Calls for independent dispute resolution service for schools, parents

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ was recently contacted by two families that took their children out of school because of what they said was lack of support for their children’s special needs. 123rf

Children are missing weeks and even months of vital schooling because of stand-offs between their parents and their schools.

Youth advocates say the problem happens repeatedly and highlights the need for a free service that resolves disputes between schools and families.

RNZ was recently contacted by two families that took their children out of school in early February because of what they said was lack of support for their children’s special needs.

One returned to class on a part-time basis after seven weeks of being absent, while the other was still at home when the April school holidays began.

Both agreed an independent dispute resolution service would have helped.

Children’s commissioner Claire Achmad said in the first instance it was up to schools to solve disputes and ensure children were returned to class.

But she said when that didn’t happen there was a gap.

“There does seem to be a bit of a gap here in terms of being able to have a clear pathway to be able to resolve these disagreements or disputes at the lowest level as quickly as possible,” she said.

Dr Achmad said the Education and Training Act allowed for the creation of a dispute resolution organisation for schools and families, but no government had yet set it up.

“I know it’s something that my predecessor Children’s Commissioners have advocated for, and I support and build on those calls because it’s crucial that there’s timely, child-focused and practical holistic resolutions in these kinds of situations,” she said.

Achmad said calls to the Children’s Commission/Mana Mokopuna’s children’s’ rights line indicated disputes between schools and families were not uncommon.

“This is a common theme that we are hearing about, and it shows that there is a need for more focus on finding that clear mechanism, implementing it, so that there can be timely child-focused resolution in these kinds of situations.”

Children’s commissioner Claire Achmad. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Youth Law senior solicitor Velda Chan said families could go to the Human Rights Commission or seek a judicial review of school decisions, but neither were easy options.

“If they’ve come to a situation where they can’t resolve things, then there isn’t a lot of places they can go to try and work things out,” she said.

Chan said an independent and free disputes panel would be helpful.

Principals Federation president Jason Miles said disagreements between schools and families were fairly regular, but it was unusual for children to be out of school for more than a couple of weeks.

He said the ministry did not usually get involved and if schools and families could not agree on an issue, there was no organisation to step in and mediate.

Miles said an independent body would help.

“I don’t think there’d ever be a process where everyone would be happy with an outcome, but that would be another step,” he said.

“The focus would need to be on a resolution process that uses restorative and culturally appropriate processes and procedures, and be done in a timely manner so that disputes could be resolved and children won’t miss out on being in education.”

Autism New Zealand chief executive Dane Dougan said two months was too long for children to be out of school.

He said the Education Ministry was usually able to mediate disputes and if that didn’t work, some families turned to the Human Rights Commission.

Dougan said autistic children were much less likely to have problems in schools where staff had specific training in working with neuro-diverse pupils.

The Education Ministry said schools were resourced to provide learning support to children who needed it and families should try to resolve disputes with their school’s board in the first instance.

But if that didn’t work the ministry could become involved.

“Where concerns are escalated to the ministry, we can review the situation and work with the school and board as needed to support a safe and inclusive learning environment. If parents remain dissatisfied with the board’s response, they can also raise their concerns with the Ombudsman.”

The ministry said all children had the same right to attend their local school.

“When concerns arise about a child’s support, supervision, or safety, and this affects their ability to attend school, the Ministry of Education’s role is to help uphold that right and support schools and families to work through what is needed.

“These situations can be challenging for everyone involved, particularly when a child has been unable to attend school for a period of time.”

A parent who contacted RNZ said her son was out of school for seven weeks while the family tried to persuade the school to provide better support for him.

She said the ministry became involved when she contacted it about two or three weeks into the disagreement, but the family still had to make a lot of effort to get the support it wanted.

“The initial response was ‘there is nothing we can do here’,” she said.

“It was only the fact that I got through to a capable, competent person through the incident line that I believe this even got moving.”

The woman said an independent body would have helped a lot.

“There has not been a single accountable person who has said ‘it is my responsibility to resolve this’,” she said.

Another parent who contacted RNZ said a dispute resolution body needed to be independent.

