doomsday-prepper-heres-why-they-hide-food-and-toys-268284

Two teens have launched a High Court challenge to the under-16s social media ban. Will it make a difference?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Luke Beck, Professor of Constitutional Law, Monash University

Two teenagers are taking the federal government to the High Court. They argue the ban on social media accounts for under-16s is unconstitutional because it interferes with free political communication.

The ban is due to take effect on December 10.

Will the High Court challenge make any difference?

What does the law do?

Due to a 1998 US law, social media platforms’ terms of service already set a minimum age of access of 13 years.

Australia’s new law imposes an obligation on some social media platforms to take reasonable steps to prevent users under 16 from having an account with the platform. The law does not impose obligations on under-16s themselves or on their families. This means only social media platforms can be guilty of breaking the law.

Australia’s eSafety Commissioner has announced the law applies to Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Threads, TikTok, Twitch, X, YouTube, Kick and Reddit.

The practical effect is that Australians aged under 16 will not be able to have accounts on those and similar social media platforms. But under-16s will still be able to access content on those platforms if they have a logged-out functionality.

The federal government says the law’s purpose is to “enhance the online safety and wellbeing of young people”.

The Office of Impact Analysis’ assessment of the law included a report from the Queensland Chief Health Officer stating “existing studies provide compelling indications of possible negative links between unrestrained social media usage and the cognitive, emotional, and social wellbeing of young people”.

The analysis also noted UK and US reports about the negative impacts of social media use on young people’s wellbeing.

Australia has lots of similar laws

Lots of laws restrict young people’s access to spaces and things that sometimes have political content, to protect their wellbeing.

Shops are banned from selling video games with certain classifications to teenagers, even though the games may have some political content. Cinemas are banned from selling tickets to movies with certain ratings to teenagers, even though the movies may have some political content. Liquor shops are banned from selling alcohol to under-18s, even though some alcohol-fuelled conversations turn political. And pubs are banned from allowing unaccompanied minors on their premises, even though there might be a bit of political banter at the bar.

So far, none of these laws has been found to be unconstitutional. However, more than one teenager has managed to circumvent these laws on occasion (as likely will also happen with the ban on social media accounts).

Who is bringing the High Court case?

The High Court case is being brought in the name of two 15-year-olds, Noah Jones and Macy Neyland.

They are backed by a group called the Digital Freedom Project, led by NSW upper house MP John Ruddick of the Libertarian Party. So far, the Digital Freedom Project has not revealed who is giving it money.

The case will argue that the law is unconstitutional because it impermissibly burdens the implied freedom of political communication.




Read more:
Banning under-16s from social media may be unconstitutional – and ripe for High Court challenge


What is the implied freedom of political communication?

The implied freedom of political communication arises from the Australian Constitution’s requirement that parliamentarians be “chosen” by the people. Without freedom to communicate about political matters, that choice would not really be a meaningful one.

The implied freedom of political communication is not an individual right. It is a limitation on parliament’s power to make laws. And it is not about free speech more generally. Political communication covers all matters of public and governmental affairs.

A law that burdens political communication will be invalid unless the law has a legitimate purpose and that purpose is pursued in a proportionate manner.

Does the social media account ban law burden freedom of political communication?

The plaintiffs need to persuade the High Court that the law will lead to a real reduction in political communication in Australia.

Former High Court Chief Justice Robert French said in a report considering a draft South Australian law similar to the new law:

The implied freedom of political communication would not seem to be engaged. The restriction is content neutral, is not directed at political speech and, in any event, is a reasonable and proportionate means for a legitimate purpose consistent with Australia’s representative democracy.

The Digital Freedom Project’s website says the law “places a heavy burden on political communication”. This seems exaggerated. Any reduction in political communication is slight: very few 13-, 14- or 15-year-olds use social media to create or engage with political content. Those who do are doing so only occasionally.

Is the law proportionate?

It is easier for governments to justify small burdens on political communication as proportionate to a legitimate purpose than it is to justify large burdens on political communication.

The Digital Freedom Project’s website accepts the law’s purpose of protecting young people’s wellbeing is legitimate. However, they say the law “fails proportionality because less restrictive and workable alternatives exist (parental consent pathways for 14- and 15-year-olds, platform duty of care and safe design settings, targeted moderation/takedown, age-appropriate feature gating rather than bans, digital literacy programs, and privacy preserving age assurance)”.

The Office of Impact Assessment has assessed some of those ideas as likely to be less effective than requiring social media platforms to not allow under-16s to have accounts. And some of those ideas look rather like asking the High Court to invent new legislative models, which it will not do.

What happens next?

The plaintiffs are asking the High Court to issue an urgent injunction preventing the government enforcing the law until the High Court has a chance to hear the case and make a final ruling. Injunctions like that are rare.

The law is due to come into effect on December 10. Unless the High Court grants an injunction, the law will take effect as planned, even if the constitutional challenge later succeeds.

The eSafety Commissioner’s website has a range of resources to help young people, their families and teachers get ready for the law coming into operation.

The Conversation

Luke Beck 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. Two teens have launched a High Court challenge to the under-16s social media ban. Will it make a difference? – https://theconversation.com/two-teens-have-launched-a-high-court-challenge-to-the-under-16s-social-media-ban-will-it-make-a-difference-270688

Super Rugby Pacific jerseys revealed: Which is the coolest?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Stephen Perofeta models the Blues’ 2026 home jersey. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Super Rugby Pacific doesn’t kick off until February but you could argue the first round happened today, as the five original New Zealand teams unveiled their jersey range for next season.

2026 marks 30 years since the original Super 12 competition started, so interest was high in how the teams would mark the anniversary.

Here’s what they came up with:

Blues

The Blues away jersey for 2026. supplied

The Blues have the fondest memories of the 1996 season, given that they won Super 12 and set the tone for the wildly popular first few years of professional rugby. So it’s no surprise they’ve leaned heavily on their original Auckland Blues strip for their home jersey, which will likely go down well given its association with success.

The away jersey though…let’s just say this going to split opinion. It looks far more like it’s channelling design energy from Cricket Max shirts rather than rugby, but at least it’s the right colour combination.

Martin Crowe and the original Cricket Max captains model their uniforms in 1996. Alan Lee / www.photosport.nz

Chiefs

Chiefs jerseys for 2026. supplied

Not sure whether the Chiefs actually got the brief for a throwback redesign, because their jerseys look more or less the same as they did last year. The probable explanation is that they’ve actually already done a ’96 throwback jersey back in 2019, but this still feels pretty lazy.

Hurricanes

Hurricanes jerseys for 2026. supplied

The cult team of the competition’s early years will get a lot of love for these throwbacks, even though the Canes had a rough introduction to Super 12 with only three wins in their first season. However, all anyone really cares about that season was Christian Cullen’s iconic try at the Sydney Football Stadium, so the original jersey has that nostalgia tied to it.

[embedded content]

The away jersey is the same with the black and yellow reversed, the last time the Canes did that, they won their only title.

Crusaders

Crusaders jerseys 2026. supplied

The one team that was dreading any sort of 1996 remembrance is the Crusaders, who came dead last in Super 12’s inaugural season. So it’s no surprise that their throwback jersey is their official third strip, although it admittedly looks very clean and is unlikely to contribute to any sort of failure given the Crusaders are the defending champions.

Their home and away jerseys are similar to recent years, with the Southern Alps motif across the front and their sponsor logo quite well integrated into the design.

Highlanders

[embedded content]

The Highlanders haven’t had a lot to brag about since their only title win in 2015, but they may well have banked another victory here. They brought out the big guns in Jeff Wilson and Ben Smith to launch their 2026 range, which has the same design as the inaugural season and the same shade of dark blue from 2015 – and have already got the thumbs up from fans across social media.

Classy stuff from the southern men, these should sell pretty well and hopefully inspire the players in what will be another challenging season.

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

The story behind NZ’s obsession with chocolate fish

Source: Radio New Zealand

No other country in the world has embraced the chocolate fish quite like New Zealand.

The chocolatey, marshmallowy treat is as entrenched in Kiwiana culture as L&P and pavlova.

So where did the chocolate fish come from and how did they become the preferred reward for our good deeds?

Thingee on the Son of a Gunn show had a voracious appetite for chocolate fish.

NZ on Screen

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

Wellington Hospitals waiting up to six months for Health NZ approval to recruit

Source: Radio New Zealand

Some roles in Wellington hospitals are taking six months to fill. RNZ / REECE BAKER

Hospitals in the Wellington region are waiting up to six months for Health NZ to give them approval to even begin recruitment for front-line roles.

Data obtained by the Public Service Association under the Official Information Act (for March to May) shows 219 recruitment requests took more than two months to be approved, 91 waited more than 20 weeks, and 45 roles applied for in March were still vacant last month.

In some cases, it took up to 30 weeks for management to approve a hiring process for critical positions, including medical imaging technologists who operate x-ray, CT and MRI equipment.

PSA national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons said the Wellington data was a “disturbing snapshot” of the nationwide health workforce crisis.

