Category: New Zealand

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Lower Buller Gorge rock blasting next Thursday – 2-hour closure

    Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

    People who drive through the Lower Buller Gorge, east of Westport, will face a 2-hour closure of SH6 next Thursday 3 April, for rock blasting. The highway will be closed from midday to 2pm.

    If it is wet, the closure could be shifted to the next dry day.

    SH6 is the main highway into Westport from Nelson/ Tasman and Canterbury.

    The alternative route is SH6 south of Westport to Greymouth, SH7 to Reefton and SH69 to Inangahua Junction, says NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA).

    NZTA thanks everyone for planning around the closure which is needed to keep drivers safe and ensure the blasted rock can be safely cleared from the highway before re-opening, says Moira Whinham, Maintenance Contract Manager for NZTA on the West Coast.

    “We appreciate the other route in and out of Westport could add two hours to the journey, depending on where people are coming from. If people can travel a bit earlier that day, or delay till the afternoon, it will help them avoid delays,” she says.

    The area being rock blasted next week, weather dependent, between Berlins and Inangahua Junction.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Stolen vehicle lands two in court for two separate incidents

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Officers who spotted a stolen vehicle travelling through Kaitaia managed to not only locate the vehicle and those allegedly responsible for taking it, but also link it to a nearby burglary.

    At about 11.30am yesterday, on-duty officers witnessed a vehicle travelling on Pukepoto Road which had been reported stolen the previous day.

    Far North Area Response Manager, Senior Sergeant Richard Garton, says the unit conducted an area search and quickly located the vehicle abandoned on Grigg Street.

    “Two people were located at a nearby address and taken into custody without incident.

    “Further enquiries established that the same vehicle had been used during a burglary in Mangonui during the early hours of the morning.”

    Senior Sergeant Garton says at about 2.26am on Wednesday the vehicle pulled up to a commercial premises on Waterfront Drive and three people got out, smashing windows to gain access to the store.

    “A number of items were taken before the group left in the same vehicle.

    “Two people remain outstanding in relation to the burglary and enquiries remain ongoing to locate them.

    “We acknowledge the concern these incidents cause to the wider community and reiterate our commitment to holding these offenders accountable.

    “We have zero tolerate for this type of behaviour in our community and will continue to work hard to ensure our community can be and feel safe.”

    A 14-year-old will appear in Kaitaia District Court today charged with burglary and unlawfully taking a motor vehicle.

    A 17-year-old was bailed to appear in Kaitaia District Court next week.

    ENDS.

    Holly McKay/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government to support greenfield housing

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government has made changes to build more homes on the outskirts of our cities, allocating $100 million to be lent to developers for housing infrastructure, as well as cutting the RMA red tape restricting land available for development, says Housing and Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop.

    “The government is committed to letting our cities grow up and out to address our housing crisis. Medium-sized greenfield developments play a crucial role in increasing supply, but without the right support, many projects risk being delayed or unable to progress,” says Chris Bishop.

    “The government’s Going for Housing Growth and Resource Management Act reforms will be critical in addressing our housing crisis – but it will take time to legislate and then bed in. In the meantime, we don’t have time to waste, so these immediate changes are necessary interim measures to help boost housing supply. 

    “The government’s National Infrastructure Funding and Financing Agency (NIFFCo) has been developing a pipeline of potential important greenfield projects, and the initial transactions are expected to be drawn from this pipeline.

    “Under this new model, which we are calling the Greenfield Model, NIFFCo will lend to an Infrastructure Funding and Finance Act Special Purpose Vehicle at a very competitive interest rate during the development phase of a project. Then, the debt will be refinanced to private markets once the development is complete. The funding will ultimately be repaid by future homeowners through an annual levy.

    “The development phase of a project is often the riskiest, and private financiers reflect this by charging higher interest rates. NIFFCo’s loan will provide lower cost financing to developers over the development period by charging approximately what private financiers would charge for completed developments.

    “This support will bridge the financing gap and help ensure that new homes continue to be built in areas where they are needed most.

    “Funding for the new ‘Greenfield Model’ comes from unallocated funding within NIFFCo. It will be able to recycle capital into new projects after the five- to seven-year development period.

    “I am also announcing today that Cabinet has agreed to remove LUC-3 protections from the National Policy Statement on Highly Productive Land (NPS-HPL) this year, fulfilling National’s election promise.

    “The NPS-HPL protects our productive soils from development, ensuring New Zealand has a secure food supply. However, there needs to be a balance between how we protect our most productive land with our need for more housing to tackle our housing crisis.

    “As currently drafted, the NPS-HPL protects a total of 15 percent of the country’s landmass. Three classifications of soil are protected under the NPS-HPL, with two thirds being classified as LUC-3, the lowest quality.

    “Across the country, this change has the potential to open up new land for greenfield housing roughly equivalent to the size of the Waikato region.

    “To ensure we have got the balance between protecting our food supply and enabling more houses to be built, alongside this change we are going to consult on whether we should establish ‘special agriculture zones’. 

    “These would essentially protect LUC 1, 2 and 3 land when it is grouped together in a natural configuration in key horticultural horticulture hubs like Horowhenua or Pukekohe.

    “These are good, short-term and cost-effective interventions while we get the underlying system settings right to fix our housing crisis. They will both make it easier to bring new much needed housing projects to market that otherwise wouldn’t have happened or would have happened much later.”

    Notes to Editors:

    Background:

    1. The Infrastructure Funding and Finance Act (IFF Act) enables Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) to finance infrastructure by charging a levy to those who benefit from the infrastructure. NIFFCo provides equity and debt, raises necessary external debt finance, operates SPVs, and repays finance through levies collected through councils.
    2. The IFF Act has been successfully used for city-wide transport projects in Tauranga and a wastewater treatment plant in Wellington.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech to the Property Council Residential Development Summit

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Good morning. 
    I’m excited to be here at the Residential Development Summit. 
    Thank you to the Property Council for hosting this event. 
    Residential developers, investors, and the broader property community will play a key role in fixing New Zealand’s housing crisis.
    We need your knowledge, expertise, and big ideas to help New Zealand’s housing system grow. We need to go up, we need to go out, we need more housing choice, and we need more tenure types.
    Today I’d like to give you an update on our Going for Housing Growth programme, and how changes to the Resource Management Act (RMA) will make it simpler and easier to supply the housing that New Zealanders so desperately need. 
    I will also be announcing actions Government has agreed to that will enable more greenfield development – allowing our cities to grow out.
    Letting our cities grow
    I am, unapologetically, an urbanist – dare I say, an ‘urban nerd’ – and a proponent of growth. 
    I won’t dwell on our housing challenge. You’ve all heard me bang on about that before. Our housing crisis is holding New Zealand back socially and economically. 
    Report after report and inquiry after inquiry has found that our planning system, particularly restrictions on the supply of urban land, are at the heart of our housing affordability challenge.
    I believe that fixing our planning system by making it more enabling and getting the fundamentals right in housing are the best things we can do to unleash New Zealand’s potential.
    Getting this right will:

    lift economic growth and productivity,
    reduce the cost-of-living pressure from housing, and
    ensure New Zealanders can enjoy a higher standard of living. 

    As the Minister Responsible for RMA Reform, Minister of Housing, and now Minister of Transport, I get up every day determined to try and make a difference.
    Update on Going for Housing Growth 
    Let me start with an update of our Going for Housing Growth programme. 
    It has three pillars: 

    Pillar One: freeing up land for development and removing unnecessary planning barriers,
    Pillar Two: improving infrastructure funding and financing to support urban growth, and
    Pillar Three: providing incentives for communities and councils to support growth.
    Housing Growth Targets for Tier 1 and 2 councils to “live-zone” 30-years of housing demand,
    making it easier for cities to expand,
    strengthening the intensification provisions in the National Policy Statement on Urban Development (NPS-UD),
    putting in new rules requiring councils to enable mixed-used development, and
    abolishing minimum floor areas and balcony requirements.

    Pillar One
    We have made good progress on Pillar One which includes:
    I announced these changes last year and officials have been working hard on the finer details.
    The changes I announced last year build on the NPS-UD brought in by the previous government in 2020, but they obviously sit within the existing RMA structure.
    As you’ll have seen on Monday, the Government is replacing the RMA entirely with two new laws.
    This presents an obvious sequencing problem. We are committed to housing growth targets, strengthening density requirements, and so on.
    This year we will consult on changes through Pillar One, as intended. You can expect that around May.
    However, if we implemented them straight away in 2026, Councils would be forced to conduct expensive and lengthy plan changes – only to start all over again a year or so later once the new RMA comes into effect.
    So, we’ve made the pragmatic decision to implement Pillar One of our Housing Growth changes as part of the replacement of the RMA.
    This also allows us to think about housing growth targets in the context of standardised zones.
    So, councils will implement Phase 3 of the Resource Management reforms through development of new plans, starting from 2027.
    Rest assured, Pillar One will be ready to go for Councils’ 2027 Long Term Plan cycle. 
    Pillar Two
    Now, let’s talk about Pillar Two – improving infrastructure funding and financing.
    Pillar One is about upending the system by flooding the market with development opportunities and fundamentally making housing more affordable.
    But, freeing up urban land is not enough on its own. We also need to ensure the timely provision of infrastructure. 
    Put simply, you can’t have housing without land, water, transport, and other community infrastructure. 
    But under the status quo, councils and developers face big challenges to fund and finance enabling infrastructure. 
    So, last month I announced five changes to our infrastructure funding and financing toolkit to get more houses built. 

    The first is replacing Development Contributions (DCs) with a Development Levy System, where growth pays for growth,
    The second is establishing regulatory oversight of these Levies to ensure charges are fair and appropriate,
    The third is increasing the flexibility of targeted rates,
    The fourth is making changes to the Infrastructure Funding and Financing Act (IFF Act) that will make it more effective and simplify processes, and
    The fifth is broadening the IFF Act so that beneficiaries can help pay for major transportation projects.