“An independent body would provide a much fairer path than a ministry that effectively assists schools in managing parents who speak up,” she said.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Cyclone Vaianu brings 220m of rain to Coromandel in 24 hours

Source: Radio New Zealand

Whitianga before Cyclone Vaianu’s arrival. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

A Coromandel weather station recorded more than 200mm of rain as Cyclone Vaianu swept over the North Island.

The cyclone, which caused power outages, flooding and road closures across the east coast of the North Island, tracked away from mainland New Zealand overnight.

Some residents reported it was not as severe as the storms earlier this year.

MetService meteorologist John Law said although Vaianu had veered east, the cyclone track was still within the forecast “cone of uncertainty”.

Wind gusts of up to 126km/h were recorded at Māhia, with even higher speeds recorded at offshore stations, he said.

Very heavy rain was also recorded in some places in the 24-hour period to Sunday night.

“The base of the Coromandel, we’ve seen as much as 220mm of rainfall through there, and, similarly, in towards parts of the Bay of Plenty and the higher ground there, as much as 140 to 150mm of rain.”

New Zealanders did an “amazing job” of preparing in the days before the cyclone arrived, Law said.

“People working together to make sure that everyone’s up to date with the latest forecasts and watches and warnings.

“It’s always unfortunate to see impacts like the flooding and those power outages, but I think people have done very well to be prepared.”

Flooding in central Whakatāne from Cyclone Vaianu on Sunday 12 April, 2026. RNZ/ Robin Martin

Bay of Plenty evacuees return home

Those who have been evacuated in the Bay of Plenty are now able to return home, as long as it is safe for them to do so.

Whakatāne acting mayor Julie Jukes said the evacuation order was no longer in place.

A total of 270 households in Ōhope and Thornton were forced to evacuate, while an unknown number had chosen to.

Jukes said the weather had died down as of 9pm on Sunday.

Hawke’s Bay warnings lift

MetService lifted the heavy rain warning for Hawke’s Bay, but a strong wind warning remained in place overnight until 5am on Monday.

Hawke’s Bay Civil Defence group controller Shane Briggs said on Sunday the eye of the storm had moved offshore.

“We’re not out of everything yet, but actually it’s been surprisingly less than expected and at this stage, it looks like we’ve come off pretty lightly.”

Briggs said people should still avoid unnecessary travel if they could as there may be fallen trees and damaged powerlines.

In its 8pm Sunday update, Hastings District Council said evacuation zones remained in place for parts of Haumoana, Te Awanga, Waimārama and Ocean Beach, and security was in place overnight, along with road cordons.

There remained a risk of high winds, which could cause falling trees, power outages, road closures and coastal swells in exposed areas. Rainfall in the ranges is causing rivers to rise, but not to dangerous levels.

People were advised to stay away from rivers for the following 24 hours due to the potential for flooding as this water makes its way down to low-lying areas.

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Wellington Phoenix suffer crucial A-League loss to Melbourne City

Source: Radio New Zealand

Corban Piper stood out for the Phoenix against Melbourne City. Photosport

Wellington Phoenix’s chances of making the A-League playoffs have nosedived, with a 2-0 away loss to Melbourne City.

The result is good news for City, who improve their chances of sealing a top-six spot, but the Phoenix have a huge mountain ahead of them, with only two matches left in the regular season.

They are now five points off sixth-placed City and would need to win both matches – against Western Sydney Wanderers in Christchurch on Saturday and away to Macarthur the following Friday – and hope for City and Macarthur to lose their final two matches, if they are to make the playoffs.

The Melbourne side looked more assured at AAMI Park, where the Phoenix hoped to pull off a repeat victory, after surprising Melbourne Victory there last weekend.

They didn’t lack for intensity, but the cohesion wasn’t there and they couldn’t nail a goal against tight City defence and extend their winning run to four matches.

Aziz Behich put City ahead in the 27th minute, with a low kick deflecting off a diving Isaac Hughes into the corner.

Corban Piper, who led the Phoenix attack with a spirited performance, had his side’s best chance of scoring in the first half, snapping a low left-footed shot just wide of the left corner in the 38th minute, after strong lead-up work by Paulo Retre.

Marcus Younis scored in the 76th minute, with his deflected shot beating Phoenix goalie Josh Oluwayemi.

