Category: New Zealand

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Serious crash: SH2, Maungatāwhiri

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Police are in attendance at a serious crash on State Highway 2 near Maungatāwhiri this evening.

    Two vehicles are involved in the crash, which has occurred near the Maramarua Golf Club.

    It was first reported to Police at 4.24pm.

    Two people are in a critical condition, with a third person in a serious condition.

    Those in critical condition are due to be airlifted to hospital.

    State Highway 2 is currently closed in both directions.

    Diversions are due to be put in place, but we advise motorists to expect delays and to take an alternative route if at all possible.

    The Serious Crash Unit is being deployed to examine the scene.

    ENDS.

    Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Update: Arrest in homicide investigation, Christchurch

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Attribute to Detective Senior Sergeant Damon Wells:

    This afternoon Police have arrested a person in relation to the homicide of Tyrone Munns in Christchurch on 9 March.

    At around 2pm today, Police – including Armed Offenders Squad – arrested the 29-year-old man at a Christchurch address. He is due to appear in Christchurch District Court on Saturday 29 March, charged with murder.

    I wish to acknowledge Tyrone’s family in this difficult time and hope that this arrest provides them with some degree of comfort as they grieve.

    I also wish to acknowledge members of the community who have come forward with information since the incident, which has assisted with today’s arrest. We hope that this news will provide some reassurance to our communities of Police commitment to pursue violent offenders and hold them to account.

    Finally, I wish to acknowledge the outstanding work of Police staff involved in the investigation and today’s arrest, and in the ongoing work to bring this case before the courts.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Employment Relations Authority members sought

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Workplace Relations and Safety Minister Brooke van Velden is seeking new members to fill multiple vacancies at the Employment Relations Authority (ERA) as several existing members have not been reappointed.

    The ERA is an independent body that helps resolve employment relationship problems and facilitates collective bargaining when issues arise. 

    “ERA members have an important role to play in supporting both worker and employer certainty and ensuring employers and employees do right by each other. It is important the ERA attracts committed and experienced people who can arrive at sound and reasonable decisions on employment law matters,” says Ms van Velden. 

    “There are five upcoming vacancies, and I am encouraging expressions of interest from candidates who understand the expectations, realities and demands of New Zealand’s various workplaces.

    “Much of my policy work programme is aimed at restoring certainty for all parties, for example by removing eligibility for remedies if the employee is at fault. I want to ensure that decisions made by the ERA inspire certainty in workplaces as well, which requires that the right people are appointed.

    “I note the experience and backgrounds of ERA members has been unbalanced. Currently, 76 per cent of ERA members have significant experience in the public sector, but only 48 percent in private business. I would like to see the make-up of ERA membership better reflect the proportions of public sector and private sector employment in New Zealand.

    “By having employment disputes resolved quickly we can ease the burden on New Zealand’s court system. It also means the parties involved will not need to waste as much time and money on trying to sort out work-related problems they may be experiencing.

    “This Government is committed to supporting thriving and productive workplaces. ERA decisions can have a material impact on the costs of being an employer and doing business and can impact workers’ confidence to enter or remain in the workforce,” says Ms van Velden. 

    Applicants will ideally be experienced in employment law or business and be adept at getting to the core of a problem and finding fair and equitable solutions. They can be based in either Christchurch, Wellington or Auckland.

    Applications can be made on the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment website: Employment Relations Authority Member Job Details | MBIEPROD.

    The application process closes on 20 April 2025. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Maintenance works coming for State Highway 1 Kilbirnie/Miramar

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    State Highway 1 between the airport and Kilbirnie Crescent/Hamilton Road will see road maintenance work underway next month.

    Roxanne Hilliard, Wellington Alliance Manager, says the stretch of road is the next in line to be worked on as part of the state highway summer maintenance season.

    “This is a key link to the airport and to the Miramar Peninsula. Cobham Drive and Calabar Road carry 20,000 to 30,000 vehicles daily. The highway is well-used, and it is crucial it is kept safe and reliable for the public.”

    Road crews will be resurfacing sections of the highway at night between 9 pm and 4:30 am from Tuesday, 8 April, to Wednesday, 16 April.

    Work will be carried out on Calabar Road, at the Cobham Drive/Troy Street roundabout, the southbound lanes of Cobham Drive near Evans Bay Parade, and at the Kilbirnie Crescent/Hamilton Road intersection.

    Hilliard says these sections of State Highway 1 need to be worked on.

    “People frequently ask why we are working on a road that appears to be fine. The fact is, like servicing your car, the best time to do maintenance is before major damage occurs.”

    “A road may still look like it is in good condition when we resurface it, but what we are doing is fixing it before bigger and more expensive problems arise,” Ms. Hilliard says.

    She says that because it is a well-used route, people traveling between the Wellington CBD and Miramar will experience delays while the work is completed. Stop/Go traffic management and directional closures will be used as needed.

    “Unfortunately, we cannot do this type of work without affecting traffic. Completing it at night is the least disruptive option.”

    “There are fewer vehicles on the road at night, and the work is timed outside of peak operating times for Wellington Airport. However, if you have a late evening flight, please allow extra time to get to and from the airport,” Ms. Hilliard says.

    These works are weather-dependent and may be rescheduled in case of bad weather. Road resurfacing requires dry and warm weather conditions to be effective.

    Works schedule and detour maps

    • Tuesday, 8 April. 9 pm – 4:30 am.
      • SH1 Calabar Road near the Broadway/Stewart Duff Drive roundabout.
      • Stop/Go traffic management and 30 km/h temporary speed limit.
    • Wednesday, 9 April. 9 pm – 4:30 am.
      • Cobham Drive/Troy Street roundabout
      • Altered lane layout. Traffic can travel as normal
    • Thursday, 10 April, and Sunday, 13 April. 9 pm – 4:30 am.
      • SH1 Cobham Drive/Troy Street roundabout resurfacing
      • Northbound traffic detour via Troy Street, Rongotai Road, and Evans Bay Parade
    • Monday, 14 April. 9 pm – 4:30 am.
      • SH1 Cobham Drive resurfacing near Evans Bay Parade
      • Northbound  traffic detour via Troy Street, Rongotai Road, and Evans Bay Parade
    • Tuesday, 15 April. 9 pm – 4:30 am.
      • SH1 Cobham Drive resurfacing near Kilbirnie Crescent/Hamilton Road
      • Northbound detour via Evans Bay Parade, Rongotai Road, Crawford Road, and Wellington Road
    • Wednesday, 16 April. 9 pm – 4:30 am.
      • SH1 Cobham Drive resurfacing near Kilbirnie Crescent/Hamilton Road
      • Southbound detour via Wellington Road, Crawford Road, Rongotai Road, and Evans Bay Parade

    View larger SH1 Cobham Drive detour route [PDF, 130 KB]

    View larger SH1 Kilbirnie Crescent / Hamilton Road detour route [PDF, 119 KB]

    More information

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Waikato & Bay of Plenty state highway works March/April 2025 

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    As the end of March signals the close of the traditional construction season, there’s an opportunity to reflect on an epic summer of work. 

    “With most renewal activities wrapping up, contractors are on a final push to complete as much work as weather and time allows,” says Sandra King, Bay of Plenty System Manager at NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA). 

    When crews started the hefty Waikato and Bay of Plenty resealing and rebuilding programme, 500 lane kilometres was the target, and we remain optimistic we’ll be able to reach it. 

    “We’ve had stunning weather this summer – perfect conditions for the work that needed to be take place, which is great news for motorists. We need warm dry weather to get through it all – winter is too wet, and water has a significant impact on our roads. 

    “Everything we do now will help us keep the network safe and accessible over winter.” says Ms King. 

    Road users are reminded to check the NZTA Journey Planner website for the latest road conditions across the state highway network. 

    Journey Planner(external link)

    Waikato Bay of Plenty works as at 28 March 2025 [PDF, 301 KB]

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Crash closes State Highway 1 in Kilbirnie/Hataitai

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    |

    Drivers travelling between the Wellington CBD and the Miramar Peninsula can expect delays this afternoon following a crash on State Highway 1 near Hataitai/Kilbirnie.

    The highway is closed between the intersections of Moxham Avenue and Kilbirnie Crescent following a crash which has seen a car roll onto its roof.

    Emergency services are at the scene.

    Drivers should avoid the area and use an alternative route until the crash site is cleared and the road reopened.

    Updates on the highway’s status can be found on the NZTA/Waka Kotahi website:

    Tags

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech to NZ Planning Institute Conference

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Introduction 

    Thank you for inviting me to speak with you today about the new resource management system the Government is introducing, starting this year. I want to acknowledge Hon Rachel Brooking, opposition spokesperson for RMA Reform, as well as Simon Court, my Under-Secretary, who I will invite to speak after me.

    I would like to acknowledge the NZPI, David and Andrea, and the many planners here today, as key and influential players as the Government takes action to replace the Resource Management Act.

    You, more than most, will understand the frustration and headwinds that the RMA has caused for everyone involved in the system – from applicants just wanting to get things done, to councils trying to implement and administer the RMA, to planners such as yourselves, and other experts, who are trying to do their best within what is a fundamentally broken system. 

    I am concerned that the social license of planning is at risk, with some seeing planners as stifling development rather than enabling it. 

    I accept that you have been working and operating in an uncertain and broken system. A system that encourages too much consultation and too much regulation for fear of landing yourselves court. 

    We are fixing the planning system. We are doing our part to improve the system, which means you have to do your part, too. 

    You have to properly balance the protection of the environment with the necessity of development, accepting that things like houses, supermarkets, and quarries are not nice to haves: they are essentials for human life. 

    We live in a free market economy, and not a planned one. Commerce and trade must happen, and it isn’t the job of the planning system to control or prevent those things.

    You all have a critical role to play in New Zealand’s growth journey. We are a country that has been living beyond our means for too long – with an economy our size, that is thirsty for growth, we cannot justify being as restrictive and fragmented as we have been.

    As a country, we have to start saying ‘yes’ a lot more, and ‘no’ a lot less. We have accepted our part we play in helping you do that, and I look forward to working with you on the part you need to play as well.

    I know the NZPI has thousands of members and a long proud history of providing good advice and advocacy and I look forward to working with you on the replacement for the RMA. 

    As you know, earlier this week, Cabinet took decisions on a new resource management system. We’ve made some announcements including sharing the Expert Advisory Group report and recommendations, which I have heard has contributed to healthy discussion and debate at your yearly conference down here in Invercargill. 

    The need for reform 

    As you know more than most, the RMA is broken and is a handbrake on growth for the country and you can directly trace the onset of our housing affordability crisis to the introduction of the RMA.

    It’s also too hard to build renewable energy, it’s too hard to get a road or quarry consented, it’s too hard to get roads built, it’s too hard to do anything. 

    That’s why it’s critical that over the next two years and beyond, we nail resource management reform.

    The Government is committed to reforming the resource management system to drive economic growth and increase productivity by making it easier to get things done in New Zealand. 

    Our intention is to replace the Resource Management Act with two new acts – one to focus on land-use planning and the second to focus on the natural environment. 

    The new system will provide a framework that makes it easier to plan and deliver infrastructure as well as protecting the environment. But before I share further detail, I’d like to cover the significant progress we have made already. 

    As you will be aware, we have taken a phased approach to resource management reform. 

    Our first phase of resource management reform was the repeal of the Natural and Built Environment Act and Spatial Planning Act in December 2023. 

    The second phase was to deliver targeted changes to the RMA through two amendment bills, focused on relieving the most significant resource management issues in the short term, as well as fast-track and changes to the suite of national direction. 

    In October 2024, the first RMA Amendment Bill, came into force. This sought to reduce the regulatory burden on resource consent applicants as well as supporting development in key sectors, including farming and other primary industries.

    In December the Fast-track Approvals Bill was enacted, and from February it has been open for referral and substantive applications. 

    The second of the RMA bills is now before the Environment Select Committee – and is a precursor to full replacement of the Resource Management Act. This Bill will make important changes in the short term to make it quicker and simpler to consent renewable energy, boost housing supply, and reduce red tape. The Select Committee is due to report back in June on this Bill. 

    Phase three 

    The third and final phase of the resource management reform programme is the full replacement of the RMA.

    Last year, we established the Expert Advisory Group, ably led by Janette Campbell to develop a blueprint for replacing the resource management legislation. The Expert Advisory Group worked at pace, and I would like to congratulate Janette and the Group on the quality of the report and appreciate all their efforts in the later part of last year to deliver the Blueprint. 

    At the commencement of the reform process, Cabinet set 10 principles for the Expert Advisory Group to consider in the development of the Blueprint. The EAG report provides a broadly workable basis for the new resource management system, and the report has guided Cabinet decision-making on the broad architecture. 

    I say broadly workable – it is of course obvious to everyone in this room that with any planning system the devil is in the detail, and we do have more work to do. 

    Today I want to take you through the ten principles Cabinet asked the EAG to ‘build out’, and how they are being carried forward into the next system.

    Narrow the scope of the system 

    The first of these principles was to narrow the scope of the resource management system and the effects it controls. The RMA right now just does far too much. 

    When you’re trying to manage for everything, often, you achieve nothing.

    The new system will have a narrower approach to effects management based on the economic concept of externalities. Effects that are borne solely by the party undertaking the activity will not be controlled, while financial or competitive matters will be excluded. 

    For example, under the new system you will be able to change the interior or exterior of a building, which have no impact on neighbours, such as the size or configuration of apartments, the provision of balconies, as well as outdoor open spaces for a private dwelling. 

    The new legislation will narrow the scope of system, with the enjoyment of property rights as the guiding principle. 

    Now a lot of people are getting quite worked up about this. People often get obsessed about whether or not something is or is not a human right – and I must admit that a pet peeve of mine is the overuse of this label. 

    But something that is actually contained in the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights is that “no one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his property”.

    When people are stopped from doing what they want on their own property, for no good reason, then in my view: that is arbitrarily depriving them of their property. 

    We have been very clear that the new system will protect property rights, so long as you are not impacting others. To be even clearer: I see protection of the environment as a fundamental feature of any regime built on these ideals. 

    Respecting private property rights within the framework of a market economy, while also protecting the environment is exactly what we will do. 

    Compared to the RMA, the new legislation will more clearly define the types of adverse effects that can be considered and raise the threshold for when those adverse effects must be managed.

    This will be a significant transformation of New Zealand’s resource management system and marks a shift from a precautionary to a more permissive approach.

    Both Acts will include starting presumptions that a land use is enabled, unless there is a significant enough impact on either the ability of others to use their own land or on the natural environment. This will reduce the scope of effects being regulated and enable more activities to take place as of right. 

    There will be a requirement for regulatory justification reports if departing from approaches to regulation standardised at the national level. 

    Subject to further detailed design advice, the legislation will also include protection against regulatory takings. This will allow affected landowners to seek recourse where it is found that unjustified restrictions placed on them. 

    We are also proposing a smaller number of consent categories that will make it simpler and more certain for applicants. 

    This includes removing non-complying activities. 

    8-10% of all resource consent applications every year are for non-complying activities. The gateway test in the RMA, creates a barrier to development even when applicants do everything they can to mitigate effects.  

    One point that I wanted to make today was in regards to the effects threshold, or the materiality of effects that is addressed by our resource management system. The RMA has led to a system that accounts for and address all effects, with only ‘de minimus’ effects discounted.

    The EAG recommended lifting the threshold to ‘minor’ or ‘more than minor’ adverse effects, meaning that land-use is enabled, unless there are minor or more than minor effects on either the ability of others to use their land (in the Planning Act) or on the natural environment in the NEA. 

    The EAG point out that the RMA requires less than minor effects to be considered, including for who is involved in consenting processes i.e. who may be affected or whether a consent is publicly notified. 

    Cabinet has agreed to ‘raise the threshold for the level of adverse effects on people and the environment that can be considered in setting rules and determining who is affected by a resource consent’. 

    We liked where the EAG was going, but we want to take a look at this to make sure that we have the settings right, and that what we do will avoid as much as possible 30 years of litigation about what the proper definition of the thresholds are.

    This has a real impact on how people interact and use the resource management system, and how decisions are made, so we do need to do further work here and I look forward to feedback on where we land.  

    Establish two Acts with clear and distinct purposes 

    The second principle was to establish two Acts with clear and distinct purposes, one to manage environmental effects arising from activities and another to enable urban development and infrastructure. 

    Cabinet has now recommitted to this, and can confirm that the new planning system will be made up of two new Acts.

    The first act – The Planning Act – will focus on planning and regulating the use, development and enjoyment of land.

    It will enable the urban and infrastructure development New Zealand needs and will align with the Government’s Going for Housing Growth plan and 30-year National Infrastructure Plan. 

    The second act – The Natural Environment Act – will focus on the use, protection, and enhancement of the natural environment. This includes our land, air, freshwater, coastal and marine water, and other natural resources. 

    Our natural resource management needs a clearer focus on what matters most in regulating the use, protection and enhancement of the environment.

    Cabinet has accepted the EAG’s recommendation for only one set of national direction under each act.

    National Direction under the Natural Environment Act will cover freshwater, indigenous biodiversity and coastal policy.  

    National Direction under the new Planning Act will cover urban development, infrastructure – including renewable energy – and natural hazards.  

    Strengthen the role of environmental limits 

    The third principle was to strengthen and clarify the role of environmental limits and how they are to be developed.

    For environmental limits there will be a clearer legislative basis for setting them for our natural environment. This will provide more certainty around where development can and should be enabled, whilst protecting the environment. 

    Like I mentioned earlier, things like houses, supermarkets, and quarries are essential to any modern country. They actually aren’t nice to haves – they are must haves. A regime of environmental limits ensures that everyone’s obligations are clear, and developers have understood safe harbours to operate within.

    While local variation will still be possible, designing the system around default pathways like this will provide greater investment certainty, and improve the timeliness of decision-making.

    National standards

    And that nicely brings me to the fourth principle, to provide for greater use of national standards to reduce the need for resource consents and to simplify council plans, so that standard-complying activity cannot be subjected to a consent requirement.

    Nationally set standards, including standardised land use zones, will provide significant system benefits and efficiencies. The new legislation will provide for greater standardisation and ensure that policy setting happens at the national level, while local decision is enabled for the things that matter.

    New Zealand does not need 1175 different types of zones. In Japan, which uses standardised planning, they have only 13 zones.  

    Standardised zones will significantly reduce the cost of plan development borne by councils. 

    Across New Zealand local government incurs costs of $90 million per year, developing consulting and implementing regional and district plans. 

    Under the new system, council costs for developing their own zones, definitions, policies, objectives, rules and overlays will significantly reduce, as these would be set at the national level. They will focus on where the zones developed by central government will apply, and develop bespoke zones, if needed. 

    An economic analysis of the EAG report estimated a halving in the overall costs of plan making and implementation, across the country. This could save an estimated $14.8 billion in council administrative and compliance costs, over a 30-year period. 

    A standardised system will also provide much more consistency for users working across multiple local government borders, a benefit that should not be underestimated. Inconsistent rules cause frustration and added cost for resource consent applicants who have to redo otherwise identical proposals to match local plan requirements. 

    In addition to cost savings, standardised zones will be more flexible and permissive than many of the zones applied by local councils. This will improve economic efficiency and provide more choice for businesses and consumers. I would expect, for example, this to help drive down the cost of building a house. 

    We will be looking to international examples of standardised zones. While we hope to go somewhat further in terms of standardisation than some of the Australian states have done, they provide a useful cross reference for us. Victoria replaced 2,870 zones with 25 standardised zones which enable a wider range of land uses and development.

