Hipkins tries to bully schools while suppressing their success

Source: ACT Party

Headline: Hipkins tries to bully schools while suppressing their success




“The Government has utterly failed in its attempts to bully fledgling charter schools into accepting a different educational model”, says ACT Leader David Seymour.

“A month and a half after introducing a Bill to scrap charter schools, only one has taken the Minister up on his offer.

“Meanwhile, Mr Hipkins is suppressing the final Martin Jenkins evaluation of the charter school model which by all accounts is glowing.

“Jacinda Ardern says she accepts that charter schools have a right to exist and are working, but wants to take away the freedoms that have seen them succeed.

“This confused approach is one reason why polling shows that most New Zealanders disapprove of the Government’s handling of charter schools and support the schools remaining open.

“The Government should now wake up to the fact it is on the wrong side of public opinion and end its ideological opposition to educational choice”, says ACT Leader David Seymour.

Printing money doesn’t create jobs

Source: ACT Party

Headline: Printing money doesn’t create jobs




“Directing the Reserve Bank to focus on employment ignores the basic fact that printing money doesn’t create jobs”, says ACT Leader David Seymour. 

“Monetary policy doesn’t affect employment in the long-term. 

“Jobs are created when we have a world-class education system, a flexible labour market, and a sound welfare system, none of which is related to monetary policy. 

“If central banks were able to increase employment by printing money, Zimbabwe would be a thriving economy. Instead, it is a basket case.

“Forcing the Reserve Bank to focus on both inflation and employment will put it in an impossible situation.

“When inflation starts to increase as a result of the Government’s massive spending plans, the Reserve Bank will face a difficult choice: raise interest rates and therefore short-term unemployment, or accept higher inflation with all of its damaging consequences.

“New Zealand’s employment rate is high compared with other developed countries. If we want to keep it that way, fighting inflation should be the sole focus of the Reserve Bank. Low inflation is an absolutely necessary condition for strong economic performance.

“These changes are economic vandalism of the highest order”, says Mr Seymour. 

Name release – Arthur’s Pass canyoning death

Source: New Zealand Police –

Headline: Name release – Arthur’s Pass canyoning death


Location:

Canterbury

Police can now name the woman who died while canyoning in Arthur’s Pass National Park on Sunday 18 March. 
 
She was 38-year-old Verena Kuehl from Australia. 
 
Police extend our sympathies to her family and friends. 
 
ENDS
 
Issued by Police Media Centre. 

Decisions on three fish species

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Decisions on three fish species

The rock lobster catch in the fishery area between Auckland and East Cape will be more than halved in an effort to rebuild the seriously depleted stock.
Fisheries Minister Stuart Nash has reviewed the total allowable catch (TAC) for three species across seven areas, for the fishing year starting 1 April. The decisions follow public consultation on sustainability measures for rock lobster, sea cucumber, and southern blue whiting. 
Mr Nash has reduced the rock lobster TAC in the Hauraki Gulf/Bay of Plenty area known as CRA2 and the Otago area known as CRA7. He has increased the rock lobster TAC in the Wellington/Hawke’s Bay area known as CRA4 and the Southern area CRA8.
The TAC for two sea cucumber stocks off the east coast of the South Island and Challenger Plateau/Nelson will be increased, along with the TAC for southern blue whiting on the Bounty Platform to the south of New Zealand.
Mr Nash says the rock lobster fishery in the CRA2 area, which stretches from Auckland to East Cape, is seriously depleted. “Decisive action is needed to rebuild the crayfish stock,” Mr Nash says.
The current TAC of 416.5 tonnes will be reduced to 173 tonnes. Commercial and recreational crayfish allowances will be reduced as a result. The total allowable commercial catch (TACC) will be reduced from 200 tonnes to 80 tonnes; the recreational allowance from 140 tonnes to 34 tonnes; and the estimate for ‘other mortality’, such as theft and blackmarket activity, is also revised downwards, from 60 to 42.5 tonnes.
The customary allowance of 16.5 tonnes is unchanged and was not part of the review. However in 2017 the customary catch was estimated to be well within the allowance.
“The decisions are the first step in rebuilding the fishery. Further steps will be developed and implemented this year, including changes to the current recreational bag limit of six crayfish per person per day prior to October 2018,” Mr Nash says.   
“I have also asked MPI to ensure Fisheries Compliance staff have an increased focus on the CRA2 fishery to help minimise illegal take. Although the current estimate of illegal removals is highly uncertain, given the status of the fishery and the reductions in harvest levels to legitimate users, I do not want to see benefits of any rebuild going to those who are stealing from this fishery.
“When the stock has been rebuilt to a healthier level, we can reassess how best to share the fishery amongst iwi, recreational and commercial fishing interests.
“During consultation, a number of submissions called for the fishery to be closed to reflect its poor current status and allow the fastest period of rebuild. Closure of a fishery is a very significant step. Fisheries have been closed in the past. While there is no doubt the CRA2 stock is well below desired levels, the best available information suggests that it can increase by an amount and over a timeframe I consider reasonable.
“I will continue to monitor this fishery closely and if the number of crayfish does not improve sufficiently I may have to consider further measures at the next review,” Mr Nash says.
ENDS
This media statement is a summary of the formal decision. The full decision can be found on the MPI website at:  www.mpi.govt.nz/news-and-resources/consultations/review-of-sustainability-measures-for-1-april-2018/

Minister using taxpayer cash for political gain

Source: National Party – Headline: Minister using taxpayer cash for political gain

Labour’s coalition partner NZ First has threatened to withhold regional development funding for an important economic development project in Rodney unless local National MP Mark Mitchell ends his advocacy for it and stops criticising NZ First ministers.

In an extraordinary request over the weekend, NZ First MP Jenny Marcroft – who said she was under instruction from a Minister – also requested that National pledge to not ask Regional Economic Development Minister Shane Jones questions about the project, should it go ahead.

“Ms Marcroft said she had been sent to tell me that the Mahurangi River Restoration Project would be considered for funding from the Government’s Provincial Growth Fund, but for that to happen I would have to end my involvement with it as a local MP.

“Ms Marcroft told me this was because the Government was unhappy with me revealing the illegitimate use of Defence Force aircraft by Defence Minister Ron Mark.

“She also said if I ended my involvement and the money was granted, that they did not want National’s Regional Economic Development spokesperson Paul Goldsmith asking Shane Jones questions about it in Parliament.

“Finally, she implied my work as an Opposition MP would be a factor in funding any projects in my electorate I was involved in.

“I immediately told Ms Marcroft this behaviour was unacceptable, and that she had been put in a very compromised position by her colleague. She refused to name them so I said she had two hours to have the Minister call me before I took the matter further.

“She sent a text message an hour later asking me to forget the conversation.

“But this is rotten politics. It goes to the core of our democratic processes and the National Party will not let such behaviour stand.

“This billion dollar Provincial Growth Fund is taxpayer money and should be used to benefit New Zealanders, not buy an easy ride for the Government nor to try and convince local MPs to stop supporting local projects, because they have annoyed the Government.

“The Prime Minister needs to find out which of her Ministers is attempting to use public money for political gain and she needs to quickly explain what she intends to do about it.”

Māori arts students win sculpture awards

Source: NorthTec – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Māori arts students win sculpture awards

A pair of NorthTec Maunga Kura Toi – Bachelor of Māori Arts – students won two out of three  awards at last week’s Whangarei Sculpture Symposium.

Graham Nathan and Anthony Dunn, who are both in the final year of the degree programme, won the $4,000 Te Aue Marie Award, and the $1,000 People’s Choice Award for their work, after competing against established artists from throughout New Zealand.

Both students are studying the whakairo (carving) strand of the degree programme, and were taught by the noted carver and NorthTec tutor, Te Kuiti Stewart, who sadly passed away last month. Their work in Oamaru limestone was their first attempt at working with stone, rather than wood.

The sculptures were on show at the symposium, held at the Hihiaua Peninsular, for 10 days until last week’s judging and public auction.

Organised by Creative Northland, the theme of this year’s symposium was to create a form that represents “Journey” and interprets a local influence. The theme was inspired by the 250th anniversary of the voyage of the Endeavour, captained by Lieutenant James Cook, commemorating his exploration of the New Zealand coast.

Entitled He Tangata, He Tangata, He Tangata, the NorthTec students’ triptych represented three figures: Cook; Tupaea, a Tahitian navigator who travelled with him and later acted as a translator; and local Māori.

The work, consisting of three one-metre high limestone sculptures each sitting on a base of totara wood, will be installed at Kerikeri Airport in 2019 as part of the 250th anniversary events, with the artists set to attend the unveiling ceremony.

Graham and Anthony were among 20 artists who submitted work to the event. They now plan to gift part of their prize back to the NorthTec Maunga Kura Toi programme, so that another student can enter the next Whangarei Sculpture Symposium in two years’ time. The gift will be named in honour of Te Kuiti Stewart.

Graham said: “The work represents three people that came together at the point of the first engagement with Bay of Islands Māori. The “Journey” theme for us was about people, cultures and whakapapa. The idea is that we are all cut from the same stone. We all aspire to the same things for ourselves, our children, our children’s children and our planet.”

He said the other artists had been very happy to see the students do so well, and the exposure they had gained through the symposium was “phenomenal.” He added: “I’m so happy that we proved ourselves in that forum amongst those artists.”

ESR extends drug testing pilot in Emergency Departments

Source: ESR – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: ESR extends drug testing pilot in Emergency Departments

New synthetic recreational drugs are a considerable issue worldwide, and New Zealand is not immune to the harm that these types of drugs pose. During the second half of 2017 there was a significant spate of non-fatal hospitalisations connected with the use of synthetic cannabinoids, and at least 30 suspected deaths referred to the Coroner.

The ‘Unknown Substance use in Emergency Departments’ (USED) programme is a unique pilot that ESR and Capital & Coast District Health Board (CCDHB) Wellington Hospital Emergency Department (ED) have been running over the past year. The programme involved testing patients who show specific symptoms of intoxication at the ED to identify any substances, such as synthetic cannabinoids, that may be present. The focus was on identifying new synthetic recreational drugs as they emerge on the drug scene, to allow for faster response by health, police and community agencies.

The pilot was established through a collaboration between CCDHB’s Dr Paul Quigley and Diana Kappatos, a Forensic Toxicologist from ESR. The value of this program is that enables the early detection of outbreaks of poisoning from particular groups of novel agents.  This information can then be shared with other emergency departments and toxicologists, providing information on treatment, care and expected outcomes.  Providing this information in a collaborative form between Emergency Departments, Regional Public Health, Ambulance services, Police and Customs will enable a more informed approach to reducing harm to the public.

Following the success of the pilot ESR has proposed the national roll out of the USED programme. The programme has the support of the Ministry of Health, who have written to the District Health Boards (DHBs) to encourage them to participate. Being able to better correlate patient clinical signs with treatment options is an obvious outcome for ED’s, particularly when faced with previously unknown drugs. By developing a database of key clinical signs and investigations it is possible to create a standardised treatment policy for these agents.  In particular, there is current lack of knowledge on what is the best treatment for the cardiac effects of synthetic cannabinoids.  As more information is collected this will become clearer with improved patient outcomes.

Patients must give their consent to take part in the USED programme, but will not be identifiable to ESR or anyone outside of the DHB. Results will be sent back to the relevant ED for follow up patient care.

The USED programme is part of ESR’s wider ‘Border to Grave’ drug surveillance activities, which has been established to identify new synthetic drugs as they enter New Zealand and track their real-time use in the community. The drug intelligence insights gained from ‘Border to Grave’ will be important in informing Health, Police and Justice sector responses to these new drugs, and will be an important part of the development of a drug early warning system.

For further information please contact

Lynne St.Clair-Chapman

Communications Manager

Lynne.st.clair-chapman@esr.cri.nz  027 405 8644

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Drivers urged to plan ahead at Easter to avoid peak travel times

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

Headline: Drivers urged to plan ahead at Easter to avoid peak travel times

The Transport Agency’s travel team has put together maps to show the expected peak holiday traffic times to help drivers decide the best time to travel to avoid the queues. These maps show the busiest times based on previous years’ travel patterns. They are predictions and are subject to change based on the weather, local events and other factors. More details can be found at nzta.govt.nz/hotspots.

“We know we’ll see large numbers of people heading off to their usual holiday destinations and that makes queues and delays inevitable at the most popular times,” says the Transport Agency’s Senior Journey Manager Neil Walker.

Heading out of Auckland, the traffic will start to build on State Highway 1 in both directions from Midday on Thursday right through to about 8pm.

On Friday, traffic is likely to remain heavy from 7:30am for much of the day especially between Puhoi and Wellsford, on the Southern Motorway from Takanini and on State Highway 2 to Coromandel.

Coming back on Monday, the busiest times are from midday to 7pm.

“If everyone plans their travel in advance, and thinks about how they can travel outside the busiest periods it will help reduce congestion, delays and stress and that will make it a safer and more enjoyable journey for everyone.”

“The hot spot predictions have proved really popular in helping people make informed decisions about when to travel, but predicted peak times can change on the day because of incidents, changing weather and even driver behaviour. So keep up to date with real time travel information,” says Mr Walker.

Check the latest weather and warnings here:

Get real time information about the best times to travel and the less congested routes from:

For Auckland and Northland:

 

Speech to Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Working Group on Land – Christchurch

Source: Green Party

Headline: Speech to Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Working Group on Land – Christchurch

Kia tau te rangimārie o te Rangi e tū nei

o Papatūānuku e takoto nei

o te Taiao e awhi nei

ki runga I a tātou.

Tīhei mauri ora!

Ki nga kaumatua o Ngāi Tuāhuriri, tēnā koutou.

 Ki nga rangitira o te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha, tēnā koutou.

Me ki nga manuhiri I konei mai i te IPCC, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou katoa.

To the 120 scientists and experts, from 59 countries, who are gathered here, welcome to Aotearoa New Zealand and welcome to Christchurch

The work you are doing on climate change and land is obviously of critical and even existential importance to our common future.

But from my perspective, as New Zealand’s Minister for Climate Change, your timing couldn’t be better.

Because the questions around the relationship between climate change and land use, forestry and agriculture are central to the work you are doing here right now.

CLIMATE POLICY

The Paris Agreement obliges every country on Earth to achieve net zero emissions in the second half of this Century.

Our new Government has made the commitment that we here in New Zealand will hit this target by the very beginning of the second half of the Century, in the year 2050.

Across Government we are setting targets for different sectors consistent with this commitment.

For example, we aim to be producing 100 percent renewable electricity generation by 2035, or sooner.

We’re almost there now at 80 to 85 percent generation from hydro, geothermal, wind and solar, but we can go further.

Over the coming months we hope to make other announcements about transport emissions, electric vehicle uptake, and so on.

It’s an ambitious programme. It has to be.

We live in a part of the world where sea-level rise, coastal erosion, cyclones, and droughts are happening with the kind of increasing frequency and force that hasn’t been seen before.

One recent estimate suggests that $19 billion of assets are at risk from sea level rise and flooding events – including 5 airports, 50 kilometres of rail, 2,000 kilometres of road and 40,000 homes.

Another report estimates that “the costs of weather events to New Zealand’s land transport network alone have increased in the last 10 years from $20 million a year to over $90 million annually.”

Flooding in 2011 in the upper South Island – about 5 hours north of here – cost nearly $17 million.

And there have just been two more major storms in that general area over the past month, by the way, which will add millions more to the region’s bill.

Then there was one of the worst droughts on record in New Zealand in 2012-2013.

It affected the entire North Island and the west coast of the South Island, and is estimated to have cost the country $1-and-a-half BILLION in lost agricultural exports.

Quite literally – we cannot afford to ignore climate change and do nothing about reducing our greenhouse gas emissions.

That government report (Climate Change Adaptation Technical Working Group) I released last year explains why, because, the report says, “Overall, the cost to New Zealand of climate change impacts and adapting to them are expected to be higher than the costs of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.” 

In other words, it’s more cost-effective to transition to a net zero emissions economy than pay for the repairs and clean ups.

So we plan to lock that commitment into law with the Zero Carbon Act.

In addition to putting net zero by 2050 into law, the Act will establish an independent Climate Change Commission, roughly modeled along the lines of Britain’s Climate Committee but suited to New Zealand’s needs.

We’ll be leading a major programme of engagement with the public and with experts on the design of the Act in June/July this year and introducing it to Parliament in October.

We’re also in the process of revising our Emissions Trading Scheme.

Simply put, the scheme as currently designed hasn’t worked. In the decade or so since it was introduced New Zealand’s emissions have increased, rather than decreased, and more forests have been cut down than planted.

LAND USE

Which brings me to land use.

Specifically agriculture.

We are a small country with a big reliance on agriculture.

It means that unlike – say – the United Kingdom, almost half of our greenhouse gas emissions come from agriculture.  47.9 percent.

That presents challenges.  Should agriculture be included in an emissions trading scheme? And how, or how much?

No other countries include agriculture in their emissions schemes so we’re considering largely uncharted territory here.

But when I was at COP23 in Bonn last November, a number of countries, who are starting to realise they’ll also have to deal with agricultural emissions soon, asked me what we’re planning.

Just as the Dutch are now exporting their expertise in urban adaptation to sea level rise, developed over centuries, so New Zealand has the opportunity to develop and export our expertise in net zero emissions agriculture.

Given New Zealand has such significant agricultural emissions, and given we have a long history of agricultural innovation and adaptability, we need to look at the issue and look at it as quickly as possible if we want to catch the crest of that particular wave.

So, we will establish an interim Climate Change Committee to begin work on the agricultural emissions question until we’ve established the full Commission under the Zero Carbon Act around the latter half of next year.

The Interim Committee would pass on its advice and recommendations to the Climate Change Commission to follow through on.

Land is a critical part of the climate change puzzle for so many countries – as this IPCC Working Group well knows.