“These figures show that delays in recruitment are a deliberate cost-saving tactic, driven by the government’s failure to fund the health system properly.

“There should be no barriers to filling vacancies.”

The roles requested included doctors, nurses, radiographers, administrative staff, oral health therapists, and healthcare assistants.

“Allowing such long-standing vacancies in so many areas of the health system is a recipe for burnout and eventually, even higher vacancy rates as staff quit for overseas hospitals where their skills are valued,” Fitzsimons said.

Unsafe staffing levels were a key driver for Friday’s strike by 17,000 healthworkers represented by the PSA – including allied health staff, mental and public health nurses, and policy, knowledge, advisory and specialist workers, she continued.

“Workers are sick and tired of being ignored and must again send a loud and clear message to the Government that it must listen to their concerns and make patient care a priority. Enough is enough.”

Health Minister blames Labour

Health Minister Simeon Brown said the data showed Health NZ was recruiting staff, with hundreds more doctors and about 2000 additional nurses employed since the government took office.

“However, Health New Zealand must move more quickly, and my expectation is that front-line vacancies are recruited to at pace.

“Let’s be clear – Labour’s botched merger of all DHBs into one mega-entity in the middle of a pandemic created a centralised, slow, and bureaucratic system.

“That’s why under this government, Health New Zealand is moving decision-making back to the regions, so recruitment and workforce decisions happen faster and closer to communities.”

PSA members will walk off the job on Friday for four hours, with pickets and rallies at 30 locations around the country from 1pm.

Fitzsimons said since the previous strike on October 23, the parties had attended mediation through the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment but no settlement has been reached.

“Health NZ’s offer would mean workers go backwards. The health system is currently being held together by these workers’ good will for their patients. It’s not sustainable, not fair on workers, and doesn’t serve patients well either.”

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

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

Secondary school teachers to vote on potential settlement of troubled pay talks

Source: Radio New Zealand

Secondary teachers are set to vote on a pay talks settlement. RNZ / Richard Tindiller

Secondary teachers are voting on a potential settlement of their troubled pay talks.

Information obtained by RNZ showed it included similar pay rises to previous offers, but provided at the start of next year rather than this year and with the removal of some clawbacks.

It would provide a 2.5 percent pay increase in January next year with a further two to 2.1 percent in January 2027 depending on salary scale step.

The offer dropped an attempt to increase the number of “call-back days” when teachers could be required to work outside of term time.

But it would remove teachers’ ability to claim for expenses for call-back days such as teacher-only days held during term time.

It would increase the value of management units paid for extra responsibilities by $500 to $5500.

The offer followed a week facilitated bargaining between the Post Primary Teachers Association (PPTA) and the Education Ministry and Public Service Commission.

A PPTA statement said neither side would comment and the result of the ballot would be known by early December.

RNZ understands the union’s leadership has told members it would remain neutral on whether they should accept or reject the offer.

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

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

Māori face harsher sentences than NZ Europeans for similar drink-driving offences – with lasting consequences

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alexander Plum, Senior Research Fellow, New Zealand Policy Research Institute, Auckland University of Technology

Sandra Mu/Getty Images

People of Māori descent account for just a fifth of Aotearoa’s population, but are overrepresented at every stage of the criminal justice system. They comprise 37% of people prosecuted by police, 45% of those convicted and 52% of the prison population.

Such statistics, however, aren’t easily explained. Differences in offending type only go so far – for instance, a minor assault charge can involve varying impacts on victims – and for most offences there is no objective measure of severity. This makes it difficult to compare people charged with what appears to be the same crime.

Recent analysis from the Understanding Policing Delivery programme has already shown systemic bias at the policing stage: when all other factors are held constant, Māori were 11% more likely to be prosecuted than Pākehā.

What has been less clear is whether similar disparities occur within the courtroom. In our newly published study, we examined whether sentencing outcomes differ between Māori and New Zealand Europeans charged with nearly identical offences.

We focused on first-time drink-driving cases, using alcohol readings as an objective, standardised measure of offence severity. Our core question: do Māori face a higher likelihood of a community-based sentence, instead of the more common – and least severe – outcome of a fine?

The results suggest they do.

How we compared sentencing outcomes

The Land Transport Act 1998 sets clear alcohol limits and a graduated set of penalties, from infringement notices and fines to disqualification, community-based sentences and, for repeat or serious cases, imprisonment.

For drivers aged 20 and over, offending previously began at 400 micrograms (mcg) of alcohol per litre of breath, or 80 milligrams (mg) per 100ml of blood. Since 2014, lower thresholds (250mcg/50mg) have enabled police to issue infringement notices instead of prosecuting.

Drink-driving is usually a summary offence, heard in the District Court and decided by a judge alone. Cases move quickly and typically result in a fine, disqualification or community-based sentence.

To build a clear picture of sentencing patterns, we use Stats NZ’s Integrated Data Infrastructure, a large, linked research database containing information from multiple government agencies, including Ministry of Justice court charges.

Between 2008 and 2013, the Ministry of Justice also included alcohol readings (blood and breath), which can be linked to corresponding offences. Individuals can be identified consistently across datasets such as Inland Revenue tax records or driver licence data.

Our study examined whether the highest sentence imposed was a fine or a community-based sentence, and how this differed between Māori and New Zealand European offenders.

Because virtually all drink-driving offenders plead guilty and are convicted, our focus was on sentencing, rather than conviction.

To assess the role of ethnicity, we used Stats NZ’s personal details files and included only individuals who identified solely as Māori or solely as NZ European.

To ensure the groups were directly comparable – and that any differences reflected sentencing practices rather than offending histories or case types – we applied several restrictions.

We limited the sample to adults aged 20 to 69 and included only first-time offenders with no prior convictions and whose drink-driving charge was based solely on elevated alcohol levels.

This yielded a final sample of 10,599 convictions: 2,250 Māori and 8,349 New Zealand European.

A clear pattern emerges

Our results showed that, despite having similar alcohol levels at the time of offending, 9.9% of Māori offenders received a community-based sentence compared with 3.3% of NZ Europeans.

We also found Māori offenders are, on average, younger, more often parents, more often female, and more likely to live in highly deprived neighbourhoods.

Our analysis controlled for offence characteristics and a range of demographic and socioeconomic factors. But even after these adjustments, Māori remained twice as likely as New Zealand Europeans to receive a community-based sentence.

We also examined outcomes across district courts. Sentencing practices were shown to vary substantially, with some courts imposing community-based sentences far more frequently than others.

Importantly, we found a strong pattern: ethnic disparities are largest in courts where community-based sentences are generally more common. In other words, regional sentencing practices appear to amplify national-level disparities.

From a policy standpoint, this is a crucial finding. It suggests regional differences in court practice can unintentionally magnify ethnic inequities. Promoting greater consistency across courts may therefore be an important step toward a fairer justice system.

The lasting impacts

These findings matter well beyond the courtroom. First convictions and entry into the labour market often occur around the same life stage – late teens to early twenties – which coincides with the completion of formal education.

A first job, and especially the starting salary, has a long-term influence on lifetime earnings. A conviction results in a criminal record, which employers routinely consider during background checks, a standard practice in New Zealand.

Employment law requires that these checks relate directly to job requirements and be conducted with the applicant’s consent.

Nonetheless, a criminal conviction can create significant employment barriers, and the severity of the sentence may intensify these challenges.

These effects are likely to be especially pronounced during economic downturns, when job vacancies are scarce and competition is high.

Alexander Plum receives funding from Michael and Suzanne Borrin Foundation.

ref. Māori face harsher sentences than NZ Europeans for similar drink-driving offences – with lasting consequences – https://theconversation.com/maori-face-harsher-sentences-than-nz-europeans-for-similar-drink-driving-offences-with-lasting-consequences-269070

Hutt City Council suspends Petone parking charges for Christmas

Source: Radio New Zealand

The December initiative is part of a wider, long-term conversation about parking. Reece Baker

Hutt City Council is scrapping paid parking on Petone’s main street for Christmas.

The council will lift parking fees on Jackson Street and in the Peel Street carpark from 1 December to 4 January.

Usual time limits will stay in place to ensure fair access to parks.

Mayor Fauono Ken Laban said the move was a way to support local businesses and make Christmas shopping easier.

“Petone is one of our most loved destinations,” he said. “Free parking helps bring people in, encourages them to stay a little longer and supports the small businesses that are the heart of the community.

Laban said the December initiative was part of a wider, long-term conversation about parking.

“We are working with the Jackson Street Programme on a parking approach that supports our local economy and provides fair access for everyone.

“December’s free parking gives us space to keep that work moving, while backing our retailers at a crucial time.”

Jackson Street Programme co-ordinator Hellen Swales said the change would bring shoppers back to the centre of Petone for a crucial trading period.

“We want families to come into Petone, enjoy the festive season and spend time together.

“Free parking makes that easier, while time limits will keep things fair for everyone.”

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

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

Fears thousands of medicinal cannabis users set to be caught out in new drug-driving laws

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied / NZ Police

A medicinal cannabis clinic founder says hundreds of thousands of legal users could be affected by new drug-driving laws.