Even 2-0 down, the Phoenix tried hard to fight back, but City held firm.

Auckland FC drew their match 2-2 with Melbourne Victory on Saturday night and remain second on the table, three points behind Newcastle Jets.

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One-legged Carlos Ulberg wins UFC light-heavyweight title by miracle knockout

Source: Radio New Zealand

Carlos Ulberg became the first Kiwi to claim the UFC light-heavyweight belt. Carmen Mandato/Getty Images

King Carlos has his crown.

Kiwi Carlos Ulberg is the new UFC light-heavyweight champion, after knocking out Jiří Procházka in round one, while on one leg.

Ulberg blew out his knee, after stepping back and landing awkwardly, and was clearly compromised, as he hobbled around the Octagon.

Procházka did not attack the knee, but instead opted to enter a firefight, a decision he said he regretted in his post-fight interview.

The Czech implied he showed mercy on Ulberg before the finish, but none was shown in return, as Ulberg swung for the fences and stunned the world.

With one final desperation shot, Ulberg landed a picture-perfect check left hook, landing flush on the jaw of Procházka.

The lights were instantly shut off, Ulberg’s follow-up barrage academic, as his miracle killshot had already done the damage.

Ulberg becomes the first fighter from Aotearoa to claim the light-heavyweight title.

See how the event unfolded below.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Eastern Hutt Road closed following crash, Upper Hutt

Source: New Zealand Police

Eastern Hutt Road is closed near the intersection with Fergusson Drive in Upper Hutt following a crash.

The single vehicle crash was reported just before 6pm.

One person has been critically injured, a second person has sustained serious injuries.

Motorists are advised to avoid the area and expect delays.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

The House: Citizens assemblies – an alternative to select committees?

Source: Radio New Zealand

A meeting of Ireland’s Citizens’ Assembly. The country’s first deliberative democracy process was a Constitutional Convention held over 18 months starting in 2012. Maxwells

What if a group of randomly selected people were put in a room and asked to hammer out national policy, or co-opted onto select committees?

It sounds like a social experiment, but was raised repeatedly at last month’s Democracy Forum at Parliament, hosted by Labour’s Duncan Webb and National’s Vanessa Weenink.

The concept even has a name – a citizens’ assembly. It sits under a broader political science idea known as deliberative democracy (our current system is a representative democracy).

Randomly selected people would make decisions as a group. The issue could be very local or take on more precarious national questions, like the superannuation age.

One panelist at the forum was Mika Hervel, a winner of the Rod Oram Memorial Essay Prize. He envisaged the process playing out a bit like a jury.

Citizens assembly proponent Mika Hervel. Phil Smith

“A group of randomly selected people, demographically representative of the population as a whole, are brought together, typically to discuss a particular issue,” Hervel explained.

“This group of people is then provided with experts who they can question, stakeholders who they can hear from. They’re provided with information about budgets and costs and benefits, scientific information, modelling… and given time to deliberate.

“This then leads to recommendations often, or decisions that are passed on to be implemented by officials or to be operationalised.”

Of course, Parliament already has built-in ways for people to participate between elections – through petitions, select committees, through contacting MPs – even via protest.

Hervel says these form a solid foundation for public engagement, but deliberative democracy could help address some of the limitations critics often point to in the select-committee process.

He argues that the current engagement is self-selecting, which can mean hearing from the usual suspects again and again, and that MPs rejecting one’s ideas can be disenfranchising.

Others might respond that the current system of self-selected feedback to select committees ensures that subject experts and those most likely to be impacted are also the most likely to feed into the issue.

“Deliberative democracy seeks to engage ordinary people, including those often forgotten by politics and decision-making, which I would suggest energises and connects people to the issues happening that directly affect them,” says Hervel. “[It] helps them see how they are affected and empowers them to be involved in looking for solutions.”

Fellow panelist Max Rashbrooke suggests that 100 people, representative of New Zealand demographically, would likely reach similar conclusions to the whole country, if everyone could fit in a room together.

Constitutional law expert Andrew Butler sees it as an innovative way to improve participation. He described a democratic fatigue – that political parties are not functioning as forums for deliberation in the way they might have in the past, when membership was larger.