    I won’t go into too much detail here today.
    But at a high-level, these changes will help create a flexible funding and financing system to match our flexible planning system. 
    These are some big changes, and it will take some time to get them right. 
    Our aim is to have legislation in the House by September this year, to come into effect next year. 
    Councils will be able to make the shift to development levies on the same timeline as the 2027 Long Term Plan cycle. 
    You can see, I hope, a lot of really good things coming together around 2027.
    Pillar Three 
    On Pillar Three, officials are working away on this, and we will have more to say later this year.
    Changes to RMA will support more housing
    I want to quickly talk about how RMA reform will make it simpler and easier to supply the housing New Zealanders need.
    For example, standardised zones will be a game changer. 
    I completely agree with urban economist Stuart Donovan – zoning is so balkanised that even large developers tend to stick to one or a few main centres as branching out requires reconfiguring to different planning rules.
    Developers currently face a Gordian knot of these rules. 
    Maximum building heights of 9m in Kapiti versus 8m in Dunedin. Porirua requires an outdoor living space of at least 20m2 for a medium-density residential unit – in the Manawatu it’s 36m2. In Dunedin, maximum building site coverage can vary from 30% to 60% whereas in Taupō it varies from 2.5% to 55%. 
    Councils are even getting involved with things as niche as whether it is possible for someone to see the TV from the likely location of their couch – or whether doors should face out for “privacy” or in for “inclusion and community”. 
    I get email after email about this stuff. People stop me in the street to tell me about it. It is utterly out of control.
    Councils should be focusing on engaging with communities, looking at capacity in the network, and making decisions on where growth is most appropriate. 
    And we need to grow both up and out. 
    For the remainder of this speech, I want to focus on what we are doing to enable more greenfield development. 
    Changes to the NPS-HPL
    The National Policy Statement for Highly Productive Land – or the NPS-HPL, was introduced by the last Government to protect New Zealand’s highly productive soils. This piece of national direction is intended to boost food security for both our domestic food supply and primary exports.
    However, it is clear that it has gone too far. As currently drafted, the NPS-HPL protects a total of 15 percent of the country’s landmass. That’s nearly as large as the entire Canterbury region.
    This protected land often surrounds our biggest and fastest growing cities where growth is busting to get out.
    I have lost count of the number of developers who have come up to me since this has been introduced, frustrated that they are unable to secure land for greenfield housing to be developed. 
    There needs to be a balance between how we protect our most productive land with our need for more housing to tackle our housing crisis. 
    Right now, that balance is out of whack. 
    National campaigned on amending the NPS-HPL to remove the lowest classification of land protected, what is known as LUC-3. 
    This kind of land is not the golden soils we need in Pukekohe – instead, it’s much lower quality land that is good for housing. 
    Despite being a lower quality of soil, two thirds of land protected by the NPS-HPL is classified as LUC-3.
    I am pleased to announce today that Cabinet has agreed to remove LUC-3 from the NPS-HPL this year, fulfilling our election promise. 
    Across the country, this will open up land for housing roughly equivalent to the size of the Waikato region. 
    Alongside this, we are going to consult on whether we should establish what we’ve called ‘special agriculture zones’ around key horticulture hubs like Horowhenua or Pukekohe. This would essentially protect LUC 1, 2 and 3 land when it is grouped together in a natural configuration.
    We need more houses, and we need more greenfield development. 
    Removing these restrictions will allow us to have our vegetables and eat them too. 
    Changes to the NPS-HPL will be progressed as part of our National Direction changes in Phase 2 of our RMA reforms. 
    I will announce further details about the timing and shape of that package tomorrow but wanted to announce this change today to highlight our Government’s commitment to greenfield housing.
    Greenfield Model 
    To further demonstrate this commitment, we are also taking action to get more greenfield houses built in the near term. 
    I am pleased to announce that the Government will provide finance to developers to ensure more medium-sized greenfield developments – think around 1,000 to 2,000 dwellings – are enabled through the Infrastructure Funding and Finance Act.  
    We are calling this the Greenfield Model. 
    The Government will support National Infrastructure Funding and Financing Ltd – or NIFFCo – in lending up to $100 million to developers for infrastructure needed to enable new greenfield housing. 
    This model is being funded using existing unallocated funding within NIFFCo. 
    Here is how it will work. 
    NIFFCo will lend to an IFF Act Special Purpose Vehicle at a very competitive interest rate during the development phase of a project. 
    Then, the debt will be refinanced to private markets once the development is complete, with the funding ultimately being repaid by future homeowners through an annual levy.
    The development phase of a project is often the riskiest – and private financiers reflect this by charging higher interest rates.
    NIFFCo’s loan will provide lower cost financing to developers over the development period by charging approximately what private financiers would charge for completed developments. 
    This is a big win for growth.  
    NIFFCo will also be able to recycle capital into new projects after the five- to seven-year development period. 
    We are putting the Greenfield Model in place as a targeted interim measure while our Going for Housing Growth policy and Local Government reforms bed-in from 2027 or so onwards.
    To date, the IFF Act has not been used for greenfield housing developments. 
    The Act is complex, and levies are deemed too expensive. The higher than anticipated levies are also much less favourable than using DCs which are often artificially low, under-recover growth costs, and are cross subsidised by rates. 
    The economics of IFF Act levies just don’t make sense right now. 
    The changes we are making through Pillar Two, particularly around improvements to the IFF Act and our shift from DCs to Development Levies, will do the heavy lifting to fix incentives and put in place a more effective infrastructure funding and financing system where growth pays for growth. 
    But, as fast as we are going on this, it won’t happen overnight. 
    So, the Greenfield Model is a good short-term, cost-effective intervention as the lower interest rate provides benefits of around $10,000 per dwelling. 
    For comparison, the Infrastructure Acceleration Fund, which was set up to support new housing by the previous government, cost around $28,000 per house. 
    This model will support growth that otherwise wouldn’t have happened – or would have happened much later. 
    I am excited to just crack on. 
    Conclusion
    Let me finish by saying that solving our housing crisis is one of this Government’s top priorities.
    And to be honest, it is my number one priority. 
    I look forward to working with you to grow up and out, and to deliver more housing that New Zealanders need. 
    Thank you. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Road closed: State Highway 5, Te Pohue

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    A vehicle fire has closed State Highway 5 in both directions at Te Pohue.

    Emergency services were called to the scene, between Te Pohue Loop Road and Richmond Road, about 11.20am.

    The fire has spread to vegetation, and FENZ is attending.

    Motorists should expect delays.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Police hone in on Waiuku offenders

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Waiuku Police have identified offenders for some recent pesky offending occurring in the community this month.

    This includes the large quantity of graffiti and two vehicles that had been putting the community at risk.

    Sergeant Michael Robinson says a large quantity of graffiti went up on buildings between 6 and 8 March.

    “This tagging was occurring in the early hours over several mornings, which our team have been investigating,” he says.

    “As a result, I can advise a search warrant was carried out locally this week, and we have now identified the young person responsible.”

    This young person will be dealt with through the Youth Aid process.

    Local Police have also impounded two vehicles seen doing skids on Waiuku’s main street on 12 March.

    “These two vehicles were seen doing skids around the roundabout in wet conditions,” Sergeant Robinson says.

    “It was idiotic behaviour that put other motorists using the road at the time at risk.”

    Police have obtained search warrants and have since impounded both vehicles involved.

    Sergeant Robinson says Police have now identified both drivers that were behind the wheel at the time.

    They are being dealt with by Youth Aid as a result of this offending.

    “I hope these results are a reminder to the Waiuku community that we are taking offending of this nature seriously, and we will continue to take action.”

    ENDS. 

    Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: New law targets illegal fishing in the high seas

    Source: New Zealand Government

    New Zealand’s fight against illegal fishing in the high seas has been boosted by new legislation which passed its third reading in Parliament today.

    The Fisheries (International Fishing and Other Matters) Amendment Bill sets out stronger powers for the investigation of and action against suspected illegal fishing outside New Zealand’s Exclusive Economic Zone. 

    “Illegal fishing in the high seas hurts all countries by undercutting legitimate operators, distorting markets and impacting sustainability,” Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones says.

    “These changes take a commonsense approach to the problem by strengthening our ability to fight illegal fishing outside our domestic waters and beefing up regulation for our own commercial fishers in international waters.”

    Key changes include:

    • Improving the regulation and permitting of New Zealand vessels fishing outside our waters.
    • Strengthening New Zealand’s ability to combat IUU fishing by both New Zealand and foreign vessels.
    • Clarifying and expanding the international fishing permitting regime for industry and decision-makers.
    • Strengthening the efficiency and effectiveness of action taken against fisheries violations. 

    “The Pacific Ocean provides food and economic opportunities for the countries in and around it. These changes will help ensure fisheries continue to thrive while protecting the livelihoods of fishing communities throughout New Zealand and the Pacific,” Mr Jones says.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: DOC appeals to equine lovers for horse homes

    Source: Department of Conservation

    Date:  27 March 2025

    The Department of Conservation (DOC) aims to keep the heritage horse herd at around 300 horses, the agreed limit to keep the horses healthy and protect the fragile ecosystems of the unique Moawhango Ecological Zone.

    Rehoming is coordinated by the dedicated, not-for-profit group Kaimanawa Heritage Horses (KHH). However, they have not received nearly enough applications for re-homing this year.

    DOC Senior Biodiversity Ranger Sarah Tunnicliffe says the rehoming benefits both the horses and the environment.

    “Our latest aerial survey shows the herd is more than double the recommended 300 horses, which risks environmental damage and food shortages for the horses.”

    In recent years, with Animal Ethics Committee support, DOC has introduced a contraceptive treatment for some mares to support population control. This supporting method takes a few years to take effect, and rehoming continues to be the primary tool for herd management.

    “The muster is our opportunity to balance the continued health of the heritage herd with the protection of rare plants and ecosystems which make New Zealand special,” says Sarah.

    “It’s a win-win, but is reliant on Kaimanawa Heritage Horses getting enough applications for rehoming.”

    KHH chair Carolyn Haigh stresses the urgency of finding homes.

    “With applications closing soon, time is running out. We encourage people to contact us for information on the rehoming process.”

    The annual muster is in late April, with applications for horses open until April 14.

    If you can provide a home for a Kaimanawa horse, please contact KHH at muster@kaimanawaheritagehorses.org or visit www.kaimanawaheritagehorses.org/muster-information.

    Your help is crucial to protect these horses and their environment.

    Contact

    For media enquiries contact:

    Email: media@doc.govt.nz

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Outstanding branch activist

    Source: Post Primary Teachers Association (PPTA)

    Being a unionist is in Lisa Murphy’s DNA. “It’s part of my family heritage, being from a Catholic family there are a lot of
    teachers in my background. My Mum was a high school teacher in the 1970s, she taught in all sorts of Auckland schools and was always involved in the union. So, we had discussions about Tomorrow’s Schools, education, and politics. “Being a union member is just not something I would question, I suppose. I never look at the subs and think I could save that money.

    Chairing with gusto

    Paul Stevens, Chair of PPTA’s Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland region, nominated Lisa for the Guy Allan award. “As branch chair, Lisa has taken to this role with gusto, ensuring her colleagues and comrades are well supported and well connected to the work of the PPTA. Lisa should feel proud that she has maintained a strong branch through very tricky times.