Police will begin testing drivers for THC – the main active ingredient in cannabis – along with methamphetamine, MDMA (or ecstasy) and cocaine in Wellington next month, ahead of the nationwide rollout of new drug driving laws next year.

Cannabis Clinic founder and chief executive Dr Waseem Alzaher told Morning Report he didn’t disagree with the need for drug testing, but wanted to see New Zealand follow countries such as Canada, Germany and the Netherlands that included impairment tests alongside saliva and blood tests.

“The overall move is a good move, but what we need to consider adding into it is impairment, because you could test posititive for cannabis but be entirely unimpaired in your functioning and that’s the elephant in the room we’re not addressing.”

Alzaher said he was advising patients to wait 12 hours before driving – ideally taking medication at night so they would be unimpaired by the morning, however, the sensitivity and accuracy of the tests remained to be seen.

“The question is, how do we manage it when we’ve got people who are being prescribed cannabis safely and are under medical supervision just like they could be for other medicines … you shouldn’t be punished or face consequences as a result of that.”

Dr Waseem Alzaher Serena Solomon/RNZ

It’s thought there are around 120,000-130,000 New Zealanders being prescribed medicinal cannabis and around 400,000 using cannabis illicitly, he said.

“Everybody knows someone who’s using cannabis through illicit or legal means, and we’ve known for thousands of years this plant has lots of potential benefits for people.

“We have 60,000 people [The Cannabis Clinic’s] legally prescribed cannabis for who could face negative outcomes by being stood down and potentially fined – which they then have to appeal – even though they’re doing the right thing and have been prescribed medicinal cannabis and that’s going to be an issue for Kiwis around the country,” Alzaher said.

Returning two positive roadside saliva tests could result in a 12-hour driving ban.

Saliva tests would then be sent to a laboratory, where – if levels above legal thresholds were confirmed – would result in an infringement notice, including a $200 fine and 50 demerit points.

If a saliva test was refused or police requested a blood test, the consequences could be more severe.

If a blood sample breached the “high risk” threshold under the legislation, penalties included a $4500 fine, up to three months in prison and a mandatory six-month licence disqualification.

Infringements could be appealed via a medical defence by showing a prescription or ID card from a prescriber, and Alzaher urged medicinal patients to ensure they had one or both.

Australian researcher Dr Michael White, an adjunct senior fellow at the School of Psychology at the University of Adelaide who has researched road accidents involving cannabis, said the tests were nearly worthless when it came to picking up if someone was impaired.

“There’s a lot of research that says regular cannabis users are not impaired even if immediately after taking it so that produces … questions of justice.

“It is a scattergun approach, many people who are regular users won’t be impaired even if they test positive,” Dr White said.

The NZ Drug Foundation warned many medicinal cannabis users could be caught out, given the drug can show up even three days after use.

Others, such as senior biosciences lecturer Dr Catherine Crofts raised concerns about legal users of other drugs, such as those taking ADHD medication containing amphetamine, like dexamphetamine or lisdexamfetamine, which around half of New Zealanders taking ADHD medication currently use.

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

Tom Phillips’ family welcome government inquiry into case

Source: Radio New Zealand

The inquiry would look into whether government agencies took all steps to ensure the safety and welfare of the children. Dean Purcell/New Zealand Herald via Getty Images

The family of Tom Phillips say they “welcome” a public inquiry into the handling of the case by authorities.

Phillips died following a shootout with police, when they were called to reports of a burglary in the early hours of 8 September, after 1358 days in the bush with his children.

Phillips shot a police officer several times during the shootout.

On Thursday, Attorney-General Judith Collins announced a public inquiry would be held into the disappearance of the Phillips children.

A spokesperson for the Phillips family released a statement to RNZ.

“We welcome any inquiry that helps ensure this never happens to another family ever again.”

Collins said the inquiry would look into whether government agencies took all practicable steps to ensure the safety and welfare of the Phillips children.

“The decision to establish a public inquiry reflects the significant public interest and concern for the children’s welfare over the almost four years they were missing.

“It is important that we establish the facts and determine whether agencies could take steps to prevent, or resolve similar situations more quickly and effectively in the future.”

The terms of reference had been developed with the privacy and welfare of the children in mind. The inquiry would therefore be conducted in private and without public hearings.

Collins said the inquiry must also respect the independence of the courts and would not include findings on judicial decisions.

The Honourable Justice Simon Moore, KC, has been appointed as the sole member of the inquiry.

The inquiry would deliver a final report with recommendations by 21 July 2026.

An injunction preventing the media from publishing certain details related to the investigation into Phillips remains in place.

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

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

Habits may change as price of beef mince soars by 18%

Source: Radio New Zealand

Beef mince is now 18 percent higher than the start of the year. RNZ / Vinay Ranchhod

Beef mince long seen as the most affordable red-meat option for households is losing that status as prices continue to surge.

RaboResearch senior animal protein analyst Jen Corkran said food prices had risen across the board, but beef mince had jumped far faster than most staples.

New Stats NZ figures showed in the year to October, overall food prices rose 4.7 percent, but the average price of a one-kilogram pack of beef mince climbed 18 percent.

Corkran said mince was now averaging $23.17 per kilo, meaning it was actually slightly more expensive than lamb chops, which sat at $22.27.

She said the price spike came down to global demand for red meat.

“New Zealand exports most of our beef, 80-odd percent, and our biggest market, actually, the most volume is going over to the United States, where their cattle herd is at sort of multi-decade lows.

“As they look to rebuild their herd, they’re short of this lean trim product, which is essentially the same as our beef mince in the supermarket and so our local retailers are having to pay more to get hold of that product because they’re competing against global buyers and that’s really pushing those mince prices up.

“What’s happening with that US beef market at the moment is directly impacting what we’re paying for mince here.”

Corkran said with mince traditionally seen as the go-to budget option for families, its rapid price climb could change buying habits.

She said mince may stay expensive for several years while the US herd recovers.

In the meantime, she expected shoppers to trade to cheaper proteins like pork and poultry, or buy less mince and bulk it out with vegetables to make it go further.

It came as high beef prices were also hitting McDonald’s New Zealand bottom line, a chain usually known for value.

Last year, McDonald’s used 6000 tonnes of locally-sourced beef for sale domestically, and it exported nearly 30,000 tonnes of it, making up around 10 percent of New Zealand’s total beef exports.

McDonald’s New Zealand’s head of impact and communications Simon Kenny said globally the chain served 70 million people a day, using 2 percent of the world’s beef.

He said price swings locally could have a material impact on the operating costs of its restaurants.

“Like everyone’s seen in the supermarkets, beef’s been one of the biggest ones,” he said.

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

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

37 former Lake Alice patients receive individual compensation payments of up to $600,000

Source: Radio New Zealand

The total band of compensation payments spanned $160,000 to $600,000. Supplied

  • Thirty-seven former Lake Alice child and adolescent unit patients negotiate compensation
  • They received amounts between $160,000 and $600,000
  • Another 105 opted for $150,000 “rapid payments”
  • Independent arbiter Paul Davison, KC, says survivors see their lives as blighted by Lake Alice.

Thirty-seven former patients of the Lake Alice psychiatric hospital’s child and adolescent unit have received individual compensation payments of up to $600,000.

The government last year announced its redress scheme for children and teens tortured with electric shocks without anaesthetic or through being injected with paralysing drugs at the unit in the 1970s.

One-hundred-and-five survivors opted to receive $150,000 rapid payments.

Another 37 negotiated their compensation.

Independent arbiter, former High Court judge Paul Davison, KC, determined the amounts these survivors received and he has released a summary of his work on Thursday.

The majority received payments between $175,000 and $250,000, but the total band of payments spanned $160,000 to $600,000, as Davison worked within a “fiscal envelope” of $8.39 million.

The Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care found that many of the 362 children who went through the Rangitīkei unit didn’t have a mental illness, yet were still subjected to electric shocks or injected with paraldehyde.

The unit’s lead psychiatrist, Dr Selwyn Leeks, moved to Australia shortly after it closed in the late 1970s and died in 2022 without facing justice.

In his report, Davison said survivors had shown great courage and resilience in opting to negotiate their compensation.

“Recalling traumatic events and recounting them for the purposes of the torture redress assessment process has been acutely painful and difficult and serves to underscore how deeply traumatic their time at Lake Alice was for them, and how indelible their memories are of what they were subjected to.”

Davison said in determining the compensation amounts he also took into account solitary confinement and sexual abuse the survivors suffered.

Most survivors were 12 or older when admitted to the unit, but some he’d spoken with were as young as 9 when they were sent there and given electric shocks without anaesthetic or paraldehyde.

Davison said he adopted a “survivor-focused and trauma-informed approach” in generally accepting the survivors’ accounts of what happened to them, while also examining records where available and previous statements from the survivors.

“The survivors quite understandably see their lives as having been blighted by their Lake Alice experiences and how they were ill-treated and tortured,” he said.

