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Should GPs be allowed to prescribe ADHD medication?
Should GPs be allowed to prescribe ADHD medication?

15 May 2024, 9:18 PM

Any moves to free up access to medication for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) must be balanced with ensuring patient safety and preventing drugs ending up on the black market, psychiatrists warn.A recent University of Otago study showed a tenfold increase in the amount of ADHD medication dispensed for adults between 2006 and 2022.However, only about one in five people with ADHD are currently receiving treatment for the condition, which is estimated to affect more than 250,000 New Zealanders.Some-time actor, marketing executive, blogger, photographer and business owner Julie Legg said her ADHD diagnosis at the age of 52 has helped her make sense of her life.Her restless mind, low boredom threshold and constant need for excitement caused "a few bumps in the road" for her career and relationships, she said."In a sink-or-swim environment, I learned to dog-paddle very quickly. But if there was a guide or some treatment or assistance along the way, that certainly would have helped me.Julie Legg. Photo: SuppliedClinical psychologists can diagnose ADHD, but only psychiatrists (or in the case of children, paediatricians) can prescribe the stimulants to treat it.Furthermore, patients are currently required to get reassessed by a psychiatrist every two years, which can cost more than $1000.A hui this week at Parliament to discuss removing barriers to treatment for ADHD brought together health officials, Corrections, NZ Police and professional organisations for clinicians, as well as MPs from across the political spectrum.Pharmac is considering removing or amending the two-year renewal criteria for ADHD treatments. Chief Medical Officer Dr David Hughes said the drug-funding agency hoped to have a proposal for public consultation in the second half of the year."There are ongoing supply issues with some ADHD medicines. We must carefully consider any potential changes, to make sure we don't make supply issues worse."As for getting that diagnosis in the first place, there was support from health officials and professional bodies to make it easier.Child psychiatrist Hiran Thabrew - the New Zealand chair of Tu Te Akaaka Roa, the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists - said members were generally supportive of widening the prescriber base to allow vocationally trained GPs and nurse prescribers to treat ADHD."No one has a problem with increasing access - we don't want people suffering, we want them to be getting the care they need. But it's just a matter of balancing that with safety, especially for children and teenagers."However, diagnosing ADHD could not be "shoehorned" into a 15-minute GP appointment, but required hours of careful and detailed assessment to rule out other physical or mental conditions with similar symptoms.He cautioned against removing ongoing monitoring for children and teenagers, both because they were still growing and developing and because of the risk of abuse or "diversion" (ie patients giving or selling their medication to others)."We know that diversion is highest in the young adult age group, up to 35 percent of high school students in the United States, according to some studies."When he raised this risk with health officials at the hui this week, he was told there was unlikely to be a problem with diversion in New Zealand because police were not picking up anyone."I think that's a pretty high threshold in terms of adverse effects, if that's all they're counting as a problem - people coming to the attention of police or the criminal justice system."Tauranga GP Luke Bradford, medical adviser for the Royal College of General Practitioners. Photo: Ruth Hill / RNZTauranga GP Luke Bradford, medical adviser for the Royal College of General Practitioners, was confident GPs with special training could diagnose and treat ADHD."We've got patients who are being treated for anxiety and depression, and using alcohol and cannabis to calm their brains down, when we know they very likely meet the criteria for ADHD and just need to trial medicine."There's the frustration of people saving up for months and months to see [a private psychiatrist], and you only need to have the car break down or for something else to happen for them to be back to square one, and this sense of hopelessness can creep in."ADHD New Zealand chair Darrin Bull was heartened by the broad consensus that people should be able to get treatment in primary care.Darrin Bull. Photo: Supplied"It's going to make life [for people with ADHD] a lot easier, as well as free up a lot of time for psychiatrists."A senior police officer at this week's hui told him they were "sick of arresting people just because they have ADHD and no one is helping them on the health side".In Australia, the government has just approved standard clinical guidelines - the result of four years' work - to allow a broader range of clinicians to diagnose and treat ADHD.In New Zealand, GPs were stripped of their authority to prescribe stimulants in 1999 due to concern they could be misused.Dr Tony Hanne Photo: SuppliedAuckland GP Tony Hanne, who had become a leading specialist in ADHD, continued treating thousands of patients over the next two decades under the supervision of psychiatrist Dr Allan Taylor. However, he struck trouble when Taylor retired and no one else was willing to take on the job.Fearing his patients would be "cut adrift", he wrote to the Ministry of Health asking for help, but there was no response."So I simply said, 'Well, my duty is firstly a duty of care to my patients.' So I kept telling everyone what I was doing and why I was doing it, and that went on for six months, and then they took action against me."Found guilty of professional misconduct by the Health Practitioners Disciplinary Tribunal last year, he was suspended by the Medical Council for a year from March this year, banned from prescribing restricted Class B ADHD drugs for three years and ordered to pay costs and fines of $175,000.Hanne appealed to the High Court, and was hopeful the changes currently under consideration would make life easier for ADHD sufferers in future.Meanwhile, several psychiatrists have stepped in to take on his old patients."So that's fine as far as people in the past are concerned, but the question is still about new patients. When someone goes to a GP with symptoms of ADHD, how do they respond? How do they know it's ADHD, and how do they respond? And that's where I'm wanting to be involved."Medication 'low-hanging fruit'Thabrew said in some ways, the push for medication was "low-hanging fruit" - the bigger problem was the dire state of mental health support services."While all this focuses on drugs - dare I say this as a psychiatrist? - it's not all about medication when it comes to ADHD."There's no discussion from what I can see about psychological and non-medication support for people with ADHD, either children or adults, and we know we've got woeful shortages of psychologists to do that work."Legg has written a book based on her own experience and interviews with other women diagnosed with ADHD, The Missing Piece: A Woman's Guide to Understanding and Living With ADHD.She knew many people for whom the medication had been "brilliant and transformative", but she has chosen to explore behavioural strategies at this stage."It's probably the longer, harder journey, but I've taken it up myself as a bit of a goal to do."But never say never when it comes to medication for me. If my environment changes, and I know medication is available for me, I would be silly not to consider that as an option."It was important to give people with ADHD credit for what their neurodiversity gave back to the world, especially in terms of innovation, she said."We're fun and we're great at problem solving and we're passionate. We're so many things - we're not just that list of traits. There's an upside too."

Job scheme for young people continues to be 'win-win'
Job scheme for young people continues to be 'win-win'

15 May 2024, 4:28 AM

Putting the young person “at the centre” is key to the success of the Mayor’s Taskforce for Jobs programme in the Waitaki District, says coordinator Eugen Dupu.The programme helps link young people aged 16 to 24, the majority who are not engaged in employment or training (NEET), with potential employers.“We focus on the individual as opposed to the programme. We don't have a blanket rule for everyone. The blanket rule is we put the young person at the centre, and we create a work plan for the programme that's individualised for them.”Between July 2021 and June 2022 Waitaki MTFJ achieved 65 placements, when the target was 50. Out of these, 23 were apprenticeships. The total employment or apprenticeship placements made the following year was 80 (with extra funding), and by March this year 50 placements had been made - already well exceeding the June 30 target of 38, Eugen says.“So, the young person will come in . . . and we look at what they're passionate about, what they've done, maybe some work experience, we help them with a CV . . . and then we try and get them into a job that's suitable for them.”During the year, the MTFJ team continued to engage with employers and visit the young people taking part in the programme. On Monday, the team was at Riverstone Kitchen, north of Ōamaru, meeting with restaurateur Bevan Smith who had successfully found three employees through this year’s programme.“Bevan has been fantastic at supporting the programme,” Eugen says. “He's giving these young people a chance.” Waitaki Mayor Gary Kircher, along with representatives from Workbridge and Stronger Waitaki, were joined by Waitaki MP Miles Anderson to witness first hand how things work.Miles has spoken to different district councils involved in the initiative and it’s something he wants to support and advocate for with his colleagues.“In particular with the ministers that are directly responsible for it,” he says. “I see initiatives like this that have worked, and work really well, as something that as a party we talked about during the election campaign, as a Government we're talking about backing because there's good hard data that's backing up the anecdotal evidence of the success of the scheme.  “I think it's that combination of pastoral care and wraparound services that were provided by the Taskforce for Jobs that made it so successful,” he says.While Eugen says there is approval for the next tranche of funding, up to July next year, he is unsure what that amount will be yet, and there is no word whether it will continue into the future.Miles says he will be “advocating that funding is at least maintained or increased”. Minister of Social Development Louise Upston is in Waimate today (Wednesday) and will see how the programme works first hand, he says. Future funding is an issue that “will be raised”. “The Mayor's Taskforce, it's a bit of a force, and the fact that, you know, they can have fulfilling careers is something that a lot of those young people that started in the programme weren't probably fully aware of or cognisant of when they started with it. But a lot of those young people now are thriving, aren't they? “There's so much information out there nowadays that sometimes blinds you to what can be achieved or what is possible.“There's a huge number of industries in this country and it's just that little taste that they get to start with that has allowed them to embrace, I suppose, the potential that they have themselves.Being community-led, utilising local knowledge and local businesses, helps to ensure the project’s success, he says.   “It's always gonna be a bit more successful than something that's done remotely.”A “very strong relationship with the Ministry of Social Development locally” has been another strength of the Waitaki scheme, Eugen says.They meet once or twice a week, to find the best solution for the needs of each particular young person.Another positive progression has been involvement with the local high schools.“Schools have moved on from pushing young people to go to university and focus on what's their need,” he says.“Being able to retain a lot of these young people in the community is huge for us, and also for the businesses, for the companies, for employers and business owners, because they struggled for quite a while to retain people in our district.” Once the introduction between employer and potential employee has been made, MTFJ maintains a minimum of three months follow-up.“So that's considered a sustainable outcome - that’s MSD language - however, young people are at the centre of what we do. We never let anyone down. “If it was one and a half years later and they lose their job, just because that funding is gone it doesn't mean that we stop supporting them.” The mayor says the programme is a “really cool thing to be part of” and is a great example of local decision making, using Government funding.“We agree the outcomes with them, and then we get on and decide how to best deliver that.“It’s our problem locally, and having local solutions is really key to that. Our model is a bit different to most of the other models, which is absolutely fine . . . and the team that we’ve got has been fantastic,” Gary says.Sharing the successes of the scheme with Louise Upston was important to ensure the funding for it continues, because it is “pretty much a year by year situation”.“It's always a concern that it won't be carried on. So sharing the successes is really important to show to  the government that actually it's delivering really well for their investment, in particularly the rural and  provincial communities, it's really good. “It's a great win-win for us. It's about getting those young people into work, but it's also giving employers some valuable staff members.”It’s an initiative that Gary says it is a pleasure to be part of. “The opportunity to go around and meet with some of our young ones who have been put in the jobs and hearing from them. You know, it really is life changing for a good number of them.” Working together for a common goal are (back row, left to right) Mayor Gary Kircher, Jason Evered from Stronger Waitaki,​ Miles Anderson, MTFJ coordinator Eugen Dupu, Bevan Smith (front row, left to right) Sandra Familton from Workbridge, new Riverstone Kitchen employees Zayden Newton, Diana Flores, and Paige Hacquoil, and Dawn Ewing former Workbridge employee and now PA to Miles Anderson. Photo: supplied.

Summer riding high after winning season
Summer riding high after winning season

15 May 2024, 1:10 AM

Summer Borrie has jumped at every opportunity with her showjumping, leading to her most successful season yet.In the past year, Summer has competed from Invercargill to Taupo, receiving a number of high ranking titles.She also travelled to Brazil in August to compete in an international five-star show, where she placed 5th overall in the 1.15m class, and was the top international rider in the same class.This season is the first time the 18-year-old Waitaki Girls’ High School pupil had competed in the Junior Rider Series so her success was “kind of unexpected”, she says.She did not start the season with her heart set on titles but wanted to be consistent.Summer’s favourite shows were in Gore and at the national competition held in Christchurch, which both have great grounds and atmosphere.Despite the competitions cutting into school time, her school had been supportive, she says.Summer competed in the Junior Rider Series, held at multiple events across the country, and won a number of smaller titles, as well as fifth overall rider in New Zealand, second at South Islands, and first in the Taupo Easter Classic Show jumping 1.25m.  She capped her achievements off by winning New Zealand National Junior Rider and the New Zealand Jumping and Show Hunting Championships in March.“It couldn’t have been a better season. It’s the most successful yet.“It’s pretty cool and quite exciting.”Summer was named National Junior Rider 2024. Photo: SuppliedSummer started riding her friend’s horses at eight years old and got her own pony at ten.She started competing in show hunting (the technical art of jumping) and has “slowly built up” her skills and progressed to showjumping.Two years ago Summer’s showjumping took her to France, where she trained, learned and rode different horses.Since turning 18, she has progressed to riding horses and sold her former pony to her dressage trainer, Lynley Stockdale.In March last year she bought her own horse, Cassie, and hopes to find a second horse over winter.Having horses is a commitment she says, as during the season she was riding six or seven days a week and four or five days during the winter.“Every day I’m riding.”She is responsible for feeding her horse, mucking out, giving it water, massaging and walking it.“There’s a lot that goes on that people don’t know about.”She is going out to her horse before school and after school, where she works until it is dark.“I’m always out there. There's always something to be doing.”But the excitement and thrill of competing makes all the work worthwhile, she says.“You’ve got to love the sport to do it.”Summer hopes to one day be in the Horse Grand Prix, still riding but also training her own horses.“I love competing.”Next year, she plans to study at Lincoln University, and has an offer from a friend to have her horses nearby.Summer is grateful for the support of her coaches Lynley and Markiss Cowie.“[Lynley] has probably made me the rider I am today.”

Gang unit: Police Association 'disturbed' by lack of funding, staffing
Gang unit: Police Association 'disturbed' by lack of funding, staffing

14 May 2024, 9:15 PM

The police union is "disturbed" the government's latest move to crack down on gangs does not seem to come with any extra cash or staff.Police are setting up a new national gang unit, as well as district gang disruption teams, to get patched members off the streets and curb crime and intimidation.That was likely to include a mix of new investment and other resources being moved around, Police Commissioner Andrew Coster said.But the announcement on Tuesday lacked detail, and the Police Association had not been consulted, its president Chris Cahill said."We are disturbed that this doesn't come with any evidence of increased funding and increased staffing."So it looks to us that you'll be asking officers to do more with less, and that's the concern we have."There were more than 250 vacancies in the force, and Cahill worried that for every officer who moved to the gang unit, there would be one less on the front line."We don't have the resources, we know we can't meet the demand that's already out there, so for this to occur police are either going to have to get more money, get more staff, or stop doing other work."Listen: Ngāti Kahungunu chair on govts new gang busting units from Morning ReportThe association wanted to understand what work could be dropped, along with proof that police would not have to do it, Cahill said."We want to see a lot more facts," he said.Meanwhile, officers were still fighting for more pay, after they overwhelmingly rejected the government's latest offer.Negotiations were moving to arbitration, and a hearing was set down for 26 and 27 June, Cahill confirmed.Labour leader Chris Hipkins told Morning Report police were doing the work in Operation Colbalt units and "if the current government want to rebrand it, so be it"."I think the proof will be in how much actual resource they put into it."Hipkins said he couldn't see how banning gang patches would reduce gang crime."Removing gang patches might make them harder to see but it doesn't mean the criminal offending is going to change."Listen: Labour leader Chris Hipkins on new gang units from Morning ReportIwi urges government to address the root cause of gang problemsThe government's approach to gangs focused too heavily on law enforcement, and not enough on the underlying causes, Ngāti Kahungunu chair Bayden Barber said.Barber has been meeting with Mongrel Mob and Black Power leaders following a shooting at a rugby match in Hastings last month, to discuss how to curb crime.Establishing a gang unit sounded "militant", he said, and he was not confident it would work."My caution would be, yep, you want to put the heavy hand down [but] we know that isn't the complete solution."You've got to be doing the other stuff. [They've] brought in the stick, but the carrot needs to be there, you know, people need to have a desire to change their lives."The problems in the community were deep seated, Barber said."Lack of education, lack of care as tamariki, no job, no training, and just a lack of aspiration."And along with that, a lack of connection to who they are as Māori, and iwi and hapū members."The iwi was trying to play its part, but the government was not doing enough to solve those problems, Barber said.Gang intimidation not a problem in WairoaThe Hawke's Bay town of Wairoa is also home to Black Power and Mongrel Mob members - and Mayor Craig Little said the community was used to seeing them around.He was not sure whether the national unit or district teams would reduce gang numbers or visibility, but intimidation was not a big problem, he said."Gang patches don't intimidate a lot of the local people."There's a bit of intimidation I guess, but it's mainly people coming from out of town who aren't familiar with gangs."It was no secret gangs are responsible for a lot of the town's crime, but addressing underlying problems like drug use would be a better way to combat that, said Little.Ōpōtiki needs more police officers - mayor"Gangs are an issue in our town," Ōpōtiki mayor David Moore told Morning Report.But there was also a shortage of police officers."We are probably 12 out of 15 short, and it hasn't been fully staffed since 2012, under our last National government."Listen: Ōpōtiki Mayor on new national gang unit from Morning Report"Officially" there was a 24-hour police station, but there hadn't been one for many years, he said."I do support new powers that they've been given, but really what I want to see is the police being supported, being paid a decent wage and getting the numbers they need to enforce these new rules."There was a need for more police - "it's not just Ōpōtiki, it's every rural town, every provincial town", Moore said."You take away youth aid officers and community police officers, and you lose that connection between your community and the police."Moore said banning gang patches would not affect gang members, "you're dreaming, I'm sorry, you just won't know which gang they belong to".

Green by Nature growing into the Waitaki
Green by Nature growing into the Waitaki

14 May 2024, 5:00 AM

A new gardening contractor is coming to town, having won the tender to maintain the Waitaki District Council's parks and reserves.On July 1, Green by Nature Landscape and Horticultural Services will take over from Downer (NZ) Ltd to become responsible for maintaining parks and reserves across the Waitaki District.The council received four tenders from local and national companies before awarding the contract to Green by Nature. Green by Nature is a relatively new company, which began forming at the end of 2021 with the collaboration of Green Options, Landscape Services and Super Gardens in Australia, and Recreational Services in New Zealand. According to the website, the four companies united to create Australia and New Zealand’s “leading landscape, horticultural and grounds management company”, launching as Green by Nature in October last year.The contract with the council is for three years, with the option of two further two-year extensions.Green by Nature New Zealand director Cameron Parr says the company is "humbled and honoured" the council has placed its trust in them. "We can’t wait to roll up our sleeves and get to work alongside this wonderful community.  “We're proud to take on this responsibility and committed to ensuring the green spaces of Waitaki thrive for all to enjoy.”Council chief executive Alex Parmley says the council is pleased the district’s parks and reserves will be cared for by the award-winning capabilities of Green By Nature. “Waitaki takes a lot of pride in its natural beauty and our well-maintained Public Gardens.”He also extended thanks to Downer (NZ) Ltd for its role in maintaining the parks and reserves over the past eight years.

'Unsettling' exhibition points to women's traumas
'Unsettling' exhibition points to women's traumas

14 May 2024, 1:35 AM

Wallpaper, chalkboards and distorted videos display the stories of mental health, trauma, reproductive rights and body autonomy.Otago-based artist Maggie Covell’s latest exhibition, Good as Gold, is on display at the Forrester Gallery and uses these methods to start a conversation about trauma and its different forms.In the exhibition there are two samples of wallpaper.The colourful and glitched images aim to take wallpaper from a decorative item to the main focus, Covell says.“Throughout New Zealand we've always had decorative wallpaper and artworks and things on the walls [of doctor surgeries and hospitals], so that's kind of reflective of that as well.”One wallpaper has a repeating pill image, a post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) pill, with a tartan background.The tartan is a connection to Oamaru’s Scottish history and Maggie’s own Scottish ancestry.The other wallpaper is based on damask patterns and focuses on reproductive rights, using images of medical devices associated with birth, menopause and bodily autonomy.“Because women's bodies kind of revolve around a lot of medical devices.”She says there is a “dark history” associated with medical practices and women.“They used to experiment on women and particularly indigenous women.”Maggie’s exhibition is interactive and people can erase parts of a chalk drawing or do a puzzle.“But the interesting thing with this is they're actually ethical experiments. They're asking people to interact, but also to think. So I guess it's like, who acts before they think, and who thinks before they act.“But the whole idea is that with this - with moving it around - if you take it away. You're sort of stopping other people in your community figuring out what this means and then you kind of disrupt the experience.”Glitching and distortion is common throughout Maggie’s exhibition.“I'm really into glitch,” she says.“When you have survived trauma and you're trying to piece it together, that's what it looks like. “It's a good way to visually show things like distress and trauma but it's not quite together, it's sort of pulled out and it sort of gives a visual effect that's a bit unsettling.“You really have to stand in and figure it out. And that's what trauma is like.”Good as Gold is Maggie’s first exhibition in the Forrester Gallery.She has previously exhibited in Ashburton, Invercargill, Dunedin and the North Island.Her exhibition title is based on an old saying.“Good as gold is a phrase that's been around for a really long time. People will ask how you are - ‘I'm fine, I'm good as gold.’ Doesn't mean that's the case.”The phrase was also used when women were prescribed a “rest cure” - “they were locked away until they were right as rain or good as gold”.“And I like using really old phrases for titles and to name things because it brings it back into the current.”Maggie is currently studying towards her masters in fine arts at the University of Otago and as part of her study has created a Facebook group with 160 people from New Zealand and Australia.She shared her story of “violent sexual trauma” with the group and attached a Google form for others to share their trauma stories anonymously, which were used to inform the art she makes.Maggie is originally from Rotorua, but moved to Dunedin in 2010, when she started university. She began studying towards her masters in 2021.Good as Gold will be on display until June 30, and an artist talk will be held at the Forrester next Saturday (May 25), at 1.30pm.

Charter schools to get $153m in new funding in Budget 2024
Charter schools to get $153m in new funding in Budget 2024

14 May 2024, 1:06 AM

Up to 50 new or converted charter schools will be funded out of Budget 2024, the coalition government has announced.It has set aside $153 million of new funding for the publicly-funded private schools over the next four years.The money will establish 15 new charter schools and convert 35 state schools in 2025 and 2026, depending on demand and suitability.Associate Education Minister David Seymour said there had been overwhelming interest from educators exploring the charter model."We've heard from potential applicants such as TIPENE St Stephen's Māori Boy's Boarding School, and AGE School."By focusing primarily on student achievement, charter schools allow sponsors and communities to take their own path getting there"They can, with some restrictions, set their own curriculum, hours and days of operation, and governance structure."They also have greater flexibility in how they spend their funding as long as they reach the agreed performance outcomes."He told media on Tuesday "the idea that there's a no-holds-bar curriculum is not a fair assessment of what charter schools will be"."They will be required to teach a curriculum that is as good or better than the New Zealand curriculum."We are going to demand higher standards. Charter schools will be the only schools that contract that and say 'if you don't do it, your funding is at risk and you may ultimately be closed down'."Students at the Vanguard School in Auckland, where the announcement was made on Tuesday. Photo: RNZ/Nick MonroHe said state schools that were not performing could be turned into charter schools.While the school would continue, in some cases there might be the need for new management, he said.Charter schools will have autonomy and not be forced to follow the cellphone ban."They won't be forced to do things such as the cellphone ban, but if you look at a school like this, you don't see any cellphones, and I expect that by and large they will operate the same way."The schools will have contracts requiring high performance, Seymour said.An application process for prospective charter schools will open after legislation is passed in Parliament.It is expected the first charter contracts will be signed before the end of the year, so the first schools can open for Term 1 of 2025.Photo: RNZ/Nick MonroSeymour said the changes would lift declining educational outcomes."Charter schools provide educators with greater autonomy, create diversity in New Zealand's education system, free educators from state and union interference, and raise overall educational achievement, especially for students who are underachieving or disengaged from the current system.""They provide more options for students, reinforcing the sector's own admission that "one size" doesn't fit all."Seymour said a new departmental agency - independent of the Ministry of Education - would be created to monitor the performance of charter schools.

Warmer temperatures, and chance of rain this week
Warmer temperatures, and chance of rain this week

13 May 2024, 3:10 AM

After an unusually cold week, Metservice is forecasting a return to more typically mild May temperatures as well as a rainy low pressure system coming from the Tasman Sea.For today and tomorrow (Monday and Tuesday), there is a mix of clear and cloudy skies across the country with the slight chance of a passing shower. Patches of frost and fog are likely to return to sheltered parts of the central North Island, inland Buller, and the lower South Island tonight. Frost becomes less likely later in the week due to increased winds and overnight cloud cover, while daytime temperatures are forecast to reach the high teens in the North Island and the mid-teens in the South Island, MetService meteorologist Dan Corrigan says.“The chances of clear skies this evening are generally looking promising for aurora seekers across the country, but the east coasts of both islands will have some cloud to contend with.”The sky at Papakaio, at about 9pm on Saturday night. Photo: SuppliedA low pressure system currently over the Tasman Sea will arrive overnight into Wednesday morning, bringing widespread rain across the North Island and upper South Island as it moves eastwards throughout the day. Heavy Rain Watches have been issued for Tasman about and northwest of Motueka, and the eastern ranges of Bay of Plenty, lasting from Wednesday morning until Wednesday evening.As this system moves away on Wednesday night, northerly winds give way to showery southwesterlies, but there will be plenty of sun in the gaps.Looking ahead to Friday, a front from the south is forecast to move onto the lower South Island with strengthening northwesterly winds across the high country, and heavy rain for Fiordland and the ranges of southern Westland, Dan says. “Over the week, we will be continually assessing the risk of any severe weather with Friday’s front, and will keep everyone informed about any warnings or watches that may be issued closer to the time as our confidence increases.”An early morning runner took this photo near Kakanui on Saturday. Photo: Supplied

Australian country star coming to Kurow
Australian country star coming to Kurow

13 May 2024, 2:13 AM

If you’re a Fanny Lumsden fan or even just a live music fan, get excited.The likeable Australian singer/songwriter is performing at Kurow Memorial Hall, with her band The Prawn Stars at King’s Birthday Weekend.Fanny is the winner of two Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) awards and nine Golden Guitars.She is celebrating more than 10 years of her Country Halls Tour, by bringing four more shows to New Zealand after her success here last year.The Country Halls Tour began in three halls in the Riverina, New South Wales in 2012, to raise money for Blazeaid. Since then, the reception they have received, means Fanny and her band have performed their original live music in more than 200 halls all over Australia and New Zealand, raising funds for communities, and ‘raising the roofs’ of halls with their “all-in-community-nights-out”.Waitaki Valley School Friends of the School chairperson Philippa Cameron says having Fanny bring her band to Kurow will be an “epic fundraiser” for the school.“It's exceptionally cool that she's chosen us,” Philippa says.The reason Fanny ended up booking Kurow, is purely down to two degrees of separation. Philippa knows somebody who knows her.A friend called Jackie Elliott in Australia has been the driving force behind a Rural Women's Day event, which has taken off over there. “She holds 10 events throughout Australia every year and it's a really cool thing and it's just bringing rural women together,” Philippa says.Jackie recently visited New Zealand and stayed with Philippa and her family on Otematata Station.  Fanny had performed at one of the Rural Women’s Day events.“She got in touch with [Jackie] and said, ‘hey, you don't happen to know, or have any contacts in New Zealand, we want to do a rural hall night’, and Jackie put her in touch with me.”The hall concerts on Fanny’s tours have been “application-based” - hall committees apply to host, and use the concerts as fundraisers.“I am blown away every year by the sheer number of halls who apply to host original live music,” Fanny says.“To every community that has showed up and showed off their hall, thank you. To every person who has cooked the BBQ, run the bar, put out chairs, to every kilometre my team has driven with me, to every person who has told me stories of their halls - thank you!” While most of Fanny’s hall concerts are for all the family, the Kurow gig will be licensed, and only for those aged 18 and over.The concert is on Saturday, June 1, and doors open at 7pm. Tickets are limited and on sale now. As well as a cash bar, there will be an auction and raffles to help the fundraiser along.“But we're really putting a lot of effort into supporting our local businesses,” Philippa says. “So we've obviously approached local businesses for prizes and what-not, but a little bit different from normal, is that we've actually offered to purchase them.“We're just really aware of how everyone is feeling at the moment economically, and a lot of them actually have been quite appreciative of us offering to pay, because they just get hounded so often. So, that's had a really positive response.” They are also planning food trucks for outside the venue, so the stress of having to prepare food does not add to the load of already busy mothers, and means they get to enjoy the night too.Tickets are limited to 250 and can be brought through iTicket. 

Schools failing autistic and other neurodivergent children - report
Schools failing autistic and other neurodivergent children - report

12 May 2024, 10:00 PM

A report warns schools and early childhood centres are failing autistic and other neurodivergent children on an epic scale.The Education Hub study said devastating testimony from 2400 people showed the education system was broken and heading for a major crisis.It was calling for more funding and a law change to force the Education Ministry and schools to provide support for all children with disabilities and learning needs.Read more: Neurodiversity - unlocking the causes and dispelling the mythsThe Education Hub is a non-profit organisation that connects teachers with education research.Its report said 15-20 percent of the population was neurodivergent, meaning they had conditions including autism, ADHD, dyslexia and anxiety.The school system was supposedly inclusive, with schools required by law to enrol local children regardless of their abilities, it said.However, inclusion was not the reality for many neurodivergent children."Inclusion is all but an illusion for too many of our young people, with no specific education legislation in New Zealand regarding specialist provisions or supports for children with special educational needs," it said."Many parents gave heart-rending accounts of the mental health impacts they witnessed in their neurodivergent children during the time they attended school, describing trauma responses, clinical depression, anxiety, self-harm and suicidal ideation from as young as the age of six."The education system focused more than $600 million a year on children with the highest needs, which meant neurodivergent pupils who did not have challenging behaviours tended to miss out, the report said."In addition, at some schools, accommodations for neurodivergent students are being arbitrarily denied or discouraged."When support was provided, it was often inadequate, the report said.Education Hub founder Nina Hood said it was clear there were big problems."The system is completely broken. There's very little that is working particularly well."There are significant issues with funding. It's really, really hard for many neurodivergent students to get access to any publicly funded services and those young people who are getting access to public services, in most cases it's not enough support."There were too few specialists working with neurodivergent children - and teachers needed more help, Dr Hood said."They are having to bear a huge burden trying to support these neurodivergent students and for many teachers they want to be doing the best by their students but it is incredibly hard."More funding was part of the answer, she said.But the law needed to change so that all children with disabilities had an absolute right to the support they needed."Neurodivergent children ... have the right to attend school but at the moment they don't actually have the right to receive the resourcing and support they need in order to actually succeed and thrive at school," Hood said.Frustrated and exhaustedTami Harris from Acorn Neurodiversity, a trust helping neurodivergent children and young people in Auckland, said the report accurately reflected what many families were going through."Families feel like a burden to their school and, in fact, are often discouraged from enrolling their child at the school directly and feel like they're constantly needing to fight to get the things that their child needs."The situation was "incredibly bad" and New Zealand's neurodivergent children were much worse off than children in other countries, she said."The access that our families would have if they lived across the pond in Australia or really anywhere else, they would be getting a suite of comprehensive services if they had a disability or some form of learning challenge."Rebecca, the mother of a child with autism and ADHD, said trying to get support for her daughter was exhausting."I've been out of work, in work, out of work purely to spend time advocating, ensuring my daughter's needs are met, ensuring I'm at home when she's been sent home. Yes, it's been a real roller-coaster."Many people tried their best to help, but the system was too difficult to navigate, she said."Individuals [are] working within a system that's convoluted, complex and just doesn't have enough to meet the basic needs of children with learning needs."University student Annabelle said she teared-up when she read the report.Going through school with undiagnosed ADHD and autism was tough, because even with supportive teachers, the system made neurodivergent students feel like failures, and seemed to provide help for students only after they had failed, rather than supporting them to succeed, she said."It's not acceptable for the students and it's not acceptable for the teachers. It's not acceptable for the leaders, it's not acceptable for anyone working in schools."Trying to navigate a system that's built like an ambulance at the bottom of a cliff is ridiculous."Hostile environmentIn the report, several respondents said the situation in schools was so bad they would be better off home-schooling their children.A school's special education coordinator told the study: "If I had a learning support child I would seriously homeschool my child. At times I suggest to parents the same. The New Zealand school system currently cannot support these students."Many respondents were especially unhappy with so-called modern learning environments, which have large, open, shared spaces for teaching.Most said teachers' lack of knowledge about neurodivergent children was a big problem.And schools that did a good job tended to attract more neurodivergent children, a teacher told the researchers."It is a concern to me that the schools/staff that have embraced better approaches to supporting neurodiverse students (and others with special needs) often are flooded with those students."This is unfair, does not always come with extra funding/resources, and allows those who are deliberately blind to remain that way."Another respondent said specialists were burnt out and every Education Ministry speech therapist they knew was looking for another job.

Six60 show Ōamaru why they're still The Greatest
Six60 show Ōamaru why they're still The Greatest

10 May 2024, 1:37 AM

Six60 fever hit around the district yesterday, with the successful Kiwi band playing at the Ōamaru Opera House last night.On one of the last legs of their Grassroots tour, the four-man band did not disappoint a receptive audience, playing a string of favourites as well as throwing in a few lesser-known tunes for the hardcore fans. The 23-concert tour began a month ago at the marae of lead singer Matiu Walters - Pōtahi Marae in Te Kao, Northland, and the band will play in Waimate’s Regent Theatre on Saturday night, before heading to Waipara and wrapping up in Stewart Island next Tuesday.It was the first tour for Matiu and bandmates Marlon Gerbes, Ji Fraser and Chris Mac, without drummer Eli Paewai, who played his last gig with the band in February. For the majority of the concert, Chris Mac seamlessly slotted in behind the drum kit, but popped out front to his more usual bass guitar spot for a crowd-pleasing acoustic set.The concert was opened by Makayla (Ngāti Kahungungu ki Heretaunga, Te Whakatōhea), who brought a fresh energy to the stage, and had the crowd at “kia ora”.Makayla was born in Boston, USA, and raised in the Hawke’s Bay, and is the most recent signing to Six60’s record label Massive.Before the concert, Six60 made an appearance at Weston 4-Square to visit a tiny home replica of 660 Castle Street - the Dunedin flat the band was formed in - which has been on the road with them, and housing merchandise. The Weston School kapa haka group performed, there was a sausage sizzle, bouncy castle, balloon making, and the Weston Fire Brigade raffled a Tutu Hill Cake of the Six60 house.Hanging with the band are (front, from left) Jessica Gibson, Pyper McNamara, Oliver Townsend and Zac Townsend outside the Six60 tiny home at Weston 4-Square. Photo: suppliedThe Weston School kapa haka group performing at Weston 4-Square. Photo: Ashley Smyth

Bookarama back for next chapter
Bookarama back for next chapter

09 May 2024, 12:55 AM

With is less than 24 hours to go until the Rotary Club of Ōamaru’s annual Bookarama, things are “wonderfully frantic”.Chief organiser Janet Wallace says they have “thousands” of books and are grateful for the donations received.“It's the biggest year we've had.”Last year about $50,000 was raised but they did not have a target for this year, she says.“We don't set ourselves any goal, we’re just having fun.”Volunteer Jacquie Webby is grateful to all involved in the Bookarama, including the people buying the booksThere are stacks of puzzles, which people can purchase up to four of at once, she says.Ele Ludemann, who has been the organiser in previous years, says there is a “huge” science fiction and fantasy section as well as children’s books.“There's not much that you wouldn't find.”One of the interesting donations, which will be on the table of special individually-priced books, is a pop-up book from the Queen’s coronation in 1953.The profits from Bookarama are used to benefit the North Otago community.Previously, money raised has gone towards funding the new Waitaki Event Centre, a chemotherapy chair at the hospital, and to help students attend courses and tertiary education.The leftover books will either be on-sold, or kept for next year’s Bookarama.Both cash and Eftpos will be accepted, and people are encouraged to bring their own bags.Books start at $2, and puzzles, games, DVDs, magazines and CDs will also be sold.Bookarama begins tomorrow (Friday, May 10) at 145 Thames Street (the former Noel Leeming building) from 10am to 8pm, then runs from 10am to 5pm, until next Sunday (May 19), when it is open 10am to 1pm.

'Darkest before the dawn': Nicola Willis rules out austerity Budget
'Darkest before the dawn': Nicola Willis rules out austerity Budget

08 May 2024, 9:29 PM

Nicola Willis has ruled out an austerity Budget, although she says the country's economic challenges mean the country is in a "darkest before the dawn" position.In a major speech on Thursday, the Finance Minister promised her first Budget "breaks from the past" and will not "run long on good intentions but fall short on delivery"."Every dollar counts and our Budget will reflect that reality."While she will not be delivering a big-spending Budget nor would she follow the advice of some commentators and take an austere approach."Our government knows how devastating it would be if we were to give up on overdue tax relief, to drastically cut back on investment and public services, and to downsize our ambitions for growing New Zealand's economy."That approach would be bad for the Kiwi families depending on us and bad for your businesses."Instead, she would deliver a moderate, responsible Budget that charted "a sensible middle course".Willis also announced the creation of a new Social Investment Fund which she promised would make smarter use of data and evidence to help vulnerable New Zealanders.She said $70 billion was being spent every year on "well-intentioned social services" but not achieving strong outcomes."We can see the lack of appropriate support for the most vulnerable reflected in rises in welfare dependency, declining educational attendance and achievement levels and rising rates of youth and violent crime."From 1 July it would replace the Social Wellbeing Agency and would work with community, non-government organisations and iwi providers."Over time I expect the fund to grow in partnership with other funders to deliver at scale with a wide portfolio of investments."Willis also affirmed the government's commitment to "overdue" tax cuts."So I'm very pleased to announce today that our tax relief package will increase the take-home income of 83 percent of New Zealanders over the age of 15 and 94 percent of households."We will responsibly deliver these lower taxes for low and middle-income families, by fully funding them with a package of careful savings and targeted revenue measures," she said.$3.5b spending limit announcedThe government has set an operating allowance of less than $3.5 billion for the Budget."That's less than the previous government's allowance and it will be adhered to - a first in recent years. That has been possible because of our government's willingness to redirect existing spending to a better purpose."She said since taking office the government had aimed to find $1.5 billion in annual savings across government agencies."I am confirming today that we have met that savings target."The economy was in a "tricky spot" with inflation too high, soaring interest rates, rising unemployment and low growth."This is taking its toll on New Zealanders," she said, referring again to "the squeezed middle" who had been forced to soldier on through a cost of living crisis."Our government will not over-react to worsening forecasts. Instead, our task is to get on with making the economic changes New Zealand needs and that we were elected to deliver."She said the priorities were:Cost of living reliefFairer taxBetter value from public spendingBalanced books for lower debtA stronger more productive economy"Our first Budget will make progress on all these fronts."She promised a significant funding boost for health and targeted new investment in other essential frontline services including education, disability services and police.Willis delivers the speech on Thursday. Photo: RNZ/Samuel RillstoneDuring questions from those attending the event Willis said it would be "a major breach" of trust if the government did not follow through on tax cuts.On trade, she said the country needed a diverse range of exports to sell in overseas markets and that was why ministers had embarked on several trips. She backed the agricultural sector to continue to be the backbone of the economy.On improving productivity, lifting education standards, better infrastructure and a more efficient regulatory framework were important factors, Willis said."No silver bullet but lots of things we can do," she said.New agency will be more effective - WillisSpeaking to media after the event, Willi said the new Social Investment Agency would be all about "the human touch"."We fail too many New Zealanders because we don't have the rigour of saying 'is the service we're providing working for you?'Successive governments had had good intentions but not put in place evaluation methods to decide if they were working.It was possible the government would work with some of the community-based Whanau Ora agencies to deliver some of the investments.On public service cuts, Willis said there were some government agencies that had not met the 6.5 to 7.5 percent cuts in spending the government had sought.This was for good reasons, she said. One example was the police who had expressed fears of cuts to frontline services which the government did not want to see happen.Some agencies had exceeded requirements so it all balanced out, she said.

Local rural voice sought by climate change advisors
Local rural voice sought by climate change advisors

08 May 2024, 1:31 AM

The Climate Change Commission is coming to Ōamaru and wants to meet with farmers, growers and other rural community members.Last month He Pou a Rangi Climate Change Commission began running an eight-week public consultation across the country to help it develop advice to the Government.The commission would like people from throughout the Waitaki to attend an hour-long, in-person hui next Tuesday (May 14), 10am, at the Business Hive, on Ōamaru’s Thames Street, as part of that consultation.Commission chair Dr Rod Carr says before the commission finalises the advice, it wants to test its thinking to make sure the eventual recommendations are realistic and robust.At the Ōamaru hui, an overview of the three pieces of work being consulted on will be given, regarding Aotearoa New Zealand’s emissions reduction target and emissions budgets.There will also be plenty of time to ask questions and discuss ideas, and people are then encouraged to share their evidence, perspectives, insights and other information by making a submission before the end of May.This will help make sure our advice to the Government reflects the challenges and opportunities facing the nation, Dr Carr says.Climate Change Commission chair Dr Rod Carr. Photo: Supplied/He Pou a Rangi website“We’re seeking feedback and input from a wide range of people, businesses, organisations and sectors,” he says.“This is because the decisions that the Government makes will affect all of us. They’ll affect the whenua, our lives and livelihoods, and our global reputation.“Our role is to provide independent, expert advice to the Government. We’ve begun by pulling together and analysing evidence, and looking at possible options. Now we want your input on this important mahi.” The results of the consultation will inform the commission’s upcoming advice to the Government – due by the end of this year – about what are known as emissions budgets and targets.That advice is intended to inform Government decisions – due by the end of 2025 – that will affect the country’s actions, planning and investment decisions for the next 20–30 years, Dr Carr says.Having a say and sharing what you know will help us make sure the advice reflects the challenges and opportunities facing Aotearoa New Zealand.The consultation includes three pieces of work:Looking at what the emissions budget should be for the period 2036–2040. Emissions budgets are stepping stones towards the country’s long-term emissions reduction target. They set a cap on the maximum amount of climate pollution that Aotearoa New Zealand can emit in a five-year period.Looking at the country’s 2050 climate target. When the commission develops advice on the next emissions budget, it also does a sense check of that long-term target.The third piece of work also relates to the 2050 target – but is focused on whether emissions from international shipping and aviation should also be included in it, like emissions from domestic shipping and aviation already are.Dr Carr says people “are at the heart of policy". “Input is vital to help us develop robust and realistic advice that reflects the views and experiences of people of all ages and backgrounds across Aotearoa New Zealand.“This is an important chance to have your say about where the country should be heading, and what the future could look like for current and future generations – because ultimately, the Government will have to make choices and judgement calls.” Find out more and register to attend the Ōamaru event here.

Managed retreat: How do we get out of the way of climate change?
Managed retreat: How do we get out of the way of climate change?

07 May 2024, 9:18 PM

There are lots of ideas on how to get out of the way of climate change events. But, after years of discussion and some 'ad hoc' action, there is still no national plan.Once upon a time, the flowering of the kōwhai tree in front of Mark Solomon's house heralded the coming of spring.In recent years, though, the pendulous blooms have emerged months early, splashing colour against a flat July sky.On a short mid-winter day, some might welcome that. Tā Mark does not.He views it as a warning: a canary-coloured omen that things are not as they once were.Down the hill, where only the main trunk line separates the tiny settlement of Oaro from the sea, there are more troubling signs.The former Ngāi Tahu kaiwhakahaere's grandfather and uncles were coastal crayfishers on this part of the Kaikōura coastline, launching into the waves from a slipway."Where they had their winch to winch their boat up, we've lost over 60 feet already of coastline."Oaro, south of Kaikōura Photo: RNZ / Cole Eastham-FarrellyRecently, Environment Canterbury shared research that showed how future sea level rise could affect Oaro - a cluster of 50 or so houses on Ngāi Tahu land."By about 2080 - if it continues at the same level - we will lose between 27 and 30 metres off our frontage," Tā Mark says."There is a real possibility by the end of this century our little community will no longer exist."Tā Mark first shared his concerns with the trust board at Oaro three years ago, suggesting they set some of their returns aside to buy a new block of land further from the coast.Tā Mark Solomon Photo: suppliedNothing has come of it - but he understands why."Well, how do you retreat? How do you bear the cost? Who bears the cost? Climate change is a national issue … and the solution of how we do this has to be a national solution."From Oaro to Otago, Westport to west Auckland, communities around the country are grappling with the same questions: Do we need to move? How do we do it? And who on earth pays?For Māori communities with deep ancestral ties to land under threat, those questions are especially fraught.The previous government planned to pass a Climate Change Adaptation Bill that would have set out a national framework for managed retreat, or planned relocation - but despite years of work, draft legislation never made it to Parliament.The new government says it's working on its own solution - but in the absence of any national direction, communities are forging their own uncertain path.In the way of waterCoasts and rivers have always defined where people choose to live in this country: once for cultural and economic reasons, more recently for the lifestyle.Two-thirds of us live within five kilometres of the coast. Many more live in towns built on river plains and wetlands.To accommodate this, the water has been shunted round and shut out. Wetlands have been infilled. Streams have been undergrounded. Harbours have been dredged, reclaimed, sea-walled. Rivers have been diverted and walled in.Now, as climate change fuels the frequency and intensity of severe weather events, the water is beginning to push back.In the immediate aftermath of Cyclone Gabrielle, Hastings District Council chief executive Nigel Bickle was struck by how obvious the risk had always been."Post-cyclone, you're reading situation reports describing where problem areas are - Swamp Road, Awatoto, Te Awa, Riverbend - you know, the whakapapa in the place names kind of gives it away."A massive earthquake is still the biggest, most thoroughly-researched risk to New Zealand lives, homes and livelihoods.But mapping and modelling of the current and future coastal and inland flooding risk is accelerating, and the picture it's revealing is ugly.A paper published by NIWA and University of Auckland last year found just over 440,000 houses, sheds and sleepouts are in known flood risk areas, with an estimated replacement value of $218 billion.And research published in 2020 by the Climate Sigma group, looking at just the main centres, projected that 10,000 coastal homes would face full insurance retreat - where insurance is either not available at all or becomes prohibitively expensive - by 2050. Partial insurance retreat could begin as soon as next decade."The analysis in this report is conservative," the authors wrote. "We expect the true number of homes facing coastal insurance retreat to be higher, and the number on our inland floodplains to be far higher."Many New Zealand houses were built well before climate change was recognised as a problem, but even now, properties continue to mushroom in flood zones and on beach fronts.Despite objections from its own elected representatives, Auckland Council has continued to grant new dwelling consents in flood hazard zones at similar rates as before the 2023 Auckland Anniversary floods."Sometimes the political economy trumps good planning decisions," Bickle says. "There are lots of examples of where a hearings committee or the Environment Court's overturned a decision that council's made on planning."Hastings District Council chief executive Nigel Bickle Photo: RNZ / Tom KitchinA red-hot housing market for most of the last decade means existing homes have also been bought and sold with little due diligence - something Bickle knows all about."I came to Hastings as the chief executive in 2019, into a crazy hot housing market."I bought a house - didn't do any checking of the LIM or builder's reports, because I was desperate."So if new builds are going ahead in risky locations, and existing homes in hazard zones are continuing to change hands, what happens when the next Gabrielle arrives?Flirting with (another) disasterFor Ilan Noy, every day that goes by without a nationally-driven, properly funded system for moving people out of harm's way - and not putting them there in the first place - is a day gambled.Noy, who sits as Economics of Disasters and Climate Change chair at Victoria University, was part of an expert working group commissioned by the previous government to report on exactly how such a system could be set up."We started working on this in October or November 2022, not thinking that in January 2023, we would have the biggest extreme weather event in New Zealand history," he says."The same thing could happen tomorrow."Ilan Noy is chair of Economics of Disasters and Climate Change at Victoria University of Wellington Photo: suppliedThe group published its report in August 2023 - too late to inform the post-disaster retreat programmes that had already begun in Auckland and Hawkes Bay, and also too late for the previous government to introduce any legislation before that year's election.In it, the authors suggest a basic framework for how planned relocation could take place all over New Zealand.First, regional-level authorities would identify general areas at risk within a region.Next, each area would get a detailed risk assessment, and then the community would be fully involved in identifying and choosing the solutions for a "local adaptation plan", which might include planned relocation for all or part of an area when a threshold - such as a specific sea level rise - was met.The final stage of the process would be actually putting the new plan in place: identifying all of the practical things that needed to happen, and who was responsible.The report recommended full compensation for homeowners and slightly less for landlords and businesses. Owners of baches and other second homes would only get help with demolition or removal costs.The report was sent to the environment select committee, but is still waiting on a response.The same too, for a National Policy Statement on Natural Hazard Decision-making that was drafted in the wake of 2023's disasters, and would direct councils to give greater weight to natural hazards when considering new resource consents.Climate Change Minister Simon Watts says the work already before the select committee will continue and he wants the "heavy lifting" done by the end of this year."And then we see where we are … in terms of our ability to put that into whether it's legislation or a national policy statement."He won't commit to a brand-new piece of legislation, as the working group recommended, going only as far to say that it's "a probable scenario".Without government direction, retreat is happening in a piecemeal fashion, he says, and very rarely in advance."We're seeing very ad hoc responses to emergency events, we're seeing ad hoc decisions around house buyouts across the country, and we're seeing variation … between council to council, in the way in which the Crown interacts with that as well."That is not a sustainable model."The cost of livingVictoria University Professor of Public Policy Jonathan Boston, who served on the expert working group alongside Ilan Noy, says it's also not an affordable model.The cost of 2023's weather disasters has been put at up to $15 billion - tens of times more expensive than any previous weather-related event in New Zealand history.The longer the country delays investing in climate change resilience, adaptation and retreat - whether it's through taxation or borrowing - "the greater the future harm will be", he says."And then we'll get into a potential spiral where we simply won't have the resources to do the upfront investments, and will be forever in a worsening situation."Bickle also wants to see a "multi-generational fund" established to foot the cost of adaptation.He says only acting in the wake of a disaster has created a dangerous - and expensive - precedent in New Zealand."[There's] almost a community expectation that when bad things happen, that governments - whether it's central or local or a combination of both - they're going to step in to compensate."After Gabrielle, 167 property owners across Hawke's Bay were offered buyouts at 100 percent of their pre-cyclone market value, whether they had insurance or not, and were also assisted with demolition, legal and valuation costs."The moral hazard argument is well, why would people pay big premiums and be insured if when these things happen, governments and local governments come in and bail you out?" Bickle says.People had to be helped to move on, he says."But I'm also really, really clear that this is forecast to cost $100 million here. This will be the only time that we're able to do this, because we simply don't have the balance sheet or the funding to do this again."Even though people should not be given perverse incentives to remain in hazardous zones, you still need to offer them compensation, Ilan Noy says."We know from previous experience in other places that unless you offer a financially generous package, it's very difficult to get people to agree, and even then it's not always straightforward."Clarity, transparency and speedy decision-making are also fundamental to success, Noy says.He's critical of how authorities have handled the retreat and buy-out process after the 2023 floods. "It would be great if we do not repeat [that] because I think it took too long, it created a lot of uncertainty."The pain of inactionAt the end of Lyall Carter's cul-de-sac, the mud-stained Momotu Stream winds a lazy course through regenerating mānuka and cabbage trees.Most afternoons, he and the kids take the path through this pocket oasis to get to their local park in Rānui, west Auckland.On a summer evening just over a year ago, their benign stream became a pummelling, churning force, that rose and rose and rose until it overtopped the newly-built six-foot fence at the back of their garden.At the same time, stormwater coursed down the street, pouring down driveways and right-of-ways until the houses were waist-deep in the stinking, swirling flood.Their next-door neighbours left in an army Unimog, and have never been able to return.The water stopped just short of entering Carter's house, so the family have been able to continue living there while they wait - and wait - for Auckland Council to determine whether or not the property will be completely bought out.Lyall Carter looks out over bush bordering the Momotu Stream in Rānui, West Auckland. The stream rose rapidly during the 2023 Auckland floods, inundating his and his neighbours' properties. Photo: RNZ / Kate NewtonHouses all around them now lie empty - some already bought out, others simply uninhabitable.Carter gestures at the broken panes of glass, the junk piled up by empty garages. A cat squats in an overgrown driveway, then scampers away through the unkempt kikuya grass."When this was built in the 70s, it was built fine, but then you add a whole lot of things further upstream and it has a flow-on effect."He believes the area should have been "a perfect case study for managed retreat" before disaster struck.Carter was already part of a community group, West Auckland is Flooding (WAIF), which established itself in the aftermath of previous floods, including one in 2021.The post-flood response has been fraught, with missed deadlines for categorising properties, poor communication at times, and emotions constantly running high."I think for our community, the constant moving of dates has been really frustrating and really demoralising," he says."[There are] really good people at the recovery office and at council, but … in a lot of ways [they] were building the aeroplane as they were flying."A police officer wades through flooding in West Auckland on January 27, 2023 Photo: SuppliedWAIF has been trying to impress upon local and national politicians the need for a better system for adapting and retreating before disaster strikes."Auckland and Esk Valley were probably the first on such a scale, but we definitely will not be the last."Any system should still be rooted in community decision-making, Carter says."People know the neighbourhoods, they know the lay of the land, they know the environment that surrounds them. It needs to be led by the community, but supported by local and central government,because that way I think there is ownership of the outcome, but also ownership of the process."A managed retreat, without compulsionHelen Haslam led a successful managed retreat programme in Auckland two decades ago Photo: RNZ/ Kate NewtonHelen Haslam believes managed retreat before a large-scale disaster can be done successfully - because she's already helped it happen elsewhere in west Auckland.Twenty years ago, Halsam led the community engagement for Project Twin Streams, a decade-long scheme to restore the natural stormwater network of streams running from the Waitākere Ranges to Waitematā Harbour.Infill development within the floodplain meant that during heavy rain, the eroded, contaminated streams no longer flowed easily out to the harbour and properties habitually flooded.The project aimed to better protect both the environment and community, but would require removing dozens of properties.When the first round of homeowner consultation began in 2004, the team met with every owner individually, usually in their homes, and always visited in pairs - someone with technical understanding, and a "people person", Haslam says."I was absolutely adamant that people needed to fully understand the problem."They took historical documentation with them, along with computer models of future flooding, and information about climate change."The engineers could actually show them, sitting together on the couch, the water flows with certain levels of rainfall coming in over the years," Haslam says. "They could see how it was no longer just going to be their garages or their back door steps that would be affected."Some were relieved, others reluctant or even resistant.The news was never delivered as an ultimatum, Haslam says."We just said, 'Look, nobody's going to force you to sell… But you need to do your own research and talk to your family, talk to real estate agents and lawyers and so on.'"So we left them to it, but we made sure that each of them was connected with a key person at the council."Over three years, 78 owners sold all or part of their land to the council, without any forced acquisitions."I really believe strongly that if people have got information they will understand, and it breaks down those barriers that are there," Haslam says."But you have to give people time to go through their reactions and to feel that they've been really heard. It's very easy to get oppositional."Photo: RNZIs it necessary to retreat at all, though?Simon Watts believes that, in the wake of 2023, "conversations sort of jumped to managed retreat where there's a huge range of other interventions before that"."For some communities at some point in time in the future, remaining where they are is not going to be an option," he says."[But] we need a spectrum of options available, so that we choose the right option for the right situation at the right time."Jonathan Boston says the threshold for retreat should not just be "intolerable risk to life"."You don't want to wait until people's properties are being inundated multiple times, their health is deteriorating, their livelihoods have been disrupted, the kids can't go to school and so on... You want to be moving people out before you get to that critical point."The expert working group also warned against the temptation to harden the coasts with engineering solutions, if that could only provide short-term protection."For example, communities may favour protective measures such as sea walls, even where they cannot offer long-term protection against rising seas and escalating risks," the authors wrote.Managed retreat is just one of 16 different options being shared with residents in South Dunedin, a suburb at imminent threat of both sea level rise and a rising water table.South Dunedin Futures, a joint programme between Otago Regional Council and Dunedin City Council, has been tasked with first defining the problem and then helping the community choose the solutions."There's really no limit to what we could do," programme manager Jonathan Rowe says."Pumps, pipes, sea walls down one end, nature-based solutions, planning tools like making it easier or harder to build in areas, and things like moving away from the hazards - so managed retreat, de-intensification, that type of thing."His job is helping people understand what's on the table. "So then when we start to narrow down what we might do, they've got a really good baseline understanding."The other ways outSouth Dunedin residents meet with scientists, engineers and policy makers to discuss water issues hitting their low-lying suburb. Photo: Tess BruntonManaged retreat does not mean moving the entire community, or even moving people from the suburb. "There's been this kind of historical view that it's a binary: we dig in for as long as we can, there'ssome pumps and pipes or dykes or whatever and then there's a date that comes when everyone needs to leave."That kind of response would be "enormously traumatic for the community, probably really expensive and certainly not the best way forward".Instead, the suburb might exist within a smaller or changed footprint, Rowe says. "Maybe high-density housing, maybe there's more green and blue space. So when it does flood the water goes in those places rather than people's homes and living rooms."Above all, Rowe wants to take the fear out of the conversation."Climate change is a catalyst here, but this is really around urban regeneration and renewal. While we're making this place safer, why don't we also make it better?"

Half the country's junior doctors to strike for 25 hours
Half the country's junior doctors to strike for 25 hours

06 May 2024, 9:19 PM

About half the country's junior doctors have walked off the job for 25 hours with every aspect of the hospital system likely to be affected.Te Whatu Ora says emergency departments will remain open and patients should turn up to their regular appointments unless they hear otherwise.About 2500 junior doctors were due to walk off the job from 7am on Tuesday to 8am on Wednesday.Christchurch Hospital has said it might have to postpone treatment for some patients, saying it would contact them directly.That would likely be the case in some other hospitals, but Te Whatu Ora chief of people Andrew Slater said the agency would not know the full impact until after the strike had finished.Health services would still be available for those who needed them, he said.Senior doctors and junior doctors from the other main union would still be working, and would be providing essential "life preserving" services.One of the junior doctors in Dunedin today. Photo: RNZ / Tess BruntonThe doctors taking industrial action are members of the Resident Doctors' Association.Senior advocate Melissa Dobbyn said they worked across the country and in every speciality.They range from those just out of medical school, to those about to become specialists.Junior doctors go on strike (duration 3'59'') from Morning ReportMost were due for a pay rise of about 20 percent in their latest contract, but there were two major problems with what Te Whatu Ora was proposing.About 300 doctors working in areas such as radiation/oncology, psychiatry, public health and those entering GP training would miss out on pay rises.The second area of contention was that doctors in another union had reached a deal, however, it was higher than what the junior doctors' union had been offered.Junior doctors on the picket line in Dunedin. Photo: RNZ / Tess BruntonThis could result in colleagues working alongside the union's members being paid more for the same work."And our members are saying, this isn't right, this isn't fair."Dobbyn was asked if any deal might have to wait until the Budget is announced later this month so that Te Whatu Ora had more funds to possibly allocate for wages."This is such a vital workforce that the money needs to be found and it has to be found sooner rather than later."The workforce was short 500 resident doctors and 600 senior doctors so was already in a crisis.While doctors were reluctant to take strike action, "this is the future we're planning for", she said.One of the doctors, Dr Rosa Tobin Stickings told First Up the current pay offer was not good enough and they couldn't accept pay cuts for any union members.Why are half of junior doctors going on strike? (duration 4'14'')Tobin-Stickings who is training to be an emergency registrar said with 500 resident doctors short across the country, shifts were getting "harder and harder".It was not unusual to start work and be told she had to cover for another doctor."It's exhausting to be working in this environment and we've been working in this environment for some years ... and we're getting pretty burnt out."Sometimes, the doctors had to apply for annual leave a year in advance and it was difficult to get leave for education purposes or to attend conferences to help with their training.Many junior doctors had enormous leave balances and so far Te Whatu Ora had not responded to how leave pressures could be improved, she said.Some of those on strike in Wellington. Photo: RNZ / Krystal GibbensHealth New Zealand Te Whatu Ora chief clinical officer Richard Sullivan said the country's EDs remained open and patient safety and welfare was the top priority.He encouraged those who were unwell to contact their GP or Healthline (0800 611 116) first if possible.Sullivan refused to comment on the strategy behind the approach of Te Whatu Ora cutting the pay for some doctors while raising salaries for others.The matter would probably need to be resolved by an independent facilitator, he said.Te Whatu Ora chief clinical officer on junior doctors' strike from Morning Report (duration 4'08'')A second two-day strike is planned from 16 May, and the union would take a vote on further action, Dobbyn said.Doctors in Dunedin have a dog summing up their situation. Photo: RNZ / Tess Brunton

ORC offers advice for dam owners around new regulations
ORC offers advice for dam owners around new regulations

06 May 2024, 1:59 AM

New Government regulations for dam owners come into force next Monday (May 13), and the Otago Regional Council wants to help.Owners of dams which are 4-metres high or more, and store 20,000 or more cubic metres of water (or other fluid) need to arrange and have this classification submitted to ORC no later than August 13.The new regulations have been developed to provide a nationally consistent risk-based approach to dam safety, the ORC says.The regional council’s dam register shows that in Otago, 98 dams will be affected by the new regulations, with an extra 34 dams close to exceeding the threshold, requiring further investigation.Of those, 82 are in the Central Otago and Queenstown Lakes districts, while 45 are in Dunedin City and Waitaki and Clutha districts.ORC acting regulatory general manager Joanna Gilroy says the council’s focus is on the implementation of the regulations and assisting dam owners to understand the steps they need to take over the coming months. “ORC is here to help as needed with the new regulations and if anyone has any questions they are encouraged to get in touch with the team.“We will be contacting dam owners directly, but we also have a number of resources online and are happy to help,” she says.Dam owners will need to check if they exceed the threshold, and if so, carry out a potential impact classification (PIC) to assess the potential impact (i.e. low, medium or high) their dam’s failure could have on the community, historical or cultural places, critical or major infrastructure, and the natural environment.Additional actions dam owners need to take will then depend on whether their dam is assessed as low, medium or high impact. The regulations allow for anyone to carry out a PIC assessment (e.g. dam owners, farm consultants, technical practitioners). The role of a recognised engineer is to audit and certify these PIC assessments. Engineering New Zealand maintains a register of recognised engineers that can be accessed on their website, and has tips on how to effectively engage with them. For more information, visit the ORC Dam Safety Regulations website, including the Dam Classification Certificate Form to use for submitting the classification. A recording of a MBIE webinar for dam owners and other stakeholders who have an interest in dam safety is also available. 

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