    “To me Lisa is the demonstration of what PPTA Te Wehengarua represents at its best: a humble hard-working teacher and activist, who cares about our rangatahi, supports her colleagues, and recognises the important work of our collective to ensure the future of our profession.”

    When Lisa heard she had won the award, she felt pleased and proud. “I feel like I put in the work and the award is an acknowledgement of that which is nice. It is also an acknowledgement of the branch behind me and around me.” A sign of a great leader is that they do not have to be present for the work to continue. “I was away last July and a bunch of them went to the pub and wrote a submission on charter schools.”

    Enjoying the role

    There are many reasons why Lisa enjoys being a branch chair. “I love the people I work with; I want to bring them together so they have a place they can feel safe and heard- and get power from each other.” She also finds the political and social dynamics fascinating. “We’ve got these really interesting political and social structures going on, like why are people in the union or not? The political background to that, their choices of why they are in the union or not fascinate me, how they are led to their various political choices and why.

    ‘It is also an acknowledgement of the branch behind me and around me.’ 

    “I really enjoy navigating the variety of views that you get across such a big branch and I’m always quite amazed by the psychology of it, how different perceptions can be of any one issue.” Being a staunch PPTA member, Lisa has always been interested in union meetings and how they operate. She was an observer at Annual Conference a couple of years ago and was fascinated. “Seeing the formal processes that are happening, I was amazed by that because in my daily life as an art and art history teacher, I touch on politics and philosophy, but to see democracy in action and how structured it is, was really inspiring. It was like being in a mini government.”

    Tips for new branch chairs

    Lisa has some tips for new branch chairs in preparation for this year’s collective agreement campaign. Go to your regional meetings and get as much information as you can because the members will be hungry for information
    about what’s going on. Set up regular meetings – because most members would prefer to hear it in a discussion or meeting than have to read a whole lot of emails. Some people do read the emails so they can bring the information to the meeting. Make sure meetings are a nice place to be- have a bit of food if your branch can afford it. And provide the opportunity for members to share but keep it focused as well – not a whinge fest. 

    * PPTA Te Wehengarua established the Guy Allan award in 2005 to recognise outstanding branch activism in the Counties-Manukau and Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland regions. The award commemorates the late Guy Allan — a former PPTA branch chair and Auckland based field officer who was renowned for his commitment to unionism and branch activism.

    Last modified on Thursday, 27 March 2025 11:44

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Charges laid over Murupara incident

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Attributable to Inspector Lincoln Sycamore, Bay of Plenty District Commander (Acting):

    A 55-year-old Whakatane man has been charged after allegedly breaking into Murupara’s Police Station yesterday.

    About 6:45am, the man allegedly forced entry into the unmanned Police station by smashing a glass door. The Police Negotiation Team engaged with the man for several hours before he was arrested outside the station without further incident, just after 12pm.

    He has been charged with committing burglary with a weapon, and intentional damage, and is expected to appear in the Rotorua District Court today, 27 March.

    Enquiries into the incident are ongoing and further charges are possible. The station has been secured and repairs will begin as soon as possible.

    As the case is before the court, Police are unable to comment further.

    ENDS

    Issued by the Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Greens call for Govt to scrap proposed ECE changes

    Source: Green Party

    The Green Party is calling for the Government to scrap proposed changes to Early Childhood Care, after attending a petition calling for the Government to ‘Put tamariki at the heart of decisions about ECE’.

    “This Government has prioritised profits over our whenua, over our moana, and now looks set to sell out on our tamariki,” says the Green Party spokesperson for Māori Education and Early Childhood Education Benjamin Doyle.

    “Every child in Aotearoa deserves an education that sets them up for success. That demands an ECE system that places tamariki at its core.

    “Private profit and greed have no place in the education system. The Government’s proposed changes remove obligations to honour te Tiriti o Waitangi and mana whenua status of tangata whenua, undermine qualification requirements for teachers, and reduce protections for teachers who educate our rangatira mō āpōpō, our future leaders.

    “Every decision we make must be for the tamariki that we saw today on the steps of Parliament calling for these proposed changes to be scrapped. 

    “Tiakina te rito o te harakeke. We need to put our tamariki and mokopuna back at the heart of decisions about education,” said Benjamin Doyle. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech: Navigating the New World (Dis)order in Turbulent Times

    Source: New Zealand Labour Party

    Special thanks to Diplosphere for helping organise this event.

    Tena kotou katoa.

    Mexican poet Homero Aridjis wrote “There are centuries in which nothing happens and years in which centuries pass”. It sure feels like this now.

    Large swathes of the 80-year-old rules-based world order developed after World War 2 are in tatters.

    The dramatic withdrawal of the United States of America from the Paris agreement, the World Health Organisation, and the halting of most USAID programmes are, to say the least, significant. The ineffective and stalled OECD work on the minimum taxation of multinational corporations. The whirl wind of tariffs and counter tariffs, which change almost daily.

    The war of words between neighbours in North America is unprecedented.

    The speed of the recent withdrawal of US support for institutions the US was itself pivotal in creating has shocked many.

    Europe, already reeling from the war in Ukraine and wider instability, is now deeply unsettled by recent statements and positions from the new USA administration.

    The withdrawal of the US security guarantee changed not just Europe but geopolitics everywhere including Asia and the Pacific.

    Tectonic shifts are rocking the world, which is markedly different from a decade ago.

    Multilateral institutions have diminished in authority and effect. The slide of the United Nations, and other important institutions like the World Trade Organisation, is obvious.

    The overuse of the UN Security council veto and inconsistent application of international law has undermined the United Nations. UN ineffectiveness feeds a cynicism and emboldens disregard for international laws, treaties and institutions. The UN Secretary General was declared persona non grata in Israel.

    Many countries we identify with – like Canadian and European democracies – which relied on security alliances with one great power are obviously rethinking their strategy.

    In stark contrast, the New Zealand government has spent the last 18 months seeking closer alignment to the US, increasingly positioning New Zealand as being in opposition to China. We did not consider this a wise approach, but in any case the shifting global landscape has rendered it unsound.

    The world is in a transition to a multipolar world, with heightened rivalry between the great powers.  

    We could be in for a rough ride. What would what a Labour government do if we held the reins?

    How should New Zealand navigate the new order?

    When should we speak out?

    When should we stay silent so as not to provoke a response?

    I’ll set out my thoughts on New Zealand’s foreign affairs, trade and defence responses. How Labour would steer New Zealand’s independent foreign policy efforts, both transactionally and more holistically.

    You will have seen that we share common views with the government about the likes of the Cook Islands, the militarisation of the Pacific, and on Ukraine, but that we differ strongly on AUKUS and Gaza.

    This should not surprise given Labour’s record, which we are proud to stand by.

    The Labour-led government stayed out of the illegal invasion of Iraq after the UN inspector Hans Blix found no evidence of weapons of mass destruction. National  said New Zealand should have joined that war, which made the Middle East less secure, and undermined the rules-based order.

    An earlier Labour government established New Zealand’s nuclear free status, which National also opposed.

    Labour sent peacekeeping and reconstruction forces to Timor-Leste and Afghanistan. We provided money for arms to Ukraine via the NATO fund, humanitarian aid, air transport in Europe, and New Zealand personnel to help train Ukrainian soldiers in the UK.

    These are examples of the New Zealand Labour Party in government applying our independent foreign policy, making decisions according to our assessment of New Zealand’s long-term national interest.

    New Zealand is not non-aligned and works most closely with like-minded countries which share our values.

    Australia is by far our most important relationship.

    We are internationalists, not isolationists, and a reliable supporter of international institutions.

    We understand communication between nations on sensitive issues benefits from diplomacy, whether via the United Nations, other multilateral fora, or bilaterally.

    We must be able to talk about differences between our country and others. Hegemony is taken too far if we cannot.

    Not all statements can be in public, but some should be.

    Sometimes, as now, there is a desire not to offend for fear of retaliation. At times of sensitivity, the wisdom of former Prime Ministers on both sides of the Tasman can be helpful. They can say what needs to be said.

    Paul Keating is well known for his pithy comments. He recently described the fairer  attributes of Australian society compared with US societal settings. He listed cradle to the grave healthcare for everyone, sustainable retirement savings and superannuation, an Australian economy which delivers substantial income increases for working people, high rates of Australian participation in education, and effective gun control.

    Keating’s purpose was to emphasise that we shouldn’t be subservient, nor cede moral authority, to others including the US when choosing our approach to the world.

    Malcolm Turnbull has spoken out against US tariffs noting their random use against Australia is not justified by a trade imbalance.

    John Key has quietly but importantly emphasised that we should be careful not to ruin our relationship with China.

    Helen Clark described the pitfalls of AUKUS pillar 2 and has been critical of loose language resurrecting the defunct ANZUS pact or using the Five Eyes intelligence network as a foreign affairs construct.

    She put it succinctly and well – “New Zealand needs a clear-eyed vision for courteous relations with the US and China, close dialogue with the Pacific Rim, Pacific Island and European friends”.

    Just because great-power politics have shifted does not mean Aotearoa should drop our long-standing commitment to human rights, open trade, multilateral institutions and the rights of small states.

    Obviously we understand diplomacy is required, but that should not silence our ability to speak up and advocate for what we believe in.

    We raise concerns about freedom of expression and the treatment of minorities in China, and about foreign interference. Some of this is said behind closed doors. Some is very public.

    When the Chinese government via its NZ embassy criticised New Zealand media for reports alleging foreign interference, in Labour we quickly and publicly stood up for the rights of New Zealand media and criticised the Chinese intervention.

    The New Zealand Labour Party’s view is that if we don’t stand up for what we believe in, we undermine our ability to do so in the future. We also undermine our reputation for fairness in foreign affairs, built up over decades, which in turn undermines our influence.

    The same principle applies to our relationship with the US.

    We have acknowledged the current government’s desire not to unnecessarily provoke a response from the US when things are so volatile.

    But the government’s seeming unwillingness to criticise anything pertaining to the US concerns us, even when the US went so far as to sanction others for participating in international institutions we support.

    For example, New Zealand is a member of the International Criminal Court. The US is not. That is their right, but for the US to sanction those assisting the ICC is wrong. Yet the current New Zealand government chose not to stand with 69 other countries including Switzerland, France, Canada, UK, Germany, Sweden – countries we share values with. This was an unfortunate break with NZs proud tradition of independently standing for what we believe in.

    If we want countries to support the international rule of law, we should apply it consistently. Many countries think the west is inconsistent in its application of international law in the middle east.