“Whatever behavioural, psychological or mental problems led to them being patients at Lake Alice, from their accounts it appears that these problems, rather than being treated therapeutically, were aggravated and compounded by how they were tortured and ill-treated, in what was a cruel and malevolent process.

“For most of them, the opportunity to tell someone in a position of responsibility, willing to listen and acknowledge the authenticity of their account of what they were subjected to and how it has affected them, appears to have been a cathartic experience, at least to some degree.”

Lead co-ordination minister for the response to the Royal Commission Erica Stanford. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Erica Stanford, the lead co-ordination minister for the response to the Royal Commission, said it was important survivors had a choice between negotiation and the rapid payments.

“We know no amount of money can ever undo or fully recognise the harm and abuse survivors were subjected to,” she said.

“No government before now has acknowledged torture or apologised for it happening in New Zealand.

“In July last year, we formally acknowledged that torture occurred at the Lake Alice unit as defined in the United Nations Convention Against Torture. A specific redress scheme was established in December for survivors who were tortured at the unit to serve as an expression of our regret as to the many ways in which they were failed.”

Survivors had also received individual apologies and other support as required.

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

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

Ryman Healthcare returns to positive cashflow for first time in decade

Source: Radio New Zealand

The reset followed a $1 billion equity raise in February 2025. Supplied

Major retirement village operator Ryman Healthcare has reported a first-half loss, but is in a cashflow-positive position for the first time in a decade.

“We’ve turned an important corner in our transformation, with the balance sheet reset providing a robust foundation for sustainable performance,” chief executive Naomi James said.

The reset followed a $1 billion equity raise in February 2025, which saw its debt-financing costs drop 27 percent or $14.2m.

“The business has stabilised, momentum is returning and we are delivering results with meaningful progress achieved against FY26 priorities,” she said.

“Our focus is now moving to accelerating performance across our portfolio of high quality retirement villages.”

Key numbers for the six months ended September compared with restated year-earlier results:

  • Net loss $45.2m* v $82.0m net profit
  • Underlying loss $43.4m v $101.0m net loss
  • Fair value movement of investment properties $3.2m* v $270.1m
  • Revenue $413.8m v $366.3m
  • Interim dividend nil
  • *Net loss includes drop in fair value of assets, as well as a $2.4m impairment, resulting from cost overruns in Woodcote and Kevin Hickman villages

James said the second half of FY26 was expected to remain broadly in line with the first half.

“We remain focused on selling down stock as a significant opportunity to drive cash flow. We are confident our sales effectiveness will support continued progress over FY26.

“We anticipate ongoing variability as the property markets recover at differing speeds – Victoria is showing positive momentum, while Auckland is yet to show meaningful improvement.”

She said cost savings were tracking ahead of expectations, with annualised savings of $40m, expected to rise to between $50-60m by the end of the year ending in March.

“At our investor day in February, we’ll share more on the land bank review, including sites which have been earmarked for future development and additional sites selected for divestment.”

The company would also provide an update on its overall growth strategy and dividend policy.

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

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

Tower reports record profits, more customers, fewer big-claim events

Source: Radio New Zealand

The company forecasted an underlying profit for the coming year between $55m-65m. RNZ / Dan Cook

Insurance company Tower has reported record profits, as increased numbers of customers drove premium income, while it had a low level of big-claim events.

Key numbers for the year ended September compared with a year ago:

  • Net profit $83.7m v $74.3m
  • Underlying profit $107.2m v $83.5m
  • Gross written premium $600m v $595m
  • Large event costs $7.2m v claim back $2.3m
  • Full year dividend 24.5 cents per share v 9.5 cps

The New Zealand-owned company extended its recovery and return to profit, as it sold more policies, boosting its premium income, and benefited from below-average large claims.

“This is an exceptional result, underpinned by Tower’s transformation, driven by investment in our digital platform and continued focus on underwriting discipline, technology, data and efficiency,” chief executive Paul Johnston said.

The company added 5000 new customers to 318,000, as it concentrated on lower-risk policies and competitive pricing, which boosted its housing-insurance revenue.

The bottom-line result was affected by increased Canterbury earthquake claims cost estimates, the ongoing cost of customer remediations and a provision for software impairment.

The company said the Dunedin floods of October 2024 and Cyclone Tam in April were treated as big events, costing $7m.

Storms that hit the country in late October were expected to cost about $4.5m and would be accounted in the coming year’s accounts.

Johnston said the past couple of years had been out of the ordinary and were not likely to continue.

“We expect conditions that influenced the FY24 and FY25 results, such as relatively benign weather and prior-year rating flowing through the portfolio, to normalise in the coming year.”

The company forecasted an underlying profit for the coming year between $55m-65m and has set aside $45m to cover big-disaster claims.

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

Fiji MP: Violence against women and girls ‘permeates every dimension of society’

RNZ Pacific

Fiji marked the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women and Girls  this week with the government saying the day is a reminder that for too many women and girls violence is a daily reality — not a headline or a statistic.

The day also kicked off 16 days of activism against gender-based violence — a worldwide UN campaign running from November 25 to December 10.

The country’s Minister for Women, Children and Social Protection Sashi Kiran told Parliament violence against women and girls was not limited to the private sphere — “it permeates every dimension of society”.

“Addressing this issue is therefore not only a woman’s matter; it is a national priority — requiring engagement from every sector, every institution and every leader in our country.

“It manifests in various forms including physical, emotional, sexual and economic abuse as well as harmful practices such as trafficking.”

She said the cost of violence against females was estimated to be equivalent to seven percent of Fiji’s gross domestic product (GDP), affecting families, the health system, productivity and the nation’s development.

“The cost of violence is not only emotional — it is national.”

She pointed out several statistics, including that around 60 percent of Fijian women had experienced some form of violence in their lifetime; girls as young as 13 remained the most vulnerable to sexual assault; and from 2020-2024, more than 4000 child sexual offences were reported — most involving young girls.

“Our response must be survivor-centred, and above all accessible to everyone — including women and girls with disabilities and those from diverse sexual orientations and gender identities.”

In the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Western Pacific Region, more than a quarter of girls and women experience some form of intimate partner or sexual violence.

But WHO said in several Pacific island countries and areas, the prevalence of lifetime intimate partner violence is as high as one in two women.

WHO’s western Pacific director, Dr Saia Ma’u Piukala, said governments and communities must use data to drive stronger policies, scale up prevention efforts, and invest in health system readiness, “so every girl is protected and woman is empowered”.

WHO said while the numbers were grim, a survey on “health system readiness to respond to interpersonal violence” pointed to an encouraging policy environment.

“Many countries are integrating strategies to prevent violence against women and girls into their national multisectoral plans, and acknowledging the key role that health systems must play in tackling this societal problem.

“However, the survey also highlights challenges in implementing these strategies.”

It is not all bad news in the region though — Cook Islands police have reported a decrease in the number of assault cases against women this year.

This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Launch catches fire on Auckland’s Hauraki Gulf, firefighter injured

Source: Radio New Zealand

Launch on fire on Auckland’s Hauraki Gulf, near Browns Island. Supplied/Facebook

A launch caught fire in Auckland’s Hauraki Gulf this morning, near Browns Island.

Fire and Emergency were called to the incident about 8.15am.

It said the 38-foot-long launch (about 11 metres) was well ablaze, when firefighters arrived on the scene.

FENZ said no-one was injured and about eight firefighters were still working to extinguish the fire.

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

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

Inquiry into handling of the Tom Phillips case announced by government

Source: Radio New Zealand

An inset of Tom Phillips at one of his campsites. RNZ / Supplied / Police

The government has announced an inquiry into the handling of the Tom Phillips case by government authorities.

Phillips died following a shootout with police, when they were called to reports of a burglary in the early hours of 8 September, after 1358 days in the bush with his children.

Phillips shot a police officer several times during the shootout.

On Thursday, Attorney-General Judith Collins announced a public inquiry would be held into the disappearance of the Phillips children.

“The inquiry will look into whether government agencies took all practicable steps to ensure the safety and welfare of the Phillips children,” Collins says.

“The decision to establish a public inquiry reflects the significant public interest and concern for the children’s welfare over the almost four years they were missing.

Police believe the Phillips family moved regularly between several sites. NZ Police / Supplied

“It is important that we establish the facts and determine whether agencies could take steps to prevent, or resolve similar situations more quickly and effectively in the future.”

The terms of reference had been developed with the privacy and welfare of the children in mind. The inquiry would therefore be conducted in private and without public hearings.

Collins said the inquiry must also respect the independence of the courts and would not include findings on judicial decisions.

The Honourable Justice Simon Moore, KC, has been appointed as the sole member of the inquiry.

The inquiry would deliver a final report with recommendations by 21 July 2026.

An injunction preventing the media from publishing certain details related to the investigation into Phillips remains in place.

Family’s primary campsites

Last month, police released several photos of what are believed to be the family’s primary campsites. Police had discovered two large, established and “heavily concealed structures” in recent weeks in dense bush surrounding Marokopa.

