Page 7

Mike Pannett named as new Deputy Commissioner of Police

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mike Pannett has been appointed a statutory Deputy Commissioner of Police. Supplied / NZ Police

Assistant Commissioner Mike Pannett has been announced as one of the new statutory deputy commissioners of Police.

After the initial shock at Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming‘s resignation in May one of the questions that emerged was who would replace him.

Then, in July Deputy Commissioner Tania Kura announced her retirement after 37 years in police, leaving both Deputy Commissioner roles vacant.

The second deputy commissioner will not be announced on Wednesday, though Jill Rogers is widely considered to be frontrunner for the role.

Acting Deputy Commissioner Jill Rogers. RNZ

It’s understood acting Deputy Commissioner Mike Johnson and Bruce O’Brien – who has been in London since June 2023 as New Zealand Police’s Senior Liaison Officer – were in the final four.

Pannett is the longest serving of the final four, having joined police in 1980. His career has included a secondment to the Australian Federal Police’s International Command in 2020 as well as a stint as the New Zealand Police Liaison Officer in Washington D.C, covering the United States, Canada, Central and South America. In 2010 he was made a member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to New Zealand Police.

Do you know more? Email Sam.Sherwood@rnz.co.nz

Former Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming resigned in May. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The announcement comes after the Independent Police Conduct Authority’s report found serious misconduct at the highest levels of police, including former Commissioner Andrew Coster, in relation to police’s response to allegations of sexual offending by former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers earlier announced the focus for 2026 was on the four priorities he outlined a year prior: core policing, supporting the frontline, leadership and accountability, and fiscal responsibility.

Specifically, he had set specific goals around service, safety and trust, including getting trust and confidence up from 69 percent to 80 percent.

Deputy Commissioner Tania Kura announced her retirement after 37 years in police in July. RNZ / REECE BAKER

The other benchmarks included getting satisfaction for services to 80 percent from its current 71 percent, a 15 percent rise in resolutions for retail crime, and a 15 percent reduction in violence in public places.

He also pointed to a 20 percent increase in Māori at police over the past five years.

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

Christmas is peak kidney stone season. Blame dehydration, the heat and all that food

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Anthony Dat, Adjunct Lecturer, Department of Surgery, School of Clinical Sciences, Monash University

Carlina Teteris/Getty

Christmas in Australia is a great time to spend enjoying the outdoors, with plenty of good food and drink.

But such a combination contributes to this time of year being the peak season for kidney stones.

But what exactly are kidney stones? Why is this painful kidney condition more common at this time of year? And how can you reduce your risk?

What are kidney stones, actually?

Kidney stones are hard crystals made from minerals – such as calcium and oxalate – in the urine. They form when the urine becomes too concentrated. This allows these minerals to stick together forming stones.

Stones usually start the size of tiny grains of sand, and cause no symptoms. When stones become large enough, however, they can migrate down the ureter (the narrow tube between the kidney and bladder). During this migration, they can block the flow of urine, causing severe pain.

Pain is from the middle of the back to the pelvis, and comes and goes as the stone makes its way down the ureter. There’s usually nausea, vomiting and blood in the urine at the same time.

In severe cases, kidney stones can block the flow of urine and trap bacteria, causing severe infection. This can cause permanent kidney damage.

About one in ten Australians will get a kidney stone at some point in their lives. This condition affects adults of all ages with those aged 40–60 most at risk.

Now let’s see why kidney stones are more common at this time of year.

Phew, it’s hot …

Kidney stones are most common in the heat. A recent review showed the risk of kidney stones increases by 2.4% for every 1°C increase in average outdoor temperature.

Higher temperatures cause more sweating and dehydration. This concentrates your urine and allows minerals in your urine to form into stones.

People living in tropical areas with higher humidity, such as Far North Queensland, are more prone to kidney stones.

That’s because the humid air stops sweat from evaporating to fully cool the body. This leads to even more sweating and worsens dehydration, increasing your risk of kidney stones forming.

Kidney stone crystals under the microscope.
Annie Cavanagh/Wellcome Collection, CC BY-NC

… and getting hotter

Climate change, with its higher temperatures and heatwaves, means kidney stones are likely to be even more common.

That’s partly because high-risk zones are expanding. Hot tropical climates closer to the equator have higher rates of kidney stones. But as global temperatures rise, these zones are expanding away from the equator to more cooler regions, putting more people at risk.

With climate change, heatwaves are becoming more frequent and lasting longer. Along with this comes an increased risk of dehydration and kidney stones.

Those most at risk now and into the future include elderly people, outdoor workers and people without access to adequate cooling.

Food, drink and travel

Christmas is a risky time for kidney stones for other reasons. Festive eating and drinking, plus altered travel habits, means this time of year has the ideal conditions for kidney stones to form.

Excess alcohol leads to dehydration, which we know increases the risk of kidney stones. Sugary soft drinks and foods high in salt, such as meat, chips and cheese, lead to more stone-promoting minerals to aggregate into stones.

Foods that contain high levels of oxalate, a naturally occurring chemical in certain plant foods, also increase the chance of a kidney stone if eaten regularly over a long period of time. Examples of foods high in oxalate include spinach, almonds and dark chocolate.

Long road trips and air travel can result in disrupted routines. Travel is a common cause of dehydration because people tend to drink less, access to toilets can be inconvenient, and hot destinations increase sweat losses. This leads to reduced urine volume that is more concentrated.

Ways to prevent kidney stones

The vast majority of kidney stones can be prevented. Here’s how you can significantly reduce your risk of kidney stones this holiday season.

1. Drink more water

Drinking enough water is the most important way to prevent kidney stones. You should aim for 2.5–3 litres of fluids a day, more on hot days or during exercise.

The best way to know if you are well hydrated is by looking at your pee. It should look pale or clearer, with no smell. Another good sign is not feeling thirsty.

The best fluid to drink is water. You can add a squeeze of lime or lemon. These contain citric acid, which prevents stones from forming.

Drink alcohol in moderation. Match one standard drink with a glass of water.

2. Don’t overeat

It might be tempting to overeat during the holiday season, but try to limit the types of foods we know increase your risk of kidney stones. You don’t have to avoid these salty and sugary foods entirely.

There are plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables in season this time of year, and are great sources of magnesium and fibre. These bind oxalate in the gut, preventing it from reaching the kidney. Fresh fruit and vegetables are also high in stone preventers, such as citric acid and potassium.

3. Avoid the heat

This will reduce fluid loss, lowering your risk of dehydration and kidney stones forming.

Stay out of the heat during the hotter times of the day, and seek shade or air conditioning. Take advantage of pools or the ocean to stay cool.

Anthony Dat 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. Christmas is peak kidney stone season. Blame dehydration, the heat and all that food – https://theconversation.com/christmas-is-peak-kidney-stone-season-blame-dehydration-the-heat-and-all-that-food-271093

Leave notes, play games, go shopping: how to boost your child’s multilingual skills these holidays

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Julie Choi, Senior lecturer in Education (Additional Languages), The University of Melbourne

Kamaji Ogino/ Pexels

About 5.7 million Australians speak a language other than English at home. Most multilingual children spend their school days speaking English and during term-time, home languages often take a back seat. So holidays – particularly the long summer break – offer a chance to hear and speak their heritage languages more often.

Research shows home languages matter for identity, belonging and cultural connection. With relaxed routines and extra time, families can use low-stress, creative methods to strengthen heritage-language use and build confidence.

Here are five practical, research-informed tips to help families make the most of this holiday time.

1. Aim for short sessions or moments

Research shows small, meaningful exchanges can be more effective than long, formal sessions.

So schedule short bursts of home-language use. For example, a ten-minute chat over breakfast, a board game in the home language, or a quick WhatsApp call with grandparents.

These moments fit easily into daily routines and don’t feel like lessons. Frequent, low-pressure interactions build confidence and keep the language active in children’s minds.

2. Use artistic, creative play

Try making books, scrapbooks, comics, or holiday memory books together. Children can draw, write captions and tell stories in their home language.

Creative activities make language use enjoyable and purposeful. Studies show artistic approaches give children more confidence across languages. One Vietnamese parent in research I conducted with colleagues reflected:

Vietnamese is not a language my kids think is ‘cool’ […] But now they are actually proud to be Vietnamese. They’re proud to be part of this project and the events that came out of it.

This shift happened after a bookmaking project that connected family stories to public events.

3. Make the home language visible

Label household items, display bilingual books, leave short notes, or record voice messages for family members. These small actions weave the language into everyday spaces. Visibility doesn’t just signal the language is valued, it normalises its presence.

When children see and hear the home language in ordinary contexts, it feels natural rather than “special” or “extra”. This environmental support encourages spontaneous use and reinforces the idea that multiple languages belong in daily life.

4. Be flexible

Children may want to switch languages mid-sentence. This is not a problem!

Mixing languages is natural and helps children draw on all their linguistic resources to make meaning. Research shows mixing languages (also called “translanguaging”) supports learning and identity.

Making meaning and communicating matters more than perfect grammar.

5. Involve other senses

If you are at the shops or market, invite children to touch, smell, and taste unfamiliar foods. Ask simple questions in the home language: “How does it look? Do you like it?” Language learning isn’t just about words, it’s about experiences.

Engaging multiple senses also makes language meaningful and memorable. As one parent in research I conducted with colleagues explained:

Food is always big for my family […] I pick out items that are quite uncommon. I introduce them to the kids. So feeling it, smelling it, tasting it […] If they are interested enough, they will naturally start picking things up if they enjoy it.

You can also play music or watch movies/TV in your home language. Research shows students who regularly watch foreign-language TV programmes outside school perform better at reading, listening and vocabulary in that language. This makes entertainment a powerful and enjoyable pathway to language maintenance.

These approaches can work for all kids from all backgrounds

It’s not just home languages that matter. Children today often show interest in languages beyond their family backgrounds – such as Japanese, Korean, Spanish or Auslan.

Supporting this curiosity can open new windows to culture, creativity and global perspectives.

Parents can encourage exploration through music, games, apps, or community events. This helps children see languages as tools for engaging with difference and understanding the world.

Julie Choi is affiliated with not-for-profit organisations VietSpeak and partners on research projects with Kids’ Own Publishing.

ref. Leave notes, play games, go shopping: how to boost your child’s multilingual skills these holidays – https://theconversation.com/leave-notes-play-games-go-shopping-how-to-boost-your-childs-multilingual-skills-these-holidays-271840

Supermarket price gouging will be banned from July. Will consumers actually end up better off?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sanjoy Paul, Associate Professor in Operations and Supply Chain Management, UTS Business School, University of Technology Sydney

This week, the federal government announced a ban on supermarket price gouging, aiming to get “a fairer go for families in their weekly shop”.

From July 1 2026, the new supermarket regulations will ban very large retailers (those with revenue of more than A$30 billion per year) from charging prices that are:

excessive when compared to the cost of the supply plus a reasonable margin.

Coles and Woolworths are currently the only two supermarkets big enough to meet this definition of “very large” and therefore face these new regulations.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s (ACCC) final report after its major inquiry into the supermarket sector was released in March. It found they were among the most profitable supermarkets in the world.

However, it did not directly accuse them of price gouging. So, what’s actually changing under the new regulations? And could it lead to lower prices for Australians at the checkout?

What’s changing?

Price gouging – setting prices at a level far higher than people think is reasonable – isn’t currently illegal for businesses in Australia.

The ACCC will enforce the new rules, which form part of the now-mandatory Food and Grocery Code of Conduct. The penalty per contravention for breaching the new laws will be the highest of:

  • $10 million
  • three times the benefit derived
  • 10% of turnover during the preceding 12 months.

But both Coles and Woolworths were quick to voice their opposition to the new regulations, arguing they could drive up costs and cause consumers to miss out on deals.

Who decides prices?

To price their products, supermarkets consider a wide range of costs for supply, manufacturing, transportation and distribution, warehousing and storage.

They also have to factor in labour, rent and inventory costs that are involved at every step of the supply chain.

Under the new regulations, pricing will have to reflect supply costs and a “reasonable” margin. This will require supermarkets and the regulator to accurately track and determine supply chain costs.

Why tracking costs is tricky

This could prove a challenging task. Supermarkets deal with thousands of products. They have hundreds of different local and international suppliers, manufacturers and logistics service providers.

The supermarket supply chain has several stages. This includes the first tier of direct suppliers, second tier (which supplies the first) and the third tier (which supplies the second).

On many occasions, suppliers beyond the first tier remain invisible and potentially responsible for contributing to supply chain costs. It is a challenging task to factor them accurately into the product costings.

Supermarket supply chains are also dynamic. Operational costs vary significantly across time and different locations.

Other challenges

Many other factors in the supply chain influence pricing. These include logistics, disruptions, waste, operational inefficiencies, high labour costs, marketing strategies, insurance and adoption of technologies.

The main challenge is these factors are always changing, which can make it hard to determine their accurate contributions to the pricing.

The ACCC may need extra resources, including a sophisticated price reporting and monitoring system, to make it work. Supermarkets, manufacturers, suppliers and logistics providers will need to report supply chain cost data regularly.

A significant effort will also be required to ensure data integrity and accuracy in the reporting system.

A shifting approach

The supermarket price gouging ban is more than just a new enforcement issue for the ACCC. It also represents a broader shift in how Australia approaches competition and consumer protection.

Under Australia’s existing legal framework, high prices alone are not unlawful. Australian competition law focuses on protecting the competitive process rather than regulating price levels directly.

For example, cartel rules prohibit price fixing and other forms of collusion between competitors. And resale price maintenance rules prevent suppliers from controlling resale prices charged by downstream businesses.

In both cases, the law targets anti-competitive coordination, not the level of prices themselves.

Consumer law similarly protects consumers through consumer guarantees and rules against misleading or deceptive conduct, unconscionable conduct and unfair contract terms, rather than regulating profit margins themselves.

Comparison with overseas

The current policy in Australia broadly reflects international practice. In the United States, federal anti-trust law does not prohibit firms from charging high prices, even where they have substantial market power, if there isn’t anti-competitive conduct such as collusion. Enforcement focuses on conduct rather than price levels themselves.

The European Union (EU) and the United Kingdom take a more interventionist, but still cautious, approach. EU competition law allows action against excessive pricing by firms with a dominant market position, but such cases are rare.

How might the ban affect competition?

On one hand, closer scrutiny of pricing may limit the ability of large supermarkets to sustain margins that are persistently disconnected from costs.

Greater transparency may also help address public concern in a highly concentrated grocery sector, as highlighted in ACCC market studies.

At the same time, competition authorities and economists have long warned direct price regulation carries risks. High prices do not necessarily indicate market failure. Poorly targeted interventions can weaken incentives to compete, discount or innovate.

Will consumers actually end up better off?

In the short term, stronger oversight may place downward pressure on prices where margins are clearly out of step with costs. However, price regulation alone does not guarantee sustained lower prices.

If retailers adopt more cautious or uniform pricing strategies to manage regulatory risk, price competition could weaken rather than intensify.

Competition law does not promise low prices at all times. It aims to deliver competitive prices over time through rivalry and market entry. Consumers are therefore most likely to benefit if the price gouging ban operates alongside broader competition and supply-side reforms, rather than as a standalone mechanism.

George Tian currently serves as Co-Chair of the Private International Law Interest Group of the American Society of International Law (ASIL), Washington DC; Deputy Co-Lead, ODR Working Group, Silicon Valley Arbitration & Mediation Center (SVAMC), CA, USA.

Sanjoy Paul 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. Supermarket price gouging will be banned from July. Will consumers actually end up better off? – https://theconversation.com/supermarket-price-gouging-will-be-banned-from-july-will-consumers-actually-end-up-better-off-272060

Who really photographed Napalm Girl? The famous war photo is now contested history

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kate Cantrell, Senior Lecturer, Writing, Editing and Publishing, University of Southern Queensland

The Terror of War, commonly known as “Napalm Girl”, is one of the most enduring and influential images of the 20th century.

Captured on June 8 1972, the photograph shows nine-year-old Kim Phúc running naked toward a camera. She has her arms outstretched, and is flanked by other children screaming in terror after a napalm strike on their village during the Vietnam War.

For five decades, the photo has been credited to Nick Út, a then 21-year old Vietnamese photographer working for the Associated Press (AP) in Saigon.

The image earned Út the Pulitzer Prize and World Press Photo of the Year in 1973, and the National Medal of Arts (America’s highest honour for artists) in 2021.

His account of the moment – how he photographed Phúc, then rushed her to hospital to save her life – has become inseparable from the photo’s legacy. But a new documentary calls this narrative into question.

Recently released on Netflix, The Stringer is directed by Bao Nguyen and narrated by photojournalist Gary Knight. It claims the iconic image was actually taken by a local freelance photographer – a “stringer” – paid just US$20 by the AP and given a print of the photo, before his contribution was erased from history.

If true, Napalm Girl becomes not only a damning indictment of war’s brutality, but also of the systematic exploitation of non-Western journalists by Western media organisations – a pattern that persists today.

The first media war

The Vietnam War, dubbed the living room war, was the first conflict fought in the global media spotlight.

While reporters were embedded in military units during the World Wars, the horrors of those conflicts remained carefully curated – limited by the technological constraints of monochrome print and government censorship.

By the late 1960s, everything had changed. War’s violence arrived in full colour, broadcast on the evening news and splashed across the pages of magazines. America’s failure in Vietnam was increasingly apparent. And media coverage of the 1968 Mai Lai massacre turned the tide of public opinion, intensifying the anti-war movement.

By 1972, the writing was on the wall. Australian troops withdrew following massive protests during the 1970 moratoriums.

In the United States, anti-war sentiment reached fever pitch. The publication of an image showing a young Vietnamese girl naked and severely burned as she fled a misdirected attack by South Vietnamese forces only accelerated the inevitable.

A theatre of conflict

The Stringer is a kind of detective story that hinges largely on testimony from Carl Robinson, the AP’s photo editor in Vietnam at the time the photo was taken.

Now in his eighties, Robinson claims once the photo was developed, AP’s Saigon bureau chief Horst Faas ordered the credit be changed to Nick Út instead of the actual freelance photographer, Nguyễn Thành Nghệ, ensuring the image remained AP property.

The filmmakers build their case methodically through archival footage and witness accounts, including an interview with the stringer.

Perhaps the most compelling evidence emerges at the film’s climax, when French independent forensic-investigation company, Index, presents a visual-spatial timeline of the day’s events using aerial photographs, video recording and satellite imagery.

Through 3D modelling, the investigators propose Út was not in the right position to take the photo. In fact, 15 seconds after the photo was taken, Út was standing 250 feet away.

To have taken the shot, he would have needed to sprint about 75 metres in seconds, while somehow remaining outside the frame of another camera crew filming the scene.

Index concludes Út’s authorship is “highly unlikely” and editorially “doesn’t really make sense”, since Út, if he had taken the photograph, would have then moved away from the action rather than toward it.

The stringer too is unequivocal:

Nick Út came with me on that assignment, but he didn’t take that photo […] That photo was mine.

Út declined to be interviewed for the film. In a statement posted to Facebook, he called the accusation “a slap in the face”.

The fallout

Following The Stringer’s premiere at Sundance in January this year, both World Press Photo and the AP launched investigations into the documentary’s claims.

In May, World Press Photo suspended the attribution of authorship to Út, concluding that “based on analysis of location, distance, and the camera used on that day, photographers Nguyễn Thành Nghệ or Huỳnh Công Phúc may have been better positioned to take the photograph than Nick Út”.

The statement went on:

Importantly, the photograph itself remains undisputed, and the award for this significant photo […] remains a fact. Only the authorship is suspended and under review. This remains contested history, and it is possible that the author of the photograph will never be fully confirmed.

At the same time, the AP published a 97-page report concluding there is no definitive evidence Út did not take the photo, and therefore retained the attribution to him.

In the same report, however, the AP conceded its internal investigation raised “unanswered questions”, and that it “remains open to the possibility” Út did not take the photo.

The image remains available from the AP under Út’s byline. But World Press Photo now lists the photograph’s author as “indeterminate/unknown”.

Attribution in the AI age

Questions of authorship and attribution have taken on new urgency in a world of generative AI, where fabricated images, text and video are virtually indistinguishable from human-made work.

Despite huge technological advances since the 1970s, the underpinning systems remain unchanged: large corporations still appropriate the work of the less powerful without attribution or compensation.

The filmmakers claim “this was something that happened to Nick” as well, and that he had no agency in the AP’s reported decision to change the photo credit. The documentary concludes:

What we accept as the official record is often shaped more by power than perspective […] even the most entrenched histories deserve to be reexamined.

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

ref. Who really photographed Napalm Girl? The famous war photo is now contested history – https://theconversation.com/who-really-photographed-napalm-girl-the-famous-war-photo-is-now-contested-history-267440

Live: Bondi terror attack gunman wakes from coma

Source: Radio New Zealand

One of the gunmen who police believe carried out a mass shooting at Sydney’s Bondi Beach that killed 15 people at the weekend has woken from a coma.

Naveed Akram, 24, remains in a Sydney hospital under police guard. His 50-year-old father Sajid was killed by police during the shooting.

Police are yet to announce what charges Naveed Akram may face.

Australian officials have described the shootings as a targeted, anti-semitic terror attack.

See our liveblog above for the latest updates.

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

Ōtara-Papatoetoe election re-do a ‘nail in the coffin’ for postal voting – law professor

Source: Radio New Zealand

A judge has ordered a new election to take place for seats on the Auckland local board due to manipulation of voting papers. RNZ / Eveline Harvey

A law professor says a judge’s order for a new election to take place for seats on an Auckland local board – due to manipulation of voting papers – is another “nail in the coffin” for the postal voting system for local elections.

Former Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board deputy chairperson Lehopoaome Vi Hausia took a petition to the Manukau District Court, calling for a judicial inquiry, after receiving reports of voting papers stolen from residents.

Vi Hausia did not get re-elected, coming fifth after four candidates from the Papatoetoe-Otara Action Team – Paramjeet Singh, Sandeep Saini, Kushma Nair and Kunal Bhalla – secured the four seats in the Papatoetoe subdivision of the Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board.

The inquiry identified 79 voting papers cast without voters’ knowledge.

Judge Richard McIlraith on Tuesday ruled that irregularities had materially affected the election results and voided the Papatoetoe subdivision’s election results.

Otago University’s Professor Andrew Geddis said the ruling was significant in that it was the first electoral petition that had led to findings of deliberate attempts to manipulate the results of an election in New Zealand.

“It’s very worrying, whenever one of our democratic processes is found to have so fundamentally failed that we just cannot trust the results, because of course it’s the process of electing people that then allows our system of government to work,” he said.

Professor Geddis said it was a “wake-up call” for New Zealand to rethink how local elections needed to be run in the future.

“What it does show, though, is that the postal voting system that we use is susceptible to this sort of manipulation or this sort of irregularity,

“Another perhaps nail in the coffin of using the postal system to run local elections,” he said.

Andrew Geddis is a law professor at University of Otago. Supplied

Professor Geddis said the most secure system would be an in-person voting system, which was used in national elections.

He said while that would cost more than the current postal system, it was worth the investment.

“Given those risks and the costs that then come with having to redo elections, the cost of not changing may well in the future be as much, or even greater than moving to a system that’s secure and more trustworthy,” he said.

“I suspect that what we’re going to find, is we just are going to have to bite the bullet and say, if we want to have trustworthy elections that produce legitimate outcomes, we’re going to have to pay to allow that to happen,” he added.

Complaints handed on to police – lawyer

The lawyer for Lehopoaome Vi Hausia, Simon Mitchell, KC, told Morning Report 53 of the 79 people applied for special votes on the basis they hadn’t received a voting paper. It soon emerged votes had already been received in their names.

Of those votes, 51 were for the newly elected members, he said.

In some streets in the subdivision there was an increase of more than 100 percent compared with the 2022 election.

Across the subdivision there was a 7.5 percent increase in voting. No other local board had seen an rise and for the Auckland Council there was a decrease in voting.

“So Papatoetoe was a total outlier in terms of special votes where a vote had already been cast…”

Mitchell said it would not have been difficult for the judge to conclude that there had been irregularities and a new election would be needed.

“He found that there was enough evidence that the result could have been different.”

Sixteen complaints have been made to the returning officer and some were now being investigated by the police.

It was a serious offence to vote for somebody else, and it could be punished by a two-year jail term, he said.

The safety of the postal voting system would also need to be examined. It might lead to more disengagement with participation in local body elections, he said.

Police said their investigation was still ongoing.

Electoral officer ready for new election

Meanwhile, the independent electoral officer for Auckland Dale Ofsoske said he was ready to undertake a new election for the Papatoetoe seats in the Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board, which was estimated to cost between $175,000 and 200,000.

He said any voting system had its weaknesses, and it was a matter of mitigating the risks and informing voters when to check for their postal voting papers.

Ofsoske said the new election date for the Papatoetoe seats would be 9 April next year, and would also be done through postal ballot voting.

Voting packs would be delivered in early March, he said.

The minister for Local Government Simon Watts said in as statement that what occured was “disappointing”.

“This is a matter that I am watching very closely, and I will continue to assess the situation,” he said.

However, he said the processes showed that appropriate guardrails were in place and functioning as they should.

“Local councils are responsible for running their own elections, in this matter the case was referred to police by the council and its electoral officer and a petition for inquiry was brought by a candidate who noticed something unusual. This is in line with the appropriate process,” he said.

Meanwhile, Papatoetoe-Otara Action Team’s Kushma Nair was not available for an interview on Tuesday.

“I am looking into the matter and am not in a position to comment until I get full information,” he said in a text message.

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

Wellington trains out of action for at least two weeks over summer

Source: Radio New Zealand

Buses will replace trains across most of the Wellington rail network from 26 December until 12 January. RNZ / Krystal Gibbens

Wellington trains will be out of action for at least two weeks over the summer break.

KiwiRail said track maintenance and major upgrades will see buses replace trains across most of the network from 26 December Boxing Day until 12 January.

Wellington Metro general manager Andy Lyon said the line-up of work included replacing rails and sleepers, bridge repairs, and level crossing upgrades.

“Physically lifting out and replacing old infrastructure isn’t something we can do while trains are trying to run at the same time – it’s too disruptive to passenger services.”

Some of the projects were laying the groundwork for 2029’s new trains and increased services between Wairarapa and Manawatū and also included preparation work for new substations and the Ava Bridge renewal in Lower Hutt, he said.

Lyon said the plan was to get the work done while commuters were out of town but warned that disruptions were possible when train services resumed.

“It’s not unusual for things to take a few days to settle.

“We will know how things are looking by end of that last weekend, and will work closely with Metlink to make sure passengers are informed in advance of any temporary changes to timetables while things bed in.”

The network was expected to be up-and-running again on Monday 12 January, with trains on the Johnsonville line, and Wellington to Porirua services on the Kāpiti line resuming a week earlier on Monday 5 January.

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

1000 customers each weekday have power disconnected

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prepay customers have their power disconnected more often. RNZ

More than 10,000 households a month have their power disconnected, new data shows.

The Electricity Authority has published a new disconnections for non-payment dashboard, including prepay customers who have been disconnected.

It shows that between January and October, for people on contract accounts, there are an average of 810 disconnections a month.

For 44 percent of them, they lasted less than one day.

Prepay customers were disconnected more often. There were 27,000 disconnections a month affecting 10,000 prepay customers, or 35 percent. Prepay customers are automatically disconnected when they run out of credit.

Almost 60 percent were disconnected more than once but 94 percent lasted less than one day.

Kate Day, co-director of Common Grace Aotearoa, said the data was helpful to help address the problem.

“We are particularly sobered to see data on prepay disconnections. Prepay is used by roughly 28,000 households and is a last resort for many low-income people with poor credit history who can no longer access standard plans. A reason we believe disconnections on post-pay – standard plans – are not increasing is those having trouble paying are increasingly having to move to prepay. This makes prepay disconnections a crucial part of the picture of energy hardship.”

Day said the figures were grim.

In July, power companies cut off electricity to 12,075 households due to non-payment, including people on contracts and prepay.

“That was an average of 390 households switched off per day. The vast majority of households disconnected were on prepay, and most of those faced two or more disconnections in that month. A full 183 households were disconnected 11 times or more, meaning on average they spent time without power every three days.

“Over the full ten months of the dataset, companies disconnected households 282,370 times, an average of 28,327 disconnections per month. Each month, an average of 11,000 households faced disconnection.

“While a small minority of these households may genuinely choose to disconnect, for instance, because their property is unattended for a significant period, many households would have disconnected due to lack of funds,” Day said.

“It is positive that the majority of disconnections lasted less than 24 hours and this shows effort from companies to help people reconnect quickly. However, looking at July as an example, there were still 1848 disconnections that lasted between one and seven days. That was an average of 60 disconnections occurring per day in July that would last longer than 24 hours.”

She said that meant many households spent one or more winter nights with no lighting and potentially no cooking or heating.

“These figures show we have a long way to go before everyone can afford the electricity they need. This new data provides a vital baseline, now the Electricity Authority and companies must accelerate work to reduce the numbers of people cut off from the essential service of electricity.”

Jake Lilley, spokesperson for the financial mentor network Fincap, said his organisation was concerned at the scale of disconnections for non-payment – at more than a thousand each weekday.

“For comparison, the state of Victoria in Australia, where prepay automatic disconnections are prohibited, has a larger population but recently averaged just over a thousand disconnections a month.

“Energy is an essential service, needed to keep healthy and keep up with the world. It is the front line of our health system, affordable heating and home cooked meals can prevent presentations to hospitals. The Consumer Care Obligations that set out what electricity business must to do help people offer next to no protection from automatic disconnection when someone runs out of money on prepay power. This needs urgent attention.”

He said some people had no option but to choose prepay power.

“We need a right for all to connect to a post-pay electricity arrangement at a fair price in Aotearoa to prevent serious harm for whānau who otherwise could not maintain ongoing access to the electricity they need.”

Jessica Walker, communications and campaigns manager at Consumer NZ, welcomed the data being made public.

“The rationale given for the previous exclusion of pre-pay disconnections was an assumption that consumers accept disconnection as part of the pre-pay product. We, along with other advocates, have strongly disagreed. Many households do not actively choose pre-pay; they end up on it as a last resort. In many cases, non-payment or a poor credit history result in households being required to go on to a pre-pay plan in order to get connected. For these households, pre-pay is not a genuine choice.

“In the absence of official data, Consumer NZ has previously relied on extrapolations from our own ongoing survey work and estimated that there could be around 40,000 disconnections for non-payment each year. Some of the industry disputed this, arguing that we were overstating the scale of the issue. The newly published data shows the opposite: if anything, our estimates were conservative.”

Electricity Retailers and Generators Association chief executive Bridget Abernethy said members were focused on supporting customers who were struggling.

“For those managing multiple bills, prepay can be a helpful way to keep overall household finances in check. Retailers may offer this option when it fits well with a customer’s situation. The number of prepay customers is falling, around a 6 percent reduction since 2023.

“The data clearly shows that of those who reach the disconnection point, most prepay customers reconnect quickly – over 90 percent within just 24 hours. Only a small number are disconnected for more than three days at a time.

“A prepay disconnection might be due to hardship, but it could also mean the customer is away, the property is vacant, or it’s for temporary use, like a holiday home. Providers gain these insights in their interactions with customers. The dataset is broad and includes both small businesses and residential properties.

“We welcome the Electricity Authority providing more detailed disconnection information publicly available. Having reliable data is essential for addressing energy hardship effectively. At the same time, it’s vital to look at the new dashboard carefully to help us make informed decisions about where support is best placed.”

Andrew Millar, general manager, retailer and consumer Electricity Authority, said that given less than 0.1 percent of most customers had been disconnected, New Zealand’s consumer obligations were working as intended.

He said it was too soon to tell whether the numbers of prepay disconnections reflected the cost of living crisis, as this was the first time the data had been released.

Millar said some people liked prepay because it gave them more control of their electricity use, and some used it for properties or holiday homes that were not always in use. But he said he would not recommend prepay for people who were medically dependent, because their electricity could be cut off.

Disconnections that lasted over several days were concerning, he said, and would be something the authority would be talking with retailers about.

He said the disconnection data would be released monthly – and he hoped in time it would be able to track if people were moving between postpay and prepay plans.

“This data is about really looking under the hood of the retail market for the first time and giving more visibility. It’s important we have this information out there so ourselves, retailers and other advocates can have a really informed discussion about consumers, their needs and where energy hardship may be.”

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

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

What NZ needs to watch as Australia reforms gun laws after the Bondi terror attack

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alexander Gillespie, Professor of Law, University of Waikato

The Bondi terror attack on Sunday has seen Australian federal, state and territory governments agree to the biggest overhaul of firearms regulations since the 1996 Port Arthur massacre.

For New Zealanders, with memories of the horrific 2019 Christchurch terror attacks still vivid, and with domestic gun laws now being rewritten again, how Australia responds will be of intense interest.

Future terror attacks are always a possibility. The best jurisdictions can do is reduce their risk and scale, while balancing the liberties and freedoms central to liberal democracies.

As Canada did with its Mass Casualty Commission following a 2020 rampage in Nova Scotia, and New Zealand did with its 2020 Royal Commission into the Christchurch attacks, Australia may now hold a high level inquiry.

This should lead to further recommendations – particularly about security intelligence and the regulation of firearms. New Zealand will watch closely.

A gold-standard firearms regime

Aside from in the United States – where firearms are a right, not a privilege – there is a pattern to what follows a mass shooting.

Laws are reformed and, typically, the type of firearms used are either prohibited or highly regulated. This has been the case throughout the Commonwealth, in Britain, Canada, New Zealand and Australia.

The New Zealand government, to its credit, has not attempted to roll back restrictions on high-powered semi-automatic weapons in its rewrite of the Arms Act after Christchurch.

To date, Australia has been the gold-standard for firearms reform, producing many influential ideas other countries have been able to learn from.

Without the post-Port Arthur reforms, it has been estimated 16 more mass shootings may have occurred. But as Bondi has shown, the risk can never be reduced to zero.

Regulations and limits

Apart from restricting certain types of firearms used in mass shootings, jurisdictions such as New South Wales have required evidence of licence applicants having a “genuine reason” to possess firearms: specialised gun club memberships and mandatory attendance at club events.

The thinking is that greater self-regulation and identification of risk within those communities will promote an obligation to recognise and report any concerning signs of extremism. Quebec in Canada has similar requirements.

In New Zealand, however, such genuine reasons are not required to prove you are a “fit and proper” applicant. New Zealand only requires mandatory club membership for pistol shooters. There is no obligation to report concerning behaviour.

Given one of the the Bondi shooters was licensed and supposedly had to comply with the New South Wales rules, it will now be important to evaluate what happened and whether such protections are working.

While it is currently unknown what type of firearms were used in the Bondi attack, their legal status, modification and ammunition capacity will now all be examined.

All of these pieces of the puzzle now become important because the Bondi shooters apparently used multiple standard firearms to do so much damage, not semi-automatic rifles and large capacity magazines.

In New Zealand, there is no upper limit of how many standard firearms a licensed person may possess, nor how much lawful ammunition they can have.

Australian regulators will probably look closely at the current limits in Western Australia, which stipulate a maximum of five firearms if someone possesses a hunting or recreational licence.

Reporting risk

Perhaps the biggest question from the Bondi tragedy is how someone could lawfully hold firearms in a household connected to an unlicensed person who had been previously examined by the spy agency ASIO.

The licencing process needs to consider risks beyond the individual applicant to those they are closely connected to (including if they have records of domestic violence, self-harm, organised crime or extremism).

Australian authorities will also be scrutinising the evidence to see if any flags were raised by medical and/or firearms licensing professionals. It is possible a review might recommend shorter relicensing periods, with greater involvement by medical and security officials.

General practitioners in Western Australia and Britain are now responsible for conducting physical and mental health assessments for anyone applying for or renewing a firearms licence.

There are limits to what risks GPs can foresee. But it is a reasonable requirement, especially for licence renewals by people possessing the highest-risk firearms.

At the moment in New Zealand, a health practitioner is only notified after a licence is issued. If they are concerned a person is unfit to use a firearm, they “may” contact the police.

This is a lower standard than for a driver’s licence, where a medical professional must report someone they consider unsafe to drive.

Ultimately, the onus is now on New Zealand to learn from the Bondi experience and any law changes Australia enacts in its aftermath. The victims of terrorism deserve no less.

Alexander Gillespie is a member of the Ministerial Arms Advisory Group. Alexander is also the recipient of a Borrin Law Fellowship which allowed him to undertake comparative work on firearms law in nine different countries. Alexander’s views in this article are his own and do not reflect either the MAAG or the Borrin Foundation.

ref. What NZ needs to watch as Australia reforms gun laws after the Bondi terror attack – https://theconversation.com/what-nz-needs-to-watch-as-australia-reforms-gun-laws-after-the-bondi-terror-attack-272170

A permit for trapping feral cats may get much easier to obtain after a U-turn by DOC

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hunter Victor Tindale in Fiordland. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Permits for trapping feral cats on conservation land may become easier to obtain.

At present, individuals need to adapt a possum fur trapping permit and contact local Department of Conservation (DOC) offices for permission to trap.

Gaining permission can take weeks, and requires filling out paper forms and supplying maps with trapping areas marked.

In contrast, hunting permits can be obtained by completing an online form on the DOC website, and approval is automatic. A 12-month permit is emailed within 15 minutes of the form being completed online.

Since RNZ reported hunter Victor Tindale’s struggle to trap cats in Fiordland, DOC’s stance on the matter has changed.

Initially, DOC told RNZ it was satisfied with the current system of adapting the possum permit.

Tindale said he had now received a letter from DOC following his request to make the system simpler, saying the permit system is being investigated. The letter states: “As part of our regulatory modernisation programme, DOC is seeking to improve efficiency and usability of the permissions system. This includes exploring the integration of trapping authorisations and online hunting permits.”

The hunter – who trapped five cats, two stoats, a ferret and 18 possums on a recent trip to Fiordland – thinks many hunters would be happy to do some trapping on hunting trips to help out the environment.

He’s “rapt” at the positive response from DOC and hopes it results in a consistent nationwide approach for online trapping permits, as he had experienced different attitudes from different regions.

Being able to help native bush out with some trapping during hunting trips, “welcomes more of us as part of a team, without barriers which put us off”.

The idea should be well promoted on the DOC permit site to encourage involvement, he said.

“Good hunters care about this sort of stuff and good hunters make great trappers.”

Feral cats captured by a thermal imaging camera in Fiordland National Park. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

New Zealand Deerstalkers Association Taupō president Alan Bullick said simplifying the permit system for trapping would be a good move.

Hunters can get vilified as rednecks because they use guns, Bullick said, but “most hunters are ardent conservationists”.

“They want the bush to thrive. They want the [feral] cats gone.”

Members have told him they’ve seen feral cats while out hunting and would like to take traps into conservation land to help limit the damage they cause.

“Some people shoot them with a high-powered rifle when they see them, but that also destroys their chances of getting a deer that day.”

Bullick said DOC needs to include clear instructions for safe trap setting in any new permit system to avoid by-catch, such as kiwi or weka. He’s confident hunters who make the effort to take traps with them would be capable of following instructions related to setting traps high enough to avoid by-catch.

DOC’s letter to Tindale said trapping permits will include conditions related to animal welfare, non-target species and public safety.

Tindale is a keen hunter and outdoorsman, eager to protect conservation land from damage caused by pests. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

The letter said the recent addition of feral cats – wild cats which live without human interaction – to Predator Free 2050’s target species list, “will likely trigger more interest in making it easier for the public to access trapping permits where feral cats are being targeted”.

The inclusion of feral cats in Predator Free 2050’s list of target species was promised in a 2023 election debate, and announced after RNZ’s reporting on the issue.

Tindale said the current beech mast event, which was expected to be the biggest in seven years, meant it was the perfect time for hunters to lend a hand. The increased seeds from the trees is expected to swell predator numbers.

DOC director of regulatory transformation Joanna Clifford said phase one of the modernisation programme is due to be completed by the end of June 2026. Work to integrate permits into an online system will start after that. In the meantime, people could still apply for trapping permits by adapting the possum trapping permit.

See more about New Zealand’s growing feral cat problem in Feral, a special RNZ investigation.

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

Can you donate your poo in New Zealand?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Poo transplants may sound unglamorous, but researchers say the early evidence has been encouraging, and it’s grabbed attention around the world.

Nelson infectious disease specialist Richard Everts (of Richmond Health Centre) and researchers at Auckland’s Liggins Institute say fecal microbiota transplants (FMT) can help certain patients — yet finding eligible donors is rare.

Public interest is high. Liggins Institute professors Justin O’Sullivan and Wayne Cutfield, who were some of the early researchers in the field in New Zealand, say a public call for study volunteers would spark global attention. But enthusiasm alone isn’t enough. Donating is a demanding process, and only a small fraction of volunteers make the cut.

Liggins Institute researchers working in the lab that’s undertaking studies into FMTs.

Supplied / Matt Crawford

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

Ōtara-Papatoetoe election re-do a ‘nail in the coffin’ for the postal voting – law professor

Source: Radio New Zealand

A judge has ordered a new election to take place for seats on the Auckland local board due to manipulation of voting papers. RNZ / Eveline Harvey

A law professor says a judge’s order for a new election to take place for seats on an Auckland local board – due to manipulation of voting papers – is another “nail in the coffin” for the postal voting system for local elections.

Former Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board deputy chairperson Lehopoaome Vi Hausia took a petition to the Manukau District Court, calling for a judicial inquiry, after receiving reports of voting papers stolen from residents.

Vi Hausia did not get re-elected, coming fifth after four candidates from the Papatoetoe-Otara Action Team – Paramjeet Singh, Sandeep Saini, Kushma Nair and Kunal Bhalla – secured the four seats in the Papatoetoe subdivision of the Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board.

The inquiry identified 79 voting papers cast without voters’ knowledge.

Judge Richard McIlraith on Tuesday ruled that irregularities had materially affected the election results and voided the Papatoetoe subdivision’s election results.

Otago University’s Professor Andrew Geddis said the ruling was significant in that it was the first electoral petition that had led to findings of deliberate attempts to manipulate the results of an election in New Zealand.

“It’s very worrying, whenever one of our democratic processes is found to have so fundamentally failed that we just cannot trust the results, because of course it’s the process of electing people that then allows our system of government to work,” he said.

Professor Geddis said it was a “wake-up call” for New Zealand to rethink how local elections needed to be run in the future.

“What it does show, though, is that the postal voting system that we use is susceptible to this sort of manipulation or this sort of irregularity,

“Another perhaps nail in the coffin of using the postal system to run local elections,” he said.

Andrew Geddis is a law professor at University of Otago. Supplied

Professor Geddis said the most secure system would be an in-person voting system, which was used in national elections.

He said while that would cost more than the current postal system, it was worth the investment.

“Given those risks and the costs that then come with having to redo elections, the cost of not changing may well in the future be as much, or even greater than moving to a system that’s secure and more trustworthy,” he said.

“I suspect that what we’re going to find, is we just are going to have to bite the bullet and say, if we want to have trustworthy elections that produce legitimate outcomes, we’re going to have to pay to allow that to happen,” he added.

Meanwhile, the independent electoral officer for Auckland Dale Ofsoske said he was ready to undertake a new election for the Papatoetoe seats in the Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board, which was estimated to cost between $175,000 and 200,000.

He said any voting system had its weaknesses, and it was a matter of mitigating the risks and informing voters when to check for their postal voting papers.

Ofsoske said the new election date for the Papatoetoe seats would be 9 April next year, and would also be done through postal ballot voting.

Voting packs would be delivered in early March, he said.

The minister for Local Government Simon Watts said in as statement that what occured was “disappointing”.

“This is a matter that I am watching very closely, and I will continue to assess the situation,” he said.

However, he said the processes showed that appropriate guardrails were in place and functioning as they should.

“Local councils are responsible for running their own elections, in this matter the case was referred to police by the council and its electoral officer and a petition for inquiry was brought by a candidate who noticed something unusual. This is in line with the appropriate process,” he said.

Meanwhile, Papatoetoe-Otara Action Team’s Kushma Nair was not available for an interview on Tuesday.

“I am looking into the matter and am not in a position to comment until I get full information,” he said in a text message.

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

What to bring to a barbecue that isn’t a boring potato salad

Source: Radio New Zealand

One of the best things about summer gatherings is how happily everyone contributes to the table; a salad here, some barbecue meat there, or the show-stopping summer pudding that disappears in seconds every time.

Most of us have a few go-to dishes that get rolled out as soon as the invites start coming. A signature dish is always a winner, but every now and then, it’s fun to try something new.

We sought fresh inspiration for this summer by chatting with some chefs and restaurateurs from other parts of the world who now live in New Zealand.

Brazilian, Regi Gallina, owner and chef at Tambo in 269 Parnell.

Supplied

‘Crunch point’: Stretched rheumatologists decline half of referrals in some regions

Source: Radio New Zealand

A computer illustration of a person with foot pain. KATERYNA KON/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

Rheumatologists in some regions are turning down about half the specialist referrals they receive from GPs in order to provide adequate treatment for their existing patients.

However, they say even with restricting “in-flow” in that way, wait times for first specialist appointments – and critical follow-up appointments – continue to grow.

Anna*, a fit and healthy 27-year-old, started feeling unusually fatigued in August last year.

“I work quite a high-stress job and I study, so I initially thought, ‘It’s burnout’. But then the fatigue continued and I then noticed swelling and stiffness and odd things I had never experienced before.”

Her GP immediately suspected rheumatoid arthritis and referred her to the rheumatology service in Auckland – and kept updating that referral as Anna’s symptoms worsened.

Accepted best practice is for rheumatoid arthritis patients to be seen within three weeks – she waited six months.

At her appointment in February (five days before she left Auckland for a job in another city), she was prescribed a drug to suppress symptoms.

Unfortunately, she suffered a bad reaction.

“The medication caused extreme nausea, it would last for five days. I had quite a bit of my hair fall out. I was always sick, and then I began to develop a dry cough. It suppressed my symptoms but the cons definitely outweighed the pros.”

Her new GP made an urgent referral to the local rheumatology service – but it was another three months before she was seen.

“I honestly at this point think that if I did not have a severe reaction that I probably would not have got in to see him as quickly as I did.”

Anna has seen a specialist twice more this year, and undergone multiple tests but is still waiting for a definitive diagnosis.

She has had to quit her “dream job”.

“There were days that I could not walk around, I could not get up out of bed on my own, I couldn’t stand up on my own,

“I needed help just to do the basic things, like brush my teeth.”

The best advice she has had on how to manage symptoms and live her life has come from Arthritis New Zealand’s online support group, she said.

“Sometimes you get lucky – like I got lucky – and you have really great GPs who advocate for you, who help you, who take what you need to the rheumatologist and say ‘You have to see this person’.

“But if you don’t have a good GP that’s just not going to happen for you.”

Patients waiting longer than ‘target

In April – the most recent month for which data is available – 281 patients had waited longer than four months for a first appointment with rheumatology: more than 14 percent of patients are waiting too long.

It varies dramatically nationwide, from less than 2 percent in some centres, to nearly half of all patients in Nelson-Marlborough and Northland.

Long-time Waikato Hospital rheumatologist Alan Doube said there was usually “no quick fix” for rheumatology patients; they needed long-term follow up.

Waikato “accumulates” another 300 patients every year.

“So over 10 years that’s an extra 3000 patients. And unless the facility expands to facilitate that, you get to a crunch point.”

As of April, Waikato had 46 patients who had waited longer than four months for a first specialist appointment (FSA) – more than one in five.

However, Doube said many others did not even get on the waiting list because the service was already stretched.

“Currently we decline about 50 percent.”

Sometimes, specialists could advise GPs on how to manage those patients, Doube said.

“But even then we still can’t see the 10,000 patients [on their books] in the way that they need to be seen over time. So the model that’s been put forward to us doesn’t help us – the focus on FSA.

“You can either see those FSA or you can see the follow-ups. But you can’t do both.”

Osteoarthritis can occur in a number of joints, and mobility can be impaired when it occurs in the hips, knees and ankles. Wikimedia Commons / Milorad Dimic MD CC BY-SA 3.0

Poor access to specialist and medicines

Rheumatology Association spokesperson Hugh de Latour said there had been a huge surge in rheumatology referrals post-Covid – but New Zealand also had much fewer specialists per capita compared with other developed countries.

“So even with our select grading, our timeliness to see patients is less than ideal.”

In his region, Waitematā, routine follow-ups were “six months overdue”.

Arthritis alone cost the country millions in terms of lost productivity but inflammatory disease generally was not really prioritised, de Latour said.

“New Zealand is well behind compared to any other country both in terms of what we have and the threshold you must get to in order to actually qualify for it.”

The quicker patients were seen by a specialist, the more effective their treatment and management of their condition, he said.

New medicines available could completely alter the outlook for people with symptoms of inflammatory disease.

“But no-one is really going to get upset if someone’s rheumatoid arthritis didn’t get seen within three weeks, which is our target.

“If you get rheumatoid, you should be seen within three weeks.”

De Latour said in recent years New Zealand had lost most of its newly qualified rheumatologists to jobs in Australia.

The Royal College of Physicians recommends 1.16 full time equivalent (FTE) rheumatologists per 100,000 people in the public sector.

A 2019 paper found none of the 20 district health boards met the guideline in the public sector, and only four areas reached this level when private FTE were included.

Arthritis NZ estimates the specialist workforce would need to increase by 13 FTE rheumatologists to achieve the guideline.

It has recommended greater efforts to recruit and train specialist nurses to support rheumatologists in their practice.

Health NZ responds

In a written response to RNZ’s questions, Health NZ’s national chief medical officer Dame Helen Stokes-Lampard said there were “a range of challenges related to workforce shortages in healthcare”.

“The Health New Zealand Workforce Plan has a series of workstreams that are considering total workforce numbers, as well as newer ways of working to optimise the efficiency of all our existing healthcare professionals and support their wellbeing.

“Discussions are under way to see how we can reduce rheumatologist workloads.”

*Name changed for privacy reasons.

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

Former New Plymouth mayor bids for Kāinga Ora flats neighbouring his apartment development

Source: Radio New Zealand

Former mayor Peter Tennent is developing two buildings across the road including one which will house a family apartment overlooking the Tasman Sea. RNZ / Robin Martin

A former New Plymouth mayor has put in a bid to buy two blocks of Kāinga Ora flats – planning to bowl them and build apartments alongside an upmarket development he already has underway.

Peter Tennent said he’d had enough of the unacceptable behaviour of some social housing tenants – and wanted to move his family into the neighbourhood.

The successful hotel owner served three terms as mayor of New Plymouth between 2001 and 2010 and is redevelopling two sites on Dawson Street – one featuring an apartment overlooking the Tasman Sea for his family.

He made no secret of the fact he had made frequent complaints about the behaviour of his Kāinga Ora neighbours.

“I have become a vexatious emailer, I think, to the Minister [of Housing Chris Bishop] and all and sundry concerned about the behaviour of some of the tenants across there.

“It’s no surprise that while property is doing well in New Plymouth and Taranaki, properties have been selling well below RV in and around those flats. It’s been a disgrace, and I’m keen to see it sorted.”

One of Peter Tennent’s developments which will house an apartment overlooking the ocean. RNZ / Robin Martin

Kāinga Ora has confirmed it is putting the 1940s vintage flats on the market.

Tennent had gone so far as to make bid for the properties – four of which had recently been boarded up.

“I’ve made an offer on the land myself, but that will go through due process. It’s fair to say my offer included a significant amount for community good, as opposed to value of the property, but I just want to see it sorted.