    The sympathy most New Zealanders felt for Israel and those who settled there following the holocaust has severely eroded. We condemned the killings and hostage taking by Hamas on 17 October 2023. But 70 years after the 1967 war, the blatant lack of rights of Palestinian people, the endless death and carnage in Gaza, and lack of progress towards a two State solution, or a single state alternative, is intolerable.

    This is why we have said New Zealand should be assisting the International Court of Justice when considering whether the state of Israel is acting illegally, as we did in respect of Rwanda and Ukraine. And be clear that individuals in breach of international law should face consequences in the International Criminal Court, and via a New Zealand sanctions regime.

    We have limited power and can’t always get our way. We try to use our values and reputation to influence better outcomes.

    We get the realpolitik of superpower.

    We are long term observers of superpower behaviour.  We are not surprised that China has become more assertive as it has becomes a superpower. The UK used to be, so were France, and Spain, and Italy back in the day.

    The USA has long used its power in central America, and beyond, to influence outcomes, and is currently pressuring Panama to limit Chinese influence.

    Russia’s Mr Putin has a history of invading and destabilising other countries. He is unlikely to stop, in part because his internal political position – including his life and retention of his billions – may rely upon his continued international aggression. This is why we support consideration by the New Zealand government of support for multinational peacekeeping efforts in the Ukraine.

     

    AUKUS pillar 2.

    The New Zealand Labour Party does not support joining AUKUS pillar 2, which the prior US administration described as a China containment strategy. There was a change of language from the New Zealand government after the 2023 election. New Zealand was described as a “force multiplier” for the US. The government said there were strong reasons in favour of pillar 2. Long redundant ANZUS language was resurrected. It appeared to us in Labour that the public were being softened up to join.

    We engaged the public in a debate. This included well-attended public meetings. Voices for and against AUKUS pillar 2 were active. The media delved into the issue.

    Neither interoperability nor access to technology rely upon AUKUS – two of the arguments put in its favour. Cooperation with other countries in Asia like Japan, Indonesia, Singapore, South Korea does not rely upon AUKUS and could be hindered if these countries do not like the anti-China AUKUS positioning.

    We concluded that AUKUS pillar 2 is not in New Zealand’s interests. Our decision was not influenced by the election of the new US administration, although for some this will be relevant.

    It is pleasing that senior former National and Act politicians have voiced their opposition too.

    Interestingly, the rhetoric from the government has toned down on AUKUS. That said, language in India last week, instead of emphasising the need to navigate a multi-polar world, clumsily positioned New Zealand as making binary choices between India and China.

    Being unsurprised that a rising China is more assertive in its nearby region does not mean we are comfortable with all steps in the Pacific.

    Being situated at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean distant from neighbours has trade and other disadvantages. But that physical isolation and low levels of militarisation in the vast Pacific are our greatest defensive attributes. Changes to that status quo concern us.

    We are perturbed by the recent agreements signed between the Cook Islands and China, labelled as a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. The agreement commits the Cook Islands to supporting China in multilateral forums and to support candidates during elections of various boards and committees.

    We agree with the current New Zealand government that the process which preceded these commitments, and their substance, breach the arrangements under which the Cook Islands operate, which are referenced in the Joint Centenary Declaration of 2001.

    The Cook Islands are part of the realm of New Zealand. Cook Islanders carry New Zealand passports. The advantages this carries are the primary reason Cook Islands per capita GDP is a remarkable four times that of Fiji and five times that of Tonga and Samoa. Advantages include the ability to work in New Zealand and Australia, access to New Zealand health care and education, and superannuation portability.

    Consultation obligations are not some perfunctory commitment of little importance. They are to ensure the Cook Islands government neither deliberately nor unwittingly takes foreign affairs steps deleterious to the Cook Islands, or to New Zealand, and to our relationship.

    It is of course open to Cook Islanders to change their relationship with New Zealand and give up their New Zealand Passports. I doubt this will occur as Cook Islanders know their standard of living would slump if they did so. Security issues for the Cook Islands could deteriorate over time too.

    In terms of seabed mining, it is within the sovereign power of the Cook Islands to pursue this if their government desires. New Zealand’s experience with hundreds of millions of dollars of clean-up costs left behind by overseas oil companies makes us very wary. Nevertheless, if the Cook Islands so wish, New Zealand should assist them to manage the opportunities and risks, including with international participants.

    The prosperity and peacefulness of the Pacific Islands is of fundamental importance to New Zealand. The withdrawal of USAID does not help.

    New Zealand, with partners like Australia, must step up. We need to do more to help Pacific countries with affordable banking services, digital telecommunications, renewable electricity, sustainable resource utilisation (especially helping to maximise value from EEZ fisheries), and climate adaptation.  Better educational, health and civil society outcomes are good for us all. Labour mobility can also help, although care is needed given sensitivities for some concerned about depopulation,

    New Zealand can help Pacific populations displaced by sea levels rise.

    Reciprocity is key to prosperity and the desired avoidance of militarisation in our region. What would we do next?

    Labour would like to discuss a Pacific Peace Zone with other Pacific Island countries, and surrounding superpowers. Hon. Phil Twyford will detail how this meshes with our historic commitments to denuclearisation and peace on another day.

    We are continuing to work on our Pacific priorities within Labour, but one thing is already clear. The decline in New Zealand government spending on soft and hard power must be reversed.

    The split between hard power expenditure on military personnel and hardware, and soft power spending in development assistance and diplomacy will need to be worked through. But in our view increases to both are needed. A good principle to start with would be that every extra dollar spent on our military will be matched with an equivalent lift in our aid to the Pacific.

    Today is not the day to detail a defence procurement plan, but some high-level statements are appropriate. I make three points:

    1. In coalition with others, Labour recently replaced the Orions with P8s and replaced the Hercules. An earlier Labour government bought the current frigates, which are now nearing end of life. While we will never be a substantial military power, we need naval vessels to respond to disasters in the Pacific, and it is reasonable for our partners to expect they will have military capabilities. Rt Hon Chris Hipkins has acknowledged this requires cooperation across governments and election cycles.

    2. Our most effective fighting force is our SAS. They should be well paid and well equipped. They like to deploy to polish their renowned skills. Consideration should be given to their deployment in Ukraine in support of peace.

    3. The war in Ukraine has proven quantities of small drones are important. Ukrainian drones have effectively controlled the Black Sea against an invading nuclear power. They are affordable. We are home to Rocket Lab, Hamilton Jet, and drone companies delivering leading edge services to our world leading agricultural sector. 

    Australia has drone capabilities and is ahead of us in some areas. To use Sam Roggevin’s analogy in his book the Echidna Strategy, in defence we want to be a prickly adversary. New Zealand should prioritise working with Australia on defensive marine and air drones and commit significant resources to the task. Our defence spokesperson Hon. Peene Henare is engaged in these issues.

    Now I turn to trade. A lack of cooperation and compromise has blocked progress at the WTO for many years.

    This is not a dig at the US.  Many US complaints about trade imbalances caused by existing tariffs, non-trade barriers, state subsidised overcapacity and dumping are valid.

    That said, other distortions and unfairness caused by tax arbitrage substantially benefit the USA, especially in services like e-commerce. So does the US dollar reserve currency status, which in effect outsources much of the cost of US government deficits and debt. 

    Clearly these are complex issues.

    As Trade Minister during the last Trump administration, I had frequent dealings with then US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer. He criticised private equity purchasers of US manufacturing outsourcing manufacturing to low cost-labour countries to shave off the last few percent of labour costs. Those owners banked increases in capital values at the cost of the US workers. He wrote about this in his book.

    He understood that the standard of living of working middle class citizens were essential underpinnings of both the long-term health of the US economy and democracy. Without a strong middle class working, producing, saving and consuming, the economy and society weakens.  

    There are ironies.

    The system has worked for the US in terms of its GDP per capita, which is amongst the highest in the world. The factors referred to by Paul Keating, together with the parallel concentration of wealth at the very top, are not primarily caused by other countries, but rather by the USA’s internal settings.

    Unfairnesses in trade settings are not new for New Zealand.

    New Zealand and Australia both play much fairer in global trade than most other countries but are still caught up in the maelstrom. 

    Sitting as we do at the bottom of the Pacific, New Zealand responded to protectionist measures in Europe and the Americas by building trade and foreign affairs relationships in Asia. Some of those strategies have been phenomenally successful for a little country – the China FTA, AANZFATA, CPTPP – which includes Japan, Canada, Mexico and Chile. Then we circled back to the UK and Europe. The current government has closed the Gulf deal and is pursuing India. Labour’s record in trade is second to none.

    How do we protect our trade interests now?

    We are as well placed as any distant small country can be. Our diversity of sales channels will help us minimise the first-round effects of the trade war. Risks to compliance with trade agreements and the second-round effects in terms of the risks of an international economic slowdown are impossible to model.  I certainly do not recommend tit for tat tariffs.

    Where might a new order emerge?  I will mention one new idea Damien O’Connor and I have discussed. It is at least possible that some of the barriers to trade between Europe and the US will soon be reduced for both security and economic reasons. What happens then? Maybe CPTPP could then be a sensible choice for Europe. The UK is already in it. If this happened, CPTPP – which is has overtaken the stagnant WTO – could become the de facto international standard. This possibility should be pursued by our excellent trade officials.

    I want to end by lifting our thoughts to the underlying drivers of the polarisation afflicting the world.

    Polarisation has increased between and within countries. There are many causes. Some are geopolitical, some economic, and some technological – like the role social media plays in carrying lies, misinformation, violence and death threats without consequence for those lying or those profiting from them.

    People feel less secure. Whatever the causes, this has political, economic, social and security implications.

    Many foreign affairs responses are transactional. But the big shifts post-World War 2 were holistic.

    There was broad acceptance that the extremes of fascism, revolution and wars had been caused by depressions and inequality, in turn partly caused by unaffordable reparations.

    The new world order after WW2 was intended to enable countries to succeed by encouraging international trade, access to resources, better health, and international cooperation.

    The decades that followed saw enormous progress in most parts of the world, with complimentary progressive measures within countries assisting to lift outcomes for billions of people.

    Now the underlying consensus has frayed to the point of disfunction.

    I believe the current turmoil will need a holistic response, and for that to be agreed a substantial subset of the international community will need to find common ground about the main underlying causes of the current worrisome trends.

    I’ve reached the stage of career that I know what I believe to be important. 

    For me there are two main themes.

    The first I have already touched on is gross wealth inequality, especially when this becomes intergenerational and sections of the population stagnate. This drives instability. I won’t say more about that in this speech, but history shows time and again that gross inequality ends in tears.

    The second is the breakdown in trust which happens when lies and misinformation prevail over facts. A cornerstone of the emergence of the nation state and the spread of liberal democracy was the enlightenment. There are rational facts. There are truths and untruths.

    The scourge of irresponsible social media, megalomaniacal tax avoiding tech barons, and irresponsible internet service providers is on my list of the important. 

    I have a view that we in the west have made a fundamental error in providing what is in effect an exclusion of liability for third party content.

    We have wrongly taken upon the shoulders of government the burden of regulating against what is harmful. I doubt this will ever work in practice. It also puts the burden on the harmed citizen (or government agencies) to respond after harm is caused. 

    The exclusion of liability was conferred when providers were more akin to the postal service, which has no liability for the content of a letter. Those providers morphed into publishers yet are protected from the legal remedies which apply to the traditional media they undermine. This mistake is the core of the problem.

    I am convinced it is better to remove the exclusion of liability, exposing those selling a harmful product to liability to the ordinary people that their product harms. 

    And it is a harmful product.

    Be it damage to young people, foreign interference, defamation, theft of other people’s content, the enabling of small but extreme groups of evildoers who find each other on-line, online sexual abuse, online streaming of terrorism, or the regular unpunished threats of death and injury. Lies and misinformation abound.

    A senior banker recently complained to me that internet investment scams are more common than legitimate products, and that the internet companies refuse to control them. Worse, they take money for the advertising service they provide to the fraudsters.

    Much of this is harm is from anonymous sources, with some deliberately aimed at undermining our democratic way of life and freedoms.

    Enabling private remedies for our citizens against those profiting from selling these harmful products, including through low-cost fora such as disputes tribunals or small claims courts, seems to me to be proper. Leave it to the Courts to work out the balance between freedom of expression and the duty not to sell a harmful product.

    There are ways to introduce safeguards, such as liability limits or safe harbours for media content or maybe for platforms that take active steps to prevent scams. But allowing the current situation to continue – where the burden falls almost entirely on individuals while social media giants profit – is untenable.

    The suggested approach does not make the government a censor and better avoids the risk of state suppression of freedom of speech. 

    Left unchecked, current ills will be made worse by those malevolently using AI to make the harms they are already causing worse. 

    Left unchecked the oligarch owners of these platforms will increasingly use them for the own political ends, as we already see with some platforms. 

    Fixing this would not ruin the internet. Point to point communications would still be protected like the mail. E-commerce would endure. Massive quantities of information will remain.

    I fear that if this is not addressed, polarisation and demagoguery will prevail.

    I am by nature an optimist. Opportunities arise from adversity. Digital services taxes sprouted at the end of the last Trump presidency, and I predict pressure for change will continue to mount.

    Many people in the world are fed up with these selfish tech giants. We should work with other countries to fix this.

    The holistic changes after World War 2 had the betterment of people at their heart.

    New Zealand under Labour Prime Minister Peter Fraser helped ensure the United Nations applied a human rights approach, for the benefit of people in countries large and small.

    New Zealand needs a clear-eyed vision for courteous relations with the US and China, close dialogue with the Pacific Rim, Pacific Island and European friends. 

    Everyone in this room has a role to play. It has never been more important to stand up for New Zealand’s independent foreign policy. And we all should.


    Media: Check against delivery

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Driver sentenced for serious crash

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Attribute to Senior Sergeant Fane Troy, Taupo Police:

    A Canadian woman has been sentenced for her role in a serious two-vehicle crash near Taupō on Sunday.

    Renee Kelly Vanry, 57, of West Vancouver in Canada, appeared in the Tauranga District Court today, where she was sentenced on four charges of careless driving causing injury – relating to the serious injuries four of her passengers sustained – and another charge of careless driving – relating to the overtaking manoeuvre that caused the crash.

    Police were alerted to the two-vehicle collision on State Highway 5 in Rangitaiki, about 10.30am on Sunday 23 March. Ms Vanry was the driver of a van and had been attempting to overtake a slower vehicle near a left-hand bend, with less than 100 metres visibility. The van was still on the opposite side of the road when a Jeep rounded the corner and collided with it.

    The force of the impact caused the van to become airborne, landing backwards in a ditch across the road. Neither driver was injured, but four passengers in the van suffered a range of serious injuries and another seven were assessed and discharged that day.

    Of the four, one has flown back to Canada, with another due to return home this week, while two remain in hospital in New Zealand. All face many months of recovery.

    Ms Vanry has taken responsibility for her actions, which has allowed the judicial process to be expedited. Her misjudgement has had a profound effect on the lives of her passengers, the other driver, and her own.

    The crash, although serious, could have been so much worse if it were not for the seatbelts that everyone involved was wearing.

    At sentencing, Ms Vanry was disqualified from driving for six months and ordered to pay $1000 for emotional harm to each of the four victims, and $1500 for emotional harm to the other driver.

    Six other charges were withdrawn.

    ENDS

    Issued by the Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Regional Tourism Boosts drive international growth

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Autumn and winter international visitor numbers are being boosted by six new regional initiatives, taking tourists beyond traditional hot spots to see more of New Zealand. 

    Tourism and Hospitality Minister Louise Upston says the successful regional tourism organisations will receive a total of $3 million for short, sharp campaigns across regional New Zealand. 

    “I’m pleased to announce support for six successful initiatives, ranging from the top of the North to the bottom of the South Island. There’s again a strong focus on the Australian market, with one setting its sights on North America,” Louise Upston says.

    “The successful bids are: 

    • $600,000 for a top of the North initiative led by RotoruaNZ
      • $600,000 for a central North Island and Nelson / Marlborough initiative led by WellingtonNZ
      • $600,000 for a central South Island initiative led by ChristchurchNZ for a winter-focused marketing campaign
      • $170,000 for a top of the South initiative led by Development West Coast
      • $350,000 for a lower South Island initiative led by Great South
      • $680,000 for a nation-wide initiative, led by Tātaki Auckland Unlimited, focused on the North American market. 

    “I’m thrilled to see tourism businesses working together with councils and communities to get in behind this. We want tourists travelling across New Zealand, so they’re aware of everything New Zealand has to offer.

    “Every café selling a coffee, every motel getting a booking and every attraction that’s visited will feel the benefit from increased visitor numbers.”

    The Regional Tourism Boost contestable fund opened in February with applicants encouraged to collaborate to attract more international visitors to their wider regions over autumn and winter. 

    It’s part of Tourism Boost, developed by the Government in partnership with industry to support an immediate growth in visitor numbers. 

    “This regional activity, alongside our previously announced Australia campaign and funding to encourage more business events, will continue to boost tourism and drive economic growth. 

    “This is a year of opportunity for tourism. The numbers are already tracking up and 2025 is our chance to further reinforce its value to a humming, vibrant country, where we welcome anyone, from anywhere, anytime,” Louise Upston says.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Cuts to consultant, contractor spend exceed target

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government’s move to cut public sector spending on consultants and contractors is on track to save $800 million over two years – double the initial target, Public Service Minister Judith Collins says.

    “We set a two-year target to cut $400 million in spending on consultants and contractors across the public sector by 2024/25,” Ms Collins says.

    “The latest update anticipates savings will come in at more than $800 million by the end of June.

    “That’s $800 million that can be spent on delivering core services to taxpayers, in areas such as healthcare, law enforcement and education.

    “Taxpayers expect public servants to spend their money wisely, and I’m very happy to share with them just how much money is on track to be saved as a direct result of the Government’s efforts to rein in excessive spending while ensuring core government services continue to be delivered.”

    Public Service Commission data released today shows the size of the core public service workforce decreased 4 percent in the 12 months to December 2024. At the end of December there were 62,968 public servants (FTEs), compared with 65,699 in December 2023.  

    “This reduction largely impacted back-office roles and has been offset by an increase in the number of frontline staff,” Ms Collins says.

    “In the six years from 2017 to 2023, total salary costs for the core public service workforce grew a staggering 72 percent, to about $6.1 billion a year. We simply do not have sufficient taxpayers to support that kind of growth.

    “The Government will continue to focus on the delivery of frontline services while keeping contractor and consultant spending and the overall size of the workforce in check.”

    Note to editors:

    The core Public Service are departments and departmental agencies only. It excludes the wider public sector, such as defence personnel, police, teachers and public healthcare workers

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech to open new building at Lincoln University

    Source: New Zealand Government

    I am very pleased to open the redeveloped George Forbes Building at Lincoln University.
    The original building was opened by Governor-General Viscount Cobham on 11th August 1960. He inherited Viscount Cobham from his father but his birth name was actually Charles Lyttelton, Lyttelton being named after his great grandfather. 
    The building has undergone significant changes since then that have made it a notable landmark in the area. 
    This latest development creates a vibrant new student hub, which will contribute to a world-class campus. 
    I know Lincoln has a strong focus on its students, both in terms of their campus experience but also a commitment to supporting their success in study and moving into employment.
    This space demonstrates your focus on your learners and their future, by providing a mix of areas for relaxation and recreation, as well as places to work and collaborate with others.
    And collaboration is one of the hallmarks of the university. 
    We can see it today in your strong domestic and international partnerships in research and teaching. 
    An excellent example is Bioprotection Aotearoa, a Centre of Research Excellence that features a collaborative partnership of 11 universities and CRIs to train the next generation of bioprotection researchers. It also delivers pioneering, multi-disciplinary research to protect our productive and natural landscapes from pathogens, pests and weeds in a warming climate.
    Scientists from Lincoln along with Plant & Food Research have contributed to the discovery of a new gene – the PAR gene – that will make it possible to produce seeds from crops that are genetically identical to the mother plant, without pollination. This was done with scientists in the Netherlands and Japan, and it is expected to lead to major innovations in plant breeding.
    You also have a strong history in commercial collaboration. The New Zealand Agricultural Engineering Institute (NZAEI) established in 1965, now Lincoln Agritech, has a history of finding practical engineering solutions to agricultural issues, supporting sustainable production. That contributes social, environmental and economic benefits to the community but also to your researchers and helps maintain the university’s reputation as a partner in innovation.
    It’s not an exaggeration to say that Lincoln has been making vital contributions to our country and to the wider world, in agriculture, horticulture and viticulture, for nearly 150 years. That’s quite an achievement and something to be proud of.
    Your focus on the agricultural sector has positioned you well in our nation’s economy and helped build our reputation as an agricultural innovator, as well as a successful and reliable supplier of high-quality food and associated technologies.
    These are some of the things that place this small university in the top 150 for agriculture and forestry, according to the QS World University Rankings.
    It is also in the top 150 for hospitality and leisure, another significant industry for economic growth, and one that relies for much of its appeal on the quality of our rural environments and the products that are so important to this country’s economy. 
    I know that you have a long-term plan which is driving the shape of the campus, with both new and redeveloped facilities. 
    With Plant & Food Research and Landcare Research across the road, we have a hub of research excellence that is important to New Zealand’s agricultural future.
    These combine to make Lincoln an attractive place to study. You have rapidly rebuilt your domestic and international student population, and achieved a position of financial sustainability while continuing to be recognised as a leader in research for the land-based sectors.
    Keeping all of your achievements in mind, it gives me great pleasure to turn to the opening of this new development and the opportunities still to come. 
    I want to thank a great-grandson and namesake of George Forbes, who provided very helpful information on his history. I know he was invited today and I hope he is here.
    The Right Honourable George William Forbes was MP for Hurunui from 1908 to 1943 and Prime Minister from 1930 to 1935. He was also the first leader of the National Party. 
    Before that he was farmer in Cheviot – on his farm called Crystal Brook – which he farmed until his death. He had a keen and enduring interest in the industry throughout his political career, and he regularly attended agricultural events here at Lincoln. 
    The George Forbes Memorial Library was developed in recognition of his advancement of the interests of Canterbury Agricultural College, as it was then, in the mid-1920s, when plans for Massey Agricultural College were underway.
    The library has moved but the building retains his name. It is now the new entry point to the university. 
    For learners just starting their tertiary education journey, this will be a place of welcome and connection with each other and the studies that will support their success in years to come.
    Many Lincoln alumni have gone on to play, and continue to play, prominent roles in New Zealand life.  There is an impressive list of scientists, All Blacks and business leaders, as well as politicians and media personalities, who have passed through these halls. There are a few international leaders in there as well.
    Lincoln was a key part of their leadership journey. 
    That’s as it should be. We expect our tertiary institutions to produce leaders in all areas – science, arts, public service, sports, community and commerce.
    I believe George William Forbes would be proud and pleased with this place and the contribution Lincoln is continuing to make to New Zealand, as well as the continuing association of his name with the university. 
    Thank you Chancellor and Vice Chancellor for your continuing efforts, and congratulations to you and the university community on this occasion. 
    I now take great pride in officially declaring the George Forbes Building open. 
    Nō reira, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou katoa. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Funding limit change win for mental health sector