Detective Superintendent Ross McKay said inquiries to date indicated the Phillips family moved regularly between these sites, the makeshift camps near Te Anga Rd and other locations around Marokopa.

“For the last few weeks, police have been piecing together information and building a picture of Phillips’ movements.

“What is now clear is that Phillips moved regularly from coast to farm to bush in a complex manner that meant he was unlikely to be stumbled across.”

Local search and rescue staff located the new sites – one to the north of Marokopa, the other to the east – which included partially buried, semi-permanent structures concealed by large amounts of vegetation.

The sites included partially buried, semi-permanent structures concealed by large amounts of vegetation. NZ Police / Supplied

“Approaching Phillips in such circumstances would have been extremely dangerous.

“As we’ve said previously, we knew he had firearms and was motivated to use them.”

Investigators had removed a significant number of items from the camps, all of which would now be forensically examined.

“This is a protracted and labour-intensive exercise that forms part of our ongoing enquiries to identify anyone who may have assisted Phillips.

“We continue to make good progress and believe he was assisted by a small number of people at different stages over the last four years.”

All campsites had been cleared and police would not be releasing their specific whereabouts.

McKay earlier said the vast area in which Phillips kept the children was difficult, steep terrain almost completely obscured from all angles by dense bush.

“At various times during the operation, police specialist units such as Special Tactics Group, Armed Offenders Squad, Search and Rescue and Tactical Operations Group, were used.”

Police also had support from the New Zealand Defence Force.

“Police never stopped trying – thousands of hours were dedicated to the search,” McKay said.

“Intelligence played an important role in informing decisions and planning for possible outcomes.

“We also knew, based on previous actions and behavioural science analysis, that Phillips was unlikely to surrender easily and was prepared to put the children in harm’s way.

“The primary objective was locating and returning the children safely.”

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

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

Carving returned to marae after more than 100 years

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hāmama is back at Rānana Marae after more than 100 years away. Supplied

After more than 100 years in museum exhibitions and storerooms, a carving is back at the marae it was taken from.

The tekoteko Hāmama arrived back at Rānana Marae in the Whanganui district in November, after years of petitioning to have it returned.

Dr Rawiri Tinirau helped uncover the carving’s provenance and told Morning Report it was a special day for the marae when Hāmama was returned.

“Given that the craving Hāmama has been absent from us for such a long time, it was a nice way to spend the day with each other and welcome him home.”

Hapū descendants, local iwi and members of the community gathered at the marae to celebrate the homecoming of Hāmama, which was acquired by the Dominion Museum in 1912, and had been part of the national collection for over 100 years.

Tinirau said there was some ambiguity as to whether Hāmama was taken properly.

“There was certainly some ambiguity over the tekoteko’s provenance, and if you have a look at those early records within the museum, it talked about it being a purchase from a J Thompson.

“But other than that, we were unable to uncover who J Thompson was.”

Tinirau said it was by looking through old photos that they could identify the tekoteko and match it with the marae.

Tinirau said his mum was also able to help identify Hāmama during a visit to the Dominion Museum in the 1980s when she saw some old footage of an expedition up the Whanganui River from the 1920s.

Carved in the 1870s-1880s the tekoteko is an example of the unique carving from the Whanganui region.

“Hāmama was one of our ancestors that must have been an important man because he was named as one of the significant ancestors in the Rānana block where the Rānana Marae is situated. And if you have a look at him, he definitely displays characteristics that are unique to Whanganui River carving.

“For example, he has bulbous eyes, he clutches his tongue. He has, four fingers and a thumb on each hand. His knees are slightly interlocking and facing inward. So those suggest that the carvers definitely came from the Whanganui River.”

After Hāmama was identified, Tinirau was involved in petitioning and letter writing to get the carving back to Rānana Marae, and said the museum “didn’t really have repatriation protocols” and couldn’t deal with requests at the time.

“It wasn’t until the last five or six years that we’ve reengaged with Te Papa and really pushed this kaupapa through.”

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

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

Can bigger-is-better ‘scaling laws’ keep AI improving forever? History says we can’t be too sure

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nathan Garland, Lecturer in Applied Mathematics and Physics, Griffith University

Milad Fakurian / Unsplash

OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman – perhaps the most prominent face of the artificial intelligence (AI) boom that accelerated with the launch of ChatGPT in 2022 – loves scaling laws.

These widely admired rules of thumb linking the size of an AI model with its capabilities inform much of the headlong rush among the AI industry to buy up powerful computer chips, build unimaginably large data centres, and re-open shuttered nuclear plants.

As Altman argued in a blog post earlier this year, the thinking is that the “intelligence” of an AI model “roughly equals the log of the resources used to train and run it” – meaning you can steadily produce better performance by exponentially increasing the scale of data and computing power involved.

First observed in 2020 and further refined in 2022, the scaling laws for large language models (LLMs) come from drawing lines on charts of experimental data. For engineers, they give a simple formula that tells you how big to build the next model and what performance increase to expect.

Will the scaling laws keep on scaling as AI models get bigger and bigger? AI companies are betting hundreds of billions of dollars that they will – but history suggests it is not always so simple.

Scaling laws aren’t just for AI

Scaling laws can be wonderful. Modern aerodynamics is built on them, for example.

Using an elegant piece of mathematics called the Buckingham π theorem, engineers discovered how to compare small models in wind tunnels or test basins with full-scale planes and ships by making sure some key numbers matched up.

Those scaling ideas inform the design of almost everything that flies or floats, as well as industrial fans and pumps.

Another famous scaling idea underpinned the boom decades of the silicon chip revolution. Moore’s law – the idea that the number of the tiny switches called transistors on a microchip would double every two years or so – helped designers create the small, powerful computing technology we have today.

But there’s a catch: not all “scaling laws” are laws of nature. Some are purely mathematical and can hold indefinitely. Others are just lines fitted to data that work beautifully until you stray too far from the circumstances where they were measured or designed.

When scaling laws break down

History is littered with painful reminders of scaling laws that broke. A classic example is the collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge in 1940.

The bridge was designed by scaling up what had worked for smaller bridges to something longer and slimmer. Engineers assumed the same scaling arguments would hold: if a certain ratio of stiffness to bridge length worked before, it should work again.

Instead, moderate winds set off an unexpected instability called aeroelastic flutter. The bridge deck tore itself apart, collapsing just four months after opening.

Likewise, even the “laws” of microchip manufacturing had an expiry date. For decades, Moore’s law (transistor counts doubling every couple of years) and Dennard scaling (a larger number of smaller transistors running faster while using the same amount of power) were astonishingly reliable guides for chip design and industry roadmaps.

As transistors became small enough to be measured in nanometres, however, those neat scaling rules began to collide with hard physical limits.

When transistor gates shrank to just a few atoms thick, they started leaking current and behaving unpredictably. The operating voltages could also no longer be reduced with being lost in background noise.

Eventually, shrinking was no longer the way forward. Chips have still grown more powerful, but now through new designs rather than just scaling down.

Laws of nature or rules of thumb?

The language-model scaling curves that Altman celebrates are real, and so far they’ve been extraordinarily useful.

They told researchers that models would keep getting better if you fed them enough data and computing power. They also showed earlier systems were not fundamentally limited – they just hadn’t had enough resources thrown at them.

But these are undoubtedly curves that have been fit to data. They are less like the derived mathematical scaling laws used in aerodynamics and more like the useful rules of thumb used in microchip design – and that means they likely won’t work forever.

The language model scaling rules don’t necessarily encode real-world problems such as limits to the availability of high-quality data for training, or the difficulty of getting AI to deal with novel tasks – let alone safety constraints or the economic difficulties of building data centres and power grids. There is no law of nature or theorem guaranteeing that “intelligence scales” forever.

Investing in the curves

So far, the scaling curves for AI look pretty smooth – but the financial curves are a different story.

Deutsche Bank recently warned of an AI “funding gap” based on Bain Capital estimates of a US$800 billion mismatch between projected AI revenues and the investment in chips, data centres and power that would be needed to keep current growth going.

JP Morgan, for their part, has estimated that the broader AI sector might need around US$650 billion in annual revenue just to earn a modest 10% return on the planned build-out of AI infrastructure.

We’re still finding out which kind of law governs frontier LLMs. The realities may keep playing along with the current scaling rules; or new bottlenecks – data, energy, users’ willingness to pay – may bend the curve.

Altman’s bet is that the LLM scaling laws will continue. If that’s so, it may be worth building enormous amounts of computing power because the gains are predictable. On the other hand, the banks’ growing unease is a reminder that some scaling stories can turn out to be Tacoma Narrows: beautiful curves in one context, hiding a nasty surprise in the next.

The Conversation

Nathan Garland 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. Can bigger-is-better ‘scaling laws’ keep AI improving forever? History says we can’t be too sure – https://theconversation.com/can-bigger-is-better-scaling-laws-keep-ai-improving-forever-history-says-we-cant-be-too-sure-270448

Your risk of catching COVID is at its lowest since 2020 – but here’s why you should still get boosted for Christmas

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michael Baker, Professor of Public Health, University of Otago

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

As the Christmas season looms, with its crowded end-of-year parties, family gatherings and busy travel schedules, many New Zealanders might be asking a now familiar question: should I get another COVID-19 booster?