    Resource consents will still be needed under the new system, but with the new nationally standardized land use zones and more national standards, there will be much fewer resource consents required and more permitted activities.

    Compliance monitoring and enforcement

    The fifth principle was the agreement that the new system would see a shift from consenting before any works are undertaken, to strengthened compliance monitoring and enforcement after the activity.  

    We are acutely aware that if we truly want an enduring system that is enabling of development, we need to show Kiwis that this can exist at the same time as good environmental protection. 

    All users of the system need to be aware that while we will be enabling them, we expect them to follow the rules. And if they don’t, there will be consequences. 

    The new system will improve the consistency and strength of environmental monitoring and enforcement. This will ensure that whilst the new system will be more enabling, the rules for environmental protection will be clear and consistent across the country, and anyone seen to be flouting the rules will be more likely to have enforcement action taken against them.

    This work will involve consideration of an entity like the Environmental Protection Authority to perform compliance and enforcement functions, and environmental monitoring functions centrally, removing these functions from councils. 

    This will be done in a separate legislative process and is not part of the two new Acts. 

    This, combined with other system changes (ie, national standards and zones) would involve a reduction in the role of local government which if progressed, could have wider implications for the structure of local government in New Zealand. The Minister of Local Government and I are working through these issues now, and expect to have more to say later this year. 

    Council plans

    Each Act will require one combined plan per region – including spatial planning – with plan chapters being developed by each local authority, combined for each region, then presented as a national e-plan as per Cabinet principles six and seven. 

    This will result in a smaller number of plans overall, that will be simpler to use, and consistent across the country.

    Spatial planning done right will enable housing and business development in places where constraints can be avoided or appropriately managed, as well as support early protection of infrastructure corridors and strategic sites, lowering the cost of infrastructure. 

    Cabinet has also agreed to establish a new planning tribunal for low-cost dispute resolution, as per the eight principle. 

    Uphold Treaty of Waitangi settlements 

    Critically, the ninth principle was to uphold Treaty settlements and the crowns obligations. 

    In the last few days, some people have been mischaracterising the Government’s position by saying there would be no treaty clause at all in the new planning system. This is untrue. 

    As per our coalition agreements, there will not be a generic Treaty clause that says that the act must give effect to or take account of the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi. The Government’s intent is that there will be a descriptive clause instead, that will recognise the Treaty of Waitangi and the uniqueness of the settlements entered into by Iwi with the Crown.

    The problem with generic treaty principles clauses is they are open ended and amorphous, and they create uncertainty and legal risk for everybody. There is an opportunity through the development of more descriptive treaty clauses to really spell out everyone’s specific roles in the new system. 

    This may include refreshing provisions that provide for Māori participation in the RMA, making sure they are relevant in modern New Zealand and are achieving their underlying purpose.  

    We will also work with post-settlement governance entities to ensure that historical Treaty settlements and other arrangements, including rights acknowledged under Takutai Moana legislation, are upheld.  

    It is a bottom line for this government that we uphold and honour Treaty settlements that the Crown has entered into in good faith, and this includes in these reforms.

    Having outlined the above nine principles, I hope you can agree that principle ten has clearly been achieved, which was to provide faster, cheaper and less litigious processes within shorter, less complex and more accessible legislation. 

    As I have said: the devil will be in the detail, and there is still water to go under the bridge. But with the EAG’s blueprint, I feel confident that we are going to get this done, achieving better outcomes for all New Zealanders. 

    Changes to Phase 2 national direction programme 

    Now those eagled-eyed viewers of government policy will remember the Government has an ambitious plan in Phase 2 of our reforms to update and modernize a series of National Direction to ensure New Zealanders experience gains in the short term from a more enabling system.

    Our previously announced national direction program included 21 instruments, which collectively would have substantial implementation requirements of local government. 

    In light of the significance of the phase 3 reform, the Government has decided to relook at our Phase 2 national direction program and focus it to deliver on Government priorities while minimizing disruption to the resource management system. 

    Today I am confirming that we will still be progressing most of what was previously announced. 

    As promised, the planned freshwater package will continue, as well as changes to both national policy statements (known as NPSs) and national environmental standards (known as NESs).

    Specifically: for freshwater – the package will include amendments to the NPS-Freshwater Management, NES for freshwater, the stock exclusion regulations, drinking water proposals and enabling vegetable growing and water storage. 

    In fact, all NES proposals will continue as planned. This includes new national standards on granny flats, pakakāinga, and amendments to existing standards on electricity transmission, telecoms, aquaculture, and commercial forestry. 

    Targeted changes to selected national policy statements (NPSs) will also continue, and will have immediate effect to support better decision making on the ground.

    These include more enabling policies in the NPS Infrastructure, NPS-Renewable Electricity Generation, NPS-Electricity Transmission and the New Zealand Coastal Policy Statement. 

    Also as promised, we will also be progressing quarrying and mining consistency changes across NPS-Freshwater Management, NPS-Indigenous Biodiversity and NPS-Highly Productive Land.

    We will do a narrow change to the NPS-Highly Productive Land – to remove Land Use Capability (LUC) class 3 from the definition of highly productive land, to help support cities expand but still protect key soils under LUC 1 and 2. 

    And finally a scaled back national direction on managing natural hazard risk to support councils managing significant risk from hazards.  

    Some of you may be disappointed that we aren’t progressing some policies, for example changes to the effects management hierarchy for things like electricity and infrastructure development, as well as more substantial changes to things like the NPS-Indigenous Biodiversity, and some changes to the NPS-Urban Development.  

    Last year I announced changes we intended to progress on the NPS-Urban Development. We are committed to progressing housing growth targets and strengthening density requirements. But if we made changes now to the NPS-UD, this would require councils undertaking substantive plan changes, which considering the new planning system will be up and running by 2027, forcing councils to undertake a costly and lengthy plan change now wasn’t really feasible. 

    So as part of the consultation on national direction we will include a package on housing and urban development, focused on how our proposals will port into the new system.

    The new system provides opportunities to achieve greater urban outcomes, through standardized zones and spatial planning, so this is a little short-term pain for massive long-term gain. 

    I expect to release the detail of these changes in the next 2 months, and have them in place by the end of the year. 

    Conclusion

    We’re acutely conscious that the Government is moving fast and we’re making a lot of changes to resource management law. 

    But we want to settle on a system that is enduring, so that we can get on with implementing it. 

    The Government wants a rapid transition to the new system.  

    Our intention is that both new acts are put in place together, along with prioritised sets of new national direction, as I outlined earlier.  

    We anticipate turning on the new system at a fixed date, rather than the 10-year timeframe under the previous Government’s reforms. Local government entities are expected to be able to begin implementing the new system from 2027. 

    We also recognize that in order to transition quickly to the new system, with minimal disruption, local government and others in the system will require implementation support, which we have started work on already. 

    What we are doing is difficult and complicated, but it will create a more enabling framework, one that protects the environment and sets environmental bottom lines. 

    As members of the planning community, you have a huge part to play in providing feedback and ideas on how the new system can work, along with supporting councils and others with implementation. 

    We need a resource management system that will help drive economic growth and increase productivity by making it easier to get things done in New Zealand.

    I look forward to your feedback and to discussing your ideas, as we continue to create a better resource management system for everyone. 

    Thank you for the opportunity to speak with you today. I will now hand over to my Under-Secretary, Simon Court, who is assisting me with these reforms. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Auckland man who illegally killed and sold pigs fined $8,000

    Source: Ministry for Primary Industries

    An Auckland man who illegally killed and sold pigs and a chicken has been fined $8,000.

    Peni Naivaluvou (64) was sentenced in the Papakura District Court today (28 March 2025) on 3 charges under the Animal Products Act, following a successful prosecution by New Zealand Food Safety investigators.

    He was fined $4,000 for the illegal slaughter of the animals, $2,000 for selling the animal meat and $2,000 for failing to comply with a notice of direction – to stop the home kill operation.

    “This home kill business was not registered as required under the Animal Products Act, meaning they were operating unlawfully and not subject to the food hygiene standards and meat inspection checks that all registered meat processors meet.

    “Those who try to avoid registration and operate outside New Zealand’s stringent food safety rules are taking unacceptable risks with consumer safety and putting our international reputation at risk,” says New Zealand Food Safety deputy director general, Vincent Arbuckle.

    During an investigation (2022 to 2023), a covert Food Safety investigator bought a slaughtered pig from Mr Naivaluvou. Mr Naivaluvou was then served a notice of direction under the Animal Products Act which prohibited him from killing or selling animals, but he ignored the directive and carried out additional sales to covert Food Safety investigators.

    “Mr Naivaluvou told New Zealand Food Safety investigators he understood the requirements of the notice of direction but continued to operate as an illegal home kill business, slaughtering pigs, and at least one chicken.

    “The majority of operators in New Zealand follow the rules because they want to make sure they are keeping their customers safe.

    “When we find evidence of people deliberately flouting the law, we take action and there are consequences, as we’ve seen from the court’s response.”

    For further information and general enquiries, call MPI on 0800 00 83 33 or email info@mpi.govt.nz

    For media enquiries, contact the media team on 029 894 0328.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech to NZ Planning Institute Conference 2025

    Source: New Zealand Government

    It’s great to be here today on what has been a momentous week for resource management reform.

    As you’ve heard, Minister Bishop and I have been working hard to reset resource management in New Zealand.

    Today I want to talk to you about the broader step change and what that is going to mean.

    Among the many problems the RMA has caused is a playing field of skewed incentives for decision makers that has led to a culture of risk aversion and restriction.

    As policy makers, we must expect people to follow the incentives they face. That is rational.

    This is why it is important our reforms get the incentives right, to minimise distortion and incentivise optimal outcomes.

    There are several elements of the reform that are particularly important in achieving this; in transforming this culture of planners first saying “no, but…” to one of “yes, and…” We must do away this culture of regulatory anxiety.