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Minister for Mental Health Matt Doocey says smaller Non-Government Organisations (NGOs) will now be able to benefit from the Government’s Mental Health Innovation Fund following a change to the match funding threshold.

    “This fund was created in consultation with NGOs so it’s important that, if changes are made, they are made following feedback from the sector.

    “So, I am pleased to be announcing today there is now a lower limit required to access match funding. We have gone from requiring at least $250,000 per application to $100,000. This means more NGOs will benefit, but the real winners are New Zealanders looking to access timely mental health support,” says Mr Doocey.

    The announcement was made while Mr Doocey was speaking to the NGO sector at the Platform Trust Members Day.

    “Round one of the Fund saw great organisations who are already making a real difference receive funding. These included MATES in Construction, The Mental Health Foundation, YouthLine, Wellington City Mission, Rotorua Youth One Stop Shop and the Sir John Kirwan Foundation. There will be further announcements from round one in due course.”

    During the announcement, Minister Doocey also laid out his priorities for the year ahead that the Fund will help to contribute to.

    “This Government is working hard to bring down mental health and addiction wait times. We are the first Government to introduce specific mental health targets and the initiatives funded to date are taking pressure off the public system and using a workforce that sits outside it.

    “We have a responsibility as a government to look at every option we can to ensure New Zealanders have timely access to mental health support where and when they need it. They have a Government that will leave no stone unturned in the pursuit of this goal.

    “It is vital that we enable NGOs to deliver innovative projects and initiatives that increase faster access to better mental health support across New Zealand. This lower funding limit will help clear the way for more organisations to contribute to the Government’s vision,” Mr Doocey says.

    Notes to editors: 
    •    The fund will see $10 million spent across two years.
    •    Successful proposals will need to demonstrate that they can address the following:
    •    Increases access to mental health and addiction support 
    •    Protects public specialist mental health and addiction services by reducing demand
    •    Develops capacity in the mental health and addiction workforce
    •    Uses technology to drive productivity
    •    Delivers scalable solutions for unmet need
    •    Returns positive social return on investment (with evidence)
    •    Achieves positive outcomes for target population groups that have evidence of poorer mental health outcomes than other groups
    •    Will be co-funded on a dollar-for-dollar matched funding basis

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Teaching Council shouldn’t be policing political speech

    Source: ACT Party

    “The Teaching Council should throw out a vexatious complaint against a teacher who expressed a political opinion online”, says ACT Education spokesperson Laura McClure.

    According to the Free Speech Union, a complaint has been made about a teacher who made a comment about the Treaty Principles Bill on Facebook. The complaint alleges that the teacher has breached the Teaching Council’s Code of Conduct, in particular the requirement for ‘manaakitanga: creating a welcoming, caring, and creative learning environment.’

    “The comment disagreed with the Teaching Council submitting against the Treaty Principles Bill on behalf of all teachers.

    “The Teaching Council cannot use its Code of Conduct to silence people having a political opinion outside the classroom. That itself would be a potential breach of the law.

    “This teacher has a right, like anyone else, to express their opinions freely on social media.

    “Teachers have contacted me to complain that they are uncomfortable with the fact that the Teaching Council made a submission against the Treaty Principles Bill. Clearly, they did not speak to their members.

    “The complaint is clearly an attempt to punish someone who holds the ‘wrong’ opinion on the Treaty, and it should be treated with contempt and thrown out.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: 27 March 2025 A new home brings new opportunities Jack’s new home at a Kāinga Ora complex in New Plymouth has been life-changing in more ways than one. As well as having a stable place to call home, the complex’s community room has become the perfect place for Jack to focus on his future and take up new opportunities.

    Source: New Zealand Government Kainga Ora

    “I never had a home of my own,” says Jack. “I have always moved around and lived in temporary accommodation or on the street. It took me a while to get my head around the fact that I won’t need to leave my home anytime soon.”

    YMCA Taranaki manages the community space, which can be used by both tenants and the wider community.

    Deanne Phillips is the Community Space Coordinator. “Designed to meet the diverse needs of the community, we organise a variety of free activities and services in the community space to promote connection, well-being, and personal growth for everyone who walks through the door,” says Deanne.

    “I am passionate about creating an environment where people from all walks of life can come together, learn new skills, access information, and form friendships.”

    Through YMCA Taranaki’s network of other community organisations services, tenants can also access a wide range of other resources to support their personal and professional development.

    Jack says that most days, he visits the community space for a chat and to help out where he can, and Deanne has also supported him in looking at opportunities for his future.

    “She helped me with my application for a full driver’s licence and her encouragement and support were exactly what I needed. It’s the first time I have ever had my full licence.”

    “I am now also going to the YMCA gym around the corner on my own. A YMCA staff member wrote a workout programme and showed me how to use the equipment. These gym sessions have made a huge difference for my mental health, and I sleep better too.”

    Jack says his full driver’s licence opens more doors to employment and he is now looking for a job. Eventually, he would love to be able to buy his own car.

    “I have put my name forward to the YMCA to be a support worker for homeless people, as I have lived experience. It would be really rewarding.”

    “I love the community we have at our complex. All of us tenants look out for each other and know each other. I feel like I can give back to others now, which I haven’t always been able to do,” says Jack. 

    Page updated: 27 March 2025

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Social worker legislation strengthens professional oversight

    Source: New Zealand Government

    New legislation passed in Parliament highlights the influential role social workers play in communities around New Zealand, supporting some of the most under-served and vulnerable members of our society.

    Minister for Social Development and Employment Louise Upston says the Social Workers Registration Amendment Bill, which passed its third reading, puts safety at the forefront.

    “Through this legislation we are tightening up a number of significant matters, including the process where social workers accused of wrongdoing may now be stood down before a formal investigation or criminal proceeding has started, reducing risk to vulnerable members of the public,” Louise Upston says.

    “Overall, the six policy changes and 10 technical amendments included in the legislation will improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the wider Act. 

    “Each change separately has a small impact, but together, they strengthen protections and operations.

    “They also build on wider changes to the way social workers are governed, professionalising the workforce across the board.

    “For example, social workers all now need to formally register with the Social Workers Registration Board, and hold a practicing certificate, which must be renewed each year. 

    “In this way, we increase transparency within the profession and put its important status alongside similar professions in health, teaching and law, which all have mandatory registration.

    “It is crucial we have a workforce of social workers who are able to serve increasingly complex and diverse needs. I recognise the hard work and stressful situations they frequently find themselves in, and the need for professional protections too,” Louise Upston says. 

    The Bill under debate had been prepared in response to the Social Workers Registration Board’s 2020 review of the Social Workers Registration Legislation Act.

    “The 16 amendments passed today provide fit-for-purpose occupational regulation — an important part of ensuring the safety of both social workers and the public throughout New Zealand. 

    “These changes will help achieve better regulatory oversight, clarity for the workers themselves, and protections for the public,” Louise Upston says. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Attendance rates rising but not good enough

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Associate Education Minister David Seymour says this Government has prioritised student attendance and as a result we’ve seen every term in 2024 record higher attendance than in 2023.

    In Term 4 of 2024 58.1 per cent of students attended school regularly, an increase of 5.1 percentage points from 53 per cent in Term 4 of 2023. Attendance rates across all equity index groups increased from 2023 to 2024.

    “Every region has recorded an increase in attendance. I would like to give a special shoutout to North and West Auckland and South and South-West Auckland for recording the biggest improvements, of 6.6 per cent each,” says Mr Seymour

    “While there’s more work to be done, these numbers are another step in the right direction to achieving the Government’s goal of ensuring 80 per cent of students are present more than 90 per cent of the term by 2030.  

    “I’m encouraged to see attendance rates continuing to increase steadily for all students, including those facing the most socio-economic barriers.   

    “Attending school is the first step towards achieving positive educational outcomes. Positive educational outcomes lead to better health, higher incomes, better job stability and greater participation within communities. These are opportunities that every student deserves. 

    “This trend must continue as schools begin investigating reasons for absence and supporting students back to school, as outlined in the Stepped Attendance Response (STAR).  

    “Schools will be required to do this from Term 1, 2026, although schools who don’t already follow a similar approach are encouraged to start earlier, and the Ministry has support in place.  

    “We are focussed on improving educational outcomes for all Kiwi children. No matter someone’s socio-economic background, location, or ethnicity, getting your children to school is the best thing you can do to ensure they have a bright future.” 