After nearly four years of continuous Omicron circulation, each coming with a distinct summer wave, it is understandable to be weighing this up.

Many of us now have reasonable immunity to COVID, both from previous vaccines and from repeated contact with the virus. This may not stop us getting sick with a another COVID infection, but it makes it less likely that it would cause severe illness.

However, some groups particularly older people and those with significant medical conditions – continue to be at higher risk. For these people, getting a top-up before Christmas – and ahead of any summer travel – is indeed a wise idea.

This holds true even when the risk of catching the coronavirus this holiday season is far lower than in the past.

While COVID-19 waves have become more consistent – we have now observed eight, occurring roughly twice a year – they have also grown markedly smaller since Omicron began spreading widely in early 2022.

Hospitalisation data from Te Whatu Ora shows this decline clearly. The enormous peaks of early 2022 are gone and now, in late-2025, the baseline of hospital admissions had sunk to its lowest point in four years.

In the past week, we have seen roughly 30 hospitalisations nationwide, comparable now to influenza at this time of year.

Wastewater surveillance tells the same story. Traces of the virus are still being detected at all monitored sites, but at low levels and with only small ripples, rather than the sharp peaks of New Zealand’s first year with Omicron. Reassuringly, genome sequencing results also show no new virus subvariant is rapidly emerging.

Why an extra dose still matters

Even with activity at its lowest point in years, Omicron has not disappeared. Small waves still appear and clinicians continue to see serious infections.

Older New Zealanders, those who are pregnant, have important underlying medical conditions or weakened immune systems are at markedly higher risk of serious consequences.

That means staying up to date with vaccination is still important – especially when we consider that protection from vaccination declines over time.

Antibody levels drop markedly in the months after a dose or an infection and, while longer-lasting immune memory remains, the front-line protection that prevents severe illness weakens particularly for those at higher risk.

A booster restores this protection against severe clinical outcomes, notably hospitalisation and death.
The current variant vaccine Pfizer JN.1 vaccine now used in New Zealand provides good immunity against the variants currently circulating. It is free for all eligible people, and anyone aged 30 or over can receive an additional dose once six months have passed since their last vaccine or infection.

A booster heading into the festive season is therefore a practical way to lower the risk for individuals, their whānau and the wider community.

Staying protected from other infections

This holiday period also carries the risk of measles for those lacking immunity.

New Zealand has recently experienced outbreaks and, although the immediate risk has eased, two full incubation periods are needed before this current outbreak can be considered over.

Childhood immunisation coverage for measles, mumps and rubella has slipped to the low 80% range, with coverage much lower in some communities, leaving the country vulnerable when cases are brought in by travellers.

New Zealand has a large migrant population, some of whom may also be unsure of their vaccination history, and clinics are identifying gaps through serology testing. There is no harm in receiving an MMR dose even with existing immunity, so vaccination before Christmas is a sensible precaution where status is uncertain.

Other respiratory infections also continue to circulate at low levels over summer.

Increased travel and indoor gatherings create opportunities for them to spread, which is why the basic public health measures remain useful. People should avoid social gatherings if they are unwell with respiratory symptoms.

At this time of year influenza is low, so COVID-19 remains one of the more likely causes of respiratory illness. Testing is useful, including the combined rapid antigen tests that also detect influenza and RSV.

Ventilation matters. Summer makes it easier to throw open windows and doors, and a well-fitted N95 mask offers excellent protection in crowded indoor settings such as public transport. Building these habits now lowers risk over Christmas and improves our readiness for the next pandemic.

The same logic applies to vaccination. For those who can receive it, an updated COVID-19 booster ahead of the holidays adds a useful layer of protection.

The chances of catching an unwelcome bout of COVID for Christmas might be lower than ever – but strengthening immunity now helps safeguard families and the health system during one of the busiest times on the calendar.

The Conversation

Michael Baker’s employer, the University of Otago, has received funding from the Health Research Council of New Zealand and the New Zealand Ministry of Health for research he has carried out on COVID-19 epidemiology, prevention and control. He is also a member of groups that advise the Ministry of Health and World Health Organization on immunisation and pandemic response strategies.

Nikki Turner works for the Immunisation Advisory Centre, University of Auckland who have funding from Health NZ to support the delivery of the national immunisation programme. She is also on several advisory groups to the Ministry of Health and Pharmac around advising on immunisation and vaccine strategies

ref. Your risk of catching COVID is at its lowest since 2020 – but here’s why you should still get boosted for Christmas – https://theconversation.com/your-risk-of-catching-covid-is-at-its-lowest-since-2020-but-heres-why-you-should-still-get-boosted-for-christmas-270271

Rural Australians are 13% less likely to survive cancer. Here’s what needs to change

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Charlene Wright, Research Fellow, Equitable Cancer Outcomes across Rural and Remote Australia (ECORRA), Deakin University

If you live in rural or remote Australia and are diagnosed with cancer, you’re less likely to survive than someone in the city with the same disease. Our research shows people in rural Australia are 13% less likely to survive their cancer, in the first five years after diagnosis.

For the seven million Australians living outside major cities, this inequity is reflected in every stage of cancer care, from prevention through to end-of-life support.

Our five-paper series published today in The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific explains why – and how to address these disparities.

Why the difference?

We analysed survival data from 37 studies across multiple countries involving people diagnosed with cancer and found a consistent pattern: the more remote your location, the worse your chances.

This happens for several interconnected reasons. But access to health service in the early stages is instrumental in influencing survival. People in rural areas often find it harder to get screened for cancer, meaning tumours are caught later when they’re more difficult to treat.

When symptoms do appear (such as pain, changes in bowel habits, fatigue or unintentional weight loss) distance to doctors and long wait times can delay diagnosis.

Treatment usually means travelling

Once diagnosed, many Australians in rural areas face a difficult choice: relocate to the city for treatment, make exhausting and expensive regular trips for appointments, or decline the recommended treatment if it requires travel or relocation.

Radiation therapy, a cornerstone of cancer treatment, is mostly only available in metropolitan areas, as is specialised cancer surgery. This means people in rural areas must travel long distances for treatment, often requiring weeks or months away from home, family and work.

Consider what this means in practice. A farmer (who is likely also the family bread-winner), during harvest season, needs weeks of daily radiation therapy 300 kilometres away.

A parent with school-age children recommended three sequential types of treatments across three different locations, and not enough leave to cover the months this will take.

A retired widower is anxious to be in a city alone and wants to stay with their local support system.

Taking weeks or months away from home isn’t just inconvenient – it can mean financial hardship, disrupted family life and isolation from support networks.

Some people choose to decline treatment, knowing the outcome is a shorter life expectancy, rather than face these barriers. Others push through, but the financial and emotional costs are significant.

The rural landscape in Mitchell, Queensland.
Some people have to make the difficult decision of whether to relocate to the city for health care or decline treatment.
Skye Marshall

Not just about distance

Rural hospitals often lack specialist cancer services. While they might be able to deliver chemotherapy, they might not have oncologists on site. Specialised cancer surgeons and radiation therapy facilities can be even rarer.

Clinical trials can offer cutting-edge treatments, deliver better outcomes and are considered a marker of quality cancer care. But access is limited in the country.

Availability of allied health support (physiotherapy, dietetics and occupational therapy) and psychosocial supports (psychology and social work) is limited.

Rural hospitals face workforce shortages and fewer specialists. Unlike metropolitan hospitals, multidisciplinary teams are less likely to meet regularly to discuss the best way to treat complex cases. Specialists have fewer opportunities to build experience with specific cancer types due to lower patient numbers.

These factors all affect the range and consistency of treatment options available.

Training staff won’t solve system failures

Rural communities are diverse. A farming town in Victoria faces different challenges than a regional centre in Queensland. Solutions need to be developed with these communities, not imposed on them.

Yet our analysis of health-care interventions in rural areas found most rely heavily on training and educating staff, with little attention to fixing the underlying system problems. Few studies reported meaningful engagement with rural communities or health-care professionals in designing solutions.

This approach places the burden on individuals – expecting patients to travel long distances or doctors to fill workforce gaps – rather than addressing policy, funding and infrastructure issues.

Building on rural strengths

Our examination of the historical evolution of cancer policy in Australia found Australia’s Cancer Plan (2023-2033) is one of the world’s strongest in addressing rural cancer inequities. The plan aims to ensure all Australians receive optimal cancer care, regardless of where they live. But policy is only the first step.

We need place-based solutions developed in genuine partnership with rural communities. This means involving rural health-care workers, patients and community members from the beginning – not just asking them to implement programs designed in cities.

This could include:

  • expanding telehealth for specialist consultations, so rural patients can access expert advice without travelling

  • better travel and accommodation support for patients who travel for treatment

  • patient navigation programs to help coordinate complex care across distances.

