Update: fatal house fire, Mairehau, Christchurch

Source: New Zealand Police

Please attribute the following to Superintendent Lane Todd, Christchurch Metro Area Commander:

Emergency services continue to work at the scene of a house fire on Whitehall Street in Christchurch, reported about 8.25pm tonight.

Sadly, we can confirm one person has died. One person has critical injuries. Three other people have moderate and serious injuries, and two have minor injuries.

A scene investigation is ongoing and cordons remain in place in Whitehall Street and Hills Road for the time being. 

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

NRL: NZ Warriors star Luke Metcalf signs with St George-Illawarra Dragons, but still has role to play

Source: Radio New Zealand

Luke Metcalf attended Warriors training, while talking to other NRL clubs. Blake Armstrong/Photosport

NZ Warriors coach Andrew Webster insists halfback Luke Metcalf still has a role to play, as the Auckland club chases its first NRL championship.

Unable to displace in-form Tanah Boyd or Chanel Harris-Tavita in the starting line-up, and apparently intent on playing halfback, not five-eighth, in the long term, Metcalf was given permission to speak to other clubs about his future beyond this season.

On Thursday night, he informed the Warriors he had reached an agreement with another club, signing a three-year deal with St George-Illawarra Dragons.

Metcalf earlier attended training, but has not been selected for either first grade or the reserves this weekend, while he explores his future contract options.

During the summer, Metcalf signed a two-year contract extension until the end of 2028.

“It’s dumb for business to name people, to play people, to put them in harm’s way, until they’ve got their future sorted,” Webster explained. “The moment he does that, we’ll have him available for selection either in NSW Cup or NRL.”

Now that seems resolved, Metcalf will likely see out the rest of the season at Mt Smart, where he still has a role in the squad.

“One-hundred percent,” Webster assured. “A week in rugby league is a long time, and whoever is playing the best and deserves the opportunity will take it.

“We’re certainly not going to change that and he could have a big part to play.”

Boyd is just an injury – or State of Origin selection – away from missing time for the Warriors, with Metcalf still the next best No.7 option on the roster.

“We’re really blessed that we’ve got Te Maire Martin, we’ve got Luke Metcalf and all our young halves,” Webster said. “Luke Hanson has played this year and Jett Cleary is tracking well, so we’ve got a lot of players that could fill in.

“Luke wants to be here for the rest of this year at least and, if he’s playing well and buying in, he’s certainly available for selection.”

Webster was adamant there was no suggestion Metcalf would leave before the end of this campaign, but watching the saga play out in public had been frustrating.

“To see it in the media before we knew a lot about it… people were talking about it before we knew, but the way Luke has handled it with me, particularly in the last three days, has been awesome. I’m really proud of him.

“You always want to get ahead of it and be the first to know.

Luke Metcalf at Warriors training. Blake Armstrong/Photosport

“He wants to make sure he can explore his future, but at the same time, I know he’s very grateful to this club and loves this club. His training’s been good, the way he’s been around the boys, but rugby league players are ambitious.

“His future’s here right now for as long as he wants to be here. It’s not an argument or a blow-up or anything like that.

“I haven’t seen him train poorly, it’s just unfortunate that form from other players has been exceptional, there’s been some injuries to Luke himself and he now wants to explore where he wants to go from here.”

Webster warns fans not to judge Metcalf too harshly.

“To ask if I’m disappointed they don’t want to hang around and fight, I don’t know what they’re going through,” he said. “I don’t know how much it’s hurting them and I don’t know how much strain it’s putting on them.

“I honestly think Warriors fans are awesome like that. There will always be at every club one or two idiots that will get it wrong.

“Just treat him with respect. We still love him here and have a lot of time for him, so I hope all the fans feel the same.”

Warriors skipper Mitch Barnett has put Metcalf’s wellbeing ahead of any disruption the fallout may have caused.

“End of the day, in rugby league, people come and go,” he said. “It’s a business and for us, as a team, we have to check in with Luke to make sure he’s alright – we don’t get involved in the other stuff.

“All we expect here is for people to rip in on the training field and deliver on the weekends, and buy into the team culture. He’s been doing that, so that’s as far as I go.

“For Luke, it’s his business and not something I’m willing to comment on. We just check in on the welfare of the human being.

“We’ve got a game to prepare for. Yes, we care about the individual… we’re all around him.”

Barnett himself has been granted an early exit from his Warriors contract to return across the Tasman next year on compassionate grounds, signing with Brisbane Broncos.

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Two critically injured, others may be missing after Christchurch house fire

Source: Radio New Zealand

Two people have been critically injured in a Christchurch house fire, and others may be missing. RNZ / Sam Sherwood

Two people have been critically injured in a Christchurch house fire, and others may be missing.

Christchurch Metro Area Commander Superintendent Lane Todd said emergency services were called to a house on Whitehall Street around 8.25pm tonight.

“Reports were made that a house was on fire with people unaccounted for,” Todd said.

“Two people have suffered critical injuries. We are working to determine how many people remain outstanding.”

Emergency services attend a house fire on Whitehall Street in Christchurch on 14 May, 2026. RNZ / Sam Sherwood

Cordons are in place on Whitehall Street and Hills Road.

A significant emergency service presence can be seen at the scene including firefighters, police and St John staff.

“Members of the public are advised to avoid the area as emergency services work at the scene.

“Further information will be released when it comes available. “

Cordons are in place on Whitehall Street and Hills Road. RNZ / Sam Sherwood

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House fire, Mairehau, Christchurch

Source: New Zealand Police

Please attribute the following to Superintendent Lane Todd, Christchurch Metro Area Commander:

Emergency services are attending a house fire on Whitehall Street in Christchurch tonight.

About 8.25pm, reports were made that a house was on fire with people unaccounted for.

Two people have suffered critical injuries.

We are working to determine how many people remain outstanding.

Police are on the scene with cordons in place in Whitehall Street and Hills Road. 

Members of the public are advised to avoid the area as emergency services work at the scene.

Further information will be released when it comes available. 

ENDS 

Issued by Police Media Centre

Urban renewal project in New Plymouth’s CBD reveals traces of city’s past

Source: Radio New Zealand

The demolition of the Metro Plaza and surrounding buildings is part of a project to ‘daylight’ a stretch of the Huatoki Stream which has been covered over for about 100 years. RNZ / Robin Martin

An urban renewal project in New Plymouth’s CBD is revealing traces of the city’s past – piece by piece.

The derelict Metro Plaza is being demolished to allow a stretch of the Huatoki Stream – which has been hidden from view for about a century – to be uncovered.

The Devon Street address has been home to a multitude of businesses over the years including a bakery, drapery, tearooms, and furniture store before in more recent years hosting a cafe, night club and even a Subway outlet.

Senior project manager Steve Ilkovics said the May and Arrowsmith bakery was the earliest to leave its mark.

Steve Ilkovics believes the Oregon Pine (Douglas Fir) beams from the old bakehouse were most likely imported from the United States. RNZ / Robin Martin

“The bakehouse was the first building on this site probably built about 1908 or 1910 and there’s some interesting history around how it linked up with some of the old flour mills and the mill building across the way at Powderham Street.

“Potentially it had the capacity to bake all the bread Taranaki needed back in those days.”

An article published when the bakehouse opened in 1918 by the Taranaki Daily News proclaimed it “would be hard to find its equal among the bakehouses of the Dominion”.

The top floor held up to 305 tonnes of flour, which was fed through to two large hoppers to mixing machines on the second floor, where the dough was fed down to the ground floor where there were “five big ovens, each capable of holding 480 to 500 loaves”.

NPDC infrastructure project manager James Harrop takes a look at the Old Bakehouse beams before their removal. Supplied

About “9000 dozen eggs” could be stored in the cellar and a concrete platform was specially constructed on the ground floor for breaking the vast quantities needed each day.

Ilkovics said experts had been bought in to examine the wooden beams which held up the three-storey bakehouse.

“They identified this wood as being Oregon pine, know as Douglas Fir here in New Zealand as well.

“These are 14m-long beams, which are probably from the heart of the tree, but interestingly we didn’t start growing Douglas Fir in New Zealand until around about the 1870s or 1880s, so we can only assume these were imported from the United States.”

New Plymouth District Council intends to repurpose the beams as street furniture, decking, handrails and other public‑space features.

Demolition manager Brett Wheeler, of Wheeler Demolition, said the job had not been without its challenges.

Demolition manager Brett Wheeler said protecting the Huatoki Stream from debris had been one of the toughest challenges of the project. RNZ / Robin Martin

“Probably managing the stream, the awa looking after that has been toughest. If it was a different kind of demo we would’ve just caved all this in and loaded it out.

“But the methodology of this one had to be cut and carry because we can’t put too much weight on certain parts of the floor especially at the front where it’s all timber framing, so we’ve had to crane diggers into certain points.”

His crew had made several surprising finds.

“So a good one’s just down here. We pulled one of the walls away and the foundation for this building, we’re standing on, is like a pretty old bluestone masonry wall, which is pretty cool.

“No one knew it was there until we ripped down three layers of walls and found it.”

Ilkovics had a theory about that wall.

RNZ / Robin Martin

“The blockwork that you can see under the old wooden building there. We believe that is part of the old railway embankment.

“A trainline used to run through this site, along this edge, and that was the original Waitara to New Plymouth line.

“This section was made redundant when the line was diverted along the coast, but a lot of the old brickwork, stonework was just sort of left in place.”

Ilkovics, who said it was a privilege to work on such a project, said another find was the steel framing of a drapery that once occupied the site.

“This beam on the ground here was part of the old McGruer’s building, which was constructed in the 1930s, again we didn’t know much about it until we peeled back the cladding.

RNZ / Robin Martin

“We found it was an import and you can actually see here from the stamp that it’s come from a company called Dorman Long & Co in Middlesbrough, England which still fabricates steel components and exports them around the world today.”

The company famously supplied steel for both the Auckland and Sydney harbour bridges.

The New Plymouth District Council had partnered with property developer K.D. Holdings and Ngāti Te Whiti to create the Huatoki public space which is part of its $10 million centre city strategy.​

Construction of the wider project – which included new retail, office, and hospitality spaces on both sides of the stream, was due to begin next year

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Morale at NZTA at ‘rock bottom’ after latest round of proposed job cuts

Source: Radio New Zealand

PSA national secretary Duane Leo told RNZ workers were in a state of confusion. RNZ / Dom Thomas

Morale at the New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) is “at rock bottom” after a fresh wave of proposed job cuts, the Public Service Association (PSA) says.

The restructure would lead a further 140 roles to be disestablished, with a net loss of 30 positions.

Proposed changes would impact three groups: transport services, commercial and corporate and system leadership, the PSA said.

PSA national secretary Duane Leo told RNZ workers were in a state of confusion and shock after the proposed cuts were put to them.

“Morale is zero, it’s rock bottom at the moment, and there’s real insecurity out there.”

The restructure was especially disruptive, because it came just three weeks after another restructure that affected more than 250 roles in NZTA’s regulatory group.

He pointed out the latest round of changes marked the second major restructure at NZTA since the beginning of the coalition government’s term.

“Restructure after restructure – it’s taken a huge toll on the workers and their families.”

Workers were particularly confused by the cuts to the transport services group, because it was responsible for some of the government’s most critical infrastructure projects, Leo said.

“The transport services group has been given plans to deliver some huge capital transformation programmes, including Roads of National Significance.

“What they’re doing is actually cutting the people who will build their flagship projects.”

This latest proposal meant nearly one-in-five workers at NZTA were facing uncertainty about their employment, the PSA said.

NZTA told RNZ the restructures were in response to a review of how it plans, invests in, delivers and manages transport system assets.

“We have identified the need for clearer, more connected end‑to‑end ways of working, including earlier and more collaborative planning, more consistent investment decision‑making, and a sharper focus on delivery and asset management.”

The changes were aimed at reducing duplication, strengthening accountability, and ensuring it was set up to effectively deliver its services, NZTA said.

Duane Leo. Supplied

Leo said he did not buy that.

“We’ve heard this consistently over the term of this coalition government: ‘it’s about efficiencies, it’s about making the public service more responsive’. This is not the case. It’s cost-cutting.”

NZTA said it was currently formally consulting with people in its system leadership, commercial and corporate and transport services groups on the proposal.

The PSA had made submissions to NZTA on behalf of all the groups that would be affected, Leo said.

Final redundancy decisions would be announced in July for workers in transport services and in August for commercial and corporate and system leadership staff.