    Regulatory anxiety

    Good decisions rest on benefits outweighing costs, and on decision-makers facing the right incentives to adequately assess these costs and benefits in full.

    Yet, planners working under the RMA are trapped in an asymmetric system.

    The risks of saying yes—public backlash, political fallout, legal challenge and cost—are much more direct and salient to those making the decisions. 

    The costs of excessive caution—housing shortages, infrastructure deficits, wasted economic opportunity, and infringements on people’s property rights—not so much.

    Many of these costs are spread across society and felt over decades, some just shovelled onto private property owners to cop. This system rewards planners for avoiding risk, not for enabling growth, and it enables the undermining of property rights in the process.

    The result? A culture of “no” and a bias toward excessive caution; caution that ties us down and squanders the great opportunity we have to cement our spot as the best country on the planet.

    We’re making several moves to drive change.

    Fixing the problem

    Descoping

    I have been beating the drum about the RMA’s absurdly broad scope for a while now, and we’ve talked about descoping as principle number one of the reform, so I will spare you the further noise beyond saying this: descoping the ‘effects’ the system manages will play a core role in liberating planners from the regulatory anxiety with respect to so many things currently managed. 

    There will simply be less to do, and less to worry about.

    The right to plan

    The reforms will reinforce that districts and cities have the right to plan. Your city, your district, will have democratic accountability for choosing where to grow from standardised zones set at a national level, providing a high level of regulatory assurance to planners.

    By closing the door to anyone who doesn’t like their specific height to boundary ratio to agitate for some bespoke zoning rules, this will necessarily ease pressure facing planners who currently must defend these things.

    Communities will still get to have their say at the planning phase—and, in fact, they will be incentivised to do so—but we do intend for the ability for appeals to be greatly reduced which will go a long way toward reducing regulatory anxiety. This is an area we will firm up over the coming months.

    National standards for common activities

    Similarly, national standards for common activities will reduce anxiety that planners and decision makers currently have when it comes to forming up defensible consent conditions for what are relatively common and necessary activities.

    Under the current system, decision makers must assess a wide range of potential effects, which often drives disproportionality between the consent conditions and the effect they are trying to manage, for the sake of appeasing noisy NIMBYs who don’t like things like quarrying, and who may be motivated to appeal otherwise reasonable decisions.

    This often leads to a “ratcheting up” effect on consent conditions in an attempt by both applicants and decision makers to ward off pesky appeals. 

    Codifying practice for common activities, like earthworks and working in a water course, into regular standards will liberate the anxiety planners face to set ever more stringent conditions and give development a mandate to certainly and sensibly occur, from Cape Reinga to Bluff.

    Environment

    The current system presumes that developers and infrastructure must avoid sensitive environments and that only by a torturous and often litigious process can an outcome which benefits the environment overall be arrived at.

    Instead of spending weeks and months and years and tens of millions of dollars arguing with any Tom, Dick or Harry in various hearings, wouldn’t it be better that experts direct their energy into win-wins? Biodiversity offsetting springs to mind as a particular area of opportunity to help deliver both better development and environmental results.

    Offsetting and compensation should be a starting point for conversations beginning with “yes, and”, because for someone like me who thinks an ideal date is an eco-adventure to see creatures like lizards, bats, and Freddie the frog, that could equally be a constructed wetland at an active or rehabilitated mine site, as much as it could be to Zealandia. 

    Planning Tribunal

    While these anxiety-reducing steps we’re taking will go some way to restoring balance and proportionality in decisions, there is a need for additional tension in the system to offset the distortion towards regulatory overreach and too much “no” in planning and decision-making.

    This is a key focus of the Planning Tribunal.

    By providing an accountability mechanism against scope creep and unjustified regulation, the Planning Tribunal will provide the tension in the system necessary to ensure the system is delivering as intended.

    No longer will it be the easy way out to default into decision making that appeases salient interests and pressures at the expense of growth and progress.

    Compensation for takings

    Further tension will be introduced through compensation for regulatory takings to ensure decision makers are confronted with the costs of decisions to infringe on property rights.

    Morally, it is simply not fair to force people to privately cop the cost of decisions supposedly made in the public interest—if the public has an interest, the public should pay.

    Compensation for regulatory takings is akin to a congestion charge on regulation. 

    Without a price on congestion, there is too much traffic. Without a price on protecting trees, or ‘outstanding’ or ‘highly productive’ land, there is a risk of too much regulation on people who want nothing to do with it.

    We pay people for their losses from compulsory acquisition under the Public Works Act, and there’s no reason the same principle should not apply for partial takings for the public good under resource management legislation.

    Moral case aside, this will lead to more careful consideration with respect to decisions that would restrict property rights, and ensure they occur only where there is a genuine net public good.

    Conclusion

    We are clear on the problems we intend to solve through the new planning system for people and the environment.

    We are clear this requires a culture change.

    We are clear that this culture change rests on a reset of the incentives for decision makers.

    This requires a fundamental shift in the values and behaviours of the planning workforce which must align with our nation’s ambitions for the new system. 

    A culture change means planners and decision makers share the ambition of property owners to maximise enjoyment of their property, of developers to deliver affordable homes, and of the infrastructure guardians to provide efficient and safe infrastructure.

    To enhance overall performance, a culture change from “no, but” to ”yes, and” is a must-have, not a nice to have.

    The new system will be designed to enable this culture change, and to enforce it where old habits persist.

    I look forward to working with planning professionals on this necessary evolution.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Road blocked, Hataitai

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Motorists are advised of a crash in Hataitai which has blocked the road.

    It happened about 2:20pm on Wellington Road between Walmer Street and Moxham Ave, and involved more than one vehicle.

    One car is currently on its roof, and as such, motorists are asked to take the diversion via Crawford Road, Rongotai Road, and Kilbirnie Crescent.

    Any injuries are yet to be determined.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Police appeal for information following aggravated robbery in Tauranga

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    A person has been arrested and police are appealing for information to identify the remaining people involved in an aggravated robbery in Tauranga.

    Around 5:20pm on Wednesday 26 March, Police responded to a dairy on Willow Street following reports that a group of people entered the store, some armed with weapons (not firearms), and stole vape products.

    Subsequent enquiries have revealed the individuals then regrouped on The Strand a short time later.

    One person has since been identified, and today Police executed a search warrant at a Tauranga residential address where that young person was taken into custody.

    They are due to appear in the Tauranga Youth Court in due course.

    We are committed to seeing the other people identified and held to account, as there is no place for violent offending in our community.

    We need your help, and we are asking anyone with information to come forward.

    If you witnessed the robbery or have any footage or information that may assist in our investigation, please contact us on 105 either online or over the phone referencing file number: 250326/3631.

    Information can also be reported anonymously to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

    ENDS 

    Issued by Police Media Centre 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Improved hunting permit system on its way

    Source: New Zealand Government

    A new and improved hunting permit system will make it easier for New Zealanders to go hunting on public conservation land Minister for Hunting and Fishing James Meager says.

    “Longer permits, automatic reminders and better navigation are part of a significant upgrade that will make life easier for 34,000 hunters that hunt on open conservation land,” Minister Meager says.

    “The underlying technology of the current hunting permit system is outdated and in need of an update, and is being improved based on the direct feedback of hunters. This upgrade will support more hunters, both domestic and international, getting out and doing what they love.

    “This substantial upgrade to the permitting system will make it more reliable and easier to navigate on mobile devices, making it easier to obtain permits on the go. Hunting permits will now be valid for 12 months, an increase on the current four-month period. Hunters will also receive reminders 14 days before their permits are due to expire so they can easily obtain a new permit. 

    “The upgraded system will also make selecting hunting areas easier. Instead of the 54 hunting areas that hunters currently choose from, the system will be simplified so hunters choose from eight regions, four in the North Island and four in the South Island/Stewart Island. All existing hunting areas within the broader region will automatically be included on the permit, and hunters can also select all hunting areas within New Zealand at the press of a single button.

    “These may be simple changes, but they reflect a government which is committed to making it easier for New Zealanders to go hunting and fishing on conservation land, and are willing to listen to the feedback of the hunting community to do so.”

    This new system will be launched by the Department in Conservation in May.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Auckland overnight motorway closures 30 March – 4 April 2025

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi advises of the following closures for motorway improvements. Work delayed by bad weather will be completed at the next available date, prior to Friday, 4 April 2025.

    Please note this Traffic Bulletin is updated every Friday.

    Daily updated closure information(external link) 

    Unless otherwise stated, closures start at 9pm and finish at 5am. Traffic management may be in place before the advertised closure times for the mainline.