Rural health services are often agile and well-positioned for research and innovation. They’re usually the primary health organisation in their community, making changes more straightforward than in complex metropolitan networks.

However, we need better data to understand if these solutions work. Currently, rural cancer patients are often underrepresented in research databases. When data from across the country are combined, rural outcomes can disappear into the larger numbers from cities. Better data collection – including tracking where patients live and their remoteness – will help us see whether interventions are making a difference.

Finally, we need to shift away from viewing rural health care through a deficit lens. Rural communities have strengths: strong social connections, established relationships with local health-care providers and dedicated community members with deep knowledge of their local challenges. These should be leveraged.

Achieving cancer equity for Australians in rural areas requires coordinated action and sustained investment in rural infrastructure and capacity. Cancer survival shouldn’t depend on where you live.




Read more:
Too many Australians miss out on essential medical care every year. Here’s how to fix ‘GP deserts’


The Conversation

Anna Ugalde receives funding from the Medical Research Future Fund, Department of Health, Disability and Ageing and holds a Cancer Research Fellowship Victoria. She is affiliated with Cancer Council Victoria.

Laura Alston receives funding from the Rural Health Multidisciplinary Training (RHMT) Program from the Department of Health and Ageing.

Skye Marshall receives funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council.

Charlene Wright 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. Rural Australians are 13% less likely to survive cancer. Here’s what needs to change – https://theconversation.com/rural-australians-are-13-less-likely-to-survive-cancer-heres-what-needs-to-change-270360

Men earn nearly $10,000 more than women in bonuses and overtime pay, fuelling the gender pay gap: new data

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Leonora Risse, Associate Professor in Economics, University of Canberra

Men are earning on average A$9,753 more than women each year in the form of performance bonuses, allowances and overtime pay.

That’s according to the latest gender pay gap data released on Thursday by the Workplace Gender Equality Agency. It covers more than 8,000 private companies for 2024–25, employing more than 5.4 million workers across Australia.

The overall gender pay gap fell to 21.1%, compared to 21.8% in 2023–24. But the gap in discretionary pay makes up a big chunk of the total gender pay gap of $28,356.

Where gaps in bonus and overtime are widest

The gender gap in discretionary remuneration – payments made on top of a worker’s base salary and excluding mandatory superannuation – balloons in particular industries.

In the rental, hiring and real estate industry, these additional payments average $34,618 annually for men and $14,154 for women. That’s a gap of $20,464.

In financial and insurance services, the gender gap in additional payments comes to $20,383. In electricity, gas, water and waste services, it’s $16,644.

Studies have found that when gender gaps have successfully narrowed, it’s generally the base salary component that has improved. The gap in discretionary payments is more stubborn.

Blame ‘greedy jobs’

Partly these gender differentials in discretionary payments are due to men working overtime hours, which are paid at a higher hourly rate.

But this gender pattern in overtime reflects rigid gender roles. While men work longer hours, women are shouldering the bulk of unpaid domestic labour and care in the home.

These patterns arise from employers’ expectations in many jobs that employees will be available 24/7 to work very long hours (such as in finance) or non-standard hours like weekends (such as in construction).

It’s what Nobel Prize-winning economist Claudia Goldin calls “greedy jobs”.

Longer hours are rewarded through bonuses and higher hourly pay rates. What’s the logical thing, financially, for households to do? For one partner to work the extra hours and leverage overtime rates, while the other takes the lion’s share of domestic work and care.

Greedy jobs cause couples to split their roles. And gender stereotypes get further entrenched.

Parental leave is growing among men

This brings us to another of the Workplace Gender Equality Agency’s latest findings on a policy that can undo these entrenched gender patterns: fathers’ usage of paid parental leave.

The agency measures the share of total paid parental leave that is been taken by men, with the remaining share being taken by women.

The share of all parental leave being taken by men grew to 20% in 2024-25, a rise of three percentage points from the year before.

These numbers need to be looked at alongside the gender composition of the workforce. Men’s 20% share of paid parental leave is still a minority considering men make up half of the workforce.

In male-dominated industries, we would expect men’s share of paid parental leave to be higher because men make up the majority of workers.

While mining is the industry with the largest share of paid parental leave being taken by men (53%), it’s still well below men’s 77% share of the industry.

The Workplace Gender Equality Agency notes that men’s uptake of paid parental leave jumped notably in the past year in the construction sector, up 12 percentage points to 39%. But that’s still well below men’s 79% share of that industry’s total workforce.

Among the industries with the biggest gaps between men’s share of the workforce and share of parental leave, men in transport, postal and warehousing take 24% of paid parental leave, despite making up 73% of the workforce.

Men working in wholesale trade take just 19% of paid parental leave, even though they make up 62% of the workforce.

Going beyond the minimum requirements

There’s also scope for more employers to offer paid parental leave above government-funded minimum entitlements. Availability is lowest in public administration and safety, and accommodation and food services, where only around one in three private sector employers offer company-funded parental leave.

Often, this type of benefit is used by companies as an attraction and retention tool. Industries with high rates of staff mobility, and less competition for workers, tend to see less payoff in these types of policies.

But often overlooked in debates about paid parental leave are the benefits to men, too.

There’s still much progress to make in shifting workforce culture to make it “the norm” that all parents have the opportunity to participate in caregiving.

By measuring and tracking Australian employers’ gender equality performance and policy actions, the agency’s annual scorecard helps employers and employees realise these benefits.

Anyone can now explore the agency’s data, including gender pay gaps for each industry and employer.

The Conversation

Leonora Risse receives research funding from the Trawalla Foundation and the Women’s Leadership Institute Australia. She serves as an Expert Panel Member for the Fair Work Commission and the Parliamentary Budget Office. She has previously conducted research for the Workplace Gender Equality Agency.

ref. Men earn nearly $10,000 more than women in bonuses and overtime pay, fuelling the gender pay gap: new data – https://theconversation.com/men-earn-nearly-10-000-more-than-women-in-bonuses-and-overtime-pay-fuelling-the-gender-pay-gap-new-data-270366

How feral cats spread toxoplasmosis risk across hundreds of Kiwi farms

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ruth Kuo

Feral cats are responsible for spreading toxoplasmosis, which can cause “abortion storms” on sheep farms. Methods of control, such as annual culls, have come under fire from animal welfare advocates.

Content warning: This story describes the killing of animals.

It was over beers in a woolshed that the decision was made: Feral cats would be part of the North Canterbury Hunting Competition.

“We just sort of looked around and went, ‘Yeah, might as well’,” says organiser Matt Bailey.

“Unbeknown to us, it would go off like a powder keg within a matter of days of posting something on social media.”

What the farmers thought was a no-brainer decision to add another pest to the competition shocked cat lovers. The backlash was immediate and sponsors of the rural fundraising event came under attack on social media.

But, if anything, the outcry from animal rights advocates made the decision to include feral cats even more popular with farmers and sponsors.

“They poked the bear and it’s probably backfired for them because it’s gotten people off their asses and out there hunting,” says Bailey.

Three years on from the woolshed conversation, the cat category remains popular. This year, contestants entered 326 dead cats for the June weighing-in weekend.

Bailey suspects the real number of feral cats culled was higher. Farmers ran out of freezer space to store the bodies, he says.

“I knew guys catching 10 a week, and they weren’t keeping them.”

This year, there was no backlash from animal rights advocates, which Bailey reckons is down to increased awareness of the damage feral cats do.

It is one topic where hard-core conservationists and farmers find common ground. Feral cats decimate native wildlife and pose a disease risk to farm animals, and dolphins.

They are found on all types of farms, according to Bailey. On dairy farms feral cats are often spotted near milking sheds or hay sheds. They are also commonly seen near offal holes, or in Bailey’s case at lambing time, in paddocks eating afterbirth.

He said he had not heard anyone report an increase in rat numbers after removing cats, adding that if rats do appear, bait stations can be used.

And to critics who argue that trapping, neutering, and releasing feral cats is better than culling them, Bailey has a blunt response: “They’re killing our native birds and not shagging them.”

How feral cats can spread disease

There is no official estimate of how many feral cats there are in New Zealand. The number of 2.4 million is often cited, but some believe the true number is far higher.

Their number creates a disease risk for every farm in the country, says NZ Veterinary Association sheep and beef branch president and vet Alex Meban.

Toxoplasmosis is carried through cats and spread through their droppings. Tens of thousands of oocysts produced by the parasite can be in cat poo, which when accidentally ingested by sheep via grass, hay or water, can be infectious.

Toxoplasmosis can also be passed to humans through contaminated soil, water or unwashed vegetables, and is particularly dangerous during pregnancy or to people with compromised immune systems, but it also affects dolphins and farm animals, such as sheep.

For farmers, there are no outward signs of the disease until lambing time. That is when an “abortion storm” can occur, which is when more than five percent of ewes lose lambs.

“It can be devastating,” says Meban. Last season one farmer realised he had lost 30 percent of foetuses during scanning.

“We asked the question about wild cats, the answer was yep, there are lots of wild cats. They hadn’t really considered it to be an issue until scanning time.”

Lamb losses like this can mean the difference between breaking even or not for a year for a farmer.

There is a vaccine for the disease, and Meban says it only takes one season of heavy lambing loss to convince a farmer to vaccinate flocks. The vaccine costs between $3 and $5 and offers lifelong protection.

If lambs are worth $150 each, he says it does not take much for the vaccine to pay for itself. Vaccination should go hand-in-hand with reducing cat numbers on farms, he says.

Farmer trappers

A Federated Farmers pest survey last year, which had 700 responses, found 37 percent were actively managing feral cats, says the organisation’s meat and wool chairperson Richard Dawkins.

The survey showed 2868 cats were culled by farmers over a 12 month period.

Anecdotally, Dawkins says he has heard the number of feral cats is on the rise. He also points to the increased risk of toxoplasmosis and impacts native wildlife.

“I have one farmer report to me that on a braided riverbed, they had a cat take out 90 percent of a fledge of young birds in a colony that was on a river Island,” Dawkins says. The cat ate 60 of the chicks of a black fronted tern colony.

Farmers have told him live capture traps are the most effective, but these need to be checked daily, which is a time-consuming exercise for farmers with large blocks.

A feral cat caught by a farmer. Supplied

Cats need to be included in regional council pest management plans, but without extra funding of staffing, “it just becomes words on paper to be honest,” Dawkins says.

Increased public education would help, as would support for desexing domestic cats.

The problem increases around holiday periods, which could be caused by people dumping pets, Dawkins says.

“They’re a pretty loveable animal, and people may think they’re releasing them to run free and have a good life, but they may not understand those implications,” he says.

Alternatives to killing

The Animal Justice Party was one of the groups that expressed concern at the inclusion of feral cats in hunting competitions. Committee member Bridget Thompson says the party sees all animals as sentient and objects to the killing of feral cats.

The line between companion cats, strays living close to communities, and feral cats can be tricky for people to discern.

“The problem there is that if people cannot make the distinction, you get self proclaimed eco-warriors in the cities, thinking that if they go out and kill any cat community or companion, they are doing a good thing.”

Trapping and desexing is also not the preferred option, Thompson says. Instead, she would like a biological solution.

“We would like to see serious science into interrupting the fertility cycle.”

She acknowledges nothing like this exists at present.

Predator fences are also an option until science catches up.

“There’s a range of non-violent alternatives to current methods of population control.”

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

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

Man charged over stabbing in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Angus Dreaver

A man has been charged after handing himself in at a police station, over a stabbing in the Auckland suburb of Henderson on Wednesday.

A man was found seriously injured on Edsel Street around 2.40pm.

A 45-year-old went to the Henderston Police Station on Wednesday night and was taken into custody.

Detective Senior Sergeant Megan Goldie, of Waitematā CIB, said the victim and the accused man knew each other.

He’s facing a charge of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

He is due to appear in the Waitākere District Court today.

Goldie said the victim was in a stable condition at Auckland City Hospital.

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

Swiss star Stan Wawrinka to play ASB Classic

Source: Radio New Zealand

PHOTOSPORT

Former Grand Slam tennis champion Stan Wawrinka is returning to the ASB Classic this summer.

Wawrinka, who has won 16 titles including three Grand Slams, has confirmed his entry for the Auckland tournament in January.

The 40-year-old Swiss star last played in Auckland as a 21-year-old.

Wawrinka played at the ASB Classic in 2006 and 2007 before going on to win the the 2014 Australian Open, the 2015 French Open and the 2016 US Open, accounting for Novak Djokovic twice and Rafael Nadal in those finals.

Included in his 16 ATP singles titles were 11 straight wins in finals from 2014 to 2016. He rose to a career high No 3 in the world in 2014.

His injury-free years ran out when he required two left-knee surgeries in 2017 and two surgeries on his foot in 2021.

ASB Classic tournament director Nicolas Lamperin was quick to offer Wawrinka one of the remaining wildcard spots for the tournament as the Swiss star returns to the game at the highest levels.

“Of course, we have Venus Williams to play in Auckland, along with Gael Monfils, who will defend his men’s title. And now we add Stan Wawrinka to that list – three truly great players who believe that 40 is the old age of youth.

“At his best, Stan was able to better all the world’s leading players including the big four. He has always revelled in the biggest matches against the biggest names,” said Lamperin. “We are absolutely thrilled to host him back in Auckland.”

Wawrinka represented Switzerland at three Olympic Games, at Beijing in 2008 where he won the gold medal in doubles with Roger Federer; London in 2012 where he was the Swiss flagbearer, and at Paris in 2024. He had qualified for the Rio Games in 2016 but withdrew with injury.

The 2026 ASB Classic runs from January 5 to 17, with the women’s tournament in the first week.

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

Chatham Islands’ new Point Durham wind farm to drop power prices by 20 percent

Source: Radio New Zealand

Chatham Islands Enterprise Trust chair Hamish Chisholm expects the power prices will start to drop soon. Ajay Peni Ataera / First Dawn Productions

A new wind farm makes it possible for the diesel-reliant Chatham Islands to go green and run entirely on renewable energy.

Locals hope it will slash astronomically high power prices with some saying the costs are deterring others from moving there.

The three new wind turbines at the Point Durham wind farm can generate more energy than the current peak demand.

The power price is expected to drop by more than 20 percent to about 89 cents per kiloWatt hour.

Currently, diesel fuels the power supply on the Chatham Islands, but it is costly and vulnerable to supply chain issues with an ageing ship and price fluctuations.

Hotel Chatham owner operator Toni Croon said the current exorbitant power prices limited growth.

Her monthly power bill for the hotel was roughly $13,000, she said.

“It’s just horrendous. Horrendous as a business owner, horrendous for anyone on this island. It’s survival of the fittest and we basically just live in debt because of our power prices,” Croon said.

The Port Durham wind farm is designed to give the Chatham Islands a more stable and reliable electricity supply. Supplied

She could not wait to be less reliant on diesel, saying the wind farm would be good for the environment and their wallets.

“It’s going to be everything. Even your family steals fuel off you because when times get tough, when there’s no fuel, you’ve got every bottle, everything filled up that you possibly can,” she said.

“This is going to be a game changer to every business and not have to rely on the ship.”

A previous wind turbine project fell over more than a decade ago after hitting financial difficulties.

She hoped this one would not be a lot of hot air and would make a sizeable difference to their bills.

If it did, she expected the Chathams would grow.

“I can think of five businesses that I’d like to start with the power prices being a lot more reasonable,” she said.

“People will move here for a start. No one will move here [currently]. Most households are $1000 to $1200 [a month]. That’s no hot water, just absolutely ridiculous, so we’ll get growth in the population.”

The mayor of the Chatham Islands, Greg Horler, said the cost of living – including power bills – hit hard on the Chathams.

“People are struggling on the mainland. People here [have] to do the same thing, they’ve got to slap another 30 percent on so if you’re struggling on the mainland, smack another 30 percent on and that’s how they struggle over here. It’s actually quite tough,” he said.

Locals were looking forward to a greener, cheaper and more stable energy source and opportunities for growth, he said.

In 2023, a $10 million government grant was earmarked to develop a renewable energy system.

Chatham Islands Enterprise Trust led the charge for the wind farm, and added a further million dollars to the pot.

Construction at the Port Durham wind farm, which will be officially opened on Thursday. Supplied

Trust chair Hamish Chisholm said they were looking forward to a more reliable, sustainable power supply that would reduce the cost of living and doing business.

“We’ve only got limited capacity for storage on the island and we’ve had a couple of shipping outages in recent years so that’s brought us pretty close to the lights going off,” he said.

He hoped that cutting the tariff price would help to encourage businesses to invest more.

There was a lot of fishing done around the Chathams but he said the current cost of electricity meant it was mostly too expensive to process them there.

“With lower electricity prices, we’d hope that that would open up the range of fish species that could be processed here on the island viably and then that sort of just helps grow our economy from there,” Chisholm said.

The 225 kilowatt turbines generate power when wind speeds hit between 12 and 90 kilometres an hour.

A new grid balancing plant means the diesel generators can shut down when the turbines are covering the island’s demand and a battery can provide an hour of peak power load if wind speeds fluctuate.

Diesel burn would be reduced by the equivalent of 500,000 litres per year with carbon emissions dropping by around 1300 tonnes a year, he said.

The system also allowed for new renewable energy supplies to be added to the grid in the future, which would bring the costs down further, he said.

He expected the prices would start to drop soon.

“It had been feeding into the grid. There’s been days when the power station has been completely silent which isn’t something that’s been heard down here probably for 20 or 30 years,” he said.

The Point Durham wind farm will be officially opened on Thursday.

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

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

- ADVERT -

MIL PODCASTS
Bookmark
| Follow | Subscribe Listen on Apple Podcasts

Foreign policy + Intel + Security

Subscribe | Follow | Bookmark
and join Buchanan & Manning LIVE Thursdays @ midday

MIL Public Webcast Service


- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -