Detour in place as Dunedin’s Southern motorway is made safer

Source: New Zealand Transport Agency – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Detour in place as Dunedin’s Southern motorway is made safer

The NZ Transport Agency says the detour will take northbound traffic via the Mosgiel off-ramp and on-ramp, and is expected to add up to five minutes to the normal travel time.

People are advised to follow the detour signs and drive with extra care and attention.

Traffic heading south towards the airport will not be detoured however speed restrictions will be in place.

From 7pm on Sunday, all traffic will again be detoured off the state highway via Riccarton Road to allow contractors to continue work on other parts of the project. This full detour will continue until mid-March, weather dependent.

The work is part of the SH1 Dunedin to Mosgiel safety upgrade that will see safety barriers installed and others extended, and high performance road markings put in place along the route to help reduce head-on and run off road crashes.

More information about the project can be found at www.nzta.govt.nz/sh1-dunedin-to-mosgiel

How to stay up to date:

Kaikōura SH1 closed south of the town after 2 pm – small slip near Rosy Morn, 3 km south of Peketa

Source: New Zealand Transport Agency – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Kaikōura SH1 closed south of the town after 2 pm – small slip near Rosy Morn, 3 km south of Peketa

A small slip, around 20 cubic metres of material, has covered the highway after a morning of steady rain. The slip, labelled 29A, is 3 km south of Peketa and just north of Rosy Morn (a site which originally slipped in the September 2010 earthquake). Slip 29A also caused problems last Easter after heavy rain, requiring a road realignment, still being completed.

The highway is not likely to reopen today, says NCTIR Network Operations Manager Tresca Forrester. “The geotechnical team will assess the site’s safety later today and first thing in the morning before deciding on whether or not the road can reopen tomorrow morning. The safety of our crews and road users is the priority here.”

  • The next update will be 8am Saturday at this site: www.journeys.nzta.govt.nz/traffic/regions/11
  • Drivers on the Picton to Christchurch route are encouraged to take the Lewis Pass road for the remainder of today and check the web for an update tomorrow morning after 8am.
  • The highway north of Kaikōura remains open.
  • Travellers between Christchurch and Kaikōura should use the Inland Road via Waiau (Route 70), which is open 24/7, but be aware there will be delays through this route with more traffic on it this afternoon.

*Residents living within this soft cordon at Leader Road, south of the slip, will have access to their homes.

Ways to find out what is happening on the highway network:

New patrol base and dog kennel facility for Christchurch Police

Source: New Zealand Police –

Headline: New patrol base and dog kennel facility for Christchurch Police


Location:

Canterbury

Today Police Minister Hon. Stuart Nash and Police Commissioner Mike Bush opened the new Patrol Base for Christchurch International Airport Police and Dog Kennel Facility based at Christchurch Airport.

Canterbury District Commander Superintendent John Price says it was a privilege to have the Minister and Commissioner at the official opening, showing what an important milestone the new facility is.


Images(s):

Update to Pukekohe incident

Source: New Zealand Police –

Headline: Update to Pukekohe incident


Location:

Counties Manukau

Police are investigating a firearms incident in Pukekohe where a male in his 50’s received a gunshot wound to his leg.

He has been transported to hospital where his injuries are not considered to be life-threatening.

A male is currently in custody and is assisting police with our enquiries in relation to this incident.

Paerata School is no longer in lockdown and there is no threat to the public.

ENDS

Nick Baker
 

New Joint Ministerial Statement on Closer Defence Relations with Australia

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: New Joint Ministerial Statement on Closer Defence Relations with Australia

Minister of Defence Ron Mark has today met with his Australian counterpart Senator Marise Payne in Wellington for the annual Defence Ministers’ Meeting.
“New Zealand and Australia have a very close Defence relationship,” says Mr Mark.  “This is currently on display in Papua New Guinea where New Zealand and Australian Defence personnel are working hard to deliver aid to the earthquake stricken highlands, and in all the deployments around the world where we stand side by side”.
“Today’s meeting was a great opportunity to discuss shared security concerns, and to explore ways to work better together.  Today, as alliance partners, we are also releasing an updated Joint Statement on Closer Defence Relations.
“The statement acknowledges our mutual commitment to working side-by-side effectively and efficiently for our shared security interests, and sets out the guiding principles that underline our partnership.  It also reiterates our commitment to the South Pacific and our close friends in the region,” says Mr Mark.
Refreshed Closer Defence Relations between New Zealand and Australia will follow six principles:
We are sovereign, independent states working together both regionally and globally for our mutual security.
We share an interest in promoting and projecting a region that is secure, open and prosperous, with a particular focus on our cooperation in South Pacific;
Our defence and security partnership is open, based on mutual respect, and enduring;
We will work together to deliver capability in the most cost-effective way;
We will develop and harness the skills of our people and to enhance cooperation; and
We will focus on, and commit resources to, practical collaborative activities to achieve mutually beneficial outcomes. 
The statement can be found here https://defence.govt.nz/publications/publication/anz-joint-statement-on-closer-defence-relations 

The ripple effect

Source: Health Quality and Safety Commission – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: The ripple effect

Partners in Care

Ngāti Kahu Ki Whaingaroa, Te Aitanga-a-Māhaki

Te Rina Ruru’s life changed the morning her brother Ray had a car accident which left him with a traumatic brain injury. She was 16 at the time and struggled to cope. Te Rina shared her story at the Health Quality & Safety Commission’s Let’s talk forum on 8–9 March in Wellington.

“I remember walking into the hospital, the corridors were dark and there was a sense of foreboding in the air. Our beautiful brother lay peacefully in a silent room. We didn’t understand what the doctor was talking about. To us he looked perfect. Despite what he looked like on the outside, the real injury was inside,” recalls Te Rina.

“They called it a traumatic brain injury, but no one sat us down and explained what that meant.”

The family had no idea what to expect in the coming months; Ray spent three months in hospital and five months in rehabilitation.

At the rehabilitation unit, the whānau didn’t want to leave Ray alone, as he had been hit by other patients in the night and left too long without basic cares. So they juggled their lives, from work and studying to child care and being with Ray at the centre. However, there were real concerns about their own safety from other patients who would be physically and sexually abusive towards them when they visited. The whānau were left to manage alone so they made the difficult decision to take Ray home.

Home brought new and unforeseen challenges. Ray is a 6’3” 120 kg wheel-chair bound, non-verbal man. He slept in the lounge and her mother in a Lay-Z-Boy beside him, with her sister and two children in one room and Te Rina in the other. They shared Ray’s 24/7 care, with various home-based support workers coming into help.

Te Rina says her mother was under immense pressure; while worrying about her son, she was also trying to keep the family afloat, trying to maintain the mortgage payments, feed the whānau, support them and navigate the health system.

They were labelled ‘a difficult family’ because they demanded a high standard of care for Ray.

“Was it too much to ask,” says Te Rina “to ask for care workers to be trained in washing and caring for my brother and for counselling support for the children and my mother?”

The family’s focus shifted to Ray’s needs and as a result everyone’s lives were impacted. They all tried to carry on, but were struggling under the pressure.

After the accident everything changed. Her brother was her biggest support and suddenly she had to be his – it was like the floor had been pulled out from beneath her.

Te Rina struggled under the pressure and turned to self-harm as a way to cope.

“One night it got really bad – I was home alone and all I could do was think, my brother was different, my mother was different, I felt so alone. I walked into the kitchen, opened the draw and grabbed the biggest butcher knife I could. I was drenched in blood on the kitchen floor. I knew I couldn’t do anything else… I knew I couldn’t do that to my family, they had been through enough.”

Instead, her response has been to learn as much as she can about the health system, even going to university to study.

She has also become an advocate for whānau going through the impact of living with a family member’s trauma. Her family established the Brain Injury Support Network to support family/whānau going through similar trauma, and started a new initiative, Camp Unity for children and young people working through trauma and low self-esteem to build healing communities.

Te Rina’s dedication to her brother and whānau shows through the ongoing care of her brother at home. Her plea is for more support for family/whānau as they are adjusting to their loved one being a changed person with new and challenging demands, which are not just emotional, but can significantly change the dynamic of the family through the ongoing dedication of time, resources, 24/7 availability and care.

As a family they didn’t get counselling or advice on how to help each other or the larger whānau network.

“Ray’s daughter would visit every fortnight and one day my mum and I were sitting talking to her about how we could all go camping,” says Te Rina.

“I looked down and saw scars on her arms and legs.”

Te Rina had many thoughts racing through her head: ’has my beautiful niece been going through this alone?’ ‘Is this my fault?’ “I felt like our world was shattered again.”
It took Te Rina a while to realise she wasn’t that 16-year-old any more. Over the last ten years she has met many children who were self-harming. There were so many other families and so many other children who were or still are battling with the same challenges.

This led her to establish Camp Unity, alongside friend and counsellor Char Rain, to support children and young people experiencing self-harm and trauma.

Te Rina talks about ‘the ripple effect’.

“People don’t really talk about the ripple effect, the effect of trauma across the whole whānau, like the ripples in a pond. This was the inspiration to create Camp Unity which brings vulnerable children together in a safe and secure environment where they are free to be themselves.

They have made it their mission to empower every child to have a voice. Camp Unity develops strength and unity and forms healthy relationships, teaching children to understand their individuality and develop their self-worth.

“They arrived broken, they were totally different, and now they can’t wait for the next camp.”

Te Rina challenged delegates at the forum to think about the consumers and family/whānau going through their services right now. She asked “What can you do to alleviate some of the burdens of the health system right now so that, instead of fighting the health system they can heal with each other?”

She ended to a standing ovation.

More information about the Brain Injury Support Network and Camp Unity is available at www.facebook.com/NZBrainInjurySupportNetwork and www.facebook.com/CampUnity01.

– –

Sri Lanka – State of Emergency

Source: New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade – Safe Travel – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Sri Lanka – State of Emergency

On 6 March 2018, the Sri Lankan Government declared a nationwide State of Emergency due to incidents of communal unrest. The State of Emergency provides authorities with increased powers to search individuals, impose roadblocks and curfews, and to limit public gatherings. Access to social messaging networks may be restricted. We advise New Zealanders in Sri Lanka to follow the advice and directions of local authorities. Exercise vigilance throughout the country and avoid all protests, demonstrations and large public gatherings as they have the potential to turn violent with little warning.

Police attending incident in Pukekohe

Source: New Zealand Police –

Headline: Police attending incident in Pukekohe


Location:

Counties Manukau

Please attribute to Senior Sergeant John Yearbury, Counties Manukau Police

Police are attending an incident in Pukekohe where a male at an address has sustained a gunshot wound to his leg shortly after 12.40pm.

Enquiries are underway to locate the offender, who fled from the Hogan St address following the incident.

At this stage of our investigation, it’s believed the offender is known to the victim.

Paerata School in Pukekohe is currently in lockdown as a precaution.

ENDS

Nick Baker/NZ Police
 

Northland Police search for missing Onerahi man

Source: New Zealand Police –

Headline: Northland Police search for missing Onerahi man


Location:

Northland

Police are looking to locate 89-year-old Christopher Kapa who was last seen in the Raurimu Road area, Onerahi  last night around 11pm (8 March, 2018).

Mr Kapa is hard of hearing and may appear to be confused.

It is not clear exactly what he was wearing when he went missing, however he normally wears grey track pants and a dark top.

Police are concerned for his welfare and urge anyone who may have seen him to contact police.


Images(s):

Auckland overnight motorway closures 10-17 March 2018

Source: New Zealand Transport Agency – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Auckland overnight motorway closures 10-17 March 2018

Check daily updated closure information

NORTHERN MOTORWAY (SH1)

  • Southbound lanes between Oteha Valley Road off ramp and Upper Harbour Highway on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • Oteha Valley Road southbound on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • McClymonts Road southbound on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • Greville Road southbound on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • Northbound lanes between Upper Harbour Highway off ramp and Oteha Valley Road on ramp, 11 – 15 March (approx. 10:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Upper Harbour Highway northbound on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • Greville Road northbound on ramp, 11 – 15 March

CENTRAL MOTORWAY JUNCTION (SH1 & SH16)

  • (SH1) Northbound lanes between Khyber Pass Road off ramp and Nelson Street on ramp, 14 March (approx. 10:30p.m. to 5:00a.m.)

SOUTHERN MOTORWAY (SH1)

  • Greenlane northbound on ramp, 12 March
  • Greenlane northbound off ramp, 14 March
  • Ellerslie-Panmure Highway southbound off ramp, 11 – 15 March (approx. 11:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Tecoma Street southbound off ramp, 11 – 15 March (approx. 11:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Tecoma Street southbound on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • Hill Road northbound on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • Northbound lanes between Manukau off ramp and East Tamaki Road on ramp, 12 – 13 March (approx. 10:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Te Irirangi Drive northbound on ramp, 12 – 13 March
  • Redoubt Road northbound on ramp, 12 – 13 March
  • Northbound lanes between Papakura off ramp and Takanini on ramp, 14 – 15 March (approx. 10:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Papakura northbound on ramp, 14 – 15 March
  • Papakura northbound (diamond) on ramp, 14 – 15 March
  • Southbound lanes between Takanini off ramp and Papakura on ramp, 11 – 15 March (approx. 10:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Takanini southbound on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • SH22/Drury northbound off ramp, 14 March
  • SH22/Drury southbound on ramp, 14 March
  • Razorback Road northbound on ramp, 12 March
  • Razorback Road southbound off ramp, 11 March
  • Ridge Road northbound off ramp, 12 March
  • Nikau Road southbound on ramp, 11 March
  • SH1 Northbound to SH2 Eastbound Link, 12 – 13 & 15 March
  • SH1 Southbound to SH2 Eastbound Link, 11 & 14 March
  • SH2 Westbound to SH1 Northbound Link, 11 – 12 March
  • Pokeno northbound on ramp, 12 – 13 March

NORTHWESTERN MOTORWAY (SH16)

  • SH16 southbound link to SH20, (including SB Waterview tunnel), 14 March (approx. 10:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • SH16 westbound link to SH20, (including SB Waterview tunnel), 14 March (approx. 10:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Southbound lanes between Brigham Creek Road roundabout and Lincoln Road on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • Hobsonville Road southbound on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • Royal Road southbound on ramp, 11 – 15 March
  • Royal Road northbound off ramp, 11 March
  • Great North Road westbound off ramp, 12 – 13 March

UPPER HARBOUR MOTORWAY (SH18)

  • SH18 westbound to SH16 eastbound link, 11 – 15 March

SOUTHWESTERN MOTORWAY (SH20)

  • Northbound lanes between Maioro Street and SH16, (including NB Waterview tunnel), 12 – 13
  • Maioro Street northbound on ramp, 12 – 13 March
  • Coronation Road northbound off ramp, 12 March
  • Northbound lanes between Cavendish Drive off ramp and Massey Road on ramp, 11 & 14 – 15 March (approx. 10:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Puhinui Road northbound on ramp, 11 & 14 – 15 March
  • Roscommon Road northbound on ramp, 11 & 14 – 15 March
  • SH20 northbound to SH20A westbound link, 15 March
  • Southbound lanes between SH20A and Massey Road, 11 March (approx. 11:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Walmsley Road southbound on ramp, 11 March
  • Southbound lanes between Lambie Drive and SH1, 12 – 13 March (approx. 10:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Lambie Drive southbound on ramp, 12 – 13 March

GEORGE BOLT MEMORIAL DRIVE (SH20A)

  • Southbound lanes between Kirkbride Road off ramp and Kirkbride Road on ramp, 11 – 12 March (approx. 10:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Southbound lanes between Kirkbride Road off ramp and Landing Drive/Verissimo Drive, 13 – 17 March (approx. 10:00p.m. to 5:00a.m.)
  • Kirkbride Road southbound on ramp, 13 – 17 March
  • Northbound lanes between Landing Drive/Verissimo Drive and Kirkbride Road on ramp, 11 – 13 & 16 March (approx. 10:30p.m. to 5:00a.m.)

Please follow the signposted detours. The Transport Agency thanks you for your co-operation during these essential improvements and maintenance.

For updates on state highway conditions and hazards visit: www.journeys.nzta.govt.nz
Auckland roads and public transport: www.at.govt.nz