    NORTHERN MOTORWAY (SH1)

    • Southbound lanes between Silverdale off-ramp and Oteha Valley Road on-ramp, 1-3 April
      • Silverdale southbound on-ramp, 1-3 April
    • Northbound lanes between Oteha Valley Road off-ramp and Silverdale on-ramp, 1-3 April
      • Oteha Valley Road northbound on-ramp, 1-3 April
    • Onewa Road northbound off-ramp, 30 March – 3 April (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Stafford Road northbound off-ramp, 30 March – 3 April
    • Curran Street northbound on-ramp, 30 March – 3 April

    CENTRAL MOTORWAY JUNCTION (CMJ)

    • Westbound lanes between Tamaki Drive and Beach Road/Parnell Rise, 30 March – 1 April & 3 April (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Westbound lanes between Tamaki Drive and Beach Road/Parnell Rise, 2 April (approx. 11:59pm to 5:00am)
    • Eastbound lanes between Beach Road and Tamaki Drive, 30 March – 1 April & 3 April (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Eastbound lanes between Beach Road and Tamaki Drive, 2 April (approx. 11:59pm to 5:00am)

    SOUTHERN MOTORWAY (SH1)

    • Papakura (Diamond) northbound on-ramp, 30 March – 1 April
    • Papakura (Loop) southbound on-ramp, 30 March – 1 April
    • Southbound lanes between Papakura off-ramp and Drury/SH22 on-ramp, 2-3 April
      • Papakura (Loop) southbound on-ramp, 2-3 April
      • Papakura (Diamond) southbound on-ramp, 2-3 April
    • Northbound lanes between Ramarama off-ramp and Papakura on-ramp, 2-3 April
      • Drury/SH22 northbound on-ramp, 2-3 April
      • Ramarama northbound on-ramp, 2-3 April
    • Northbound lanes between Ramarama off-ramp and Drury/SH22 on-ramp, 31 March
      • Ramarama northbound on-ramp, 31 March
    • Drury/SH22 southbound off-ramp, 30-1 April
    • Drury/SH22 southbound on-ramp, 30-1 April
    • Southbound lanes between Mercer off-ramp and Mercer on-ramp, 2 April (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Northbound lanes between Mercer off-ramp and Mercer on-ramp, 2 April (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)

    NORTHWESTERN MOTORWAY (SH16)

    • Southbound lanes between Waimauku roundabout and Trigg Road, 1 April (approx. 8:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Northbound lanes between Trigg Road and Waimauku roundabout, 1 April (approx. 8:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Southbound lanes between Brigham Creek Road Roundabout and Hobsonville Road on-ramp, 30 March (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
    • Newton Road westbound on-ramp, 30 March – 3 April

    UPPER HARBOUR MOTORWAY (SH18)

    • Westbound lanes between Albany Highway off-ramp and Tauhinu Road on-ramp, 31 March
      • Albany Highway westbound on-ramp, 31 March
      • Squadron Drive westbound off-ramp, 31 March
    • Eastbound lanes between Tauhinu Road off-ramp and Albany Highway on-ramp, 31 March
      • Greenhithe Road eastbound on-ramp, 31 March
    • Westbound lanes between Squadron Drive off-ramp and Hobsonville Road on-ramp, 30 March (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Brigham Creek Road westbound on-ramp, 30 March
      • SH18 westbound to SH16 southbound link, 30 March

    SOUTHWESTERN MOTORWAY (SH20)

    • Northbound lanes between Cavendish Drive off-ramp and Kirkbride Road on-ramp, 3 April (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • SH20 northbound to SH20A southbound link, 3 April (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Massey Road northbound on-ramp, 3 April
      • Puhinui Road northbound on-ramp, 3 April
      • Cavendish Drive northbound on-ramp, 3 April
    • Northbound lanes between Cavendish Drive off-ramp and Massey Road on-ramp, 2 April (approx. 10:00pm to 5:00am)
      • Puhinui Road northbound on-ramp, 2 April
      • Cavendish Drive northbound on-ramp, 2 April

    GEORGE BOLT MEMORIAL DRIVE (SH20A)

    • None planned

    PUHINUI ROAD (SH20B)

    • None planned

    STATE HIGHWAY 22 (SH22)

    • None planned

    STATE HIGHWAY 2 (SH2)

    • Eastbound lanes between Mangatawhiri off-ramp and Rawiri Road, 2 April
    • Westbound lanes between Rawiri Road and Mangatawhiri Road, 2 April
      • Mangatangi westbound off-ramp, 2 April
      • Koheroa Road westbound off-ramp, 2 April
      • Koheroa Road westbound on-ramp, 2 April

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

    Current overnight closure information(external link)  

    Auckland roads and public transport(external link)

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Delay to start of night sealing work with road closures in Ashburton, SH1

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    A major road asphalting project in Ashburton, affecting night-time travel, due to start this Sunday, 30 March, will now begin Friday, 4 April. The work is due to run for five or so weeks.

    Weather has affected the programme and required the later start date, says NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA).

    SH1 from SH77 Moore St intersection to South St will be closed from Friday night, 4 April, work happening Sunday to Friday nights. The aim is to use the Friday nights to catch up with the scheduled programme, says NZTA’s Maintenance Contract Manager in Mid Canterbury Chris Chambers.

    SH1 traffic will be managed using local road detours for the first two stages, then Stop/Go for the last week, 8pm to 6am.

    People need to build in an extra 30 minutes after 8 pm at night and also expect short delays during the day, says Mr Chambers.

    At this stage there are no changes to the start dates for the other sections of work.

    (See original traffic bulletin below).

    SH1 will be reopened each day at 6am, under temporary speed limits with reduced lane widths.

    * Earlier release on this work:

    https://nzta.govt.nz/media-releases/sh1-night-closures-for-asphalt-resurfacing-in-ashburton-from-end-of-march/

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: ACT welcomes moves to take ideology out of healthcare, recognise overseas qualifications

    Source: ACT Party

    ACT Health spokesperson Todd Stephenson is welcoming a review of health workforce regulations, including 1) a review of complex cultural requirements, and 2) the progress of an ACT coalition commitment to better recognise people with overseas medical qualifications and experience for accreditation in New Zealand.

    On cultural requirements:

    “In recent weeks I’ve raised a number of examples of complex, bureaucratic and ideological competency standards centred around the Treaty and indigenous knowledge. Pharmacists, midwives, psychologists, nurses, and even acupuncturists are being asked to demonstrate commitment to Treaty principles and mātauranga Māori.

    “Complicated cultural requirements only serve to distract from patients’ clinical needs, while also making it harder to attract and retain skilled health professionals from overseas. My inbox has blown up with messages from health workers frustrated with these rules, and I’m glad the Minister is now swinging into action.”

    On overseas qualifications:

    “Health and medical professionals are doing their best to provide Kiwis the care they need when they need it, but they’re overworked and understaffed.

    “It seems ridiculous to have patients languishing on waitlists to see a health professional when there are fantastically qualified people from overseas who would happily provide their skills here. Currently, even a top Harvard doctor would have to be supervised for 6-18 months before being allowed to independently practise.”

    The Health Minister today announced the Government is considering the establishment of an Occupations Tribunal which would consider appeals about decisions relating to overseas qualifications.

    “For people to be able to see a health professional in a timely way, we need all hands on deck. ACT has long argued for better recognition of overseas qualifications. We campaigned on it, and now we are seeing the kind of change we campaigned on,” says Stephenson.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: New mobile dental clinic will reach thousands of children

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Heath Minister Simeon Brown has today launched a new mobile dental clinic in South Auckland, increasing access to dental care for the local community. “Ensuring all children have access to timely, quality healthcare is a priority for the Government.“Expanding dental services and offering early access to oral healthcare, close to home, is key to improving overall oral health.“About 50 per cent of children waiting for dental care in the Auckland region live in the Counties Manukau area.“This purpose-built, mobile clinic will provide dental assessments, treatment, and oral health education for up to 3,000 children each year. “By taking these services directly to local neighbourhoods and community events, we can address many of the barriers that prevent children from receiving appropriate oral healthcare in a timely manner.“Early access and education are key to preventing a number of dental issues and reducing the chance of children needing treatment under anaesthetic in hospital.“I know how important it is to set children up early for a healthy future, which is why initiatives that provide community care in a setting closer to home are so important. “I’m pleased for the thousands of children who will be able to benefit from this mobile dental clinic in the future, ensuring timely and quality access to oral healthcare for the South Auckland community,” Mr Brown says. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: New Zealand 3D maps are a game-changer

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Most of New Zealand has now been mapped in 3D, creating a rich dataset for planning economic growth, land management and modelling for risk, Land Information Minister Chris Penk and Associate Regional Development Minister Mark Patterson say.

    “New Zealand’s landscape is constantly evolving, and it’s crucial that we understand how,” Mr Penk says. 

    “For the first time, this information is available as a single, comprehensive national dataset. With 80 percent of New Zealand now mapped, we can analyse most of the country at once, rather than taking a fragmented region-by-region approach. This has enormous value for decision-making, planning, and modelling.

    “LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) data provides a baseline for tracking geological and geographical changes over time, from natural events such as erosion and shifting river paths to new manmade developments.

    “It’s an essential tool for councils to better manage natural hazards by modelling flood zones, identifying slip-prone land and creating hazard maps to help keep people safe. We can also quickly collect new data after natural disasters to assess the impact, which will support recovery efforts.”

    The PGF-LiDAR programme and the 10 regional councils who co-funded the project were supported by $14.6 million in grants from the former Provincial Growth Fund, administered by Kānoa – Regional Economic Development & Investment Unit.

    “The 3D maps enable smarter planning and investment in regional forestry planting operations and greater agricultural productivity,” Mr Patterson says. 

    “Councils are applying the data to ecosystem services such as runoff and nutrient retention, shade and ultraviolet protection, and landscape aesthetics.

    “Councils may also use the data for compliance monitoring such as identification of excessive earthworks and quarrying, tree removal, or building activity across the regions.”

    The data was captured by aircraft fitted with LiDAR technology, which uses pulsed light to measure the distance from the plane to the land below to build up a 3D picture of the country – accurate down to the nearest metre. 

    A new partnership with Ngā Tāngata Tiaki o Whanganui will contribute LiDAR data for the entire Whanganui River catchment, which will be available later this year.

    Note to editors:
    LINZ administered the LiDAR funding and makes the data available for free on the LINZ Data Service website.

     

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government addresses Wellington Water concerns

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government is accelerating Local Water Done Well for the Wellington region to provide greater transparency at Wellington Water and ensure it is delivering value for money for ratepayers, say Local Government Minister Simon Watts and Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson. 

    “Over the last few months, I have had serious concerns around Wellington’s water services,” Mr Watts says.

    “Recent reports have shone a spotlight on high costs and unsound financial management at Wellington Water with clear evidence suggesting the ratepayers are not getting good value for money,” Mr Watts says. 

    “I am not satisfied by the progress made to address these glaring problems and without clear and decisive action, Wellingtonians face a decade of hefty rate increases with little to show for it.”

    The Government is bringing forward Local Water Done Well for the Wellington region by imposing early economic regulation on Wellington Water. This means the Commerce Commission will begin its role as a monitor for the Wellington region’s water services sooner than other water services under Local Water Done Well.

    “Given the current issues, Wellingtonians shouldn’t have to wait for the full economic regulation regime to be in place to have greater visibility over how their money is spent on water services,” Mr Simpson says.

    “The Commission will impose foundational information disclosure requirements on Wellington Water. This will require it to report to the public and the Commission on key delivery performance and financial management measures.

    “While the precise disclosure requirements will be set by the Commission, we anticipate it will include indicators that provide a view of value for money, procurement practices, and plans to address the shortcomings outlined in the published reports.”

    Mr Watts says the action today to increase public accountability at Wellington Water is implemented under Local Water Done Well legislation the Coalition Government passed last year.

    “The purpose of economic regulation including information disclosures is to promote the long-term benefit of consumers of water services and to ensure that sufficient information is available to assess whether that is occurring.

    The foundational information disclosure framework provided for under last year’s Local Government (Water Services Preliminary Arrangements) Act means we can ensure a more detailed picture sooner of how Wellington Water intends to address performance shortfalls in key areas.

    “Experience in other sectors shows information disclosure provides greater transparency and is expected to drive a shift in organisational behaviour. The action we are taking will help ensure steps are taken to reduce unnecessary future costs for Wellington ratepayers. 

    “This is consistent with the Government’s Local Water Done Well objectives – financially sustainable water services with strong regulatory oversight, strict rules for water quality and ongoing investment. It is also consistent with our focus on tackling cost of living challenges for New Zealanders.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Innovation drives refreshed disability strategy

    Source: New Zealand Government

    New Zealand’s strategy to improve the lives and uphold the rights of disabled people will be refreshed using an innovative new approach, Disability Issues Minister Louise Upston has announced.
    “The current 10-year strategy ends in 2026 and has provided a valuable focus for disability work during the past decade,” Louise Upston says. 
    “While progress has been made, there is clearly more to do.
    “We’re going to tackle the next refresh in a new way. In a New Zealand first, working groups drawn from the disabled community, industry and government agencies will develop actions in key focus areas. The draft strategy will then go to the wider disabled community for further review before being agreed.
    “The resulting document will endure for five years, focusing on key areas where differences can be made for disabled people including education, employment, health, housing and justice.
    “This is an exciting opportunity. The Ministry of Disabled People – Whaikaha is managing the refresh process, and has received almost 350 expressions of interest from disabled people keen to take part.
    “Recent data from the Stats NZ Household Disability Survey found disabled New Zealanders continue to face many barriers, for example in education, employment and housing.
    “We know 1 in 6 New Zealanders are disabled, yet three quarters of unemployed disabled people want to be working which means creating employment opportunities must be an important focus. 
    “Disabled people, like non-disabled people, want to participate in their communities, to thrive and make decisions about their own lives.
    “There will be challenges ahead as the refresh proceeds, but equally there are also huge opportunities to make a positive difference,” Louise Upston says.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Putting Patients First: Modernising health workforce regulation

    Source: New Zealand Ministry of Health

    The Government is reviewing health workforce regulation to improve New Zealanders’ timely, quality access to healthcare.

    We have an opportunity to put patients at the centre, modernise and streamline the system, and improve efficiency.

    The Government is inviting New Zealanders to share their views on health workforce regulation through the Ministry of Health’s online consultation portal.

    Feedback on the options outlined in the discussion document will inform the Ministry’s advice to the Government on possible changes to health workforce regulation.

    Submissions close Wednesday, 30 April 2025 11:59pm.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Te Pāti Māori Call for Mandatory Police Body Cameras

    Source: Te Pati Maori

    In recent weeks, disturbing instances of state-sanctioned violence against Māori have shed light on the systemic racism permeating our institutions. An 11-year-old autistic Māori child was forcibly medicated at the Henry Bennett Centre, a 15-year-old had his jaw broken by police in Napier, kaumātua Dean Wickliffe went on a hunger strike after being beaten by prison guards, and Sam Matue who was tasered and pepper-sprayed before becoming unresponsive and being pronounced dead at the scene.

    This is what Crown violence looks like in 2025.

    This violence could have been prevented with mandatory police body cameras.

    “Māori are being subjected to abuse, and pushed into silence,” said Te Pāti Māori Spokesperson for Mental Health, Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke.

    “This is not justice; this is a systemic issue.

    “We are concerned for the welfare of not just the individual victims, but for all the whānau who have been impacted by state violence.

    “The ongoing lack of accountability for abuse and the failure to implement practical solutions will cause further harm to whānau and communities.”

    “Māori are overrepresented in every stage of the justice system, making up 38% of those proceeded against by police, 42% of those convicted, and 50% of those imprisoned,” said Te Pāti Māori Co-Leader and Spokesperson for Justice, Rawiri Waititi.

    “From tamariki, mokopuna, to kaumātua, our people are being subjected to unjust and violent treatment by the state.

    “Outgoing Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier has admitted that our justice system requires transformational change to prevent the further victimisation of Māori.

    “Te Pāti Māori is insisting on body cameras for police officers to ensure the safety of all those who come into contact with law enforcement. We can no longer stand by and allow this violence to continue unchecked,” concluded Waititi.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: New SH3 roundabout at Woodville opening tomorrow

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    State Highway 3 at the southern end of Woodville will reopen to traffic tomorrow morning from 9am, following the completion of construction work on a new roundabout.

    The new roundabout will link SH3 to the new Te Ahu a Turanga: Manawatū-Tararua Highway, which is scheduled for completion in mid-2025.

    The work on the roundabout was expected to be completed by 30 March but as it is now finished, the road can be reopened a few days earlier than expected.

    A temporary speed limit will remain in place on this stretch.

    Te Ahu a Turanga project spokesman Grant Kauri says completing this work on the roundabout is a major milestone towards the completion of the new highway.

    “We’re now getting closer to being able to open the new highway – this new roundabout is a crucial part of this and a great addition to the state highway network.

    “People driving through Woodville and to or from Saddle Road will be able to drive around the roundabout from tomorrow. While the highway isn’t yet open, people will get a clearer view of it.

    “We know the closure of this section of SH3 over the past 5 weeks has caused delays for road users and nearby residents and we’re really grateful for people’s support. By closing the road, we’ve been able to complete the roundabout work a lot quicker than if the road had remained open,” says Mr Kauri.

    Next season, it’s likely you’ll see crews return to the roundabout to apply a 2nd coat seal to the road.

    This is normal. When we rebuild a section of the road and apply a chipseal finish we need to come back later to carry out a second coat seal. This locks in the seal to make it waterproof, keeps it stronger and safer for longer.

    For more information about the Te Ahu a Turanga project, please head to :

    Te Ahu a Turanga – Manawatū Tararua Highway

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: 28 March 2025 Final fourteen homes complete Kerikeri development The new homes, including two built for those living with disabilities, are ready for whānau to move in following a whakawātea (blessing ceremony) by hapū leaders of Ngāti Rēhia.

    Source: New Zealand Government Kainga Ora

    The homes complete the second and final stage of the 22-home development, which includes park space and fruit trees for residents.

    Jeff Murray, Kāinga Ora Regional Director – Northland, says the homes have been built for people of all ages and abilities.

    “The homes are a range of sizes and styles, making them suitable for small families, couples and older persons. Two of the ground floor homes are also accessible providing those living with disabilities, illness or injury, greater independence,” he says.

    The accessible homes include design features such as wide hallways and doorways, power point and light switches at suitable heights, wet bathrooms, handrails and level access both into the home and to enjoy the outdoor deck area.

    Kipa Munro, Chair of Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Rēhia, says the finished development has stayed true to the name ‘Te Tira’ which was gifted by their hapū.

    “Te Tira has not only lived up to its name, which means homes that are climate smart, secure and respectful, the homes also represent a small but important step towards addressing the housing shortage facing whānau in the Far North,” he said.

    Jasem Saleh, Development Director at Gemscott, says Te Tira has been a collaborative project focussed on well-built and well-designed homes.

    “At every step of this project we have worked in close partnership with the community, Ngāti Rēhia, Kāinga Ora and the Far North District Council, and the finished homes are testament to these partnerships.

    “We have taken great care to not only deliver high-quality homes, but also homes where everyone has access to outdoor living, be it a garden, patio or balcony, as well as opportunities to connect and socialise at the park space just for residents,” he says.

    Suitable whānau on the Ministry of Social Development’s Housing Register will be matched to the homes over the coming weeks.

    L-R Jeff Murray, Regional Director – Northland Kāinga Ora, Mariameno Kapa-Kingi, MP for Te Tai Tokerau, Te Pāti Māori, Nora Rameka, Board Trustee – Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Rēhia, Kipa Munro, Chair – Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Rēhia, Babe Kapa, Far North District Council Representative for Ngā Tai o Tokerau Māori Ward, Peter Thomas, GM Te Aka Wahiora, Te Whatu Ora

     
     

    Page updated: 28 March 2025

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Fire Safety – Hawke’s Bay fireworks ban extended until end of April

    Source: Fire and Emergency New Zealand

    Fire and Emergency New Zealand is extending its ban on fireworks and sky lanterns in Hawke’s Bay until Wednesday 30 April, 2025.
    The prohibition, which was due to end on Monday 31 March 2025, affects Ahuriri-Heretaunga, Wairoa coast, Tukituki East and West, southern Hawke’s Bay coast, Pōrangahau, Pahiatua, Eketāhuna, and Tararua East, West, Central and South.
    Hawke’s Bay District Manager Glen Varcoe says recent rain hasn’t yet reduced the fire risk in many parts of the district, and grass in particular is still very dry.
    “Usually the southern Hawke’s Bay has started greening up by now, but we’re still seeing drought conditions here,” he says.
    “We’re also expecting more winds in April, which could elevate fire danger by drying out vegetation, and making it easy for fires to get started and spread rapidly.
    “It’s risky to let off fireworks and lanterns in these conditions, so we’re keeping the ban in place for another month this year – until the end of April.”
    Glen Varcoe reminded people that central and southern Hawke’s Bay are still in a restricted fire season, which means fire permits are required before lighting any fires.
    “We are continuing to monitor the fire risk in Hawke’s Bay and restrictions may change at any time,” he says.
    “Always go to checkitsalright.nz to find out what the restrictions are at your location and apply for a permit if you need one, and comply with any conditions required to help keep Hawke’s Bay fire-free.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Health – KEYTRUDA® (pembrolizumab) Now Registered to Treat Certain Patients with Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma, Biliary Tract Carcinoma and Merkel Cell Carcinoma1

    Source: Merck & Co

    Auckland, New Zealand, March 28th, 2025 – MSD (tradename of Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, N.J., USA (NYSE: MRK) announced today that KEYTRUDA is now registered to treat patients with the following cancers:

     

    KEYTRUDA is not publicly funded for the treatment of patients with these cancers.

    Vanessa Gascoigne, Merck Sharp & Dohme (New Zealand) Limited (MSD) Director, says, “We are excited about these new registrations as mesothelioma, Merkel cell carcinoma and biliary tract cancer are rare forms of cancer.”.3, 4, 5

    Dr Terri-Ann Berry, Mesothelioma Support & Asbestos Awareness Trust Board Chair, says “Mesothelioma is a cancer primarily caused by asbestos exposure. Asbestos causes harm when a person is exposed to the tiny asbestos fibres. 3 It is most likely to be found in buildings built before the 2000s and mesothelioma usually develops 15-60 years after exposure. 6,3

    “Pleural mesothelioma is a type of mesothelioma which affects the tissue lining around the lungs (pleura) and is the most common form of this cancer. The symptoms of mesothelioma may include – a cough that doesn’t go away, chest pain, shortness of breath, fatigue, unexplained weight loss, sweating at night, and fevers.” 3

    Bile tract cancer affects the bile ducts and gallbladder. Symptoms may include yellowing of the skin and eyes, nausea and vomiting, weakness or tiredness, loss of appetite and weight, fever, right-side abdominal pain, dark urine, pale stools, and itchy skin. 2, 7

    Merkel cell carcinoma is a rare type of skin cancer which tends to grow quickly. Merkel cell carcinomas most often start on skin that’s exposed to the sun, like the face, neck, and arms, but it can occur anywhere. Merkel cell carcinomas typically appear as solid lumps or bumps on the skin, which can be pink, red, or purple in color. They are generally painless. 

     

    Vanessa Gascoigne, MSD New Zealand Director, adds, “KEYTRUDA is now registered for 31 indications including for the treatment of patients with certain types of advanced and early-stage cancers.

     

    ““Thanks to the Government’s increase in the medicines budget last year, eligible patients may access funded KEYTRUDA for 11 of those indications. Patients with any of the other 20 indications may access KEYTRUDA at their own expense through a private cancer center across New Zealand. 8,9 We recommend speaking to your doctor if you would like more information about these cancers. 

     

    “MSD will continue to work with the funding agency, Pharmac, in an effort to obtain funded access for more patients with cancer, including those with early-stage high-risk triple-negative breast cancer and stage III melanoma. 10 

     

    “We know people across New Zealand would benefit from faster funded access to cancer treatment. The sadness is that while KEYTRUDA is currently publicly funded for 11 indications, it is not funded for all patients in which it is indicated for.” 9

     

    Please see accompanying Prescribing Information and Patient Information for KEYTRUDA. 

     

    KEYTRUDA® (pembrolizumab) is available as a 100 mg/4 mL concentrate for solution for infusion.

    The KEYTRUDA Consumer Medicine Information (CMI) is available at www.medsafe.govt.nz

     

    KEYTRUDA is a Prescription Medicine and may be used in adults:

     

    KEYTRUDA may be used in children with MPM, cHL, MCC, MSI-H or dMMR cancer, or after surgery to remove melanoma. It is not known if KEYTRUDA is safe and effective in children with MSI-H or dMMR cancer of the brain or spinal cord (central nervous system cancers).

     

    You should not be given KEYTRUDA if you are allergic to pembrolizumab or to any of the other ingredients listed at the end of the CMI. 

     

    KEYTRUDA can cause harm or death to unborn babies. Talk to your doctor if you are a woman who could become pregnant and use effective contraception while you are being treated with KEYTRUDA and for at least 4 months after the last dose of KEYTRUDA. Do not breastfeed while taking KEYTRUDA. 

     

    Serious immune-mediated side effects have occurred affecting the lungs, intestines, liver, kidneys, hormone glands, blood sugar levels, skin, other organs and in transplant recipients.  Some of these side effects can sometimes become life-threatening and can lead to death. These side effects may happen anytime during treatment or even after your treatment has ended and you may experience more than one side effect at the same time. Serious infusion reactions have also occurred. 

     

    Very common side effects with KEYTRUDA alone include diarrhoea, nausea, itching, rash, joint pain, back pain, feeling tired, cough, patches of discoloured skin, stomach pain, decreased levels of sodium in blood and low levels of thyroid hormone. 

     

    When KEYTRUDA was given in combination with chemotherapy, hair loss, vomiting, decreased white-blood cell count, mouth sores, fever, decreased appetite, decreased number of red blood cells, decreased number of platelets in the blood and swelling of the lining of the digestive system (for example mouth, intestines) were also commonly reported. 

     

    When KEYTRUDA was given in combination with axitinib, high blood pressure, fatigue, low levels of thyroid hormone, decreased appetite, blisters or rash on palms of your hands and soles of your feet, increased liver enzyme levels, hoarseness, and constipation were also commonly reported.

     

    When KEYTRUDA was given in combination with lenvatinib, high blood pressure, decreased appetite, low levels of thyroid hormone, vomiting, weight loss, headache, constipation, hoarseness, urinary tract infection, stomach-area (abdominal pain), blisters or rash on the palms of your hands and soles of your feet, protein in your urine, increased liver enzyme levels and feeling weak were also commonly reported. 

     

    The most common side effects when KEYTRUDA is given alone to children include fever, vomiting, headache, stomach pain, decreased number of red blood cells, cough, and constipation. (v54)

     

    KEYTRUDA has risks and benefits. Talk to your doctor to see if KEYTRUDA is right for you. If symptoms continue or you have side effects, tell your doctor.

     

    KEYTRUDA is funded to treat certain patients with the following types of advanced cancers: melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, MSI-H or dMMR colorectal cancer, triple-negative breast cancer, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, urothelial carcinoma, and classical Hodgkin lymphoma – further restrictions apply.  KEYTRUDA is not funded for the treatment of all other cancers listed above. 

     

    Ask your health professional about the cost of the medicine and any other medical fees that may apply.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Consumer NZ urges New Zealand to learn from Australia’s supermarket enquiry

    Source: Consumer NZ

    Consumer NZ calls for stronger action in New Zealand following the ACCC supermarket report, particularly on pricing and promotional practices.

    The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s (ACCC’s) inquiry into the Australian supermarket sector has led to 20 key recommendations aimed at improving competition, pricing transparency and fairness in the supermarket sector. Consumer NZ urges the New Zealand government and regulators to take note.

    “We continue to see significant issues in New Zealand’s supermarket sector. With fewer players in the market, our situation is, in many ways, worse than Australia’s, meaning we need a stronger response to address the issues shoppers face,” says Consumer NZ chief executive Jon Duffy.

    “It’s been more than three years since the Commerce Commission’s market study into the grocery sector in New Zealand, and while we’ve seen some action, including the appointment of a Grocery Commissioner and the introduction of a grocery code of conduct, as yet, there’s been no meaningful improvements for shoppers.

    “The Commission told supermarkets they should sort their pricing and promotional practices, but this feels more like a feather than a stick – with New Zealanders losing tens of millions of dollars to pricing errors annually. Recommendations alone haven’t been effective, and, while the Commission is prosecuting some supermarkets and investigating others, given the low level of fines the courts can impose, further regulation might be the only way forward.”

    Consumer’s Sentiment Tracker survey has revealed that the cost of food and groceries remains a top financial concern for New Zealanders.  

    “The ACCC report points to the need for rigorous reforms, many of which would also benefit New Zealand consumers if they were adopted here.”

    Key recommendations from the ACCC report

    Clearer pricing through regulation of promotional practices including publishing the discounted price, the previous price and unit prices of both

    Notification when shrinkflation occurs on shelves and product webpages

    Transparency regarding supply forecasts, weekly tendering processes and wholesale fresh produce prices between supermarkets and suppliers to promote more favourable terms for suppliers

    A review of loyalty programmes’ value in 3 years to ensure consumer benefits

    Australian state governments adopting measures to address planning and zoning issues to target resource management issues over land banking.

    New Zealand’s Commerce Commission recommendations

    Grocery retailers should ensure their pricing and promotional practices are simple and easy to understand.

    Grocery retailers should cooperate with price comparison services.

    Develop a mandatory grocery code of conduct to govern relationships between grocery retailers and suppliers. (The Commission has since said this code isn’t working as intended.)

    Improve the availability of sites for retail grocery stores under planning laws, with parliament introducing the Commerce (Grocery Sector Covenants) Amendment Act, which prohibits anti-competitive land covenants.  

    The Commission has not recommended a review of loyalty programmes. Instead, it recommended that supermarkets ensure disclosure relating to loyalty programmes, data collection and use practices is clear and transparent.

    Consumer’s own research into supermarket loyalty schemes has shown that 84% of New Zealanders use loyalty cards, but ‘specials’ and discounts don’t always reflect the lowest prices available at the check-out.

    The ACCC report states it took the German multinational discount supermarket chain Aldi more than 20 years to gain its current Australian market share of 9%.

    “We are at a crucial point where more must be done to tackle the structural and systemic issues in our supermarket sector. Consumers are facing persistently high prices, and the ACCC report shows that, without additional regulation, a third entrant in the grocery sector is not the silver bullet it is often presented as,” Duffy says.

    Consumer urges stronger regulation and enforcement to address ongoing concerns around supermarket pricing and market power in New Zealand.

    Notes

    Read the full ACCC supermarket report: https://consumernz.cmail19.com/t/i-l-fddtjdy-ijjdkdttjk-j/

    The report highlights significant market concentration in Australia, with major players Aldi, Coles and Woolworths growing profits beyond some global peers.

    The term ‘recommendations’ refers to a range of potential legislative and policy reforms and other actions. The ACCC believes these measures are necessary to collectively address aspects of markets. There would be three desired outcomes: to improve competition, make a difference for shoppers and give suppliers fairer bargaining conditions.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: University Research – Land water loss the leading cause of sea level rise in 21st century – UoM

    Source: University of Melbourne (UoM)

    An international team of scientists led jointly by the University of Melbourne and Seoul National University has found global water storage of land has plummeted since the start of the 21st century, overtaking glacier melt as the leading cause of sea level rise and measurably shifting the Earth’s pole of rotation.

    Published today in Science, the research combined global soil moisture data estimated by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecast (ECMWF) Reanalysis v5 (ERA5), global mean sea level measurements and observations of Earth’s pole movement to estimate changes in terrestrial (land) water storage (TWS) from 1979 to 2016.

    “The study raises critical questions about the main drivers of declining water storage on land and whether global lands will continue to become drier,” said University of Melbourne author Professor Dongryeol Ryu.

    “Water constantly cycles between land and oceans, but the current rate of water loss from land is outpacing its replenishment. This is potentially irreversible because it’s unlikely this trend will reverse if global temperatures and evaporative demand continue to rise at their current rates. Without substantial changes in climate patterns, the imbalance in the water cycle is likely to persist, leading to a net loss of water from land to oceans over time.”

    Between 2000 and 2002, soil moisture decreased by around 1614 gigatonnes (1 Gt: one cubic kilometre of water), nearly double Greenland’s ice loss of about 900 Gt in 2002–2006. From 2003 to 2016, soil moisture depletion continued, with an additional 1009 Gt lost.

    Soil moisture had not recovered as of 2021, with little likelihood of recovery under present climate conditions. The authors say this decline is corroborated by independent observations of global mean sea level rise (~4.4mm) and Earth’s polar shift (~45cm in 2003-2012).

    Water loss was most pronounced across East and Central Asia, Central Africa and North and South America. In Australia, the growing depletion has impacted parts of Western Australia and south-eastern Australia, including western Victoria, although the Northern Territory and Queensland saw a small replenishment of soil moisture.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Households relying on Buy Now Pay Later and high interest credit to meet back to school and work costs

    Source: BNZ statements

    The cost of returning to school and work put pressure on households this year, with 70% of those who faced these expenses reporting negative impacts, according to a BNZ survey.

    The survey found that of the 48% of respondents who faced start-of-year expenses in 2025, nearly one in three (29%) reported feeling pressure when deciding what to pay, how to pay, and when to pay. To manage, 37% turned to Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) services, credit cards, and other high interest lending.

    “The financial pressure at the start of the year is very real for some households, especially after the holiday period when budgets are already stretched,” says Anna Flower, Executive for Personal and Business Banking at BNZ.

    “For some, these pressures led to difficult sacrifices – 14% of affected households reported selling things to help meet these costs,” she says.

    The biggest start-of-year expenses were stationery (53%), followed by transport (42%), school and work uniforms (42%), and technology-related costs (40%).

    Budget service sees impact on families and seniors

    “The findings from the BNZ survey mirror what we’re seeing on the frontlines,” says Claudette Wilson, General Manager of North Harbour Budgeting Services (NHBS).

    “2025 has been challenging for parents, with many turning to Buy Now Pay Later schemes and other high-interest credit options that can create longer-term financial strain.

    “Perhaps most concerning is seeing children excluded from essential school activities because their parents simply can’t afford them,” Wilson adds.

    “We’re witnessing families forced to choose between paying rent, putting food on the table, or covering basic school costs like technology, books and camp fees. With the ongoing cost of living pressures, some families simply can’t stretch their budgets to cover all these necessities.

    “We’ve also identified a concerning trend that’s often overlooked – a significant increase in seniors over 65 seeking our support because they’re raising grandchildren. These older New Zealanders, who should be enjoying retirement, are instead navigating school uniform purchases and technology requirements, creating substantial financial pressure on fixed incomes.”

    Wilson encourages those feeling financial pressure to reach out for support. “NHBS offers free, confidential financial guidance to anyone struggling with these costs. Our team can help with personalised budgeting solutions, negotiate with creditors if needed, and provide ongoing support as circumstances change.”

    Planning ahead can ease financial pressure

    While the costs can be a significant burden, the survey shows many households are finding ways to manage. Of those with start-of-year expenses, 57% took proactive steps, including 48% saving in advance and 17% spreading payments over time.

    Flower says saving even a small sum each month can make a big difference when new year costs roll around.

    “Putting aside a little each month can ease the financial pressure when these costs come around. Even better, using a dedicated high interest savings account can help these funds grow with interest throughout the year, giving families a bit extra when costs arrive.”

    Practical tips for managing start-of-year costs

    • Plan ahead – If possible, set aside a small amount each month and use high-interest savings accounts to help grow your money
    • Use budgeting tools – use digital budgeting tools to track and categorise back-to-school or work costs to avoid overspending
    • Explore your options – Check with schools about payment plans, second-hand uniform programmes or community exchanges
    • Research tech choices – Ask if there are any special deals available through your child’s school, or consider quality refurbished technology to keep costs down

    Source: BNZ Voice customer panel survey, 18th February – 2nd March 2025. Total responses: n=300 respondents. The profile of participating customers was not controlled for this survey. 

    The post Households relying on Buy Now Pay Later and high interest credit to meet back to school and work costs appeared first on BNZ Debrief.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Reducing red tape to put patients first

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government is reviewing New Zealand’s health workforce legislation to ensure the focus is on putting patients first, Health Minister Simeon Brown says.Reviewing health workforce legislation will consider a number of key matters including: 

    Prioritising patient voices in regulatory decisions.
    Reducing red tape to make healthcare more accessible.
    Making it easier to recognise overseas regulations.
    Driving efficiencies by streamlining regulatory decision making 

    “We are committed to ensuring all New Zealanders can access timely, quality healthcare,” Mr Brown says.“Making our health system more efficient and enabling frontline workers to get on with their jobs will allow it to become more responsive to patient needs.“New Zealand’s current health workforce regulations can be overly bureaucratic, and this is slowing down access to care, increasing costs, and making it harder for patients to get the services they need.“Our regulations can also make it harder to attract, train and retain healthcare workers. Whether it’s requiring nursing students to complete hundreds more clinical hours than those in Australia, complicated approval pathways for overseas qualified doctors to practice in NZ, or imposing rules that prioritise cultural requirements over clinical safety in scopes of practices, our healthcare system is being held back by outdated and unnecessary barriers.”“We also need to better recognise overseas qualifications to speed up access to healthcare for patients. As part of the National-ACT Coalition agreement, we are also considering the establishment of an Occupations Tribunal which would consider appeals about decisions relating to overseas qualifications.“Patients expect to receive care from qualified practitioners, with clinical safety as their top priority. Our proposals will also ensure that patients voices are heard in regulatory decision making, to ensure the needs of patients are considered when decisions are being made by regulatory bodies.  “We are also seeking feedback on how regulatory decisions can be made across all 18 health workforce regulatory bodies to ensure greater consistency. A streamlined system means more frontline staff available to provide care across the country, delivering shorter wait times and better health outcomes for all New Zealanders.”Consultation has today opened on changes to the Health Practitioners Competence Assurance Act and the Government wants to hear from patients and our healthcare workers on how the regulatory system can better meet the needs of patients.New Zealanders can submit their views on the Putting Patients First: Modernising Health Workforce Regulation document at www.health.govt.nz. Consultation closes on 30 April 2025.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Wildlife Act fix will enable economic growth with animal protection

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Prompt improvements to the Wildlife Act will ensure infrastructure developments and important conservation work can continue supporting our growing economy while protecting our precious wildlife, Conservation Minister Tama Potaka says.
    The High Court recently decided it was unlawful for the Department of Conservation – Te Papa Atawhai to authorise the New Zealand Transport Agency – Waka Kotahi under section 53 of the Wildlife Act to harm protected wildlife species while building the Mt Messenger highway.
    “As permission was also granted under another section of the Act, the court’s decision doesn’t affect this highway’s ongoing construction. It will not affect Fast Track projects either,” Mr Potaka says.
    “However, the decision could delay other projects DOC has given permission for or are still coming through the pipeline under section 53 of the Act – such as building new solar and wind farms, plantation forests, and powerline maintenance that are essential for supporting our growing economy. It also affects other important conservation work, like pest control.
    “The Government intends to promptly change the law to enable these important activities to go ahead lawfully, including the building of houses and roads for example, as they have in the past with safeguards for wildlife. These amendments will provide certainty for existing projects,” Mr Potaka says.
    “While developers are absolutely expected to make the best possible effort to protect our precious wildlife when getting on with their mahi, they should have confidence they won’t be prosecuted if their projects incidentally kill protected wildlife despite having previous authorisation and complying with the conditions set. 
    “It’s important Aotearoa New Zealand’s wildlife continues to be protected and that species can thrive as we support a strong and growing economy. The Government still expects responsible developers to seek permission for the activities they undertake – for example, seeking to relocate animals before doing any construction work – to protect populations and support the ongoing viability of species.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News