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Whangārei Hospital transit lounge open to patients

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Source: New Zealand Government

Health Minister Simeon Brown has today officially opened Whangārei Hospital’s new transit lounge, where patients can prepare to leave hospital after treatment. 

“The Government’s $3.75 million investment into this lounge provides an important space for patients who are medically fit to leave the ward. It helps with their timely discharge while they wait for medication, discharge papers, or transport.

“I know that being in hospital can be challenging for patients and their families and how important it is to get home following treatment. 

“The lounge provides patients a calm, transitional environment where they continue to be cared for by nurses as they wait to transition to their home or another facility. 

“It will also be used for incoming patients who are only staying for a short period of time, such as a person coming from a rural hospital for a test or a patient being transferred to another hospital, which means they don’t need to be accommodated in the emergency department.   

“Alongside the benefit the lounge will bring to patients, it will also free up bed availability and help to improve hospital flow, which are key to achieving the Government’s health target for shorter stays in emergency departments. 

“Improving health infrastructure is a priority for this Government. The previous transit lounge was not fit-for-purpose, which is why I am pleased to see projects like this being prioritised. The new transit lounge has capacity for eight chairs, six beds, and other services including shower facilities.  

“There are currently 19 hospitals around the country that have a dedicated transit lounge, including sites as small as Wairau Hospital and as large as Auckland City Hospital. 

“I’m pleased for the patients who will get to experience this transit lounge in the future, ensuring those that come through Whangārei Hospital receive access to timely, quality healthcare,” Mr Brown says. 

MIL OSI

Incident in Onerahi

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Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

Emergency services are responding to a serious incident in Onerahi.

Police received a report of a person injured at Beach Road Reserve at about 11.10am.

There are cordons in the area and locals are asked to respect these until the incident is resolved.

Motorists are being advised Beach Road has been closed from Church Road and to avoid the area.

Police will provide further information when able.

ENDS.

Holly McKay/NZ Police

MIL OSI

State of the Planet speeches, 2025

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Source: Green Party

At this year’s State of the Planet address, Green Party co-leaders Marama Davidson and Chlöe Swarbrick announced the party’s plans to deliver a Green Budget this year to offer an alternative vision to the Government’s trickle-down economics and austerity politics.   

Chlöe’s speech:

Mihi atu ki a koutou e pupuri tonu ana ki te mana o te whenua nei, tēnā koutou Ngāti Whātua.

Tēnā koutou, Auckland Central to the world.

Across the past year, I have been in front of dozens of audiences like this, and time and again, I have asked people one simple question.

I’ve asked people to raise their hand if they are excited about the future.

Every single time, fewer than half a dozen people in a sea of hundreds put their hand up. 

This, my friends, is our problem.

Trickle-down politicians and their donors have spent at least forty years coming after our public services, our media and our democracy, but it’s clear now more than ever that their real target has been our hope.

The hope that better is possible.

These guys want you exhausted and angry and disillusioned. It means you’re disempowered. Too exhausted to think at the end of the work day.

Too angry to see the problem clearly.

Too disempowered to look around and see all the other exhausted and angry people, and to understand that if we all spent a moment to find our common problems and common solutions, everything could change.

So, conveniently, all across the world, after decades of privatising and underfunding the public services people need to live healthy lives and participate in society, after decades of creating the conditions of poverty and extreme vulnerability and isolation and mental ill health… After creating this exhaustion and anger and despair, the right wing knows those feelings have to go somewhere.

So they’ve painted targets.

Those painted targets are not the people actually responsible for causing poverty and homelessness and unemployment and understandable, deep rage.

No.

The chosen targets are indigenous peoples, fighting for survival after centuries of injustice and violent theft. Those chosen targets are our rainbow communities, who every day prove that all these social norms are just made up. The chosen targets are migrants – regular people, like you and me, who just want to provide for themselves, their families and their community.

Let me be crystal clear: if you’re struggling to get by, your beef isn’t with someone else struggling to get by.

Your beef is with the system that forces almost everyone you know into a life of struggle, and, more precisely, your beef is with those who profit from it.

It’s Pride Month. We’ve seen some of the most aggressive and intentional targeting of our takatapui, rainbow and queer community in a long time. Some of that has been driven by a self-declared apostle who

lives in a mansion and drives nice cars, funded by huge tithing from people without much to spare.

The followers of this self-declared apostle have been rejected from most of regular society time and again. Some of them have been scooped up into the flock after exiting prison, because after decades of successive Governments giving up on real rehabilitation, there simply isn’t anything or anywhere else.

So people who have nothing else, and nowhere else to belong, are given refuge.

And internal pain is warped outwards.

Instead of being channelled towards dismantling the rules that allow a handful of people to take an immense amount of wealth off the back of our collective work, that anger is – so conveniently for those profiteering from the status quo – channelled towards people just trying to live their own quite regular or quite fabulous, lives.

These extreme microcosms of hatred can teach us a lot about where we’re at as a society. More importantly, I think, when we peel back the distractions, it lays bare the solutions.

We cannot give up on our fellow human beings.

You do not get human rights because someone deems you worthy or good. You get human rights because you are human.

When we uphold each other’s basic dignity, no matter what, we create the conditions for connection and true justice.

We all need somewhere to belong, and human history tells us there’s almost always a politician or self-appointed apostle willing to capitalise on and warp rejection and fear and anger for their own personal gain.

The anger comes from a real place of material deprivation: housing insecurity, food insecurity, income insecurity. Straight up insecurity.

That anger can either destroy us as we fight each other, much to the entertainment of those laughing their way to the bank, or it can be turned into the solidarity necessary to change the rules of this game.

Our country is considered one of the wealthiest in the world on a per person basis.

So why can’t regular people afford to go to the dentist?

It’s not because of the gays, or the migrants, or tangata whenua.

It’s because that wealth isn’t fairly shared.

It’s because way back when the public health system was being created, the lobby was already so strong to privatise dentistry.

Why can’t regular people afford decent housing?

Because over decades, politicians and property speculators – sometimes one in the same – have made intentional decisions to sell off your human right to housing to the highest bidder.

And why is the planet that all of this is happening on being allowed to burn while billionaires pile up ill-gotten treasure?

Because almost everybody’s focus, understandably, is on just trying to get by. It’s hard to think about, let alone contend with, how a handful of people are ransacking the climate necessary for our collective survival in order to make a quick buck. You’re just out here trying to survive.

That’s what we mean when we say that the same economic system that’s exploiting people is also exploiting the planet.

What’s a right-wing government’s response to this exploitation and exhaustion? Well, obviously, it’s more exploitation and exhaustion. It’s more punishing beneficiaries and tax cuts for the rich.

It’s fast-tracking offshore profits plundered from our natural environment.

It’s banging the ‘growth’ drum while intentionally being silent on what kind of growth, and for whom.

Seriously. Just last week when we were in Parliament, I asked the Prime Minister why after decades of this “growth” he’s so fixated on, 10% of the people in this country own 60% of our nation’s wealth.

It will shock you to learn Christopher Luxon didn’t answer the question.

Instead, he went on and on about celebrating successful people.

That would maybe make sense if we were talking about people in isolation, which the right wing so desperately wants us to do.

But we’re not, and we can’t, because, my friends, we live in a society.

Poverty, and all the social ills that stem from it, don’t come from nowhere.

It comes from a tolerance of extreme inequality.

If you’re totally sweet with 311 households holding more wealth than the bottom two and a half million New Zealanders, you’re totally sweet with the child deprivation, homelessness and poor health that comes with it.

Inequality and poverty aren’t just connected: deep inequality creates poverty.

Where would all this pent-up anger go if it wasn’t directed to other people just struggling to get by? If hustle culture didn’t teach us to lap it all up in self loathing?

What if we realised our shared power in working together, instead of fighting each other?

If we ensured the wealthy paid their fair share, instead of swallowing trickle-down fairytales?

We don’t live in a game of Monopoly. We can and should change the rules when they don’t work for the majority of people.

In the last year alone, we have seen tens of thousands of people turn up in the streets to prove our country’s values of care for each other and the planet we live on. For Te Tiriti.

2024 was the year of activism. 2025 must be the year of organising. Of channelling that energy into a shared goal: to change this Government, to uproot the trickle-down nightmare and to build an economy that supports life, instead of exhausting it.

In December, the Greens released He Ara Anamata, our Emissions Reduction Plan. We showed how to reduce emissions five times faster than the Government’s proposal. We proved you can not only reduce emissions and the cost of living, but also improve quality of life.

Today, I am proud to announce that in May, the Greens will be releasing the Budget we would be rolling out in Government.

Our budget will not be a defence of the status quo.

Our budget will show you how we already have everything we need to ensure everyone enjoys our basic rights to a clean environment and stable climate. Everyone is housed, everyone gets healthcare, everyone gets education. Everyone gets the genuine opportunity for a good life.

That’s because we believe in the public good. And we’re sick of this Government’s pathetic pandering to privatisation.

Forty years ago, a few politicians made the decision to shred our social safety net. They began selling off the things we all used to own and look after together. They privatised profit and socialised cost.

The problems we are confronted with today are not natural. Humans made the system that created them, and we can recreate it.

The gap between an economy that exploits people and the planet and one that supports us both is collective action. As long as regular people are suspicious of and fighting each other, a handful of powerful people will get incredibly rich at all of our expense.

Nobody is coming to save us. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for.

It’s time to claim your hope – to claim your power. Look to your fellow New Zealanders with curiosity and kindness. The pathway to our freedom is intertwined.

So, raise your hand: who here is excited about the future?

And are you willing to work for it?

Are you willing to believe in and work to uphold the dignity of your fellow New Zealanders, even and especially those who you have not met? Those not even born yet?

Solidarity doesn’t require us to be the same. It simply requires you to see in someone else our shared humanity, and to behave accordingly.

Together, we are unstoppable.

I am so honoured to introduce you all now to my wonderful co-leader – the Honourable Marama Davidson. Nau mai, hoki mai Marama!

Marama’s speech:

Mā te oranga o te taiao, ka ora ai te iwi. Mō te takitini, kāore mō te torutoru anake.

E te whānau, I am so grateful to be here today. I am well, and feeling better each day.

My mokopuna are rongoā. My mokopuna, just by being the embodiment of my ancestors – are a reminder of all that we love. Of all that we must protect.

Over the many months of cancer treatment, one of the most profound experiences of healing was daytime nana naps with my moko babies. Where I had any assortment of my three babies, asleep and at peace with the shared vibrations of our heartbeats and gentle breathing. Getting to enjoy this has been a precious blessing.

I am grateful to the wonderful health care professionals who have been there for me each step of the way.

I am grateful to my whānau, who are my rock. And to every single person who reached out with aroha and support. To the breast cancer community, thank you for being there for all of us. To those who are going through treatment or have just heard the worst news of their lives – nunui te aroha kia koutou.

I haven’t spoken publicly about this before, but today I’m going to let you in on a secret. I was diagnosed with breast cancer a few days before the State of the Planet speech last year. I remember standing at this exact podium – knowing I would need to step away from public life for a bit. Taking leave when my voice was needed the most was one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do.

This job is and continues to be an enormous privilege. To be able to come back to it, blows my mind.

But the space to recover and put my health and whānau first was both necessary, and something I am beyond grateful for. Not everyone has the support I had. I will never take that for granted and I will always work to embed the political change we need so that everyone can put health first. Like better pay and conditions for our health workers, decent income support, and secure housing for all.

Ehara taku tū i te tū takitahi, ehara taku toa i te toa takitahi, ehara taku taumaha i te taumaha takitahi. We all depend on each other when times are rough. People want to care for each other – manaakitanga is what makes us human. Within whānau and communities, to care and be cared for is the basis of connection.

These are the values the Green Party wants to bring to politics as well.

Being on the sidelines of politics last year was surreal. When the hikoi for te Tiriti happened, it was during medical treatments and I needed to stay home. But seeing people come together with such vibrant unity, made me so proud that I grabbed my ‘tino’ flag and took a photo in my garden so I could feel part of the movement.

While the hīkoi was in response to a Government that continues to disregard the promises this country was founded on, it was so much more than a protest. It was the ultimate example of how to show up: with our tūpuna, for our mokopuna and for each other. The wairua shown at the hīkoi is the best of us.

As Moana Jackson said, te Tiriti o Waitangi is about the rightness that comes from people accepting their obligations to each other. This is a profound vision on which to build a country. Aotearoa can be a place where everyone is supported to thrive, and no one is left behind – including Papatūānuku.

And I take inspiration from this vision not only here in Aotearoa, but globally.

The world feels like a bit of a scary place right now. I worry for the future of my three mokopuna, and all the mokopuna to come. My heart breaks for children in Gaza, for all children growing up in war zones, for children in detention centers, and for children and their whānau throughout the world who are hungry, cold and homeless.

At a time when the world needs to be coming together to solve climate change – the greatest challenge humanity has ever faced – instead we can barely come together to solve easy challenges like making sure every child has healthy kai.

We can do better. Our mokopuna deserve better.

Last year was the hottest year on record. That means that my mokopuna, and all the babies of the world today, will never see a normal climate. They have been born into climate change. And no matter where they are born, here in Aotearoa or far across the sea, they need us – their adults – to step up to this challenge right now. They deserve to inherit a thriving planet, not a destroyed one.

Now I want to draw this back to Te Tiriti, because these things are connected. Te Tiriti is a promise that carries through the generations. Te Tiriti is an enduring guarantee of iwi and hapū sovereignty over taonga like our lakes, rivers, seas, soils and native forests. And that means protecting those living systems for our mokopuna – so they too can exercise tino rangatiratanga.

Te Tiriti is the best defence Aotearoa has against the plundering of our environment for the profit of the few. This is why the far right is so intent on ripping it up and pretending it doesn’t matter. But that short term exploitation only enriches the pockets of a tiny group of people, while destroying nature for the rest of us.

When our gorgeous conservation land is trampled for mining, when our rivers become too polluted to swim in, when we can’t go down to the moana to harvest kai because there aren’t enough fish left – everyone misses out. And when a tiny group of oil executives are more interested in a growing balance sheet than a stable climate, every single child in the world misses out.

Our mokopuna deserve better!

At the heart of the political change we seek is manaakitanga, collective caring for people and planet. And crucially, the humility to understand that common human experiences are much more important than any flash job title or made-up markers of status. A serious illness throws that into sharp relief. Because what matters most when things are tough is our care for one another. I know that people are doing the best they can with what they have.

But the dominating economic system, means that wealth and power are not shared equally. These inequities further divide communities when instead we need to come together. By making sure everyone gets the care they need, we can ensure nobody is left behind to fall through the cracks. Care and justice for ALL people is what binds us together and helps us build a future where all of us thrive. This vision will be at the centre of our Green Budget.

This is what our politics should reflect. A politics of care. A hunger for doing what is just. This is the legacy of our late and great friend, Green MP Fa’anānā Efeso Collins whose one year anniversary of passing we have been reflecting on over the past week. Gone too soon our friend, we miss you deeply.

Efeso spent his life building bridges between the Pacific communities he loved and the rest of Aotearoa.

During Efeso’s maiden speech in Parliament, he shared with us his translation of a saying in Sāmoan: E le tu fa’amauga se tagata. No one stands alone, no one succeeds alone — and, for him, and the Green Party, no one suffers alone.

This is manaakitanga.

And this is what inspires me e te whānau. This is the hope for our mokopuna.

But collective care is not part of this government’s plan. They are showing us each day they stand for the few and not for the many. They are completely out of touch with the community.