For us in New Zealand land is the point where the majority of environmental pressures are borne.

TREES

Which is why a massive and ambitious key initiative in the New Zealand Government’s action plan on climate change is trees.

We intend to see one billion trees planted over the next 10 years.

Part of the challenge – beyond the issue of such large scale planting –  is making the right choices about which are the right types of trees to plant in the right places at the right time.

It’s about getting the right mix of slow-growing indigenous tree plantations combined with much faster growing exotic species.

The right mix and locations will bring a number of benefits:

  • There’s carbon sequestration. NZ indigenous trees are incredibly efficient as carbon sinks, but they’re slow to get there.
  • Another benefit is restoring biodiversity with the right planting in the right areas.
  • Water quality can be improved and sedimentation run-off controlled.
  • And forestry can stabilise erosion-prone land. Currently we lose 200 million tonnes of soil to the sea every year.
  • Plus, it promises a lot of jobs in parts of New Zealand that need them.

 The work underway now is to map out land, both government-owned and private holdings, where forestry will be a good option.

 CONCLUSION

New Zealand is embarking on the kind of reform and transformation we haven’t seen for more than 30 years.

Choices around our land and how we use it will be critical in our overall climate change strategy.

Everyone gathered here today knows the severity of the challenge we face as a global community.

As Minister for Climate Change, I am proud that New Zealand is hosting you, and I am proud of the work New Zealanders do in the IPCC and other international climate forums.

30 years ago New Zealand took a moral stand against nuclear weapons and has worked internationally since then for international non-proliferation and disarmament.

Our Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has called climate change the nuclear free moment of this generation.

If we want to help lead the world towards meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement, we must create a moral mandate underpinned by decisive action at home to reduce our own emissions.

And, as a country, we must contribute our best and brightest people to the IPCC and UNFCCC prrocesses.

The science and evidence base that you people in this room build, and the very important work you do to communicate it to policy-makers is fundamental to what I and my political colleagues must do.

When I first grasped the enormity of the climate challenge about 20 years ago, I was working at Pricewaterhouse in London and I read an insurance industry report that said that the global insurance industry itself was going to collapse by 2050 under the weight of climate change related claims.

Almost every discussion about climate change then degenerated into arguments where people questioned the science.

I am so pleased that, in most discussions now, that no longer happens.

The science is settled; largely thanks to the work of the IPCC; both in collating the evidence and in communicating it.

It is now up to politicians, business leaders and communities to make the hard decisions about what to do to reduce emissions and to adapt to the changing climate.

Our decisions should always be underpinned by the evidence that the IPCC brings to the table.

And that evidence should always be updated and re-assessed when new data becomes available.

As the IPCC marks its 30th Anniversary, it feels like we have reached a time of new realisation and new resolve around climate change.

As chair, Hoesung Lee, noted in his address at celebrations in Paris a couple of weeks ago:

“30 years of IPCC assessments have concluded that anthropogenic climate change is real, its threats will increase, and we have the means to stop it cost effectively.”

I agree with him, and I am grateful for his organisation’s vision and commitment.

To you all here today, for the work you do collectively, I also say thank you.

 No reira, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā tatou katoa.

 

END

Article Type

Intro

The question around the relationship between climate change and land use, forestry and agriculture are central to the work you are doing here right now.

Council of Trade Unions supports better valuing District Health Board nurses

Source: Council Of Trade Unions (CTU) – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Council of Trade Unions supports better valuing District Health Board nurses

The Council of Trade Unions President Richard Wagstaff said today that he was standing beside members of the New Zealand Nurses Organisation (NZNO) who had returned a ‘no’ vote on their latest collective agreement offer. Mr Wagstaff said that it was in everyone’s interests, including the District Health Boards (DHBs) that these negotiations concluded with a fair outcome as swiftly as possible, and he would do whatever he could to help facilitate that.

“We all know that our health services and the people that run them have been stretched to breaking point after nine long years of chronic under-funding,” he said. “The return of this vote shows the level of unmet need that’s out there for the nurses, midwives and care assistants who have been covering the gap.”

“They’re understandably very frustrated, but we have an opportunity now for NZNO, the DHB employers and the Government to work together to find a more sustainable balance in the way we value our nursing services and staff.”

“Nine years of running on a care budget of goodwill from health staff has taken its toll. I personally think working people highly value the skilled work that the nursing team does, and if asked would want to know our nurses are being taken care of.”

“The pressure is on now to urgently address the barriers to a settlement of the NZNO DHB collective employment agreement which demonstrates the value and respect nurses deserve.”

The NZNO campaign site is now live here: www.healthneedsnursing.nz

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