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Accommodation supplement change raises concern

Source: Radio New Zealand

Social Development Minister Louise Upston said the accommodation supplement calculation had not changed for 33 years RNZ / Mark Papalii

A critic says a change to the accommodation supplement rules is expected to push some households further into poverty.

The Social Security Amendment Bill was introduced in Parliament on Thursday.

It introduces changes that were signalled in the 2025 Budget, which the government said were designed to better target financial assistance and ensure the sustainability of the welfare system.

It introduces a parental assistance test for 18- and 19-year-old JobSeeker applicants and adjusts the calculation for the accommodation supplement.

Homeowners will be assessed based on contributing 40 percent – not 30 percent – of their income to housing costs before they are eligible for a subsidy.

Child Poverty Action Group spokesperson Isaac Gunson said even households that could meet that threshold would experience “deeper after-housing-cost poverty”.

He said they would probably have to defer things like home maintenance, which could have a flow-on effect to worse health outcomes.

Social Development Minister Louise Upston said the accommodation supplement calculation had not changed for 33 years, and those with unsubsidised housing costs now generally paid a higher proportion of their income towards housing.

“This rebalances that. This will target the accommodation supplement to those with the greatest need, while continuing to support the most vulnerable groups.”

The amount that people are allowed to have in assets and still qualify for the supplement has also not been changed in more than 30 years. A couple or a sole parent could have cash assets up to $16,200.

She said she did not have the details of how many people would be affected or how much it would save.

“The bill has been tabled, they are Budget ’25 measures so there won’t be any surprise there.”

The change does not apply to renters and boarders, nor homeowners who are likely to require longer-term social assistance, including those on superannuation, veteran’s pension, supported living payment, or emergency benefit equivalent of supported living payment.

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Air New Zealand cuts 5% of its flights, jobs could go

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied

Air New Zealand has cut 5 percent of flights and will start to consolidate other routes after the July school holidays, chief executive Nikhil Ravishankar says.

It comes as the airline is expecting a full-year pre-tax loss of between $340 and $390 million due to the soaring cost of jet fuel.

Talking to Checkpoint on Thursday, Ravishankar said domestic demand was already soft before the war in Iran, and the crisis had only made it more acute.

“Cost-of-living challenges are real and so where we’ve gone in with price increases, we are starting to see the fact that we are getting to the limits of certain markets and the ability to absorb those costs.

“So, we’re being very thoughtful about what we do with price increases.”

He said the airline was eyeing up further cuts to flights after the July school holidays.

Air New Zealand had already cut 5 percent of its flights in response to the war, which had triggered “genuinely unprecedented” fuel prices but ruled out a request for financial assistance from the government.

“We are paying over double what we normally pay for fuel. Recovery will have a long tail. But it all depends on when the conflict will end and how the fuel price recovers.”

Conflict in the Middle East has pushed up fuel prices. AFP

Ravishankar said reducing the frequency of flights, not routes, was the goal – for example instead of flying twice daily between destinations, the airline might fly once.

“That’s by-and-large frequency cuts, so we’re cutting flights that are middle of the day, non-peak flying.”

Ravishankar said it was yet to be finalised which flights would be lost, but the airline was targeting long-haul, international routes between August and October.

He said there would be fewer cuts on regional and domestic routes and expected customers would be advised in June.

Ravishankar said the sharemarket had been informed Air NZ would preserve all costs associated with supporting customers.

He said the first priority was to ensure the airline continued operating a safe, punctual, and reliable service at an affordable price.

“There are a lot of costs that go into running 500 flights a day… so those costs, we’re making sure that they are right, but we’re protecting that.

“But what we’re also doing is going through every single line item in the business and making sure any of the costs that we can live without for now – as we’re dealing with the crisis, that we… remove those costs from the business.”

Ravishankar said despite the difficulties the airline was facing, he loved his job and the role was a privilege.

“This is one hell of an airline. It’s one of the great New Zealand iconic brands, and even today one of the most respected airlines in the world.

“The plans that we have in place ensure New Zealand has a world-class airline into the future.”

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No prosecution over toppled Northland pylon

Source: Radio New Zealand

The pylon fell over while being worked on by contractors. Supplied / Kawakawa Electrical Ltd

National grid operator Transpower will not be prosecuted after all over the toppling of a pylon that cut power to about 90,000 homes and businesses across Northland.

The Electricity Authority lodged a formal complaint against Transpower last year, alleging the state-owned company had breached the Electricity Industry Participation Code by not maintaining its assets in line with best industry practice.

The pylon, at Glorit, north of Auckland, fell over during routine maintenance in June 2024 after contractors removed the nuts from three of its legs at once.

Transpower could have been fined up to $2 million if a breach had been proven.

However, on Thursday the Electricity Authority said Transpower had since provided new evidence, and an international expert had found Transpower met the required standards.

As a result, the Electricity Authority had dropped its complaint – but it was now considering whether the standards needed to be changed, or whether a different approach was needed to “reflect New Zealand’s specific circumstances”.

In particular, the current code did not apply to outside contractors, such as the French-owned company Omexom, which was working on the pylon at the time.

The authority said it was “considering whether the concept of good electricity industry practice is fit for purpose, including in circumstances where industry participants may contract out significant parts of their functions”.

Meanwhile, Transpower welcomed the authority’s decision to drop the complaint.

Executive general manager grid delivery Mark Ryall said it confirmed the company’s position that its processes and systems were “consistent with good industry practice”.

“An independent report found the tower fall was caused by a crew working for our service provider failing to follow approved processes and procedures. It also highlighted that, despite strong systems and oversight, human error can still occur.”

Ryall said the tower fall should never have happened, and apologised for the impact on people and businesses in Northland.

Since then Transpower had strengthened its oversight of service providers, to make sure their practices were robust and their crews had the correct skills and training.

“We continue to work hard with our service providers to improve our practices to ensure that we can prevent an incident like this happening again,” Ryall said.

A report ordered by then Energy Minister Simeon Brown shortly after the accident made 26 recommendations for Transpower, Omexom, the Electricity Authority and the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment.

All 19 recommendations for Transpower have since been carried out.

In November last year Sydney-based law firm Piper Alderman started class action against Transpower and Omexom on behalf of the roughly 20,000 businesses affected by the outage.

The firm did not specify how much money it was seeking, but economic consultants Infometrics estimated businesses had lost $60 million as a result of the power cut while the Northland Chamber of Commerce put the figure at $80m.

In the months after the collapse, Northland’s Chamber of Commerce and local MP Grant McCallum pushed hard for compensation from Transpower and Omexom.

Eventually, the companies agreed to give $500,000 each to a “resilience fund” supporting projects with long-term benefits for Northland.

About 180,000 people were affected by the outage.

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Pharmac adds Wegovy for weight loss to list for future funding

Source: Radio New Zealand

If chosen for future funding, Wegovy would be available to people with a BMI of 35 or more with at least two comorbidities. AFP / Jens Kalaene

Pharmac has added the weight-loss drug Wegovy to its list of medicines suitable for future funding.

In a decision released Thursday, the drug-funding agency confirmed it had added Semaglutide – brand name Wegovy – to its list of ‘Options For Investment’, which includes all the medications that Pharmac would fund, if the budget allowed.

The order of that list is not made public for commercial reasons.

If chosen for future funding, Wegovy would be available to people with a Body Mass Index of 35 or more with at least two comorbidities.

In February, Pharmac’s obesity treatments advisory group recommended the drug be funded with high priority.

Currently unfunded, Wegovy would cost someone about $400 a month.

The original application was for Wegovy to be funded for chronic weight management in adults with a BMI of more than 30.

According to the 2024/25 New Zealand Health Survey, that would apply to an estimated 34 percent of New Zealanders over 15 years of age, but the committee’s recommendation bumped that up to a BMI of 35, in line with comparable countries like Canada, England and Scotland.

“However, the group also considered that this threshold could be raised to a BMI of 40… if funding treatment down to this level proved to be cost-prohibitive or not cost-effective.”

With a BMI over 50, a person would not need comorbodities to qualify, according to the recommendation.

Below that threshold, a person would need to have at least two of the following – dyslipidaemia, hypertension, diabetes, obstructive sleep apnoea or established cardiovascular disease.

It also included a condition that treatment would stop, if someone did not experience at least a 10 percent reduction in weight after six months.

It noted that, due to the “relatively high prevalence of obesity and weight-related comorbidities, the budget impact of funding semaglutide for weight management would be very high”.

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