We have seen this in the choices to gut school lunches. To gut housing for those who need it the most. To gut our health system and put more and more pressure on our health workers. To gut benefits so that more and more children fall through the cracks and below the poverty line. For absolute shame!

Our mokopuna deserve better.

We can deliver better by channeling community power and finally putting people and planet ahead of profit.

This country can afford to feed our tamariki nutritious kai. We could choose to provide lunches in every school – using fresh local kai and made by people who are connected to that school. We could choose to make sure every person in this country has a safe, warm home. Poverty is a political choice and we can choose to end it.

We can do all of this by putting our values of manaakitanga at the heart of political decisions. By honouring te Tiriti o Waitangi and the promises of kotahitanga and care as the foundation this country was built on.

And when we do that, we will show the world what it looks like to put care for people and planet first. Together, we can build the future all our mokopuna deserve.

And that mahi is why I am so so grateful to be back with you all. Kia kaha tatau – ka whawhai tonu, mō te whenua, mō te taiao, mō ngā mokopuna – ake, ake, ake

MIL OSI

Interim Report: increased capital investment in Auckland

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Source: Auckland Council

Auckland Council’s Interim Report shows the group invested significantly to strengthen the physical resilience of Auckland and manage growth, while meeting its financial targets.

The council delivered $1.9 billon of capital investment in the six months to December 2024 – a record for a six-month period and an increase of $474 million on the six months to the end of December 2023.

In line with Auckland Council’s Long-term Plan 2024-2034, this investment was prioritised in transport, water and enabling local boards to better respond to the needs of their communities.

Auckland Council group chief financial officer Ross Tucker said the Interim Report highlights the increased investment in the region’s infrastructure likes roads, pipes and stormwater assets.

“Of the total capital invested in the six months, 38 per cent has been invested in roading and public transport – $727 million to improve our region’s roads, buses and trains, such as the City Rail Link project,” says Mr Tucker.

“Another 29 per cent – or over $552 million – has been invested into Auckland’s water supply, wastewater and stormwater, delivering new and improved infrastructure that improves existing services and will support Aucklanders for generations to come.

“We’ve also prioritised the buy-out of category three properties, spending $392 million on close to 400 properties that had an intolerable risk to life. We know the risk category three buy-outs are higher than originally anticipated, however it is being closely and carefully managed as part of making Auckland a more resilient region.”

The buyout funding includes a 50-50 agreement between Auckland Council and central government, secured in October 2023.

Major projects delivered

In its first six months, the council delivered a number of major projects in Auckland, both in communities and with region-wide benefits.

These include the Central Interceptor reaching the three-quarter completion mark, refitting a fourth low emission ferry vessel and getting it into operation, and continued progress on the City Rail Link with overhead line equipment and switch rooms commissioned at Britomart.

“Our half year results are in line with expectations. We are getting on with delivering the physical and financial resilience we planned, while ensuring value for Aucklanders.”

This includes progress on the Auckland Future Fund. In December 2024, the fund sold Auckland Council’s remaining shares in Auckland International Airport Limited for $1.32 billion.

The fund will use the sale proceeds to diversify the council’s major financial investments across different sectors and geographic regions, with expected stronger annual returns to council to help fund services and infrastructure.

The full Interim Report is available via the main Auckland Council website. 

Auckland Council Group highlights – six months to December 2024

  • Operating revenue increased 15 percent to $5.4 billion, compared to the six months to 31 December 2023. This includes revenue to pay for the services we provide and invest in maintaining and renewing our assets.

  • The operating surplus was $2 billion, an increase on $571 million in 2023.

  • The group’s capital investment in infrastructure and community assets totalled $1.9 billion – 33 percent more than the prior period.

  • Net debt increased to $13.2 billion, from $12.3 billion in June 2024. This increased debt was primarily used to fund investment in new assets, spreading the cost of these assets over the generations that will use them.

Key capital highlights include:

  • Providing funding, alongside the Crown, to City Rail Link Limited which continued work on New Zealand’s largest infrastructure project. One of the significant milestones was achieving permanent power to the stations’ high voltage rooms and main switchboards.

  • Bringing the Pukekohe Water Treatment Plant back into service after it was damaged in the 2023 severe weather events which enabled the community to increase water usage by six million litres a day at a time when water demand is at its peak.

  • Achievement of a major milestone on the Central Interceptor project, with Hiwa-i-te-Rangi Tunnel Boring Machine breaking through into a shaft in Western Springs, which enabled a tunnel to be built which collects wastewater and stormwater overflows from Mount Albert.

  • Significant progress made on the Eastern Busway project with the completion of the new bus station at Botany Town Centre

  • Completion of the Port of Auckland Outfall Upgrade project which improves the stormwater network and mitigates significant flooding risk at Britomart

  • Construction and renewal of many local and regional parks, sporting and leisure facilities such as refurbishment of Te Pae o Kura – Kelston Community Centre and renewal of Windmill Park with upgraded kiosk space, toilet facilities, a first aid room and storage.

MIL OSI

New disability data provides crucial insights

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Source: New Zealand Government

Data from Stats NZ’s Household Disability Survey released today provides crucial insights into the New Zealand disability community and its people, Disability Issues Minister Louise Upston says.

Today’s survey data, collected following the 2023 Census, identifies 1 in 6 New Zealanders as disabled – that’s around 10 per cent of children (98,000) and 18 per cent of adults (753,000).

“It’s the first time in more than 10 years there has been access to updated disability data on this scale,” Louise Upston says.

“The survey provides a comprehensive source of information about the lives and experiences of disabled New Zealanders, the barriers they can encounter and the changes needed to overcome those barriers.

“One such barrier is the number of disabled people not working and that three quarters of those people want to be working.

“That means getting more employment opportunities for disabled people has to be a key priority, driven by survey findings from the community itself.

“In another example, disability access issues continue to be raised and we need to look at why they remain so persistent.

“Having this up-to-date data is absolutely crucial for understanding the disabled community and its needs. It can then inform decision makers, businesses, service providers and communities across the country.

“While progress has been made, we know there is more work to do.

“Our Government is committed to supporting disabled people, which is why we provided a record $1.1 billion funding boost to disability support services in this year’s Budget.

“Whaikaha as a standalone ministry can focus its efforts on improving the lives of the 1 in 6 New Zealanders with a disability.

“This survey informs Whaikaha’s work programme, and actions we need to take across government, business and community to improve the lives of disabled New Zealanders,” Louise Upston says.

MIL OSI

Changes to SafePlus online self-assessment tool coming soon

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Source: Worksafe New Zealand

From April there will be a new way of doing a SafePlus self-assessment.

The current SafePlus online tool is at the end of its life and would require significant resource to rebuild.

It is being replaced with downloadable questions – in multiple languages – that can be used much more flexibly as a paper-based survey or in any online survey tool (at the user’s cost).

Registered users of the online tool have been contacted to let them know that no new assessments using the current tool can be started after 11 April 2025.

Those who have run a previous assessment using the tool can access their data and reports until 12 June 2025. After 12 June 2025, the personal data put into the tool by users will be destroyed, to meet Privacy Act requirements.

See our FAQs for more information(external link) including data export instructions. 

From April the survey questions and a results calculator will be available to download from the SafePlus section of the WorkSafe website. Businesses can use the questions either as a paper-based survey, or in their own choice of online survey platform.

They are the same questions currently used in the online tool. The questions were developed using the SafePlus framework. They focus on three key areas of health and safety – leadership, worker engagement, and risk management.

Businesses can use their workers’ responses to the questions to calculate a SafePlus health and safety maturity rating in the three key areas, and they can repeat the survey to see their progress year on year.

WorkSafe will not have access to the data. The questions and results calculator are downloadable files, so the business using them will save them in their own system. This means all data will remain with the business itself.

Providing the survey questions for businesses to pick up and use means more flexibility to run their own surveys using their own choice of survey tool. The new way of providing the survey questions also means we can incorporate user-requested enhancements to provide a paper-based option for completing surveys and translation of the questions into multiple languages.

The survey questions and results calculator will be free to use. However, WorkSafe will no longer provide the survey functionality, so if a business decides to use an online survey tool then that may have some cost to them to use.

Onsite assessments by independent SafePlus assessors are also available.

You can find out more on the SafePlus section of the WorkSafe website

We aim to make it easy for businesses to do regular self-assessments of their health and safety environment to identify areas they can improve.

We would like to thank everyone who has used the SafePlus online tool to help keep people healthy and safe at work.

MIL OSI

Going for Growth: Multi-million dollar benefits possible for farmers and growers

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Source: New Zealand Government

Regulation Minister David Seymour, Environment Minister Penny Simmonds and Food Safety Minister Andrew Hoggard have today released the Ministry for Regulation’s recommendations to cut red tape on products used by the agriculture and horticulture sectors.
“HSNO and ACVM products used to manage animals and plants like veterinary medicines and agrichemicals are absolutely critical for farmers and growers. Technological developments in these products can be the difference between surviving, or thriving,” Mr Seymour says. 
“Some farmers and growers told us they had waited over five years for their applications for new products to be approved by the Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) and the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI). That’s completely unacceptable and it’s costing the economy millions in lost productivity.
“The Government is cutting red tape to ensure farmers and growers can quickly access the high-quality products they need so we can grow the economy.
“Faster access to new products for farmers and growers will lift primary sector productivity and growth.
“The review found that halving approval times for new products is estimated to generate benefits of $272 million over 20 years for New Zealand farmers and growers. 
“Cabinet has accepted all 16 recommendations, including:

Setting targets to accelerate assessments and reduce application queues
Increasing the use of HSNO rapid pathways, ACVM registration exemptions and self-assessments for appropriate applications
Reducing ACVM efficacy requirements for inhibitors to the minimum required to manage risk
Using international regulators’ assessments to save time
Exploring a strategic pathway for priority products 
Updating EPA’s outdated risk assessment models.

Minister for the Environment Penny Simmonds says the Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) has already been working to improve the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms (HSNO) system. 
“This has included looking to appoint additional staff in the hazardous substances applications area, creating a prioritisation framework for the approval queue and developing new group standards for low-risk hazardous substances,” Minister Simmonds says.
“These are good first steps to help achieve some of the review recommendations, and I expect improvements to continue at pace.”
Minister for Food Safety Andrew Hoggard says the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) will be addressing review recommendations as part of a wider Agricultural Compounds and Veterinary Medicines (ACVM) Modernisation work programme.
“Eight out of the 13 recommendations that are applicable to MPI are already in progress or can start now,” Minister Hoggard says.
“MPI has been extremely proactive, working alongside the Ministry for Regulation to start work on the recommendations and I look forward to seeing further progress this year.”
The Agricultural and Horticultural Products Regulatory Review ran from August to December 2024. The review was of the approval process for new agricultural and horticultural products and was triggered by concern that additional regulatory burden on these products was worsening New Zealand’s international competitiveness.  
Notes to editors: 
Agricultural and Horticultural Products Regulatory Review Report: https://www.regulation.govt.nz/assets/Publication-Documents/Agricultural-Horticultural-Products-Regulatory-Review-full-report.pdf
Agricultural and Horticultural Products Regulatory Review Summary Report: https://www.regulation.govt.nz/assets/Publication-Documents/Agricultural-Horticultural-Products-Regulatory-Review-summary-report.pdf
Agricultural and Horticultural Products Regulatory Review Summary of Engagement https://www.regulation.govt.nz/assets/Publication-Documents/Agricultural-Horticultural-Products-Regulatory-Review-summary-engagement.pdf
Sense Partners Scenario analysis of economic impacts: https://www.regulation.govt.nz/assets/Publication-Documents/Agricultural-Horticultural-Products-Regulatory-Review-scenario-analysis.pdf
Other information about the review can be found on the Ministry for Regulation’s website: Agricultural and horticultural products regulatory review | Ministry for Regulation cultural Products Regulatory Review – briefings to joint Ministers 
All information can be found in the ‘Our publications’ section of the Ministry for Regulation’s website here: https://www.regulation.govt.nz/about-us/our-publications/
 
 

MIL OSI

Have your say on proposed changes to inspection requirements for vintage vehicles and private motorhomes

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Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) is seeking feedback on a proposal to reduce the frequency of warrant of fitness (WoF) checks on vintage and veteran vehicles and certificate of fitness checks (CoF) on privately owned heavy motorhomes.

The changes, proposed by the Minister of Transport, would be progressed through an amendment to the Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Standards Compliance 2002.

The proposed changes align with the Government Policy Statement on Land Transport 2024 objectives to reform the vehicle regulatory system. The proposed changes intend to reduce regulatory burden by saving owners of these vehicles time and money.

When compared to other light vehicles, vintage/veteran vehicles and privately owned heavy motorhomes are used less frequently, and evidence suggests that vehicle faults from these vehicles result in fewer serious crashes when compared to newer light vehicles.

Further information on the proposed changes and a form to provide feedback can be found at:

www.nzta.govt.nz/consultations

The last day for providing feedback is 4 April 2025.

All feedback gathered in the consultation process will be considered before the Minister of Transport makes a decision in mid-2025.

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Freedom camping certification extended

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Source: New Zealand Government

There will be more time to get self-contained vehicles green-certified, with an extension of the transition period, Tourism and Hospitality Minister Louise Upston has announced.
“This extension will be reassuring for people who enjoy freedom camping as a way to get off the beaten track and explore everything our beautiful country has to offer,” says Louise Upston.
“Following public consultation, we’re extending the certification transition period for private self-contained vehicles out by a year to June 2026. Currently only 23,000 vehicles of the estimated 73,000 have been certified.
“During consultation, individual freedom campers, certification authorities and vehicle inspectors voiced concerns about the limited time and capacity to certify all private vehicles currently on the road.  
“Extending the period provides confidence that all vehicles needing to be self-contained can be certified within the transitional period.
“That gives reassurance that laws can be properly enforced when they need to be in the future. “We’re announcing the extension now, to give certainty to both the sector and travellers as they make the most of the end of summer and start to prepare for the ski season. 
“Approximately 12,000 rental vehicles are already certified self-contained, which represents the bulk of the national fleet, so holidaymakers can be confident about finding a suitable rental vehicle, wherever their destination. 
“Extending the period for certification doesn’t detract from our Government’s commitment to the environment. It remains absolutely essential for freedom campers to respect their surroundings.
“If you’re planning to freedom camp, always check the specific rules at each location where you want to stay,” Louise Upston says. 
 

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Further appeal for information about missing person, Geoffrey Kelly

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Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

Police working to locate missing person Geoffrey Kelly are urging members of the public to get in touch if they saw any unusual activity in the area of Hikimutu, since 20 February.

Geoffrey’s car – pictured – was located at 7am on Friday 21 February in a ditch on Makokomiko Road, without any occupants.

He was last seen on Thursday 20 February, wearing grey knee-length shorts, a tan sweatshirt and glasses, and it is believed he may have become disorientated and has either taken shelter somewhere or has gotten a lift from a passerby.

Constable Mark Bolten says “Since then, Police have carried out a number of enquiries including extensive searches of the surrounding area with the assistance of a drone, Police Search and Rescue, Land Search and Rescue volunteers, local farmers and residents, and a private helicopter, however he has yet to be located.

“Police and Geoffrey’s family have grave concerns for his welfare.

“We are wanting to hear from anyone who was in the area of Makokomiko Road or its surrounding and saw any unusual activity.

“Even the smallest piece of information could be the thing we need to assist in locating him,” says Constable Bolten.

If you have any information that might help us locate Geoffrey, please call 105 and quote reference number 250222/1771.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

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