“Most people get into politics through political parties – good people who go and put [their] heads above the parapet – because they actually want to make a difference,” says Butler. “They want to help debates, but there is something about the way in which the ecosystem works, which makes that difficult to achieve.”

Butler sees deliberative democracy as complementing select committees.

“Supplementing the work that is done [in Parliament would draw] people in to want to participate on issues that are important.

“What all of the studies emphasise is the importance of framing the issue, getting the right people in the room facilitating the conversation – probably the hardest aspect of the exercise – but well-facilitated deliberative democracy adds to the sense of democracy and… to democracy’s legitimacy.

“One of the points about our democracy is to try and achieve a level of acceptance of decisions, not the ones you agree with – that’s easy. The point of democracy is to find acceptance of those very things you do not agree with.”

While the idea of citizens’ assemblies raised its head repeatedly at the forum and most agreed it could be very useful for local issues, not everyone saw it as a solution for national decision-making, with criticism coming from other speakers, in Q&As and informally.

While proponents argued that democratic engagement is flagging, public submissions to select committees have grown by orders of magnitude over recent Parliaments, repeatedly breaking records and showing participation is in fact improving.

Some participants and attendees pointed out constitutional and process issues, while others saw citizens assemblies as hopelessly naïve – and that disagreement is not a product of politics but exists in any group of people facing a significant issue.

Some argued that the idea discounted the value of expertise and experience, factors they believed were crucial for solving complex national issues. Arguing that assemblies were not a salve to discord, one attendee noted that, in international experience, the randomly chosen participants had received threats (as politicians also do), which mirrored, rather than removed the emotion and discord of traditional politics.

Listen to the audio version of this story by clicking the link near the top of the page.

RNZ’s The House, with insights into Parliament, legislation and issues, is made with funding from Parliament’s Office of the Clerk. Enjoy our articles or podcast at RNZ.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Mayor ‘grateful’ Far North escaped serious cyclone damage

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rāwene residents are being urged to conserve water after a water main broke under Parnell Street, the town’s main street. Supplied / FNDC

Far North Mayor Moko Tepania says he’s breathing a huge sigh of relief after his district escaped serious damage from Cyclone Vaianu.

The district was the first to feel the effects of the cyclone on Saturday night, but the storm took a path further to the east than initially predicted, limiting its impact on Northland.

However, some areas, such as Whangārei’s central city, were lashed by more than 130mm of rain in a 24-hour period, and winds of 110km/h were recorded at Cape Reinga.

A buoy off the Bay of Islands recorded a maximum wave height of 10.8m on Saturday afternoon.

Tepania said the outcome was a huge relief.

“All of the reports that are coming in – and not just through our Emergency Operations Centre intelligence lines, but also the good old kūmara vine and our Kaitiaki Response Network on the ground – are showing us that the effects of Cyclone Vaianu have been very limited,” he said.

“Power outages, a few roofs that have blown off, but all in all, our roading networks made it through and rivers never breached warning levels. So I’m very grateful.”

Far North Mayor Moko Tepania. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

However, it was too soon to relax entirely.

Emergency responders had learned from Cyclone Gabrielle that the tail end of a cyclone, when the wind abruptly switched direction, could still cause damage such as downed trees and power lines, especially the soil was sodden.

“But all indications are that we have dodged a bullet this time around,” Tepania said.

Tepania urged anyone who had been affected by the cyclone but had not yet contacted the council or Civil Defence should call 0800 920 029 so staff could respond.

An estimated 50 families opted to evacuate their homes before the storm hit, with most spending the night at marae or community centres.

In some cases, entire settlements, such as Taemaro Bay, near Mangonui, self-evacuated and sought shelter at Kenana Marae.

Only six homes were evacuated on council orders, all on Wendywood Lane in Kerikeri.

Tepania said the homes were near a stand of large redwood trees, one of which had fallen in a previous storm.

Those residents were able to go home on Sunday afternoon.

Tepania said he was hugely grateful to the district’s Kaitiaki Response Network, community response groups, Te Rūnanga-ā-Iwi o Ngāpuhi and others for setting up evacuation centres in town halls and marae across Northland.

The mayor said having to endure three major storms since the start of the year had been tough on Northlanders, despite their often-touted resilience.

Kaitāia flooding after heavy rain, March 2026. Supplied FNDC

Just two weeks ago many people had been badly affected by floods in Kaitāia, Awanui and the Hokianga settlements of Panguru, Pawarenga, Whirinaki, Wekaweka Valley and Waimamaku.

Since then, Tepania said he and some councillors had met many affected people.

“We’ve been out and about in relief hubs talking to whānau and they’re crying in front of you because they’ve lost everything. There’s a heck of a lot of anxiety from them, and from community leaders as well – and then you get a tropical cyclone heading towards us,” he said.

“So the anxiety levels were incredibly high even as we went into this and that’s why it’s been so important to make sure whānau are informed, they know how ready all of the agencies are, and that they listen to the official advice.”

“There’s a huge sense of relief across there today, but also a lot of weariness because it has been really hard. We always say we’re resilient as Northlanders and we know our taiao [environment], we know our awa [rivers], we know our communities, but it does get you down because it takes a heck of a lot of adrenaline, waking hours and anxiety.

“I’m praying to the weather gods that they give us a little bit of respite, so we can have a breather and a rest and recharge.”

Tepania said he believed Northlanders were getting better at preparing for storms and heeding advice about staying safe.

In the March floods, firefighters had been frustrated about the number of rescues they had to carry out after people tried to drive through floodwaters.

This time, however, emergency services told him far fewer people had risked their lives trying to take on flooded roads.

“People are taking things seriously and that’s what we want,” he said.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

One-legged Carlos Ulberg wins UFC heavyweight title by miracle knockout

Source: Radio New Zealand

Carlos Ulberg became the first Kiwi to claim the UFC light-heavyweight belt. Carmen Mandato/Getty Images

King Carlos has his crown.

Kiwi Carlos Ulberg is the new UFC light-heavyweight champion, after knocking out Jiří Procházka in round one, while on one leg.

Ulberg blew out his knee, after stepping back and landing awkwardly, and was clearly compromised, as he hobbled around the Octagon.

Procházka did not attack the knee, but instead opted to enter a firefight, a decision he said he regretted in his post-fight interview.

The Czech implied he showed mercy on Ulberg before the finish, but none was shown in return, as Ulberg swung for the fences and stunned the world.

With one final desperation shot, Ulberg landed a picture-perfect check left hook, landing flush on the jaw of Procházka.

The lights were instantly shut off, Ulberg’s follow-up barrage academic, as his miracle killshot had already done the damage.

Ulberg becomes the first fighter from Aotearoa to claim the light-heavyweight title.

See how the event unfolded below.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Rāwene residents urged to use less water after main break

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rāwene residents are urged to conserve water, after a water main broke under Parnell Street, the town’s main road. Supplied/Far North District Council

Residents and businesses in the Far North town of Rāwene are urged to immediately reduce water use, due to a major break in a main.

The Far North District Council said Sunday morning’s break had caused water storage levels to plummet to just 15 percent.

Everyone connected to the Ōmanaia-Rāwene water supply must reduce consumption immediately, or risk the town’s reservoir and taps running dry.

Hokianga Hospital was not affected by the break.

The council said some residents would be without water entirely for at least four hours, while contractors carried out repairs.

A water tanker stationed on Russell Esplanade would provide free, treated water until 6pm or when water supplies were restored.

The water main break was caused by a section of Parnell Street slumping at the intersection with Mariner Street.

Even after the pipe was repaired, residents would need to conserve water for at least 24 hours, while the reservoir refilled.

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How to stop your bed becoming a microscopic eco-forest

Source: Radio New Zealand

Up to 300ml of sweat goes onto our sheets every night, along with the skin cells we shed, says a microbiologist.

“And it doesn’t matter what the temperature is outside, you will still sweat. And don’t forget the dead skin cells that you shed as well, that the house dust mites will then come along and happily eat,” Primrose Freestone professor in clinical microbiology at the University of Leicester told RNZ’s Sunday Mornings.

For this reason, she is an advocate of the morning shower.

Washing cotton sheets at 60 degrees centigrade will sanitise them.

Unsplash

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand