New High Commissioner to Tonga announced

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: New High Commissioner to Tonga announced

Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters today announced diplomat Tiffany Babington as New Zealand’s new High Commissioner to Tonga.
“New Zealand has a strong relationship with Tonga, based on a population of more than 60,000 Tongans resident in New Zealand, development cooperation and our shared interest in regional issues,” says Mr Peters.
“Cooperation between our countries has been clearly demonstrated in recent days with our support to the Tongan Government following Tropical Cyclone Gita.
“Ms Babington will lead the delivery of New Zealand’s Official Development Assistance programme in Tonga, helping to oversee $66 million of investment over three years focused on energy, policing, justice and education.”
Ms Babington has previously been posted to Vanuatu and Italy, and worked on global development, Pacific regional, Niue and Tokelau issues.
ENDS
Contact: Alex Masters, Press Secretary, 021 809 186

Experts address urban challenges

Source: University Of Auckland – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Experts address urban challenges

As Auckland’s population continues to grow and the city intensifies, a key challenge is how to create high-quality urban spaces, accessible to all. Experts will address these issues at the School of Architecture and Planning’s annual lecture series Fast Forward.

Expressions of Interest: Consumer representative for the Mental Health and Addiction Quality Improvement Programme Leadership Group

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

Headline: Expressions of Interest: Consumer representative for the Mental Health and Addiction Quality Improvement Programme Leadership Group

Mental Health & Addiction Quality Improvement

Do you want to use your own mental health and/or addiction experience to work with the Health Quality & Safety Commission? 

We are seeking expressions of interest for the consumer position in the Commission’s Mental Health and Addiction (MHA) Quality Improvement Programme (QIP) Leadership Group. This group has a diversity of senior sector leaders as members and provides advice and direction to the Commission on this programme and its projects.

Key purpose of the Leadership Group

  1. Provide sector leadership in the development and implementation of the MHA quality improvement programme and achieving improved outcomes.
  2. Proactively support effective relationships between the MHA sector and the Commission.
  3. Provide advice and make recommendations to the Commission that are informed by evidence and international, national and local knowledge, and focused on strategies to improve mental health and addiction services.
  4. Share information that supports a national approach to MHA quality and safety improvements.
  5. Foster an integrated approach to improving the quality and safety of health and disability services with other Commission programmes.

What is expected of the consumer representative role?

Members of the Leadership Group have well-established networks and the ability to consult widely. Full day face-to-face meetings are held at least quarterly in Wellington or Auckland, with occasional teleconferences at other times and decisions by e-mail, if required.

The consumer representative will:

  • provide advice from a mental health and/or addiction consumer perspective, and be able to represent your own views from lived experience and represent the relevant views of your consumer community
  • provide advice and review materials from the Commission’s MHA programme, working collaboratively with other LG members, and other agencies when required
  • promote the work of the Commission and the Mental Health and Addiction Quality Improvement Programme with local, regional and national consumer groups and health providers
  • support and promote consumer leadership capability development in the health and disability sector
  • provide strategic guidance and support to enhance collaboration between consumer groups, health providers and government agencies.

Selection criteria

Candidates will be selected according to the following criteria:

  • demonstrated experience as a consumer representative
  • established or developing networks with local, regional and national consumer and community groups
  • ability to use personal mental health and/or addiction health experiences and those of others to support better design and delivery of health and disability services
  • knowledge about the mental health and addiction/disability services in New Zealand
  • experience working in advisory groups
  • prior knowledge/experience in co-design and/or quality improvement.

How to submit an Expression of Interest

Read and complete the attached Expression of Interest form, and email it to info@hqsc.govt.nz by 5pm Friday 23rd March 2018.

All candidates will be notified of the outcome of their Expression of Interest within one week of the closing date. Short-listed candidates will be then be offered a telephone interview and the successful candidates will be notified within a week of the telephone interview date. 

For further information please contact:
Shaun McNeil, National Consumer Engagement Advisor – Mental Health and Addiction.
shaun.mcneil@hqsc.govt.nz
04 912 0306
021 933 681

Approximate Timeline

Application closing date

5pm, Friday 23 March 2018

You will be notified by  Friday 30 March 2018
Shortlist telephone interviews during first full week April 2018 
Successful candidates chosen for recommendation to the Chair, by Friday 13 April 2018
Orientation of successful candidates to be advised 
MHA QIP Leadership Group meetings 2018 Wednesday 30th May (29 August, 28 November)

 

 

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New factsheets show extent of crisis in regions

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: New factsheets show extent of crisis in regions

New regional factsheets being published for the first time today show the housing crisis is not just an issue for Auckland but is now a challenge for our regions, Housing and Urban Development Minister Phil Twyford says.
Factsheets for 11 regions are now available on the Ministry of Social Development website and contain the latest data – including regionally-specific public housing supply figures, government support, transitional housing and numbers on the public housing waiting list – from the December 2017 quarter.
“The Labour-led Government isn’t shying away from the housing challenges our regions face. We want the public to understand the extent of these issues,” Phil Twyford says.
“This data gives the regions the information they need to work with central government on solutions to increase the supply of housing in their areas.
“This information is critical for the Government to understand what is happening at the grass roots level. We know what is happening at a national and main centres level, Auckland especially, but these factsheets shed new light on what is happening in heartland New Zealand in places like Northland, East Coast, Bay of Plenty and Canterbury.
“Everyone – no matter where they live – should have a warm, dry, safe home. Solving the national housing crisis is a massive task and one we are rolling up our sleeves and getting on with.
“This is why last week I announced the first tranche of up to 155 new state houses to be built in the regions by the middle of this year. And there will be more to come,” Phil Twyford says.

Over 14,000 Kiwis set their wheels in motion in Aotearoa Bike Challenge

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

Headline: Over 14,000 Kiwis set their wheels in motion in Aotearoa Bike Challenge

Throughout the month of February participants made more than 159,000 trips by bike, cycling an impressive 2,156,800 million kilometres in total.

The Aotearoa Bike Challenge is a partnership between the NZ Transport Agency and global organisation Love to Ride. The challenge encourages New Zealanders to make everyday trips by bike, with one 10-minute ride enough to give them the chance to win some great prizes while feeling the benefits of cycling.

“It was great to see so many New Zealanders committed to getting on their bikes this February,” says NZ Transport Agency Senior Manager System Design, Brett Gliddon.

“The challenge is an opportunity for more New Zealanders to experience just how easy it is to incorporate cycling into everyday life and its benefits as a transport option. Getting about by bike is great for your health and wellbeing, it supports communities, often is an efficient way to get around our towns and cities, and for many Kiwis who choose to ride to work, it’s a great way to start and end your day.”

To get more New Zealanders to give cycling a go, workplaces across the country were encouraged to sign up for the challenge and to motivate staff to take part.

Trade Aid Development and Education Manager, Michelia Miles, said the Aotearoa Bike Challenge was a valuable initiative for staff to take part in.

“As an organisation, we feel it is important to encourage our team to get involved in initiatives that benefit their wellbeing and the environment. The Aotearoa Bike Challenge was so fun and easy. It increased staff motivation and built stronger connections amongst the team.”

Fitting cycling in to your everyday routine doesn’t have to be difficult, says Michelia.

“As a mother with a young family I often find it hard to fit in exercise but taking part in the Aotearoa Bike Challenge was an easy way for me to get moving regularly as it only took a 10-minute bike ride to take part.

“Because of the challenge, I’m now getting at least three hours of exercise into my mostly sedentary week. It’s a win-win for both me and the environment, and a habit that I definitely plan on keeping up for the rest of 2018!”

To give riders an extra incentive, there were great prizes up for grabs. The Wattwheels e-bike was won by Elle Heike from Victoria University of Wellington; and the Avanti e-bike was won by Ross Stanley from Xero in Auckland. Hundreds of other prizes including cycling gear, books and vouchers were awarded to participants throughout the challenge.

View all results from the 2018 challenge

Place

Company

Region

Percentage of staff cycling

2000+ staff

1.

Beca

New Zealand

16%

2.

Christchurch City Council

Canterbury

8.7%

3.

University of Auckland

Auckland

5.6%

500 – 1999 staff

1.

Tonkin + Taylor

New Zealand

35%

2.

Greater Wellington Regional Council

Wellington

20%

3.

Palmerston North City Council

Manawatu

17%

200 – 499 staff

1.

Beca Christchurch

Canterbury

41%

2.

Warren and Mahoney

New Zealand

32%

3.

Meridian Energy Christchurch

Canterbury

30%

50 – 199 staff

1.

Laura Fergusson Trust

Wellington

82%

2.

Mercury Rotorua

Bay of Plenty

70%

3.

Tonkin + Taylor Wellington

Wellington

69%

20 – 49 staff

1.

Harbour Sport

Auckland

100%

2.

Tonkin + Taylor Nelson

Nelson

100%

3.

TDG Auckland

Auckland

100%

7 – 19 staff

1.

Southern
Institute of Technology Early Childcare Centre

Southland

100%

2.

Vivian Medical Centre

Taranaki

100%

3.

St John Gisborne

Gisborne

100%

3 – 6 staff

1.

Mosgiel Central Kindergarten

Otago

100%

2.

Warren and Mahoney Tauranga

Bay of Plenty

100%

3.

Van Dyck Fine Foods CRM Team

Taranaki

100%

The Māori economic renaissance

Source: Massey University – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: The Māori economic renaissance


Massey alumnus Mavis Mullins, of Rangitāne, Te Atihaunui-a-Paparangi and Ngāti Ranginui, has forged a hugely successful career in primary industries.


By Dr Jason Paul Mika

Māori businesses now account for an economic asset base of more than NZ$42.6 billion, according to the latest estimates. Small and medium-sized enterprises make up the largest part of the Māori economy. These entrepreneurs are building on a business approach with ancient roots – a Māori way of thinking and doing business and its ability to reconnect with our common heritage as descendants of Papatūānuku, mother earth.

 Drivers of Māori entrepreneurship

A number of developments are likely to be driving this. Chief among them are Māori frustration and anger over the negative effects of loss of land, language, culture and tribal autonomy over successive generations. The response has been a cultural renaissance. It started in the early 1970s and set out to reaffirm Māori as tangata whenua (people of the land) with enduring rights as the indigenous people of Aotearoa.

Out of this period of tumult came the Crown’s attempt at peace and reconciliation with Māori through the Waitangi Tribunal. Settlements under the Treaty of Waitangi, which was signed by Māori chiefs and representatives of the British Crown in 1840, are probably the single-most important factor in changing perceptions of the Māori economy.

However, settlements made up only about one per cent of the NZ$36.9 billion Māori economic asset base in 2010. It is the 15,600 or so Māori small and medium-sized enterprises, managing NZ$26 billion in assets, that make up the largest part of the Māori economy. Bankers, investors and suppliers are drawn to Māori enterprises as potential partners, eager to understand how to modify their offerings and methods with this market in mind.

Air New Zealand’s increasing use of te reo, the Māori language, springs to mind. While casually introduced, it belies a much sterner “behind the scenes” challenge to normalise Māori language and culture within our national carrier. 

Dr Jason Mika researches Māori entreprenership and is co-director of Te Au Rangahau, Massey University’s Māori Business and Leadership Research Centre.


Booming Māori economy

Not since the burgeoning tribal economies of the first half of the 19th century, when surpluses from hapū-based (sub-tribal) enterprises sustained settlers and tribes, has entrepreneurship been viewed as an appealing possibility among Māori.

Until recently, being Māori and an entrepreneur was an anomaly. The mainstay of Māori livelihoods since the 1930s was employment in labouring jobs in “salt of the earth” professions such as construction, forestry, fishing, health and education. Yet, appetite for entrepreneurship is growing among Māori.

The Māori renaissance brought forth support for other forms of Māori-centred policy. Kōhanga reo (Māori language preschools), kura kaupapa (Māori language secondary schools), and wānanga (Māori tertiary institutions) are examples of successful Māori-centred initiatives in education. There is also acceptance that Māori health models and practitioners are needed to improve Māori health. The official recognition of the Māori language as a taonga (treasure) led to the institution of Māori radio, television and spectrum to sustain it.

Māori ingenuity in business

While Māori ways of thinking and doing were becoming increasingly normalised within health, education and the media, the same acceptance was not apparent in commerce and industry. For instance, few Māori business leaders in the 1980s and 1990s could easily point to their equivalent of Māori health’s “te whare tapa whā” (four dimensions of health) as a model of how Māori do business. 

The power of enterprise to transform Māori lives was embraced when a decade of Māori development was set in motion following the Māori Economic Summit (Hui Taumata) in 1984. Within its remit, enterprise development was identified as an important means of realising Māori aspirations for self-determination.

Somewhat against the tide of the then government’s withdrawal of direct support for industry, a number of initiatives to assist Māori enterprises were established following Hui Taumata. Some of them still exist today, including Poutama Trust and Māori Women’s Development Incorporated. 

Among many examples of successful Māori business leaders are Business Hall of Fame inductee Mavis Mullins, iMoko innovator Dr Lance O’Sullivan, Kono chief executive Rachel Taulelei, animation entrepreneur Ian Taylor, horticultural robotics entrepreneur Steve Saunders, Federation of Māori Authorities chair Traci Houpapa and 2017 Young Māori Business Leader of the Year Blanche Murray. All are exemplars of a rich vein of modern Māori entrepreneurship, integrating Māori and Western capabilities to create value. 

Traci Houpapa, pictured after winning a Massey University Distinguished Alumni Service Award for her work in raising the profile of Māori agribusiness.


An ideal model for enterprise assistance

This history shows that public funding of enterprise assistance for Māori ebbs and flows with changing political ideologies. My doctoral research shows that Māori businesses operate on an uneven playing field where Māori providers face a different level of scrutiny as to their value for money. Māori enterprises need both Māori-specific and mainstream support, but the knowledge of what works for Māori has so far been limited to policy evaluations, rather than empirical research.

My research found that Māori entrepreneurs identified seven main features of the ideal model of enterprise assistance:

  • Operates within an entity substantially owned and controlled by Māori;
  • Partially government funded;
  • Delivery by Māori in partnership with mainstream providers;
  • Multiplicity of assistance (e.g. information, advice, facilitation, training, grants, and finance);
  • Cultural authenticity and flexibility;
  • Long-term relationships with Māori enterprises; and
  • Varying assistance over the business life cycle.

Within Te Au Rangahau, Massey University’s Māori Business and Leadership Research Centre, we are building on this work. We found that Māori-specific providers tend to resemble these characteristics, but mainstream providers could improve.

Research identifies three key competencies that consistently matter to Māori entrepreneurs: cultural competency (knowledge of the Māori language, culture and history and the ability to use it); relational competency (time invested in forming relationships with Māori entrepreneurs); and technical competency (delivering on promises). 

It also identifies principles that providers (Māori and mainstream) can use to evaluate their assistance against Māori entrepreneurs’ needs and preferences. With such change in enterprise assistance, all of Aotearoa is set to benefit from the “new normal” – Māori entrepreneurial success. Mauri ora!

Dr Jason Paul Mika, of Ngāi Tūhoe, Whakatōhea, Ngāti Awa and Ngāti Kahungunu descent, is a senior lecturer with the Massey Business School and co-director of Te Au Rangahau, Massey’s Māori Business and Leadership Research Centre.

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NZ supporting resilience of Niue infrastructure and renewable energy

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: NZ supporting resilience of Niue infrastructure and renewable energy

Infrastructure and renewable energy programmes are getting support today as Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announces a package to improve water and roading infrastructure on Niue and further develop renewable energy generation.
“Niue’s remoteness and susceptibility to extreme weather make high quality and resilient infrastructure very important for visitors and the local population of Niue,” says Prime Minister Jacinda Arden.
“New Zealand will invest $750,000 to make immediate improvements to Niue’s roads and water network ahead of the 2018 tourism season. We have also undertaken to carry out an assessment of Niue’s long-term water infrastructure needs to safeguard the resilience of the network.
“We will provide a further $5 million to support the development of solar energy generation in Niue. This builds on the $5 million we have already provided and will help Niue meet its renewable energy target of 80 per cent by 2025.
“Achieving this target will create annual savings of close to $1 million for the Government of Niue, which can be applied to other development priorities such as health, education and other public services,” Ms Ardern said.
Niue and New Zealand share a close relationship built on shared citizenship and our unique constitutional arrangements.
Large increases in tourism numbers have been a major success story for Niue’s economy but they have also placed major demands on the atolls roads and water supply.
The Prime Minister is currently in Niue leading the 2018 Pacific Mission.