“Now, whether it’s us or someone else that sorts it, I don’t really mind. Kāinga Ora, whether they can have some good tenants in there, that would be great, but what was in place was totally unacceptable.”

He said if successful he would develop apartments and sell them off.

A tenant of the remaining Kāinga Ora flats, who preferred not to give his name, had been told he had to move out.

“They going to be sold off and demolished because he doesn’t want his new tenants and new flash penthouses having to look at them and that’s ridiculous.”

The remaining flats on St Aubyn Street. RNZ / Robin Martin

The man in his 60s, who lived with a terminal illness, said Kāinga Ora had been trying to relocate him.

“They wanted to offer me one place on Seaview Road but that’s been deemed medically too cold and unfit for someone in my condition and then they offered me Dawson Street [a new development], but three days later it was already gone.

“Then it was this one up here [St Aubyn Street] where units are being built. And then suddenly it’s not going to be November, it’s going to be February. Then it’s not going to be February, it’s going to be March.”

Kāinga Ora regional director for Taranaki, Graeme Broderick, confirmed all the flats were about to be sold.

“Kāinga Ora will sell two four-unit blocks on Dawson and St Aubyn streets in central New Plymouth as they are no longer suitable for social housing. Proceeds will be reinvested in delivering new, warm, dry homes elsewhere.

“One block is already empty and secured, and we’re helping tenants in the other block move to other Kāinga Ora homes. Once all tenants are rehoused, the properties will go on the open market.”

The boarded up flats on Dawson Street enjoy seasviews and are neighboured by modern townhouses. RNZ / Robin Martin

He said the move was in line with Kāinga Ora policy.

“The decision to sell reflects the age and location of the units, redevelopment potential, and property value. We’ve also considered the availability of suitable housing for affected tenants.”

Broderick confirmed Kāinga Ora ended one tenancy in the units because the tenant repeatedly breached their obligations.

The social housing provider had recently delivered 14 new one-bedroom homes at 55 Dawson Street nearby, and had another 16 one-bedroom homes currently under construction on St Aubyn Street, among other developments in the pipeline for New Plymouth.

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

The best films of 2025

Source: Radio New Zealand

Best Oscar Contender/Best Movie of the Year

One Battle After Another

Director Paul Thomas Anderson’s career-long evocation of what he loves about the movies of the 1970s reaches new heights with this fist-pumpingly righteous call to action that reminds us that films actually used to, you know, be about stuff.

As a stoned former radical forced out of hiding when his daughter (Chase Infiniti in the most star-making role of the past decade) is targeted by a military psycho (Sean Penn, channelling Elmer Fudd into a nefarious embodiment of American political hypocrisy), Leonardo DiCaprio gives one of his liveliest ever performances.

Part of the film’s appeal is how difficult it is to boil it down into one thing, but I saw a patriotic, marvellously chaotic ode to the spirit of rebellion – Dominic Corry

Chase Infiniti in One Battle After Another.

supplied

More than 10,000 children stood-down for physically assaulting other students, teachers last year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Schools cracked down on more fights and assaults last year. Unsplash/ Taylor Flowe

Schools cracked down on more fights and assaults than ever before as their rolls increased rapidly last year.

Education Ministry figures show the number of stand-downs for children who physically assaulted other students or their teachers reached 9758 and 1151 respectively in 2024.

Both figures were slightly higher than in 2023 but happened in a year when the total number of students surged to 850,999 by the middle of 2024, a high surpassed only by this year’s enrolments.

The number of stand-downs for smoking, vaping or alcohol dropped by a third, from 4992 in 2023 to 3360 last year.

That drove down the total number of stand-downs and the rate of stand-downs for every 1000 students, which fell from 39 in 2023 to 37 last year, though the 2024 figure was still much higher than every other year in records going back to 2000.

Suspension and exclusion rates also dropped last year and were lower than rates for most of the previous 24 years.

But the expulsion rate jumped, from one per 1000 students to almost two, a figure similar to most previous years.

Expulsions applied to students at or above the legal school-leaving age of 16, while exclusions involved those under the age of 16.

Schools excluded 1203 students and expelled 178 last year.

A third of the exclusions and 42 percent of the expulsions were for assaults on other students.

A ministry report said 80 percent of excluded students enrolled in a new school, the correspondence school, their original school, or were home-schooled.

It said 94 percent of the expelled students did not return to school.

It said 177 schools expelled 178 students last year, up from 77 schools and 102 students in 2023.

Part of Auckland – Tāmaki Herenga Waka – had an expulsion rate more than double that of most other areas at four per 1000 students

Home-schooling enrolments reach record high

The number of home-schooled children exceeded 11,000 this year.

There were 11,010 homeschooled students at 1 July 2025, 253 more than the same time last year and the highest figure ever recorded.

Ministry figures showed 1772 students left homeschooling this year, 24 percent of them after less than a year.

They were balanced by 2025 students entering homeschooling, 39 percent of whom were six-year-olds.

Home-schooling enrolments surged in 2022 when 4342 students enrolled and had hovered around 10,800 pupils for the past three years.

More students leave school early

Education Ministry figures showed 1342 15-year-olds were granted permission to leave school last year.

That was 51 more early leaving exemptions than in 2023.

The rate of exemption was just over 20 per 1000 15-year-olds, very slightly higher than in 2023 and the highest rate since 2007 when the figure was 32.

Boys accounted for 766 of the early exemptions and 576 were for girls.

Fewer transient students

The rate of student transience dropped to its lowest level in more than a decade last year.

Education Ministry figures showed 2442 students changed schools twice or more last year, giving a transience rate of 2.9 for every 1000 students in 2024.

The rate was slightly lower than in 2023 and well below pre-covid rates which ranged from 4-5 per 10000.

The ministry said transience could harm students’ achievement at school.

“Research suggests that students who move home and/or school frequently are more likely to under-achieve in formal education when compared with students who have a more stable school life,” it said.

“A study found that school movement had an even stronger effect on educational success than residential movement. There is also evidence that transience can have negative effects on student behaviour, and on short-term social and health experiences.”

The figures showed most of the transient students moved school twice, but 189 moved three times, 21 four times and seven five times or more.

However, figures for the cohort of 61,633 students who began school in 2019 showed 13 percent or 7889 had been transient at some point in the past six years.

Though most had changed school only twice, 1788 had three changes, 751 four, 337 five changes and 377 six school changes.

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

Anglers becoming endangered species on some Canterbury rivers

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rising nitrate levels in drinking water have dominated Canterbury’s water quality debate, but anglers, conservationists and scientists are also worried about the environmental effects, with many rivers and streams testing well above the national bottom line. In the third of a three-part series, Keiller MacDuff reports on the people fighting for the health of the region’s waterways, which they say are being degraded by a toxic combination of water being taken for irrigation and nitrates in the service of intensive dairying.

Retired Canterbury fish veterinarian Peter Trolove has been a keen angler since he was a boy but these days he is more likely to be dipping a sample jar into the water than a fishing line.

The Federation of Freshwater Anglers past president regularly traces a loop from his Rangitata Huts home to the Halswell River, stopping to take samples from more than a dozen rivers, streams and drains to record nitrate levels.

A walk along the banks of the Selwyn River ahead of his routine testing reveals the depressing reality of a once thriving river.

Peter Trolove has been taking nitrate readings from rivers and streams around Canterbury for six years. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

“I probably walked about two or three kilometres upstream, there are some good pools and the sun is such that you can see under the banks, and I didn’t see a fish,” he said.

“This river was considered one of the best trout fishing rivers in the Dominion prior World War Two. Up until the 1970s, about 40,000 trout would go through the traps and now they’d be on the numbers of one hand.”

Trolove trained as a veterinarian then worked for the dairy industry before heading overseas to retrain as a specialist fish vet, earning a masters in aquatic veterinary pathology.

He blames intensive dairy farming and a lack of central and local government leadership for declining Canterbury fish stocks.

“I was a dairy vet, I come off a farm, if there was a solution, I’d tell you. The hard truth of it is, you’ve got to farm less intensively,” he said.

A moss-covered sign at the Chamberlain’s Ford entrance to the Selwyn River [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/346261/toxic-algae-warning-for-swimmers-and-pets

warns of high levels of toxic algal bloom], a neurotoxin that can be harmful to people and lethal for dogs.

The sign is barely visible, hidden by foliage as tall as the sign itself, and it is hard to know when or if the arrow indicating the risk level was last adjusted.

For Trolove, it serves as a neat metaphor for what he believes is buck-passing and a lack of care about the environment.

He believes decision-makers see anglers as an obstacle to growing the economy, yet fishing is “quite a significant economy in it’s own right”, along with tourism income from overseas anglers and the risk to “brand New Zealand”.

A moss-covered sign at Chamberlain’s Ford campground warns of high levels of toxic algal bloom, a neurotoxin that can be harmful to people and lethal for dogs. Algal blooms occur naturally but are fuelled by fertiliser run off. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

More than a million cows

Since 1990, Canterbury’s dairy herd has increased by about 1000 percent, to well over a million cows.

Between 2002 and 2019, nitrogen fertiliser use in Canterbury increased 326 percent, while the area being irrigated increased by 99 percent over the same period.

According to StatsNZ, Canterbury had the largest amount of irrigated agricultural land (480,000 hectares) in the country in 2022 and accounted for 70 percent of the country’s total dairy farming irrigation.

The regional council said it did not keep information on the area under irrigation.

An Earth Sciences New Zealand-led study published in November confirmed that Canterbury has the highest percentage of elevated groundwater nitrates in the country, following testing of 3800 rural drinking water samples from private wells between 2022 and 2024.

Researchers used dual nitrate isotope testing, known as a “chemical fingerprint”, to identify cow urine as a primary cause.

The nitrate-nitrogen limit in drinking water is 11.3 milligrams per litre (mg/L) but the standard to protect aquatic ecosystem health is far lower.

The bottom line for nitrate toxicity in the national policy statement for freshwater management, which the government has signalled it will replace, is 2.4 mg/L.

While 2.4mg/L was a steep drop from the previous limit of 6.9mg/L, many believe the figure is too high to protect the health of rivers.

The latest regional council testing of nine Selwyn rivers, streams or drains found all were well above the national bottom line.

Scientists and environmental groups argue other effects of nitrate, including runaway weed and algal growth fed by agricultural fertiliser run-off, cause big drops in oxygen levels in rivers and lakes, suffocating fish at far lower levels.

‘They can’t die twice’

Victoria University freshwater ecologist Dr Mike Joy said the 2.4mg/L freshwater nitrate limit was based on a “false flag” and did little to protect ecosystem health and biodiversity in Canterbury waterways.

“2.4mg/L is about nitrate toxicity, which is a non-existent problem, it’s way less than that where you get algal blooms and hypoxia from lack of oxygen, which is what gets rid of the fish,” he said.

“I would go on record as saying the only fish that ever died of nitrate toxicity in New Zealand were the ones in the fish tank when they were coming up with that number. They’re already dead at 1mg/L because at that level you get algal blooms and the algae takes up the oxygen.”

Joy said there was no single reason for declining fish stocks but intensive agriculture was the common thread.

“Less water, more nitrates, climate change, stop-banking. It’s never one thing, it’s a combination of things,” he said.

Victoria University freshwater ecologist Dr Mike Joy says intensive dairying on the Canterbury Plains has created a feedback loop of water extraction and nitrate pollution. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Water takes fuelling increased nitrate levels

Joy described a “feedback loop” of large scale water extraction for irrigation transforming the Canterbury plains into one of the country’s dairy hubs.

“The extraction is what you need to have that intensity of cattle. You couldn’t have that many cows without the irrigation, that means you have way more cows per hectare because you’ve got the water to be able to grow the grass, so then you’ve got more cows, more urine, more nitrate pollution,” he said.

“Less water in the river means higher concentration of the nutrients but before we had irrigation we didn’t have cows and so we didn’t have a problem.”

A February regional council report noted serious limitations on the council’s water data, including around 20 percent of water-take points not providing data, an improvement on the 40 percent that were not providing infomation when the report was last prepared a decade ago.

In 2020-2021, 3636 million cubic metres of water was taken from Canterbury’s surface and groundwater sources, the vast majority for irrigation.

In September regional councillors voted nine to seven in favour of declaring a nitrate emergency, although some branded the move a political stunt, virtue signalling and an attack on Canterbury farmers.

Joy said he held little hope the declaration alone would improve the region’s water quality.

“Big deal, call an emergency, but you’ve got to do something about it before it means anything,” he said.

A fading way of life

Salmon Anglers Association president Paul Hodgson said he had witnessed the decimation of salmon and other fisheries.

“I’ve been out to the Selwyn in the last few years and instead of having a diverse aquatic life and bugs and beetles and all sorts of things, the only thing of any great quantity that’s in the river is snails, and that’s usually the last thing to go,” he said.

New Zealand Salmon Anglers Association president Paul Hodgson is angry years of warnings have fallen on deaf ears. RNZ

Anglers spend hundreds of hours, year after year on the water, and saw changes first-hand, Hodgson said.

“When I used to go fishing, you’d look at the side of the river and you’d see this black line of silveries coming in. There had to be millions of them coming in. The silveries – known by a number of different names, including Stockell’s smelt, stocko and others – they underpin the food web. Once they disappear, they’ve gone and the whole network around the river disappears,” he said.

The association has embarked on an oral history project to record memories of what Hodgson feared was a fading way of life, affecting both anglers and the social fabric around the river.

“The river mouths often have baches or cribs and there’d be anglers in every single one of them, now it’s more like they’ve become retirement homes. The anglers have sold up and shifted out because it’s just simply not worth going there anymore. It’s almost like there’s been a death in the family,” he said.

Hodgson said his father, also a keen angler, warned of the decline decades ago.

“People of his generation were concerned enough to write letters to ECan and to chase up Fish and Game and to chase up the Department of Conservation, we’d go, ‘hey look guys, are you seeing this?’ And all the things that we talked about have now happened or are happening,” he said.

The situation had reached a tipping point, Hodgson said.

“If you can’t go to the river and eat the fish in the river, if you can’t go to the river and swim in it, if you can’t go to the river and drink the water, where are we at? Where do we go from here? Because that’s where we’re at today,” he said.

’20 years too late’ to be gathering information

Canterbury Regional Council is responsible for managing land and water use, setting pollution limits, issuing resource consents, managing water takes and designating drinking water protection zones.

A spokesperson said some surface water and groundwater zones were overallocated and had been so when the current regional plan became operative in 2015.

“This plan set allocation limits, which in many catchments had already been exceeded,” they said.

Asked to clarify which, or how many water zones were overallocated, the council did not respond before deadline.

Its latest annual groundwater survey showed nitrate increasing in 62 percent of the 300 test wells.

More than 10 percent of wells tested had nitrates above the drinking water limit, including 18 of the 56 test wells (31 percent) in the Ashburton zone.

Since the start of 2025, when a temporary [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/country/580278/thirty-two-more-dairy-farms-for-canterbury-some-grain-growers-go-for-milk

restriction on intensive dairy conversions] ended, the council has issued discharge consents allowing for a potential increase of up to 25,800 dairy cattle.

Some Canterbury dairy farmers are striving to limit nitrate leaching by planting special crops and experimenting with new winter grazing systems.

Chair Deon Swiggs voted against declaring a nitrate emergency when the previous council narrowly passed a motion brought by outgoing councillor Vicki Southworth.

He told RNZ he stood by that decision but hoped the declaration would raise awareness about nitrate.

“Once people have a bit more understanding of what it is we can work with the industry to start addressing some of the problems where there are hotspots and where there are issues,” he said.

“The science people are working with other scientists around the region as well to start standing up the science, start standing up the industry response so that everybody can get on the same page. The last thing we want is people to not believe there’s is an issue when there potentially is an issue.”

Swiggs said the council had no choice but to follow rules set at a national level and cautioned against singling out dairy farming.

“Nitrate comes from all sorts of different sources. If you’re trying to pin nitrate just on cows, nitrate is because people are putting nitrogen onto the soil. All land use activities, including farming for food production, uses nitrate,” he said.

Asked about nitrate isotope testing confirming the dairy industry as a primary source, Swiggs said, “We have a lot of cows in Canterbury”.

Deputy chair Iaean Cranwell, who voted in favour of the emergency declaration, said issue was “very complex”.

“We know there’s an issue in Canterbury and I think everyone agrees there’s an issue across all communities,” he said.

“Even though there was work happening and there were conversations, it wasn’t out in the open. I think all that [the emergency declaration] has done is actually saying we have an issue and what are we going to do about it?” he said.

Regional council deputy chair Iaean Cranwell says the council is hamstrung by central government mandates. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Cranwell said the council could consider mandating lower dairy stocking rates – Canterbury has the highest in the country, according to Dairy NZ – but it would need to go through a planning process “hamstrung” by the upheaval of freshwater and resource management laws.

The government’s move in July to halt all council planning work until Resource Management Act reforms were complete had further complicated its response, he said.

“If the regulation allowed that, I’m sure that’s one thing you could look at, but at this current time we cannot look at our planning regime,” Cranwell said.

Otago University research fellow Marnie Prickett criticised the council’s approach.

“That’s just not good enough. It’s not leadership, it’s treading water and it’s not acting in the interests of their people who are relying on them to protect their drinking water,” she said.

Along with fellow academics Dr Tim Chambers and Professor Simon Hales, Prickett presented to the council in March, calling for [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/544734/academics-call-for-urgent-action-on-nitrate-pollution

urgent action on the “water pollution crisis”].

The trio advised the council to conduct an independent analysis of why nitrate levels keep rising, look at gaps in the council’s data collection and request the auditor-general conduct a conflict of interest review, all things that could be done regardless of central government reforms, she said.

It was 20 years too late to be talking about gathering information, raising awareness or standing up the science, Prickett said.

“We’re beyond the point where we have to identify what the problem is. I think we know what the problem is.”

University of Otago research fellow Marnie Prickett says the regional council’s response to the water pollution crisis is not good enough. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Grief for a lost river

As he sets off on another round of water sampling, Trolove is motivated not only by his love of the rivers and streams but the loss of possibilities for his children and their children.

“It pains me that the next generation won’t have what I had,” he said.

The way decisions were made that has left some without safe drinking water and whittled away fishing spots to remote high country rivers made his blood boil.

“Where is the equity for the ratepayer in Selwyn who looks like paying $400 million for Rolleston to go and develop source water near the Waimak (Waimakariri) to pump around the towns and rapidly growing region because we can no longer dig a hole in the ground?

“Where is the equity for the people in Ashburton who are having to pay? Not the farmers – the people in the town who will have to pay in the future to pump water across the Ashburton River so Tinwald can have safer water.

“Where was the democracy and where was the discussion?”

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

Anglers becoming endangered species on some Canterbury rivers

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rising nitrate levels in drinking water have dominated Canterbury’s water quality debate, but anglers, conservationists and scientists are also worried about the environmental effects, with many rivers and streams testing well above the national bottom line. In the third of a three-part series, Keiller MacDuff reports on the people fighting for the health of the region’s waterways, which they say are being degraded by a toxic combination of water being taken for irrigation and nitrates in the service of intensive dairying.

Retired Canterbury fish veterinarian Peter Trolove has been a keen angler since he was a boy but these days he is more likely to be dipping a sample jar into the water than a fishing line.

The Federation of Freshwater Anglers past president regularly traces a loop from his Rangitata Huts home to the Halswell River, stopping to take samples from more than a dozen rivers, streams and drains to record nitrate levels.

A walk along the banks of the Selwyn River ahead of his routine testing reveals the depressing reality of a once thriving river.

Peter Trolove has been taking nitrate readings from rivers and streams around Canterbury for six years. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

“I probably walked about two or three kilometres upstream, there are some good pools and the sun is such that you can see under the banks, and I didn’t see a fish,” he said.

“This river was considered one of the best trout fishing rivers in the Dominion prior World War Two. Up until the 1970s, about 40,000 trout would go through the traps and now they’d be on the numbers of one hand.”

Trolove trained as a veterinarian then worked for the dairy industry before heading overseas to retrain as a specialist fish vet, earning a masters in aquatic veterinary pathology.

He blames intensive dairy farming and a lack of central and local government leadership for declining Canterbury fish stocks.

“I was a dairy vet, I come off a farm, if there was a solution, I’d tell you. The hard truth of it is, you’ve got to farm less intensively,” he said.

A moss-covered sign at the Chamberlain’s Ford entrance to the Selwyn River [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/346261/toxic-algae-warning-for-swimmers-and-pets

warns of high levels of toxic algal bloom], a neurotoxin that can be harmful to people and lethal for dogs.

The sign is barely visible, hidden by foliage as tall as the sign itself, and it is hard to know when or if the arrow indicating the risk level was last adjusted.

For Trolove, it serves as a neat metaphor for what he believes is buck-passing and a lack of care about the environment.

He believes decision-makers see anglers as an obstacle to growing the economy, yet fishing is “quite a significant economy in it’s own right”, along with tourism income from overseas anglers and the risk to “brand New Zealand”.

A moss-covered sign at Chamberlain’s Ford campground warns of high levels of toxic algal bloom, a neurotoxin that can be harmful to people and lethal for dogs. Algal blooms occur naturally but are fuelled by fertiliser run off. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

More than a million cows

Since 1990, Canterbury’s dairy herd has increased by about 1000 percent, to well over a million cows.

Between 2002 and 2019, nitrogen fertiliser use in Canterbury increased 326 percent, while the area being irrigated increased by 99 percent over the same period.

According to StatsNZ, Canterbury had the largest amount of irrigated agricultural land (480,000 hectares) in the country in 2022 and accounted for 70 percent of the country’s total dairy farming irrigation.

The regional council said it did not keep information on the area under irrigation.

An Earth Sciences New Zealand-led study published in November confirmed that Canterbury has the highest percentage of elevated groundwater nitrates in the country, following testing of 3800 rural drinking water samples from private wells between 2022 and 2024.

Researchers used dual nitrate isotope testing, known as a “chemical fingerprint”, to identify cow urine as a primary cause.

The nitrate-nitrogen limit in drinking water is 11.3 milligrams per litre (mg/L) but the standard to protect aquatic ecosystem health is far lower.

The bottom line for nitrate toxicity in the national policy statement for freshwater management, which the government has signalled it will replace, is 2.4 mg/L.

While 2.4mg/L was a steep drop from the previous limit of 6.9mg/L, many believe the figure is too high to protect the health of rivers.

The latest regional council testing of nine Selwyn rivers, streams or drains found all were well above the national bottom line.

Scientists and environmental groups argue other effects of nitrate, including runaway weed and algal growth fed by agricultural fertiliser run-off, cause big drops in oxygen levels in rivers and lakes, suffocating fish at far lower levels.

‘They can’t die twice’

Victoria University freshwater ecologist Dr Mike Joy said the 2.4mg/L freshwater nitrate limit was based on a “false flag” and did little to protect ecosystem health and biodiversity in Canterbury waterways.

“2.4mg/L is about nitrate toxicity, which is a non-existent problem, it’s way less than that where you get algal blooms and hypoxia from lack of oxygen, which is what gets rid of the fish,” he said.

“I would go on record as saying the only fish that ever died of nitrate toxicity in New Zealand were the ones in the fish tank when they were coming up with that number. They’re already dead at 1mg/L because at that level you get algal blooms and the algae takes up the oxygen.”

Joy said there was no single reason for declining fish stocks but intensive agriculture was the common thread.

“Less water, more nitrates, climate change, stop-banking. It’s never one thing, it’s a combination of things,” he said.

Victoria University freshwater ecologist Dr Mike Joy says intensive dairying on the Canterbury Plains has created a feedback loop of water extraction and nitrate pollution. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Water takes fuelling increased nitrate levels

Joy described a “feedback loop” of large scale water extraction for irrigation transforming the Canterbury plains into one of the country’s dairy hubs.

“The extraction is what you need to have that intensity of cattle. You couldn’t have that many cows without the irrigation, that means you have way more cows per hectare because you’ve got the water to be able to grow the grass, so then you’ve got more cows, more urine, more nitrate pollution,” he said.

“Less water in the river means higher concentration of the nutrients but before we had irrigation we didn’t have cows and so we didn’t have a problem.”

A February regional council report noted serious limitations on the council’s water data, including around 20 percent of water-take points not providing data, an improvement on the 40 percent that were not providing infomation when the report was last prepared a decade ago.

In 2020-2021, 3636 million cubic metres of water was taken from Canterbury’s surface and groundwater sources, the vast majority for irrigation.

In September regional councillors voted nine to seven in favour of declaring a nitrate emergency, although some branded the move a political stunt, virtue signalling and an attack on Canterbury farmers.

Joy said he held little hope the declaration alone would improve the region’s water quality.

“Big deal, call an emergency, but you’ve got to do something about it before it means anything,” he said.

A fading way of life

Salmon Anglers Association president Paul Hodgson said he had witnessed the decimation of salmon and other fisheries.

“I’ve been out to the Selwyn in the last few years and instead of having a diverse aquatic life and bugs and beetles and all sorts of things, the only thing of any great quantity that’s in the river is snails, and that’s usually the last thing to go,” he said.

New Zealand Salmon Anglers Association president Paul Hodgson is angry years of warnings have fallen on deaf ears. RNZ

Anglers spend hundreds of hours, year after year on the water, and saw changes first-hand, Hodgson said.

“When I used to go fishing, you’d look at the side of the river and you’d see this black line of silveries coming in. There had to be millions of them coming in. The silveries – known by a number of different names, including Stockell’s smelt, stocko and others – they underpin the food web. Once they disappear, they’ve gone and the whole network around the river disappears,” he said.

The association has embarked on an oral history project to record memories of what Hodgson feared was a fading way of life, affecting both anglers and the social fabric around the river.

“The river mouths often have baches or cribs and there’d be anglers in every single one of them, now it’s more like they’ve become retirement homes. The anglers have sold up and shifted out because it’s just simply not worth going there anymore. It’s almost like there’s been a death in the family,” he said.

Hodgson said his father, also a keen angler, warned of the decline decades ago.

“People of his generation were concerned enough to write letters to ECan and to chase up Fish and Game and to chase up the Department of Conservation, we’d go, ‘hey look guys, are you seeing this?’ And all the things that we talked about have now happened or are happening,” he said.

The situation had reached a tipping point, Hodgson said.

“If you can’t go to the river and eat the fish in the river, if you can’t go to the river and swim in it, if you can’t go to the river and drink the water, where are we at? Where do we go from here? Because that’s where we’re at today,” he said.

’20 years too late’ to be gathering information

Canterbury Regional Council is responsible for managing land and water use, setting pollution limits, issuing resource consents, managing water takes and designating drinking water protection zones.

A spokesperson said some surface water and groundwater zones were overallocated and had been so when the current regional plan became operative in 2015.

“This plan set allocation limits, which in many catchments had already been exceeded,” they said.

Asked to clarify which, or how many water zones were overallocated, the council did not respond before deadline.

Its latest annual groundwater survey showed nitrate increasing in 62 percent of the 300 test wells.

More than 10 percent of wells tested had nitrates above the drinking water limit, including 18 of the 56 test wells (31 percent) in the Ashburton zone.

Since the start of 2025, when a temporary [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/country/580278/thirty-two-more-dairy-farms-for-canterbury-some-grain-growers-go-for-milk

restriction on intensive dairy conversions] ended, the council has issued discharge consents allowing for a potential increase of up to 25,800 dairy cattle.

Some Canterbury dairy farmers are striving to limit nitrate leaching by planting special crops and experimenting with new winter grazing systems.

Chair Deon Swiggs voted against declaring a nitrate emergency when the previous council narrowly passed a motion brought by outgoing councillor Vicki Southworth.

He told RNZ he stood by that decision but hoped the declaration would raise awareness about nitrate.

“Once people have a bit more understanding of what it is we can work with the industry to start addressing some of the problems where there are hotspots and where there are issues,” he said.

“The science people are working with other scientists around the region as well to start standing up the science, start standing up the industry response so that everybody can get on the same page. The last thing we want is people to not believe there’s is an issue when there potentially is an issue.”

Swiggs said the council had no choice but to follow rules set at a national level and cautioned against singling out dairy farming.

“Nitrate comes from all sorts of different sources. If you’re trying to pin nitrate just on cows, nitrate is because people are putting nitrogen onto the soil. All land use activities, including farming for food production, uses nitrate,” he said.

Asked about nitrate isotope testing confirming the dairy industry as a primary source, Swiggs said, “We have a lot of cows in Canterbury”.

Deputy chair Iaean Cranwell, who voted in favour of the emergency declaration, said issue was “very complex”.

“We know there’s an issue in Canterbury and I think everyone agrees there’s an issue across all communities,” he said.

“Even though there was work happening and there were conversations, it wasn’t out in the open. I think all that [the emergency declaration] has done is actually saying we have an issue and what are we going to do about it?” he said.

Regional council deputy chair Iaean Cranwell says the council is hamstrung by central government mandates. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Cranwell said the council could consider mandating lower dairy stocking rates – Canterbury has the highest in the country, according to Dairy NZ – but it would need to go through a planning process “hamstrung” by the upheaval of freshwater and resource management laws.

The government’s move in July to halt all council planning work until Resource Management Act reforms were complete had further complicated its response, he said.

“If the regulation allowed that, I’m sure that’s one thing you could look at, but at this current time we cannot look at our planning regime,” Cranwell said.

Otago University research fellow Marnie Prickett criticised the council’s approach.

“That’s just not good enough. It’s not leadership, it’s treading water and it’s not acting in the interests of their people who are relying on them to protect their drinking water,” she said.

Along with fellow academics Dr Tim Chambers and Professor Simon Hales, Prickett presented to the council in March, calling for [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/544734/academics-call-for-urgent-action-on-nitrate-pollution

urgent action on the “water pollution crisis”].

The trio advised the council to conduct an independent analysis of why nitrate levels keep rising, look at gaps in the council’s data collection and request the auditor-general conduct a conflict of interest review, all things that could be done regardless of central government reforms, she said.

It was 20 years too late to be talking about gathering information, raising awareness or standing up the science, Prickett said.

“We’re beyond the point where we have to identify what the problem is. I think we know what the problem is.”

University of Otago research fellow Marnie Prickett says the regional council’s response to the water pollution crisis is not good enough. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Grief for a lost river

As he sets off on another round of water sampling, Trolove is motivated not only by his love of the rivers and streams but the loss of possibilities for his children and their children.

“It pains me that the next generation won’t have what I had,” he said.

The way decisions were made that has left some without safe drinking water and whittled away fishing spots to remote high country rivers made his blood boil.

“Where is the equity for the ratepayer in Selwyn who looks like paying $400 million for Rolleston to go and develop source water near the Waimak (Waimakariri) to pump around the towns and rapidly growing region because we can no longer dig a hole in the ground?

“Where is the equity for the people in Ashburton who are having to pay? Not the farmers – the people in the town who will have to pay in the future to pump water across the Ashburton River so Tinwald can have safer water.

“Where was the democracy and where was the discussion?”

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

Review: Avatar: Fire and Ash – a technical spectacle, but I lost interest

Source: Radio New Zealand

As the third Avatar film arrives in cinemas, it is fascinating to see how many people are still prepared to bet against James Cameron.

I recall being skeptical before the first film in the series was released back in 2009. I wasn’t at all sure about the character designs for the indigenous Na’vi people (blue, pointy ears, tails!) and the performance capture technology that Cameron was relying on was still in its infancy. And then the film landed with a splash and I was giddy to go along for the ride.

But commentators were certain that the second one couldn’t repeat the success of the first. He’d left it too long between pictures, they said (13 years). The first film had left no discernible cultural footprint. No one would remember who these characters were. But The Way of Water arrived and blew the box office away to the tune of another two billion dollars.

This video is hosted on Youtube.

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

Review: Avatar: Fire and Ash – a technical spectacle, but I lost interest

Source: Radio New Zealand

As the third Avatar film arrives in cinemas, it is fascinating to see how many people are still prepared to bet against James Cameron.

I recall being skeptical before the first film in the series was released back in 2009. I wasn’t at all sure about the character designs for the indigenous Na’vi people (blue, pointy ears, tails!) and the performance capture technology that Cameron was relying on was still in its infancy. And then the film landed with a splash and I was giddy to go along for the ride.

But commentators were certain that the second one couldn’t repeat the success of the first. He’d left it too long between pictures, they said (13 years). The first film had left no discernible cultural footprint. No one would remember who these characters were. But The Way of Water arrived and blew the box office away to the tune of another two billion dollars.

This video is hosted on Youtube.

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

Australia’s gun law ‘complacency’ a result of early success, expert says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Gun control expert Rebecca Peters. Supplied

An international firearm regulation expert says the shooting at Bondi is not a sign gun laws aren’t effective – rather, it’s a wake up call for Australia’s enforcement.

A father and son targeted a Jewish festival on Sunday evening, killing 15 people with legally-owned rifles.

NSW Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon said the elder, Sajid Akram, had been a licensed firearms holder for the past 10 years and legally owned six firearms. Six firearms were recovered from the scene.

Rebecca Peters is the former director of the International Action Network on Small Arms, and was the leader of the grassroots movement in Australia to change gun laws following the Port Arthur Massacre.

She told RNZ since that success almost 30 years ago, Australia’s standards had slipped.

“Complacency has been one of the results of the success of our gun laws initially,” she said. “We have had a reduction in gun violence, and so it hasn’t seemed so important, I guess, to the police and certainly to the parliaments.”

For example, it was a requirement for a gun owner to be a member of a gun club, and then clubs would assist with enforecement by notifying authorities of any no-shows, which might imply they’d been citing recreation dishonestly as a reason to get a gun. She questioned whether that was still rigorously followed.

“Over the years, we’ve found that all of the enforcement of the laws has become much more lax, especially on renewal.”

It’s been revealed the younger of the gunmen, Naveed Akram, 24, had long-standing links to Australia’s pro-Islamic State (IS) network, although he was not on any terrorism watchlists.

Still, Peters said those links should have been enough to prevent his father owning a firearm – let alone six.

Photographs of the attack indicate the weapons used were not semi-automatic. Peters said those were capable of causing much more harm, as they far reduced the time needed to reload, which meant more time firing bullets.

She said it still raised questions about the necessity of owning weapons capable of causing such harm for the purposes of recreation.

Data showed most Australians who owned guns lived in the cities and suburbs, she said. “Now, the average number of guns owned by a gun owner is four. And most Australians are really taken aback to think, ‘Why are people in the suburbs being considered to have legitimate reasons to have four guns?’”

She said the rules needed to be reassessed. “I think some kind of measures to limit the numbers, and to just really, really pay close attention to the question of has this person has really justified [their need to own a gun]?”

Even if that vastly increased the workload for police and other relevant authorities?

“I think ask anyone in Australia, do you think that’s fair to ask the police to really do a careful examination of who you’re arming with this product designed to destroy bodies, do we think extra paying attention and digging around is worth it? Absolutely.”

The Australian government agreed change was needed. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese convened an urgent meeting of national cabinet on Monday afternoon, where premiers and first ministers unanimously agreed to bolster rules around gun ownership.

On the table were options to hasten work on a national firearms register, new rules to limit the number of guns a person could own, and further restriction of legal weapon types.

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

Economists forecast tough calls to get books back to black

Source: Radio New Zealand

Finance Minister Nicola Willis speaking at the Half Year Economic and Fiscal Update. RNZ

Economists say the government is stuck between a rock and a hard place off the back of Treasury’s latest economic forecasts.

Tuesday’s Half-Year Fiscal and Economic Update (HYEFU) saw a budget surplus stretch further out of reach, to 2029/2030.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis has promised to get the books back to black a year earlier while continuing to run “a tight ship”.

“We have taken a deliberate, medium term approach to fiscal consolidation that minimises the impact on individuals and on public service delivery, but also, crucially, shows a credible path to surplus and debt reducing as a proportion of the economy.”

Infometrics chief executive Brad Olsen said no matter what way it was cut, politicians faced tough calls both now and in the future.

“At the moment, there’s a really limited amount of additional new spending to afford all of the increasing costs of providing government services. Health becomes more expensive, education becomes more expensive.

“The government doesn’t have a lot of options here, and that means that over time, you’re still seeing the government books being in deficit all the way up to around 2030 or so.

“The government wants to see that return earlier but at the moment the fiscals aren’t stacking up and the government will still spend more than it’s earning for a considerable period of time.”

Infometrics chief executive Brad Olsen. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Olsen said the coalition would have to to pursue deeper cuts if it wanted to have a shot at reaching surplus before Treasury’s forecast period.

“The challenge for the government is that they’ve got a lot of commitments that they’ve made to a lot of different areas.

“There’s a lot of baked-in spending from previous decisions by previous governments, and the current government, that have to be paid for.

“At the moment it means that they’ve got a lot that needs to be done, not a lot of fiscal room to move, which realistically means for the Finance Minister, she has to say no a heck of a lot more than she can ever say yes.”

Independent economist Cameron Bagrie said conversation about the sustainability of superannuation could not be avoided forever.

“If you look at Treasury’s statement on the long term fiscal position, we face some very tough, intense trade-offs going forward because on current policy projections government debt is going to go to 180 percent of GDP in 30 to 40 years as New Zealand superannuation and health expenditure basically explode, courtesy of demographics.

“So tweaking New Zealand KiwiSaver around the edges is not going to make a real big difference here.

“At the end of the day, we’ve got to put some pretty tough decisions on the table here going forward, whether we’re going to return to what’s called sustainable fiscal position in the next four to five years, or in the next 10 to 20 years. There’s no easy choices here.”

Independent economist Cameron Bagrie. RNZ / Alexander Robertson

It all comes as the Taxpayers’ Union runs a targeted campaign to pressure Willis to slash spending.

Willis challenged its chair Ruth Richardson to a public debate last week, saying she would go toe-to-toe with her predecessor “anytime, anywhere”.

It’s a quote that’s come back to bite the Minister, given the Taxpayers Union offered to meet on Newstalk ZB on Thursday.

The offer had not been accepted, though there were still two days to go until the week was out.

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

Funeral home reunites families with unclaimed ashes, but over 800 still in storage

Source: Radio New Zealand

Morrisons Funerals have over 800 ashes sitting in storage. (File photo)

An Auckland funeral home has reunited unclaimed ashes with about a dozen families, but still has over 800 remaining unclaimed after a call-out before a mass interment.

In September, Morrisons Funerals said it had a secured room full of over 700 unclaimed ashes urns and in the coming months it was planning a mass interment to lay the ashes to rest – this number had now risen to over 800.

Location manager Natasha Plunkett said families had been given until the end of November to come forward, but due to the sheer volume of ashes and the discovery that many belonged to returned servicemen, the date had now been extended until early 2026.

The unclaimed ashes ranged from the 1930s up to 2020, she said.

Plunkett said about 10 to 15 of the ashes had now been reunited with families, but a number of organisations had come forward offering to help with the mammoth task.

A few cemeteries had also offered to donate plots.

In some cases, spouses of those who had died had been identified in cemeteries across New Zealand, so investigations were underway to see if they could be taken to the same place.

Plunkett said they had found many of the ashes belonged to returned servicemen who may no longer have any living relatives.

“We have ashes from someone who lived to be over 100 and outlived all their relatives,” she said.

There were various reasons as to why ashes were unclaimed, Plunkett said, a common reason was just due to miscommunication within families.

She said a lot of grandchildren had been in touch looking to find the ashes of their long dead grandparents.

“There’s been a lot of joy really that we were still holding them and [they] could be reunited.”

Some of the families had felt embarrassed about coming forward after so much time had passed, she said, but most had the best intentions.

Anyone who thought they might have a loved one whose ashes were never collected from Morrisons Funerals could reach out to the funeral home by emailing tributes@morrisons.co.nz or calling 09 836 0029.

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

Jevon McSkimming case a wake-up call to child abuse ‘at every level’, charity says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ex-deputy police commissioner Jevon McSkimming. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Warning: This story discusses sexual abuse, which some may find disturbing.

Jevon McSkimming’s sentencing on Wednesday should serve as a wake-up call to how common sex abuse images have become – and to help perpetrators stop accessing them, according to a child protection charity.

The ex-deputy police commissioner pleaded guilty last month to possessing objectionable publications, including child sexual exploitation and bestiality.

Seventeen other police staff had been under investigation in relation to “misuse and inappropriate content” as a result of a subsequent audit. Among six stood down was an experienced detective who allegedly also possessed objectionable material.

The cases have brought home to people how prevalent accessing extreme content is “at every level”, said ECPAT Child Alert national director Eleanor Parkes.

“People are surprised when they hear about this happening – and it is completely outrageous and horrific, but it is not a surprise to us. And if there’s one, there’s more. We really need to step up our efforts around the prevention space and not be waiting until someone is found out for the types of content that they’re searching for online, which are deeply harmful to children.”

Some perpetrators realise they need help to stop them getting into more serious images or offending, she said.

ECPAT Child Alert national director Eleanor Parkes. Supplied / ECPAT Child Alert

“If we’re waiting until someone has fed that need and that desire and they’re well down the line of the extreme types of content that they’re seeking – that is much more difficult to help those people.

“We need to be making sure people who are starting to become concerned about their sexual preferences can get support in the early days. There is strong evidence that some of the programmes that we have in New Zealand for people to seek support in those early days are effective.

“And I can completely understand why members of the public take a more black and white approach and just say ‘harsher sentencing’. But that really isn’t what is going to be keeping our children safe.”

She stressed that the content is not pornography, but demand-fuelled sexual abuse of children. “The people who are accessing these images and these videos are doing real harm. They shouldn’t think of the perpetrators as being elsewhere. They are perpetrating this harm.”

McSkimming told a colleague that over the years he had needed different types of imagery to “make him feel anything, and it just kept escalating”.

Of the sessions police analysed, 880 objectionable images included 812 of adult bestiality and 68 of child sexual exploitation material. The remaining 2065 photos and videos showed bestiality (63 percent) and child sexual exploitation (37 percent). His searches included AI material, and computer-generated images.

As well as being deputy commissioner, McSkimming was appointed chief security officer for Police in March 2021. His membership of the Security and Privacy Reference Group gave him knowledge of information security controls applied to internet use.

McSkimming pleaded guilty to three representative charges of possessing objectionable publications, and would be sentenced at Wellington District Court on Wednesday.

Help for perpetrators

Online pictures and videos accessible worldwide depict the sexual abuse of more than 300 million children a year, according to university researchers.

Last week, Australian police revealed what they claim is an international ‘satanic’ child sex abuse material ring operating in suburban Sydney.

“One of the ongoing challenges in this area is that many people who experience concerning sexual thoughts or behaviours simply don’t know that specialist support services exist, or that these services can be effective,” said ECPAT’s Parkes.

“People in this situation often feel alone, ashamed, and unsure where to turn. Because the experience is highly secretive and stigmatised, secrecy itself can become a barrier that prevents early intervention. Even when someone does know that help is available, taking the first step can feel extremely difficult. People can worry about repercussions, especially if they have viewed harmful material.”

Worrying that family or partners would find out and fear of their reactions – being judged or rejected – was a significant emotional hurdle, she said, as well as concerns about legal consequences.

Specialist organisations such as WellStop, STOP, and SafeNetwork provide early intervention and treatment for concerning or harmful sexual behaviour.

“They work on preventing sexual harm before it occurs and providing early support for children, young people, and adults through specialist pathways, combining therapy, risk management, education, and when appropriate support for the wider whānau or community around the person,” she said.

“Referrals for children and young people often come through family members, schools, or community professionals, and the support extends beyond the individual to include the people in their lives who may need guidance and reassurance. These services can be very effective.”

People who completed specialist programmes had considerably lower reoffending rates than those who did not. “The services don’t work perfectly for every individual, but the overall evidence is clear that they significantly reduce sexual harm, especially when accessed early and when properly resourced.

“Demand for early intervention and specialist treatment is growing, and sustainable funding is essential if we want these services to remain accessible, visible, and properly supported.”

Where to get help:

  • Need to Talk? Free call or text 1737 any time to speak to a trained counsellor, for any reason.
  • Lifeline: 0800 543 354 or text HELP to 4357.
  • Suicide Crisis Helpline: 0508 828 865 / 0508 TAUTOKO. This is a service for people who may be thinking about suicide, or those who are concerned about family or friends.
  • Depression Helpline: 0800 111 757 or text 4202.
  • Samaritans: 0800 726 666.
  • Youthline: 0800 376 633 or text 234 or email talk@youthline.co.nz.
  • What’s Up: 0800 WHATSUP / 0800 9428 787. This is free counselling for 5 to 19-year-olds.
  • Asian Family Services: 0800 862 342 or text 832. Languages spoken: Mandarin, Cantonese, Korean, Vietnamese, Thai, Japanese, Hindi, Gujarati, Marathi, and English.
  • Rural Support Trust Helpline: 0800 787 254.
  • Healthline: 0800 611 116.
  • Rainbow Youth: (09) 376 4155.
  • OUTLine: 0800 688 5463.

Sexual Violence

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

WorkSafe files charge following worker’s fatal fall from scissor lift

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

WorkSafe has filed a charge in relation to the death of a Chinese worker who fell from a scissor lift during work last December.

The worker came to New Zealand on a visa to work for an Auckland aluminium company.

The worker fell from a scissor lift while working at the company’s North Shore warehouse last year and passed away in hospital a few days later.

A spokesperson from WorkSafe said the department has filed a charge under the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 following an extensive investigation.

The department didn’t identify the charged party as the matter is now pending a first hearing in the North Shore District Court.

It said that a person conducting a business or undertaking had a duty to ensure the health and safety of workers who worked for them so far as was reasonably practicable.

However, in this case, the person conducting a business or undertaking failed to comply with that duty while the worker was “loading aluminium beams into racking above 2 metres”, and “that failure exposed workers to a risk of serious injury or death”.

“Falls from height remain one of the most unforgiving risks in the manufacturing industry,” said Brad Duggan, WorkSafe’s regional manager.

“This case is a stark reminder that working at height demands disciplined planning, the right equipment and controls that are followed on the ground.

“When those basics slip, the consequences can be catastrophic. It’s vital that businesses step up and make sure their people are protected before any work at height begins.”

The worker’s wife said a weight had been lifted off her mind upon receiving the WorkSafe update.

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

Mid-year budget update will project deficit of nearly $37 billion for current financial year

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

Wednesday’s budget update will project a deficit of $36.8 billion for this financial year, which is $5.4 billion better than forecast in the Pre-election Economic and Fiscal Outlook (PEFO) issued before the May election.

The update projects deficits that are slightly better in every year over the forward estimates than forecast at the election. Cumulatively, the deficit is $8.4 billion better than over the four years to 2028-29 than PEFO.

The government earlier revealed the update will contain $20 billion in savings.

Despite critics attacking the level of federal spending, the government says it is exercising spending restraint, ensuring net policy decisions are positive for the first time in eight years, with net decisions improving the bottom line by $2.2 billion.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says the update will be “all about responsible economic management”.

“We’re not only improving the bottom line but also ensuring that essential services, like support for veterans, disaster recovery, and the aged pension, remain robust and responsive to community needs,” Chalmers said.

At the weekend Chalmers stressed the update was not a mini budget. “There’s not a lot of new stuff in there, But there’s a lot of hard yards to make room for our commitments and the big pressures on the budget which are intensifying rather than easing,” he told Sky News.

The government has avoided some extra spending by announcing it won’t extend the energy rebate that has been easing household power bills. That expires at end of this month.

But it revealed at the weekend a massive blowout in the cost of its subsidy for installing batteries. The subsidy was earlier estimated to cost $2.3 billion up to 2030. But the projected cost was headed to $14 billion, because people were disproportionately buying large batteries. The government responded with extra funding and changes to the scheme, which is now set to cost $7.2 billion over four years.

Independent economist Chris Richardson said the budget update will have some “revenue rainbows”.

Richardson said revenues were up because of higher than expected inflation, key export prices holding up (and gold prices soaring), and AI-fuelled sharemarkets boosting the tax take on super and on capital gains.

Deloitte Access Economics Partner Stephen Smith said: “Escalating spending pressures and an outdated tax system are expected to mean budget deficits as far as the eye can see.

“It is imperative that greater attention be paid to government expenditure, particularly through the systematic adoption of program and policy evaluation to amend, continue, or discard programs based on their efficacy. In addition, a careful root and branch review of expenditure responsibilities between the Commonwealth and the states and territories is long overdue.

“Critically, a focus on well-considered tax reform that turns deficits into surpluses, boosts productivity and growth, and enhances equity in our tax system is needed.”

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

ref. Mid-year budget update will project deficit of nearly $37 billion for current financial year – https://theconversation.com/mid-year-budget-update-will-project-deficit-of-nearly-37-billion-for-current-financial-year-271946

Mid-year budget update will project deficit of nearly $37 billion for current financial year

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

Wednesday’s budget update will project a deficit of $36.8 billion for this financial year, which is $5.4 billion better than forecast in the Pre-election Economic and Fiscal Outlook (PEFO) issued before the May election.

The update projects deficits that are slightly better in every year over the forward estimates than forecast at the election. Cumulatively, the deficit is $8.4 billion better than over the four years to 2028-29 than PEFO.

The government earlier revealed the update will contain $20 billion in savings.

Despite critics attacking the level of federal spending, the government says it is exercising spending restraint, ensuring net policy decisions are positive for the first time in eight years, with net decisions improving the bottom line by $2.2 billion.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says the update will be “all about responsible economic management”.

“We’re not only improving the bottom line but also ensuring that essential services, like support for veterans, disaster recovery, and the aged pension, remain robust and responsive to community needs,” Chalmers said.

At the weekend Chalmers stressed the update was not a mini budget. “There’s not a lot of new stuff in there, But there’s a lot of hard yards to make room for our commitments and the big pressures on the budget which are intensifying rather than easing,” he told Sky News.

The government has avoided some extra spending by announcing it won’t extend the energy rebate that has been easing household power bills. That expires at end of this month.

But it revealed at the weekend a massive blowout in the cost of its subsidy for installing batteries. The subsidy was earlier estimated to cost $2.3 billion up to 2030. But the projected cost was headed to $14 billion, because people were disproportionately buying large batteries. The government responded with extra funding and changes to the scheme, which is now set to cost $7.2 billion over four years.

Independent economist Chris Richardson said the budget update will have some “revenue rainbows”.

Richardson said revenues were up because of higher than expected inflation, key export prices holding up (and gold prices soaring), and AI-fuelled sharemarkets boosting the tax take on super and on capital gains.

Deloitte Access Economics Partner Stephen Smith said: “Escalating spending pressures and an outdated tax system are expected to mean budget deficits as far as the eye can see.

“It is imperative that greater attention be paid to government expenditure, particularly through the systematic adoption of program and policy evaluation to amend, continue, or discard programs based on their efficacy. In addition, a careful root and branch review of expenditure responsibilities between the Commonwealth and the states and territories is long overdue.

“Critically, a focus on well-considered tax reform that turns deficits into surpluses, boosts productivity and growth, and enhances equity in our tax system is needed.”

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

ref. Mid-year budget update will project deficit of nearly $37 billion for current financial year – https://theconversation.com/mid-year-budget-update-will-project-deficit-of-nearly-37-billion-for-current-financial-year-271946

Big music festivals struggle as cost of living bites

Source: Radio New Zealand

2026 will be the last year for the Splore music festival. Sigrid Yiakmis

The classic summer festival is the latest loser in the cost of living crisis, with another iconic event announcing its downfall today.

Splore is part of a growing list of struggling festivals, with big names like WOMAD and One Love also on pause.

But with many young people still crying out for a summer experience, some smaller events are hoping they can pick up punters let down by the big festivals.

Splore organiser John Minty announced today that 2026 would be the last year for the festival, which kicked off in 1998.