    Attendance data can be found here Attendance | Education Counts 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Fatal crash, Marton

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    One person has died after a two-vehicle crash on SH1, near Marton, last night.

    Emergency services were called to the scene about 9.45pm.

    Sadly, one person died at the scene.

    Another person sustained minor injuries.

    The Serious Crash Unit has examined the scene, and enquiries into the circumstances of the crash are ongoing.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Man charged after indecency incidents on buses, Wellington

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    A 27-year-old man has been charged following a series of offending which occurred on the Wellington public transport network.

    In early March, Police received reports relating to several incidents where a male passenger travelling on the Metlink bus network had acted in a sexually inappropriate manner, specifically directing his unwanted behaviour towards lone female passengers. This behaviour obviously caused them distress and to feel unsafe.

    Police promptly launched an investigation and as a result were able to identify, locate and arrest the offender without incident.

    Police understand these incidents can be distressing and we hope this arrest provides reassurance to large sector of the community who rely on public transport.

    Wellington Police are committed to ensuring all members of the public are safe and feel safe as they move about our community.

    Police are ensuring the victims of this offending are being provided support.

    The offender has been charged with multiple counts of performing indecent acts and is due to appear in Wellington District Court on 31 March.

    ENDS
     

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Property Market – New suburb-level property insights as NZ housing market turns a corner – CoreLogic

    Source: CoreLogic
    Property values across New Zealand are showing signs of recovery, with more than half of suburbs recording stable or rising prices in the first quarter of 2025.
    The latest Mapping the Market update from CoreLogic NZ provides suburb-level insights across 2,661 areas for houses and 1,077 areas for flats/townhouses, offering the most comprehensive view of property values in the country.
    CoreLogic NZ Chief Property Economist Kelvin Davidson said the data confirms that while affordability remains a challenge, improving market conditions are supporting a shift in property values.
    “New Zealand’s housing market has started to turn, driven largely by lower mortgage rates. Over the past three months, 54% of suburbs saw house values stabilise or increase, with a similar trend for flats or townhouses at 56%,” Mr Davidson said.
    “While this recovery is in its early stages, the strongest gains have tended to be concentrated in more affordable areas, where buyers appear to be capitalising on relatively lower property values.”
    Houses on the West Coast, particularly some suburbs in Buller and Grey District, saw values increase by 6% or more over the past quarter, reinforcing the role of affordability in driving market activity.
    Among the main centres, Dunedin’s Waldronville (3.9%), Hamilton’s Temple View (3.5%), and Christchurch’s Kainga (3.3%) recorded some of the strongest gains for standalone houses.
    For flats and townhouses, Glenleith in Dunedin (6.2%) and Grenada North in Wellington (4.8%) led the upturn, while areas such as Deanwell in Hamilton (4.1%) and Auckland North Shore’s Bayview (3.5%) also recorded notable growth.
    Mr Davidson said signs of stabilisation in previously weaker markets suggested demand was gradually beginning to return.
    “The number of suburbs experiencing price declines has narrowed, indicating the early stages of an upturn. Fewer than 230 suburbs saw house values drop by 2% or more over the past three months, while only 111 suburbs recorded similar declines for flats and townhouses,” he said.
    However, he cautioned that recovery remains uneven, with economic conditions, supply levels, and lending constraints continuing to influence local markets.
    “Some areas are stabilising or rising, but others remain affected by high listing volumes and economic uncertainty. The resurgence in values suggests improving sentiment, but we expect the pace of recovery to remain measured as affordability constraints and credit conditions limit momentum.”

    Enhanced market intelligence with new digital mapping

    The Mapping the Market online tool has been significantly expanded, now featuring suburb-level data split by property type. This enhanced dataset allows homebuyers, investors, and policymakers to assess value trends across different housing types using a single, standardised methodology.
    The interactive digital map, available at CoreLogic NZ Mapping the Market, provides current median values across every major suburb. With an intuitive interface, it offers a clear visual representation of where buyers can find properties within their budget.
    Mr Davidson said the latest insights reaffirm the affordability advantages of some regional markets.
    “Lower-priced housing markets are leading the recovery, particularly in West Coast districts such as Buller and Grey, where affordability remains a key driver. Suburbs within major centres, such as Waldronville in Dunedin and Temple View in Hamilton, are also showing signs of renewed demand.”

    NZ’s most expensive and affordable suburbs

    Auckland’s most expensive suburb remains Herne Bay, with a median house value of $3.15 million, while Oriental Bay tops the list in Wellington ($1.57 million) and Merivale in Christchurch ($1.33 million).
    For flats and townhouses, Queenstown continues to dominate, with median values in Queenstown Hill reaching $1.52 million, while Auckland’s Stonefields ($1.37 million) and Campbells Bay ($1.23 million) also rank among the highest.
    More affordable housing options remain available in regional areas, with median property values significantly lower in some parts of Buller and Grey Districts, as examples.

    A cautious recovery ahead

    While more suburbs are showing early signs of a market rebound, Mr Davidson expects the pace of growth to remain gradual due to economic conditions, high listing volumes, and credit constraints.
    “The downturn appears to be largely over, but the upturn in 2025 could be subdued,” he said.
    “The affordability gains seen in recent years are still in place and while lower interest rates may provide a lift, factors like high listings supply levels and restrained lending conditions to some degree – such as the debt to income ratio limits – could temper the recovery.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Legal and Governance Sectors – Janine Stewart: No Success without Succession

    Source: Institute of Directors NZ

    Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland-based Janine Stewart MInstD started her legal career in property litigation before moving into construction and infrastructure. Today, she is a specialist in construction and infrastructure, property and project disputes, and a partner at Minter Ellison Rudd Watts.  
     
    Stewart says the construction industry interacts with many facets of law, including contract, negligence and equity.  
     
    “You also see construction and infrastructure projects all around you . . . it’s very tangible and requires quite a lot of critical thinking and a solutions-focused approach where problem solving is at its core,” she says.  
     
    It’s also the reason governance appealed to her.  Stewart’s first experience of governance was as part of an advisory panel providing advice to the Ministry of Business and Innovation (MBIE) on construction issues and the Building Act. She says the panel ran in a similar way to a board and broadened her perspective beyond her practice and full-time work. It also aligned with her skill set.  
     
    “I really enjoyed that. I could bring what I knew from my practice to the panel – and the panel insights to my practice,” she says.  
     
    Stewart currently sits on two boards – Minter Ellison Rudd Watts, and Mercy Ships – an international organisation that brings medical care to low-income countries.  
     
    “I traveled to Dallas in place of the chair of Mercy Ships in 2017 (who was unable to attend the international board meeting) to focus on the vision and strategy of its 16 offices – that just sealed it for me,” Stewart says.  
     
    Being part of ‘the bigger picture’ and focusing on the vision, purpose and strategy of an organisation – and testing it operationally – keeps her engaged. For Stewart, having had her hand in construction-based board roles also enables her to bring deep knowledge and fresh thinking to an industry she describes as having its own level of complexity.  
     
    One of the bigger cases she has worked on in her legal practice was against Mainzeal prior to its liquidation.  
     
    “Mainzeal’s demise significantly impacted the shape of my practice because I was very focused on a major piece of litigation against it,” she says of the case.  
     
    When Mainzeal went into insolvency and the litigation wound down, this shifted the focus of her business to navigating tensions and disputes in ‘live’ projects.
     
    Overall, Stewart says large scale projects in the industry carry greater risk. Construction companies are not typically ‘asset heavy’, instead, “construction company assets tend to be in their goodwill, their people, and/or in their pipeline and projects”.  
     
    “You must be cognisant of these specific features of construction companies if you are on these types of boards because you must test the company’s ability to meet obligations on an ongoing basis against this framework,” says Stewart, who has conducted training with contractors and subcontractors on solvency-related issues that derive from late or failed payments.  
     
    “So, you do need to focus on cash flow and your ability to meet the solvency test to comply with your ongoing obligations, because you don’t necessarily have that direct and material asset base to draw on when cash flow might be tight.”
     
    If directors and boards aren’t comfortable with the financial information provided, Stewart recommends asking questions and/or seeking external expertise.  
     
    “You don’t have to be a forensic accountant, it’s having that confidence to call for external expert help when you need it,” Stewart says.
     
    For directors across all industries, the Mainzeal case, according to Stewart, highlighted the importance of skill sets around the board table and the need for succession planning.  
     
    “I think those points have really come into focus since Mainzeal because the financial state of affairs . . . were dire at the time. Had they reflected on whether they should have gotten expert advice, or [decided whether to] step down, I wonder how that would have impacted their liability.”
     
    As a result, today,‘liability’ might reverberate more forcefully in the governance landscape regardless of the type of board or industry.  
     
    But directors can guard themselves against risk by expanding their knowledge. Likening the need for continuous self-development to training at the gym or being in a relationship, Stewart says work is required. And the same is true of any board role. “You need to continue to work to improve yourself.”
     
    In 2020, Stewart attended the Institute of Directors (IoD) Company Directors’ Course and, more recently, attended the Advanced Directors Course where she says the critical thinking, and self-reflection around your values as a director and what you bring to the board table, appealed.  
     
    “I had recently joined [the Minter Ellison Rudd Watts] board and I liked the focus on critical thinking on the course because that’s something I can also bring into my legal practice and around the board table,” says Stewart, who is also looking to expand her governance portfolio.  
     
    “[In the course], there was a big focus on climate, behaviours and younger people coming onto boards and making sure they’re heard, and that the board is essentially doing the best job it can.”
     
    She says while some might dismiss development programmes, she reinforces the importance of ‘testing yourself’ and for boards to have regular board evaluations. As for identifying when it’s the right time to step down from a role, deep self-reflection and asking yourself some hard questions are necessary.  
     
    “There is a risk in people staying too long and holding onto their board roles. There’s also an important aspect of maintaining institutional knowledge, so it’s about striking a balance to ensure you’re bringing your best self to the table.”
     
    ‘Groupthink’ can also increase a board’s risk, especially where younger or new directors join the board and are shut down or dismissed by established members if they raise concerns or challenge the board.  
     
    “Groupthink just continues . . . but you have to think about how you might create a board culture that reduces the risk of that happening, and, when it does, make sure you’re prepared to deal with it because nothing’s perfect.”
     
    One thing Stewart would like to see more of at board tables across Aotearoa is “more listening”.  
     
    “And take a pause before putting forward your view . . . I think we are sort of wired to speak quickly, and we need to take the time to listen and pause and respond, rather than react.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Economy – Can new public infrastructure pay for itself? – Infrastructure Commission

    Source: New Zealand Infrastructure Commission

    Research by the New Zealand Infrastructure Commission explores whether new public infrastructure investment can generate revenue to pay back the cost of the investment.
    “The social and economic benefits of public infrastructure – our hospitals, schools, roads, water networks and more – are clear. But while all infrastructure needs to be paid for, it’s not always clear how it’s paid for,” Peter Nunns, General Manager – Strategy, says.
    How we pay for new infrastructure
    “One way to pay for more infrastructure investment is by raising user charges or tax rates. But that can be difficult. A recent public opinion survey from Ipsos shows that while most New Zealanders think we should do more to meet our infrastructure needs, few of us are willing to pay higher charges or taxes to fund more investment.
    “Another option is to invest in public infrastructure that pays for itself by bringing in new revenue. Projects that lead to large increases in infrastructure usage or large increases in economic activity generate more revenue from existing user charges, local government rates, or taxes.
    “Our new research, Paying it back: An examination of the fiscal returns of public infrastructure investment, takes a closer look at when, where, and how this is possible.
    When does new infrastructure pay for itself
    “Projects that can be delivered cost-effectively and that benefit many people are more likely to pay for themselves out of new revenue. Prioritising value for money can help boost our ability to invest in more infrastructure.
    “However, the bar is very high for public infrastructure projects to fully pay for themselves. Governments only collect a small share of new economic activity or user benefits through taxes, rates, or user charges. As a result, we estimate that transport projects must generate social and economic benefits that are five to nine times higher than the cost of the project to generate enough new tax revenue to pay for themselves,” Nunns says.
    “Our research suggests that the payback from public infrastructure investment tends to be higher when infrastructure networks are added to bit by bit as demand grows. In contrast, the costs of a ‘big bang’ approach usually outstrip the returns and must be covered from other tax or rates revenues. This could then take money that could be used for other priorities like hospitals and schools.
    A closer look at local councils
    “In one case study, we looked at seven large or growing urban councils over a 25-year period. We estimated how much they spent on infrastructure to accommodate population growth – from construction to ongoing maintenance,” Nunns says.
    “Some of these councils generate enough new revenue from this infrastructure – through development contributions and added rates revenues on new buildings – to fully recoup the cost. Others spent more on growth infrastructure than they earned in new revenue. We found that councils that grew their networks in line with population growth were much more likely to come out financially ahead after 25 years.
    “Not all projects have to pay their way. The point of public infrastructure is to improve community wellbeing, not simply generate revenue. But as the challenges of an ageing population and slowing productivity growth place pressure on our budgets, we’ll need to pay more attention to the fiscal sustainability of new infrastructure investment,” Nunns says.
    Background information
    • The report Paying it back: An examination of the fiscal returns of public infrastructure investment includes three case studies to explore how and when infrastructure can generate sufficient revenue to cover its costs.
    • Based on the case studies, the report highlights four key lessons for how to maximise revenues from new investments: project quality matters (projects that are cost-effective to build and which serve more users or beneficiaries are more likely to generate positive fiscal returns); the bar is high for projects to fully pay for themselves; incremental investment tends to have higher returns; and attaching revenue streams to new projects can help.
    • One case study looks at a 25-year period from 2007 to 2031 for seven local councils (Auckland (2012 to 2031), Hamilton, Tauranga, Wellington, Christchurch, Queenstown-Lakes, and Dunedin).
    • Another case study looks at four major transport projects, both road and rail, where published business cases provided sufficient information to calculate fiscal returns to the Crown: Ōtaki to north of Levin (O2NL) motorway (a 24-kilometre, four-lane motorway and shared use path); Pūhoi to Warkworth motorway (an 18.5-kilometre, four lane motorway, the first section of the Ara Tūhono, Pūhoi to Wellsford Road of National Significance); Warkworth to Wellsford motorway (the second proposed leg of the Ara Tūhono, Pūhoi to Wellsford Road of National Significance); and City Rail Link (CRL) (a mostly tunnelled 3.5-kilometre rail link connecting the Britomart Transport Centre to the North Auckland Line).
    • The final case study examines how a hypothetical tool, like a value capture levy to collect revenue from increasing property values might affect the returns from major transport projects. The study tests different scenarios around project cost, characteristics, and population density in the area that the project is serving.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government unlocks export growth opportunities for New Zealand dairy businesses

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government’s commitment to growing the value of New Zealand’s dairy exports has taken a major step forward with the passing of a key Bill in Parliament, Agriculture Minister Todd McClay announced today.

    “The Dairy Industry Restructuring (Export Licences Allocation) Amendment Bill, which passed its third reading today, modernises New Zealand’s dairy export quota system, creating new opportunities for growth and boosting farmgate returns,” Mr McClay says.

    “New Zealand’s dairy farmers and processors produce world-class products, but outdated rules have restricted export growth. This law unlocks greater access to lucrative overseas markets and ensures the quota system reflects the diversity of our dairy industry.”

    New Zealand currently administers dairy export quotas for the Dominican Republic, the European Union, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

    “The Bill introduces vital changes to better support businesses of all sizes, and it shifts quota allocation from the proportion of milk solids a company collects from farmers to a system based on export performance,” Mr McClay says.

    “It also reserves portions of quotas for exporters who are currently ineligible — ensuring fairer access across the industry.

    “And importantly, it now includes quota for sheep, goat, and deer milk processors, unlocking new export opportunities and revenue streams.”

    Mr McClay says the Bill directly supports the Government’s ambitious goal of doubling the value of New Zealand’s exports in 10 years.

    The commencement date for the Bill is 1 May 2025.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Update: Arrest in aggravated burglary investigation, Miramar

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Attributable to Detective Inspector Nick Pritchard:

    Police have arrested and charged a man following extensive enquiries into an aggravated burglary in Miramar.

    At around 2am on Monday 17 March, Police were called to a Darlington Road address, where the occupants located an intruder inside their home. After an alleged altercation with the occupants of the house, the alleged offender fled.

    One person in the house received minor injuries and the other three were uninjured.

    Today, Wednesday 26 March, Police arrested and charged a 28-year-old man.

    The man is due to appear in Wellington District Court on Thursday 27 March, charged with aggravated burglary and aggravated injury.

    Wellington Police continue to investigate the death of 63-year-old Abdul Nabizadah and are working to establish if there is a link between the aggravated burglary and Mr Nabizadah’s death.

    We are grateful for the assistance so far from the public and continue to appeal for information to assist in our enquiries.

    At 12.28am, a man was seen walking down Camperdown Road from Totara Street and turned right in to Darlington Road from Camperdown Road. The man was wearing a light-coloured top and dark pants.

    We know Mr Nabizadah arrived in Totara Street in his silver-coloured Toyota Aqua, registration NQE681, at 12.25am, so this man may well have seen Mr Nabizadah and or his vehicle. We urge this person, or anyone who may know them, to come forward as soon as possible.

    At 1.30am, a man in fitness clothing or activewear was seen running south on Darlington Road, before crossing the Camperdown Road intersection. He was wearing a blue shirt, and we also need to hear from him.

    We understand these incidents are upsetting and concerning for the community and the investigation team are working tirelessly to determine the circumstances around Mr Nabizadah’s death and to bring closure for his family.

    If you have any information that could help the investigation teams, please update us at 105 online now or call 105.

    Please use the reference number 250317/6324, or reference Operation Celtic.

    Information can also be provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Unlocking data to increase competition and choice

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Easier data sharing will lead to greater competition and better choice for consumers in key markets such as banking and electricity, thanks to today’s passing of the Customer and Product Data Bill, says Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson.
    “The days of manually searching the internet for the best electricity plan, or painstakingly going line by line through months of bank statements when applying for a mortgage, could soon be over. Using your own data shouldn’t be that difficult, and it won’t be in the future,” says Mr Simpson.
    “This is a monumental step for Kiwi consumers. It sets up the framework to give them greater ownership of their data, and more power and ease when it comes to shopping around for the best deal on utilities and other essential services.
    “It will also help grow New Zealand’s economy by breaking down the barriers for innovative technology companies, meaning they can also save time and money and offer new data-driven products and services.
    “Progressing this Bill was recommended by the Commerce Commission following its market study of the banking sector. We are on track to have open banking operational by the end of the year – well before the June 2026 target set by the Commission – with regulations specific to the sector to be confirmed in the coming weeks.
    “The next cab off the rank will be the electricity sector, to enable open electricity, and the legislation opens up possibilities in other sectors in future.
    “This legislation is very timely, with the media reporting just last week on exactly why a consumer data regime was needed. For instance, a Commerce Commission study found that nearly a third of mobile and broadband users have not switched providers because it was simply too hard.
    “Meanwhile in the electricity sector, comparison website Powerswitch says that because not all retailers are playing ball and sharing information, it is difficult to support people wanting to switch.
    “The data has always been there – but businesses holding it have had little incentive to invest in better data-sharing technology and agreements. We’re putting the power back into the hands of those who own the data: consumers.
    “I am excited to see the competition, choice, and innovation that this will unleash.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Legislation supports continued safe operation of clubs and ranges

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Legislation passed today will support the continued safe operation of shooting clubs and shooting ranges, Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee says. 

    “This is an important step towards modernising our firearms laws and ensuring shooting clubs and ranges are fairly regulated in a manner that supports public safety. 

    “The Arms (Shooting Clubs, Shooting Ranges, and Other Matters) Amendment Act 2025 was developed as part of the Government’s four phased approach to firearms reform. It provides regulatory relief to the operators of shooting clubs and ranges; while making sure the necessary tools remain in place to ensure public safety,” Mrs McKee says.

    The Act introduces several key changes to Part 6 of the Arms Act which include:

    • A new simpler enrolment system for non-pistol shooting clubs and ranges;
    • Decreased barriers to operating temporary non-pistol ranges;
    • Clarification on the timing of inspections; and
    • A range of minor changes to reduce compliance burdens.

    “The changes made to the Act simplify the regulatory requirements on shooting clubs and ranges, while maintaining public safety requirements. This will provide relief to club and range operators, who have struggled to comply with the unnecessary extra regulatory burden.”

    The Act was developed following consultation with members of the clubs and ranges community, firearms safety experts, and community stakeholders, as well as valuable input from the wider public through the Select Committee process. 

    Updates to the Arms Regulations 1992 to reflect the changes made in the Act are expected to come into effect once the Bill comes into force in three months’ time. 

    “We have listened to the concerns of New Zealanders and worked to create a law that prioritises safety while ensuring responsible licenced firearms owners are treated fairly.

    “This Act forms the second phase of the Government’s four phase approach to firearms reform, which will culminate in a complete rewrite of the Arms Act 1983,” Mrs McKee says.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News