Monthly E-News – March 2018

Source: Green Party

Headline: Monthly E-News – March 2018

Welcome to our first e-news of 2018. Wahoo! We’ve got big plans about how to keep you up to date with what’s been happening in, both in our work and the wider world. This newsletter is one of the ways we will bring the important issues straight to you.


We’re so excited to have Green Ministers for the very first time. We’re throwing everything we’ve got at delivering wins in our Ministerial areas. Wins for the climate, our native species, and for women.

While working as part of Government, we are also holding strong to our Green values. We are always committed to human rights, fair trade, and ending inequality

So, while the name may have changed, our position hasn’t. The Green Party remains opposed to the CPTPP (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for the Trans-Pacific Partnership).


Sometimes the best way for our MPs to get the change we need is to take a trip to the part of the world where the real impacts are being felt. For Eugenie, this meant a 760km trip south-east of Aotearoa New Zealand to Antipodes Island, aboard HMNZS Wellington.

Eugenie accompanied DOC’s ‘Million Dollar Mouse’ monitoring team to the island group where they have begun a month-long assessment of pest eradication efforts. In 2016, they began the gargantuan task of eradicating the 200,000-strong mouse population on the subantarctic World Heritage site. If successful, it will be one of the largest mouse eradications in the world. We’re all waiting hopefully as the team does their work.

Mice weren’t the only species Eugenie went searching for. The critically endangered wandering albatross breeds almost exclusively on Antipodes Island. Numbers are declining, probably due to being killed as by-catch of fisheries.


We’re celebrating a profound win with the Government’s response to a Green-led select committee inquiry into the management of tūpāpaku (deceased bodies).

In 2015, Metiria initiated this inquiry because of the huge problems and concerns many Māori share when it comes to access and care of the tūpāpaku of their loved ones. Marama took over to lead the inquiry in the Māori Affairs Select Committee.

The Committee heard from whānau about the hurt and grief they experience when they are kept from staying with their loved one’s tūpāpaku and making the decisions about how they are treated and managed.

Thankfully, the Government has adopted almost all of the recommendations including codes of best practice and formal communication processes for relevant agencies such as the Police, coronial services and funeral homes so that whānau can grieve their loved ones in the right way for them.


Waitangi Day 2018

A strong contingent of Green MPs were welcomed onto the treaty grounds at Waitangi this year. Even though it was a month ago, we are all still feeling the energy. The atmosphere was truly electric and the chance to spend a few days up north, listening, was a breath of fresh air. Iwi really get that the challenges our country faces, including climate change, are long-term. That’s the way Greens think and if we work together, it promises much for our future.

Check out Chlöe’s photo essay for a sense of the occasion. In my remarks this year I spoke about tino rangatiratanga, how a recent finding from the Waitangi Tribunal confirms what we have always known – hapū and iwi Māori did not cede sovereignty over their lands, peoples and resources in 1840.

I also spoke about Greens’ interpretation of that finding. For us, Te Tiriti is not a thing to be ‘settled’ but to be truly honoured and implemented at all levels of Government. Now that the Greens are in government for the first time, we have a weighty responsibility to act as Treaty partners and, in particular, to apply Te Tiriti in areas we hold Ministerial portfolios.

I hope you’re enjoying our first newsletter of 2018. The year has begun extremely well and I’m certain there this year will see positive change for kiwis around the country.


Watch

Dairy, an out of control machine

Election Access Fund Bill pulled from biscuit tin

Climate Change causing weather havoc

Read

Fixing health and the climate

The post Monthly E-News – March 2018 appeared first on Blog | Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand.

And the OSCA goes to…

Source: University of Waikato – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: And the OSCA goes to…

The University of Waikato has just purchased an industrial composter – the first unit of its kind in New Zealand. The OSCA Bite Size 200 can process 200kg of mixed organic waste per day, significantly reducing the University’s waste to landfill.

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Building a team in the Bay

Source: University of Waikato – Press Release/Statement:

Headline: Building a team in the Bay

Construction of the University’s new home in Tauranga’s CBD is well underway, and behind the scenes we’re also busy building a team to support our growing presence in the Bay of Plenty. The team is comprised of both academic staff who will deliver our programmes to students and also general staff who are integral to supporting our students. Here, we introduce you to some of our key people, starting with Student Recruitment and Student Service team members.

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