Minty told Morning Report that shutting down for good was the last thing he wanted.

“We took a year off last year hoping things would pick up but ticket sales haven’t been tracking where we need them to be to feel confident that it’s financially sustainable going into the future.”

With the cost of living biting down hard, a number of people Checkpoint spoke to said they were cutting costs back where they could, and festivals were one of the items getting the chop.

“I want to go to all of them obviously, but you do have to pick and choose, things like Electric Avenue I didn’t go last year, I’m not going this year but everyone I know is going and it’s so expensive,” said one festivalgoer.

Despite wanting to go, others told Checkpoint they were missing out events like Laneway, Rhythm and Vines and Soundsplash due to the costs.

Other festivals to put a pause on things over the past couple of years include One Love and Bay Dreams.

The lights were on for WOMAD 2025. Fede Pagola

Long-running Taranaki festival WOMAD is also taking 2026 off after a tough few years.

Organiser Suzanne Porter said while it was a hard decision, low ticket sales meant it was the best option.

“We came out of post covid with our costs will have increased by over 30 percent, freight, artists, and at the same time you’ve got a cost of living crisis so you’re trying to keep your ticket price, we didn’t put our ticket price up at all for those three festivals, so it’s just a perfect storm really.”

While she hoped for a successful comeback in 2027, the future remained uncertain.

“We are hopeful that things will improve, we have seen interest rates come down so hopefully people discretionary income has improved slightly.”

Despite all the festival flops, the young people Checkpoint spoke to all agreed that it was worth scraping the money together to ensure they could enjoy at least one festival each summer.

“I think it’s for the experience really, festivals are a fun time and a time to meet like-minded people, and why wouldn’t you want to see your favourite artist even if it is really pricey.

“It’s just something I don’t want to compromise on, it’s the highlight of summer.”

While many big names are struggling to survive, others continue to thrive despite Challenging times.

Electric Avenue in Christchurch. SUPPLIED / TEAM EVENT

Christchurch’s Electric Avenue is going stronger than ever after expanding from one day to two last year.

Organiser Callam Mitchell told Checkpoint tickets for the 2026 festival sold out in minutes, and with the demand they could have sold another 50,000.

Mitchell said the festival has doubled in size over the past five years, while ticket prices went up an average of 14 percent from 2025 to 2026.

“Ultimately people still want to do things even during this economic climate, we’ve worked have to make sure we’re at the top of peoples list.”

Matakanarama music festival Supplied

As the big names pull out, some smaller festival organisers have also remained optimistic, hoping to be a new option for punters left in the lurch.

Along with their mates Finn Geraets and Michael Coutts, Scott Mueller and Rob Newey took a leap and started up Matakanarama last year.

Mueller said what was originally a private Facebook event went from strength to strength, and the three-day New Year’s festival has now upscaled its capacity from 350 to 1500 this year.

“With that comes increases in essentially everything, obviously the budget is considerably higher, but with that come much more impressive artists and much more scope to do these cool little creative things.”

Matakanarama festival organisers (from left) Scott Mueller, Robert Newey, Finn Geraets, Michael Coutts. Supplied

The friends said that being the same age as their audience has helped them figure out how much people are willing to splash out on a summer experience.

“It’s such a tricky thing to have faith that we’re making the right decisions because what sort of feedback you take on, it’s all sort of anecdotal through people we know, I guess one of the fortunate pieces we have being the age we are knowing the crowd that we’re trying to appeal to, we have a complete 100 percent direct understanding of the financial situation of a lot of people.

“In terms of our ticket price, we always wanted to make it competitive compared to our direct and not so direct competitors, and for a three day ticket we’re actually undercutting our competitors quite effectively.”

Despite big competition and uncertain times, the boys were confident they could continue to upscale and create a community that wanted to keep coming back.

“I just hope we’ve built a robust enough system that will allow us to survive through these years and if we can make it through these tougher years then we’ve proved to ourselves that we have a pretty good framework for the better years to come.”

Matakanarama music festival Supplied

While big festivals going down is daunting, the team believed their small size had helped them out.

“There are definitely nerves, it’s more of a quiet voice in the back of your head than it is this north star, but I think when you look at a lot of the festivals that are struggling at the moment they’re a lot of the huge operations with massive fixed costs and we’ve designed our festival from the ground up to be pretty flexible and scalable.

“Thankfully, because we are in such a relatively early stage of operation we’re not at a point where we’re relying on these massive ticket sales to actually even break even.”

Mueller and Newey said they are confident they can continue to thrive in future years, but at the moment are focused on getting through the next 13 days before the party kicks off.

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

New Reserve Bank Governor Anna Breman talks to Corinn Dann: ‘Financial market conditions have tightened’

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Reserve Bank Governor Anna Breman will not hesitate again to issue a statement for markets to understand how she interprets the economy.

Breman sat down for an extensive interview with Morning Report presenter and incoming RNZ business editor Corin Dann, just a day after she took the unusual step of issuing a statement about financial conditions, which she believed had gone “beyond” the RBNZ’s recent projection for interest rates.

It came on the heels of some banks raising interest rates, believing the bank may raise the official cash rate, despite it cutting the OCR to 2.25 percent late last month.

“Financial market conditions have tightened since the November decision, beyond what is implied by our central projection for the OCR,” she said in the statement. There was still the possibility of another rate cut from the path forward published in the bank’s November Monetary Policy Statement.

Breman told RNZ it was important for markets to understand how she was reading the economic data.

“I am rather new in my role – still just about two weeks into it – and I thought given that it’s a long time until the next monetary policy meeting in February, I thought it was reasonable for markets to see how I read the economic data and also to see how I relate compared to the last Monetary Policy Statement.”

She said she did not want to say whether markets were right or wrong, but the forecast the Reserve Bank had for the official cash rate was different to how the market reacted.

“So there is still a small probability, but it’s still a probability, that we’ll do another rate cut in the near term. We will get much more information how the economy is evolving over just the coming days. We’ll get GDP numbers, we get inflation numbers out in January and all of this will be important when we go into our next meeting.”

Breman – a Swedish economist who was First Deputy Governor of the central bank of Sweden until taking over NZ Reserve Bank Governor on 1 December – said she would not hesitate to make a statement again. She said transparency was important.

“Given I am new in my role, if I comment on monetary policy, I do want everyone to have that information at the same time.”

New Reserve Bank Governor Anna Breman. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Covid

Breman described how she had been part of the monetary policy response for the Sveriges Riksbank, Sweden’s central bank. The country was known for responding quite differently in the Covid crisis to New Zealand – the Ardern government here pursued an elimination strategy, Sweden’s was more of a light touch.

“I was in the room when we made monetary policy decisions during Covid and we saw a deep recession coming. We saw even though maybe there were differences in exactly how the restrictions and the lockdown was done, we saw the economy almost in free fall.

“So it was a very severe situation and we acted to support the economy in different ways. So I think in that respect, all countries experienced a lot of both, obviously human suffering but also suffering in terms of economic loss because of the pandemic.”

In a wide-ranging interview, she was asked about the state of the New Zealand economy after Covid.

“I think that what we’re seeing now is that New Zealand has had several years with weak growth, a weak labour market, and we’re starting to see the economy recovering.

“And from my perspective, given that we see inflation also falling and being low and stable going forward, it’s very important now that we see growth that’s lasting, that we see that we have a period where growth is coming back. We see stronger labour markets while of course keeping inflation low and stable. So it’s very important and that’s also why I wanted to stress (in my statement yesterday) that the cut that the Reserve Bank did in late November that was really to support economic growth going forward.”

Cash

Breman believed it was important that people continued to have access to cash.

In a statement in November, the Reserve Bank said its research showed 80 percent of adults use cash sometimes, over half (56 percent) store cash and 8 percent rely on cash.

Breman said: “It is very important that people still have access to cash and as part of our job to ensure that. And the two parts of it is for financial inclusion. People need to be able to pay and sometimes cash is the best option. It’s also crisis preparedness. We saw that with the cyclones. There could be other reasons why the digital systems are vulnerable to attacks. So having cash in a society is important and that’s one of the things that we’re working with.”

Watch the full interview on rnz.co.nz on Wednesday morning

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

‘It will never be forgotten’ – RNZ on the ground at Bondi Beach

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tributes from mourners are piled together at the Bondi Pavilion in memory of the victims of a shooting at Bondi Beach, in Sydney on December 16, 2025. Australia's leaders have agreed to toughen gun laws after attackers killed 15 people at a Jewish festival on Bondi Beach, the worst mass shooting in decades decried as antisemitic

Tributes from mourners are piled together at the Bondi Pavilion in memory of the victims of a shooting at Bondi Beach. Saeed Khan

First Person: RNZ journalist Charlotte Cook is in Sydney to cover the aftermath of the Bondi Beach terror attack, and says people on the street are not returning smiles, because they are holding back the tears.

I have been a journalist for six and a half years, and this is the second terrorist attack I have covered.

I had been a journalist for three months for the first one – Christchurch, 2019.

It has been nearly seven years since then, but the shock and horror here in Sydney feels awfully familiar.

Bondi Beach is a place famous for its beauty, world-class surf, golden sand and blue sea. Today it feels grey, colourless.

Even the abandoned beach towels on the railing of the walkway flutter lifelessly. They were left as people scrambled in terror to get away from the sound of more than 100 gunshots ringing through the area.

RNZ's Charlotte Cook at Bondi Beach following the terrorist attack which claimed 15 lives.

RNZ’s Charlotte Cook at Bondi Beach following the terrorist attack which claimed 15 lives. Charlotte Cook

The mosque attacks also left Christchurch like that. Dulled by the great weight of what had happened. Blood spilled, lives lost, sorrow embedded in the earth. Even the rows of memorial flowers struggled against the grief.

I am told people ran from the northside of Bondi in horror, fleeing from the shots. For those on the main road, the rounds of fire were so loud they could not work out how far away they were or where they were coming from.

Onlookers thought someone was charging, chasing behind and opening fire on the beachgoers. The fear amplified when people who had barricaded themselves into shops and cafes then saw crowds running back the other way, thinking there was another shooter boxing them in.

When I greet someone on the street, in a cafe or a shop, I can tell from their sleepless, red eyes they felt that. And they will never forget it.

Items that were left behind at Bondi Beach following the terrorist attack which claimed 15 lives.

Items that were left behind at Bondi Beach following the terrorist attack which claimed 15 lives. Charlotte Cook

That is not to mention the ready access the rest of the world had to the graphic events unfolding. Before I landed in Sydney I had seen the gunmen shoot from three different camera angles, had a north and southside view of the people running, saw the inside of the local Woolworths as it went into lockdown. This played out, in near real time on social media for the whole world to see.

People I have spoken to tell me they have never seen anything like it – and neither have I.

This is different to Christchurch because of the way it played out. Thousands, if not tens of thousands felt like their lives were at risk in a active shooting environment on Bondi Beach.

While the 2019 mosque attacks devastated New Zealand and Christchurch, the biggest trauma and hurt was specifically aimed at the Muslim community. That is not to say it did not create hurt for many others – but they did not have a gun pointed at them.

Yes, Jewish people were the target here, but they were in a public space used by everyone, regardless of faith.

Mourners gather by floral tributes at the Bondi Pavillion in memory of the victims of a shooting at Bondi Beach, in Sydney on December 15, 2025.

Mourners gather by floral tributes at the Bondi Pavillion in memory of the victims of a shooting at Bondi Beach. AFP / Saeed Khan

The man sitting next to me says he was minding his own business – next minute he was giving first aid to victims. He did not want to go on the record, because he can’t put it into words yet.

The waiter brought me my lunch and said: “I really don’t feel ready to be here today, but I didn’t want anyone else to have to do it.”

The people on the street do not return my smile, because they are holding back tears.

On the other hand, the Jewish people I have spoken to today said they feel a togetherness they haven’t experienced in Australia for years. They feel seen. But they say it shouldn’t have taken this to create that.

A Hanukkah menorah is projected onto the sails of the Sydney Opera House in memory of the victims of a shooting at Bondi Beach, in Sydney on 15 December, 2025.

A Hanukkah menorah is projected onto the sails of the Sydney Opera House in memory of the victims of a shooting at Bondi Beach, in Sydney on 15 December, 2025. DAVID GRAY / AFP

Christian leaders have spoken at the vigil, chaplains are on standby for emotional support, Turbans for Australia is handing out food, even puppy therapy has been on offer.

I am not religious, but I’ve always liked the idea that even on our worst days the sun will rise again. Tomorrow the sun will rise again, it will be the fourth day of Hannukah, an event which symbolizes light triumphing over darkness. It will be three days since two terrorists attacked a peaceful event. It will be a new day.

And like Christchurch, it will never be forgotten. It will scar, deep and enduring.

But slowly, the sky and the sea will feel more blue, the sand clear and the flowers brighter.

Colour will return to Bondi, but how to make sure this doesn’t happen again and I don’t cover a third attack will be another much longer journey.

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

Mayor Wayne Brown’s rate rise not popular with former deputy chief of staff

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown says council staff have worked hard to stay within budget. Jessica Hopkins / RNZ

A lobbyist who used to work for Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown is now a critic of the city’s 7.9 percent rates rise.

Josh Van Veen was Brown’s deputy chief of staff just two months ago, but is now publicly criticising his former boss over the proposed rise in rates.

Auckland Councillors approved the mayor’s draft 2026/2027 annual budget – which included a 7.9 percent average residential rates increase – on Monday.

Mayor Brown said the increase was higher than ideal, but the new City Rail Link, set to cost roughly $235 million to run each year, was the primary driver.

Van Veen left his post at the mayor’s office after the October local body elections and is now a spokesperson for lobby group Auckland Ratepayers’ Alliance.

The group released a statement today, demanding that the mayor put a specific number on how much of the rates increase was to cover the new rail network.

“I don’t think that he has intentionally misled anyone about the rates increase, but I think that there are questions to be asked about the numbers,” Van Veen told RNZ.

The mayor has previously butted heads with the ratepayers group.

In an email in October, he told the group to “F off” after they asked him to sign a pledge to keep rates down.

Van Veen said his departure from the mayor’s office was not because of any personal issues with the mayor.

“There’s no bad blood. I think the mayor has a very hard job, and he is just one vote around the council table.

“I wear my heart on my sleeve in terms of my politics. I previously worked for the Ratepayers’ Alliance, and now I’m back. For me, it’s all about the policy, not the personalities.”

But he believed the mayor could cut spending more and advised him to ask the hard questions.

“Certainly, a lot of savings were found in the last council term. But the Ratepayers’ Alliance would argue the mayor could have gone a lot further.

“My advice is don’t take at face value any of the advice you receive from council officers. Ask the hard questions, be sceptical, be thorough.”

He said some Auckland councillors had requested that a breakdown justifying the rates increase be available for when the public was consulted on the budget in early 2026.

At the Auckland Town Hall, where councillors met on Tuesday, Brown told RNZ the proposed rates increase was in line with the council’s 2024 to 2034 Long-Term Plan.

He said council staff had worked hard to stay within budget.

“Read the papers, the annual plan has everything in it. You can find out what the cost of a park in Howick is.

“If people are too lazy to get the information, it’s not my job to take them word by word through the process.”

The mayor said the recession, infrastructure costs and rebuilding after flooding had all been costly for the city.

He only had one thing to say to Van Veen’s claim that he had not gone hard enough when it came to cutting council spending.

“He had his opportunity last term.”

The mayor was whisked away before he could answer questions about why Van Veen was no longer in his circle. His advisor said that it was an employment matter.

“It’s nothing. The contract ended,” said Brown.

The mayor’s budget would be open for public consultation from 27 February to 29 March.

Auckland Council has been asked what the dollar amount of the average rates increase proposed would be, but was unable to provide the information immediately.

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

Some dolphins appear to have orca friends – scientists think they have figured out what’s going on

Source: Radio New Zealand

How dolphins and orca can work together

By Katie Hunt for CNN

Underwater footage revealed that the killer whales were also following dolphins on their dives of up to 60 metres. File photo. AFP / FRANCO BANFI

A pod of Pacific white-sided dolphins off the coast of British Columbia have been observed cooperating with orcas, a traditional enemy that is better known for taking out great white sharks than friendly interaction.

Scientists say they have documented the dolphins and a local population of killer whales known as Northern Resident orcas teaming up to hunt the orcas’ staple food: salmon. Though other groups of orcas feast on dolphins, Northern Residents do not. Still, it is the first time this type of cooperative behaviour has been documented between the two marine mammals, researchers reported.

“Seeing them dive and hunt in sync with dolphins completely changes our understanding of what those encounters mean,” said Sarah Fortune, Canadian Wildlife Federation chair in large whale conservation and an assistant professor in Dalhousie University’s oceanography department. Fortune was the lead author of the study, which published Thursday in the journal Scientific Reports.

To witness the dolphins and orcas interacting, the researchers captured drone footage as well as underwater video by attaching suction tags to the orcas that were equipped with cameras and hydrophones.

Their footage showed that the killer whales travelled toward the dolphins and followed them at the surface level. The underwater footage revealed that the killer whales were also following dolphins on their dives of up to 60 metres, where the orcas were able to prey on Chinook salmon.

Though light levels are low at those depths, Fortune said cameras picked up the killer whales catching salmon, with clouds of blood billowing from their mouths, and hydrophones picked up the crunch of a kill.

To understand better what was happening, the researchers also eavesdropped on the echolocation clicks made by dolphins and orcas, which allow animals to navigate and sense their environment by listening to the returned echoes of the noises they make. “We can look at the characteristics of these clicks to infer whether a whale is actively chasing a prey for a fish and also whether it may have caught the fish,” Fortune said.

The researchers recorded 258 instances of dolphins and orcas interacting between 15 and 30 August 2020.

They found that all the whales that interacted with dolphins also engaged in killing, eating and searching for salmon.

Put together, the data Fortune and her colleagues collected suggested that the killer whales, fearsome predators able to take on great whites and whale sharks several times their size, were essentially using the dolphins as scouts.

“By hunting with other echolocating animals like the dolphins, they might be increasing their acoustic field of view, providing greater opportunity to detect where the salmon are. That’s sort of the prevailing thought here,” she explained. Using dolphins in this way would also allow the orcas to conserve energy, with salmon often hiding at depths to try and avoid predators such as orcas.

But what do dolphins get out of the interactions?

The video Fortune and her colleagues collected showed that once the orcas caught their prey and shared it with the pod, the dolphins were quick to eat the leftovers.

But salmon isn’t a core part of a dolphin’s diet, so greater access to food likely wasn’t the sole motivation, Fortune said. By hanging out with the orcas, dolphins likely gain protection from other orca pods that pass through the area and hunt dolphins.

In addition to the salmon-eating Northern Resident killer whales, the region is home to a distinct type of orca known as the Bigg’s or transient killer whales that specialize in eating marine mammals such as dolphins.

Interactions between Northern Residents and dolphins have occurred off north-eastern Vancouver Island for at least three decades, according to Brittany Visona-Kelly, a senior manager at Canadian conservation group Ocean Wise’s Whales Initiative, who wasn’t involved in this research but has studied the interactions between dolphins, porpoises and the same population of orcas.

In her experience, it was the dolphins that initiated interaction with the killer whales, not the other way around, and she said she was sceptical that the two were genuinely engaging in cooperative foraging. Instead, she said, the orcas may have viewed the dolphins as an annoying pest that was easier to put up with than get rid of.

“Over several years of observations, we concluded that dolphins and porpoises – not killer whales – benefit most from these encounters. Dolphins and porpoises likely gain protection from their primary predator,” she said via email.

“We suggest that Northern Resident killer whales derive no clear benefits from these interactions, but that actively avoiding or resisting them may impose greater energetic costs than tolerating them,” she added.

Fortune, however, said her team’s findings upended the prevailing view among scientists of the interactions.

“Under that paradigm, the dolphins would need to be just kind of hanging out at the surface, grubbing scraps, not exerting time and energy and effort in the process, which they certainly are,” she said, adding that her team found no evidence of antagonistic or avoidant behaviour by the orcas toward the dolphins.

What’s more, the research by Fortune and her colleagues was the first time underwater footage has been used to understand the behaviour, she added.

Cooperation between different species is relatively common in nature, but rarer among mammals and typically doesn’t involve predators, said Judith Bronstein, University Distinguished Professor in the University of Arizona’s department of ecology and evolutionary biology, who studies interspecies cooperation. However, she noted that coyotes had been observed hunting with badgers and opossums with ocelots.

Many species feed together, Bronstein said, noting that “mixed flocks of birds, mixed shoals of fish, for instance, all look out for predators.”

“What’s cool about this example is that each of the species has different abilities,” she said, “and when you look at collaboration between species, you’re always looking for the benefit that outweighs the cost.”

– CNN

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

Willis v Richardson debate unlikely to go ahead

Source: Radio New Zealand

Current Finance Minister Nicola Willis and former minister Ruth Richardson. RNZ/Reece Baker/Supplied

The debate between Finance Minister Nicola Willis and Taxpayers Union chair Ruth Richardson seems unlikely to go ahead, with Richardson saying she won’t be part of a “circus or sideshow”.

Willis last week challenged Richardson – the former National Party finance minister who championed the so-called “Mother of all Budgets” – to a debate “any time, anywhere”.

Initially laughing off the request, Richardson agreed – but the pair have been unable to settle on a time, a location or a host.

Willis directly criticised the Taxpayers Union’s rhetoric at the Half-Year Economic and Fiscal Update opening of the books on Wednesday, coming armed with a copy of the group’s proposed solutions which she said would deliver “human misery”.

She said she was still up for the debate and would be available Thursday afternoon or Friday morning, and did not care who the moderator was.

However, in a statement later in the afternoon, Richardson said instead of a good-faith roundtable discussion in a Wellington Studio, Willis had pushed for an event at Parliament chaired by Winston Peters, which would be “a circus”.

“In the face of the level of fiscal failure revealed today, it is clear why she wanted such a distraction,” Richardson said. “The outlook delivered today is the worst in 30 years. It gets lost in the billions, but no one was expecting the books to be anywhere near this bad.

“The debate was supposed to be about whether there is a credible pathway back to surplus; today’s numbers show there clearly isn’t one. Over the last two years, Minister Willis has pushed back surplus another three years. If there is a so-called ‘path to surplus’, Willis is walking the wrong way.”

She appeared to pull out of the debate entirely, saying: “I will not be party to a circus or a sideshow designed to distract from fiscal failure.”

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

Finance minister must take responsibility for state of books, say Labour, Taxpayer Union

Source: Radio New Zealand

Finance Minster Nicola Willis says going harder could hurt lower income families, while going softer was “reckless and irresponsible”. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Both Labour and the Taxpayers’ Union have hit back at criticism levelled at them by Finance Minister Nicola Willis, saying she must take responsibility for the state of the books.

Treasury’s Half Year Economic and Fiscal Update (HYEFU) – published on Tuesday – showed a surplus was not forecast until 2029/30, although Willis said the government would still target 2028/29.

The expected deficit for 2025/26 was projected to be $13.9 billion, $1.8b worse than forecast in May. A slower economy, lower tax take, higher debt costs were cited as reasons for the revisions.

In her accompanying Budget Policy Statement, Willis mounted a defence of her “deliberate, medium-term” strategy, and attacked her opponents on both the left and the right.

She acknowledged there were calls for her to take a harder approach – and cut spending faster – and those who wanted a softer approach.

But Willis said going harder could hurt lower income families and depress demand in the economy, while going softer was “reckless and irresponsible”.

She used Labour’s opposition to the government’s savings measures to create a hypothetical Labour Budget, with an increase to the deficit and the debt.

Using Treasury’s analysis of the savings the government had delivered over its first two Budgets, Willis’ office calculated that if government spending in 2024 and 2025 had not been offset by its savings programme, then the OBEGALx deficit would be $25b, and net core Crown debt would be 59 percent of GDP over the forecast period.

“We have the receipts, and unfortunately for Labour, having opposed every saving that we have delivered, they cannot take a position of responsible fiscal management,” Willis said.

But Labour leader Chris Hipkins questioned whether Willis had factored in the government’s tax cuts to those forecasts, an initiative Labour would not have gone ahead with.

“We certainly wouldn’t have delivered the tax cuts that they delivered at the last election, which have now created the structural deficit that Nicola Willis is dealing to.”

Labour’s finance spokesperson Barbara Edmonds said the government and Willis had made the wrong decisions.

“She’s blamed Labour. She’s blamed Fonterra. She’s blamed Ruth Richardson. She’s blamed the unions. She needs to have a good, hard look at these books and reflect on the choices that she’s made.”

The Green Party’s co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick said the government had created a “doom-loop” for itself.

“They have underfunded our public services and infrastructure, they have completely gutted the circumstances necessary for creation of jobs and a productive economy, which in turn has meant they have lowered their tax revenue,” she said.

“All of this has meant that we are circling the drain as a country, and these are active government decisions. Different decisions can be made.”

At her Tuesday media conference, Willis brandished a policy document from the Taxpayers’ Union, which said abolishing Working for Families tax credits would save $2.98b in 2025/26, or $14.95b over the forecast period.

Willis said such a policy would take money away from 330,000 families overnight, with beneficiaries and low-income working families to bear the biggest brunt.

“It would create a level of human misery that I, for one, am not prepared to tolerate.”

The Taxpayers’ Union head of policy and legislative affairs James Ross told RNZ not all of the suggestions in the document had to happen, but the longer it took the government to make choices, the harder it would be.

“The real story is that for the third time in just two years, the minister has seen the surplus slip back and back and back,” he said.

In the HYEFU, the cost of superannuation payments was projected to increase from $24.8b in 2025/26 to $30.9b in 2029/30 (with the number of New Zealanders receiving Super tipped to cross the one million line in 2027/28).

Willis, who temporarily put on her National party finance spokesperson hat, said “all sensible parties” should take a position on superannuation into the campaign.

A policy to raise the KiwiSaver contribution rate, announced last month, was National’s “opening shot,” Willis said, in that the party sees KiwiSaver playing a greater role in people’s retirements.

ACT leader David Seymour agreed superannuation needed to be looked at.

“There is an obvious change that just about every country we compare ourselves with is making, and that is now inevitable in New Zealand. The question is are we going to make that change slowly and gradually in our own time, or have it foisted on us by some financial crisis in the future?”

Edmonds said Labour was not prepared to change the superannuation settings “at this point,” while New Zealand First leader Winston Peters asked what had changed to make people concerned.

“When it’s only 5.2 to 5.3 percent of our GDP, half the imposition that it is in other economies, how can this be the issue?”

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

Transport subsidies for elderly and disabled people reduced

Source: Radio New Zealand

The subsidy will be reduced from 75 percent to 65 percent. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The government is cutting transport subsidies for elderly and disabled people for elderly and disabled people from 75 percent to 65 percent.

The Total Mobility scheme provides discounted taxis and public transport fares for those with long-term impairments.

Transport Minister Chris Bishop and Disability Minister Louise Upston said when the previous Labour government boosted the scheme from a 50 percent subsidy in 2022, it did not account for increased demand.

The number of registered users had increased from 108,000 to 120,000 between 2022 and 2024/25, and the number of trips increased from 1.8 million in 2018 to 3 million in 2024/25.

Bishop said the increased demand now meant the scheme was close to exceeding the funding provided by $236m sometime over the five years to 2030.

“The subsidy is split between the government and public transport authorities – local councils and the NZ Transport Agency (NZTA) – and provides an important service for the people who use the scheme,” he said.

“This is yet another fiscal cliff left to us that we are having to correct and fix. Today, the government is announcing decisions to stabilise the Total Mobility scheme so that the disability community is supported in a financially sustainable way, by all funding partners.”

This would be done by reducing the subsidy from 75 percent to 65 percent, something the Transport Agency would work towards.

The reduced costs to the Crown would be recycled back to public transport authorities to reduce the 2025 to 2030 shortfall, with the government also providing $10m.

Upston said they wanted to “stabilise” the scheme’s funding pressures “in a way that ensures financial sustainability, consistency in how the service is delivered, and fairness across New Zealand”.

She said the government would release a discussion document to consult on further changes to the scheme “to ensure fairer, consistent and more sustainable access to services for people with the greatest need”.

Labour’s Priyanca Radhakrishnan says today’s changes mean disabled New Zealanders paying more to get to work, attend appointments or see loved ones.

She said the government was making life harder and more expensive for disabled New Zealanders by making the cuts in a cost-of-living crisis.

“Slashing subsidised transport at a time when people are already struggling is out of touch especially from a government that promised to ease the cost-of-living and has instead made it worse.

“Disability communities feel betrayed. First came the overnight cut to flexible funding. Then restrictions on residential care with no warning. Then Whaikaha was gutted and disability support shifted to the Ministry of Social Development. Now, the transport subsidy many rely on to live independently has been cut.”

She said affordable transport was not a nice-to-have for many disabled New Zealanders, but a lifeline that meant independence, dignity, and the ability to participate in everyday life – which was why Labour had increased the subsidy in 2022.

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

Man jailed for more than five years for collecting child exploitation material

Source: Radio New Zealand

Storm Uriah Constable-Carter appears via video link in the Nelson District Court. RNZ / Samantha Gee

WARNING: Contains content about sexual offending against children and animals.

A Tasman man has been jailed for more than five years for collecting thousands of child exploitation photos and videos, described by a judge as graphic and horrific.

Storm Uriah Constable-Carter pleaded guilty in the Nelson District Court in August to 50 charges relating to the creation, possession and distribution of child exploitation and bestiality material.

Investigators described the material as some of the worst they had seen in more than two decades of work. It featured the extreme sexual exploitation of children and infants, and the torture and sexual abuse of a range of different animals.

The 22-year-old was charged in August after the Department of Internal Affairs’ Digital Child Exploitation Team launched an investigation after a video file, depicting bestiality involving an toddler was found in two cloud storage accounts.

Investigators found more than 60,000 objectionable publications across nine internet accounts created and controlled by Constable-Carter with more than 10,000 objectionable items shared with others.

The offending began in 2019 when Constable-Carter was 16 years old.

Judge Tony Snell described the content in Constable-Carter’s possession as being among the worst of its kind.

“Some of your charges depict the most extreme and depraved depictions of child abuse imaginable,” Judge Snell said.

“Your offending involved real infants, real toddlers, real children, real young people. It involved the horrific and sickening abuse – including rape, violations, torture – and it involved the torture and murder of animals for your sexual gratification.”

Not a victimless crime

Online child exploitation was not victimless, the judge said.

“It is a crime that fuels the cycle of sexual abuse and exploitation of real children internationally.

“There are the obvious impacts on all of the victims but that is compounded with this type of material because it is redistributed and exists forever on the internet. The abuse and trauma suffered by the victims continues forever. It can never truly be eradicated because it exists online. It is described often as shame and trauma that never ceases.”

Judge Snell said Constable-Carter was in possession of objectionable material where a set of victims had previously been identified.

In a victim impact statement, one of the victims described how she lived with the horrible knowledge someone, somewhere was watching the most terrifying moments of her life and taking grotesque pleasure in them.

“Every day people are trading and sharing videos of me as a little girl being raped in the most sadistic ways. Every time they are downloaded, I am exploited again. My privacy is breached and my life feels less and less safe.”

Investigation launched in after video flagged in cloud storage account

The Department of Internal Affairs’ Digital Child Exploitation Team began an investigation in June 2022 after they became aware a video depicting sexual exploitation of a toddler had been uploaded to a cloud storage account based in New Zealand and attributed to Constable-Carter.

The DIA received 74 referrals related to Constable-Carter from an international organisation that manages child sexual abuse reports.

“Between the nine cloud storage accounts, you were in possession of at least 60,437 objectionable photos and video files depicting the sexual abuse of children, bestiality and urination for the purpose of sexual conduct. Due to the number of files contained between these accounts, an additional 35,636 images and video files have not been able to be categorised,” a summary of facts said.

Constable-Carter used cloud storage accounts and encrypted internet communications to receive and distribute the objectionable material and discuss his sexual preferences.

Judge Snell said Constable-Carter had curated a large collection of objectionable material and was highly proficient at sharing it with others.

“You had your finger on the pulse of what you were distributing and knew it intimately well.”

There were several aggravating factors to the offending – the sexual exploitation of children, the age and vulnerability of the victims, the impact it had on them, the creation of objectionable videos, the duration and frequency of the offending, the scale of the offending, the engagement with the material, and the nature of the content, the judge said.

From a starting point of 12 years, Constable-Carter was given a combined discount of 55 per cent for his guilty plea, young age, undiagnosed psychological issues and other life circumstances, resulting in the end sentence of five years and five months in prison.

Judge Snell made an order for the forfeiture and destruction of the seized objectionable publications and an Apple iPhone used to access them.

Constable-Carter was automatically added to the Child Sex Offender register.

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’s fortnightly rubbish collection trial kicked to curb

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied / Auckland Council

Auckland Councillors have voted not to proceed with a six-month trial of fortnightly kerbside rubbish collections in parts of the city, after considering public feedback.

The proposed trial would’ve halved the number of kerbside collections in Te Atatū, Panmure, Tāmaki, Clendon Park and Weymouth, with the intention of reducing waste to landfill.

About 5000 Aucklanders had made submissions during consultation, and 78 percent had opposed the trial.

Feedback included concerns about managing fuller bins, smells, hygiene and whether they would have enough bin space, particularly in big households.

On Tuesday, the Policy, Planning and Development Committee voted to scrap the trial.

Its chairperson councillor Richard Hills said elected members took public feedback seriously and heard people’s concerns that the trial wouldn’t work well.

However, he said reducing waste to landfill remains a priority that the committee will revisit in the new year.

“Staff will return to the committee with a range of waste minimisation options in 2026,

“Feedback on the Waste Minimisation and Management Plan 2024 showed that reducing waste to landfill is important to many Aucklanders, with 66 percent of respondents supporting the overall plan and its targets,” he said.

Council’s general manager of waste solutions, Justine Haves, said council remains committed to meet its waste-minimisation target of 29 percent by 2030.

“Next year we’ll bring a range of evidence-based options that can help Aucklanders reduce waste to landfill to the Governing Body for consideration. This work will guide how we continue moving towards a more sustainable future for Tāmaki Makaurau,” she said.

During the meeting, councillor Julie Fairey raised that Auckland Council has been on the pathway of proposing fortnightly rubbish collections since 2012.

She said it’s one thing to look at evidence around the benefits, but another issue entirely to get social support for it.

Fairey said it would be useful to hear more from the 18 councils that have been doing fortnightly rubbish collections, and that could help with Auckland Council’s conversations with the community.

– 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 -