Air New Zealand swings to half-year loss amid severe fleet disruption

Source: Radio New Zealand

Air New Zealand said the result was driven by disruption due to grounded aircraft. (File photo) AFP/ William West

Air New Zealand has slumped to a half-year loss as it continues to face severe disruption due to grounded aircraft, with challenges likely to continue in the short-term.

The airline posted a bottom-line loss of $40m in the six months ended December, compared to last year’s profit of $106m.

Revenue was up just over 1 percent to $3.44b, compared to $3.4b a year ago.

Key numbers for the six months ended December 2025 compared with a year ago:

  • Net loss $40m vs $106m
  • Revenue $3.44b vs $3.4b
  • Pre-tax loss $59m vs $155m profit
  • No interim dividend vs 1.25 cents per share

The airline said the result was largely driven by global engine maintenance delays, slower-than-expected recovery in domestic demand, increasing costs, and a weaker New Zealand dollar.

The pre-tax loss came in worse than market expectations and the airline’s own forecast of between $30m and $55m.

Air NZ was also undergoing a major review of the business as it looked to cut costs and return to profitability.

“With the support of the board we are undertaking a comprehensive review of all aspects of the business, with the objective of returning the airline to sustained profitability through enhanced operational performance, growth and further cost transformation initiatives,” chief executive Nikhil Ravishankar said.

Air NZ chief executive Nikhil Ravishankar. (File photo) Supplied / Air NZ

“While we are disappointed that the engine availability issues have taken longer than anticipated to resolve, we are pleased with recent progress and now expect a total of four grounded Airbus neo and Boeing 787 aircraft to return to service throughout the 2026 calendar year.”

Ravishankar expected Air NZ to receive two of its 10 new 787 aircraft later in the financial year, providing widebody capacity growth of 20-25 percent over the next two years.

Domestic demand soft, costs high

Air NZ said overall passenger revenue improved 4 percent to $3 billion on the back of more capacity to Australia and the Pacific Islands, and more premium seats on long-haul routes.

But it said domestic demand recovery was slower-than-expected, while international performance was supported by strong offshore bookings, particularly for premium cabins.

It said demand for outbound long-haul travel was subdued.

Jet fuel prices were on average slightly weaker than the prior period, but the airline said lower fuel prices were more than offset by a weaker New Zealand dollar.

“Non-fuel operating cost inflation of approximately $75 million was driven primarily by higher mandated domestic passenger levies, engineering and maintenance costs, and airport landing charges,” the airline said.

“The airline’s concern is not only about the current level of these costs, but the future trajectory and potential for further increases over time, which would place additional pressure on the business, and the sustainability of regional connectivity.”

Conditions not expected to improve in second half

Air NZ said while capacity would likely increase modestly in the second half with aircraft returning to service and new aircraft, the airline was cautious on whether it would translate to earnings uplift.

“This is because widebody capacity cannot be operationalised into the schedule and sold at short notice,” it said.

“The primary constraint is uncertainty in the timing of aircraft and engine returns, which limits the ability to plan and sell additional flying with confidence.”

The airline said disruption-related costs and inefficiencies would also take time to unwind.

Based on current trading conditions, and assuming a jet fuel price of US$85 per barrel, Air NZ expected second-half earnings to be broadly in line with, or modestly below the first half.

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

Darts: Beau Greaves becomes first woman to throw a perfect leg

Source: Radio New Zealand

Beau Greaves, in action during the 2026 World Darts Championship at Alexandra Palace in London. SHANE HEALEY

There has been history made in the darts world on Wednesday (UK time), with English player Beau Greaves becoming the first woman to hit a nine-dart finish on the PDC ProTour.

The 22-year-old achieved the perfect leg in a Players Championship match against Austrian Mensur Suljovic, hitting back-to-back 180s, and finishing treble 20, treble 19 and double 12 in Leicester.

She celebrated the milestone with a quiet fist-pump, before accepting congratulations from Suljovic.

Reality then sunk in, as she shook her head in disbelief.

“I’ve narrowly missed hitting one a few times so it was nice to finally hit one. It’s nice to be the first woman to hit one on the PDC ProTour,” she said.

She went on to claim a 6-5 victory by clinching a final-leg decider, but was beaten in the next round by David Sharp.

Greaves, who is from Doncaster, has dominated the Women’s Series in recent years and beat Luke Littler on her way to the World Youth Championship final.

She also competed at this year’s World Championships, but lost a close first-round match against Daryl Gurney.

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

Several people rescued from Waikato River after tour group gets stuck trying to help

Source: Radio New Zealand

People are brought ashore after their ordeal. Supplied / NZ police

Several people have been rescued from Waikato River while clinging onto a tree on Wednesday evening.

Police were alerted at 7.20pm that four men had entered the water to float from the control gates down to Hipapatua Reserve.

With only basic inflatables and no life jackets, the group lost buoyancy and called for help.

A nearby tour group jumped into the river to assist the men, but also had no flotation devices.

When police had arrived, all seven were in distress and, and contacted the coastguard and harbourmaster.

Supplied / NZ police

They were able to rescue them using a jetboat and a jetski by 8pm.

Senior Constable of Taupō Police Barry Shepherd said the incident could have had a far more serious outcome.

“We want people to have fun and enjoy the outdoors but there’s a safe way to do it.

“While its admirable that people tried to help, we don’t want any dead heroes.”

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Bike group praises government proposal to let under 12s cycle on footpaths

Source: Radio New Zealand

The proposal would let children under 12 ride on the footpath rather than the road. (File photo) 123RF

A cycling group is praising a government proposal to allow children under the age of 12 to ride their bikes on the footpath.

The idea was floated by Transport Minister Chris Bishop, along with others including allowing E-scooters in cycle lanes and requiring drivers to leave at least a one metre gap when passing cyclists.

Bike Auckland co-chairperson Karen Hormann told Morning Report, letting children ride their bikes on the footpath made sense.

“Having young kids in 50kph traffic is not the way forward. Ideally these younger kids won’t be travelling very fast and hopefully parents and caregivers are helping them to understand how to be considerate.”

Hormann acknowledged there were some concerns about pedestrian safety, but said there were already many shared paths around Auckland and cyclists and pedestrians would need to work together to make the change work.

Motorists would also need to take extra care when coming out of driveways, Hormann said.

“You’re going to have to look threes time, maybe more, just to make sure.”

Hormann also welcomed the proposed change to allow E-scooters in bike lanes, saying vehicles travelling a similar speed should be kept together.

A proposed change would allow e-scooters in bike lanes. (File photo) 123RF

The AA earlier said the plans to update some transport rules reflected the changing times.

Chief policy and advocacy officer Simon Douglas said the AA would consider the detail over the next month, but was supportive for the most part.

He said allowing scooters on cycleways was common sense.

The chief executive for Age Concern, Karen Billings-Hensen said while some of the proposals on rules were good, they key issue would be the impact on pedestrians.

She said there should be consideration around the speed children were cycling and whether they were riding two abreast.

It needed to be clear children need to give way to pedestrians, she said.

Consultation on the proposals would be open until March 15.

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The Art of Noticing: what photography has taught me about nature

Source: NZ Department of Conservation

Olivia Wentzell was the winner of the Landscape Category in the 2025 New Zealand Geographic Photographer of the Year. She studied zoology and environmental science at the University of Auckland. 

Photography was an integral part of my childhood. Going outside with my dad and his camera is where it all started. Holding a clunky DSLR and snapping photos regardless of the camera’s settings sparked a love for photography that has never wavered.

As a university student, my time often involves a lot of studying, staying inside with my eyes glued to a screen. But as a nature-lover at heart and photographer by choice, much of my spare time is spent naturing. It is the raw beauty of the landscapes and wildlife that I experience which endlessly inspires me to capture it, and it is the same beauty that inspires me every day to advocate for it.

Recently winning the landscape category in New Zealand Geographic’s 2025 Photographer of the Year has instilled an even greater drive to inspire others to experience the outdoors. As someone who grew up spending a lot of their spare time outside, and who now combines that with photography, I have grown to have a profound appreciation and respect for nature that I think we should all have. This love for the outdoors has only grown throughout my photography journey, where I have learnt many lessons over the years. It has taught me to appreciate nature, not just for its material value, but in experiences it provides, its profound beauty, and the true calm it can bring us. So, here are the five things that I have learnt along my photography journey that I think are essential for appreciating all that nature has to offer:

1. Take Notice of the Small Things

Many of us are guilty of only staring in awe at the megafauna when out naturing, but what about the small bugs that help to decompose leaf litter, or the fungi that creates mass networks underground, connecting all the trees in a forest. I have always been one to take notice of the under-appreciated, but photography has forced me to do so even more, as focusing on each detail in a photograph is essential to creating powerful images.

A detail for me that not many people notice is the lighting in a particular moment. Photography is all about light, so naturally I pay attention to it when I have my camera, but I also notice it everywhere I go, no matter the context. This means that I appreciate the soft sun rays filtering through the forest canopy, or the sunlight that just peaks over the horizon before it dips below for the night. This is one of the biggest lessons photography has taught me: the purity of light and the beauty it casts on moments.

There is nothing overly special about these photographs—or to you there may not be—but the lighting in each creates something even more beautiful out of relatively common species.

Noticing the small details in nature deepens our appreciation for it, ultimately allowing us to connect more with the world around us and find meaning in even the simplest moments. Each time you go outside, I encourage you to focus on one more thing that is new to you so that your admiration for nature can grow.

2. Get Out Whenever You Can

In the past, I wouldn’t take photos unless I felt sure they would work compositionally. However, my mindset has recently shifted to wanting to take photos of everything. This has motivated me to get outside even on the days where I don’t feel inspired, or visit the places that don’t seem as interesting as a weekend mission to Rangitoto or Muriwai Gannet Colony. Getting outside whenever possible connects us with nature more and leads us to notice the small things.

Three photos I have taken recently, where the aim was not to create a strong composition, but rather to bring my camera out and photograph freely. As a result, I noticed details that I initially would have overlooked, and found beauty in the unexpected.

Some of my best moments in nature have either been those I wasn’t planning, or in places where the beauty far exceeded my expectations. My winning photograph in New Zealand Geographic’s 2025 Photographer of the Year is an example of this. I was on a road trip around the South Island and visited a canyon I had been wanting to go to for a while. I never imagined it would become one of my favourite places in New Zealand, and the location of where an award-winning photograph was taken. While wading through knee-deep water at its entrance, I soon realised the beauty that Wilson Creek Canyon held. With water trickling down from above, moss covered walls, and sunlight streaming through the forest at the top of the canyon, this was one of the most beautiful places I had ever been – yet it was just a small, unassuming canyon off the side of State Highway 1.

My winning photo in the Landscape Category of New Zealand Geographic’s 2025 Photographer of the Year. It shows a patch of vegetation on a canyon wall, with water droplets surrounding it.

Just a few months later, I found myself in a similar situation when visiting Limestone Creek Reserve near Palmerston North. I visited this location for the glowworms but ended up seeing a different kind of beauty. This reserve included a limestone archway of a grand scale, with the most pristine native forest and a seemingly endless trickle of water down the walls of a narrow gully.

Limestone Creek Reserve was truly an unexpected beauty that blew me away.

Through appreciating the small things in nature by getting out whenever I can, these two moments are some of the best that I have ever experienced – and neither were set out to be.

3. Slow Down

Photography requires a lot of patience to achieve the photos you want, often with more failure than success. This patience is what taught me to slow down when in nature.

By learning to notice light as a photographer, watching sunsets has become one of my favourite things to do in nature. To me, this is a moment when everything is slowing down for the day. It is a moment where I can just sit, look, listen, and feel all that is around me. While watching a sunset, every moment seems to be better than the last, and I am forced to sit and watch until the painted sky slowly turns to stars.

Watching sunsets was one of the first ways I began to truly appreciate nature. Now it has taught me to slow down in other naturing activities as well. Whether I am looking at the trees in a forest on a day hike as they gently move with the breeze, or even just watching the lapping of waves on the coast, every moment in nature can be appreciated even more if we just slow down.

A photograph of a hummingbird I sat and watched for at least an hour—slowing down to understand its movements and admire its beauty.

4. Notice With More Than Just Your Eyes

During sunset, I can hear the quiet waves on the beach while the sun sets over the horizon. I can feel the slight breeze on my skin as a Tui flies over me. I don’t hear any cars on the highway or sounds of the city – just the quiet moment as the sun dips below the horizon. Through slowing down while watching sunsets, I have learnt to take in all that is around me. I have learnt to notice not just the beauty that I can see, but which I can hear, smell, and feel too.

Photography taught me to appreciate light, which in turn taught me to slow down and observe how lighting conditions change. This awareness has helped me pay closer attention to the small details in nature, using more than just my eyes. All these lessons are interconnected and essential for appreciating nature—not just for what it gives us, but for its profound beauty too.

Not only was the visual beauty of the red-crowned kākāriki so striking while visiting Tiritiri Matangi Island, but the calls of countless individuals within the flock were overwhelmingly beautiful.

5. Expand Your Knowledge On All Things Nature

As a zoology and environmental science graduate, I know a thing or two about taking on new knowledge about the natural world. As a photographer, I also want to learn as much as I can about the natural world to better understand my subjects. Before university, I thought I had a deep appreciation for the outdoors through learning in my own time, but studying all things nature throughout my degree allowed me to have a whole new appreciation for it. I now look at birds and know what makes each one of them special, and the role they play in maintaining ecosystem health. I look at the trees in a forest and know that each one took countless years to grow and sustains thousands of animals throughout its lifetime.

A kākā, whose beauty is made even more remarkable by knowing its conservation story and rarity of seeing one in the wild.

Developing my understanding of the natural world and how it works has been one of the most important shifts in how I now appreciate it. Now every time I go outside and see anything I have spent hours learning about, I can’t help but gawk at it like a fangirl, marvelling at its intricacies and unique beauty – unlike anything else in nature.

Final Thoughts

Nature is the one thing that connects us all. Despite our differences in passions, we all rely on nature and have access to it, so we need to learn to appreciate this unifying feature between us. So, when you next have the chance to get outside, take it—and remember to slow down, take notice of the small things, and learn more about the nature around you, because the best moments are often those that are unexpected.

Seven rescued from Waikato River

Source: New Zealand Police

Seven people were successfully rescued from the Waikato River last night, after Police received reports of several people struggling in the water.

Around 7.20pm, Police were alerted to a group of four men who had decided to float from the control gates down to Hipapatua Reserve, otherwise known as Reids Farm.

The men only had basic inflatables and no life jackets.

Towards the end of the route, the group lost buoyancy, began to panic, and were heard calling for help.

Three people from a nearby tour group jumped into the river to assist the men, despite not having any flotation devices themselves.

Police arrived and were able to communicate with the now seven people in distress and contacted the Coastguard and Harbourmaster.

Using a jetboat and a jetski, Police, Coastguard and the Harbourmaster were able to rescue the seven people, who were hanging onto a tree.

Senior Constable of Taupō Police Barry Shepherd says the incident could have had a far more serious outcome.

“We want people to have fun and enjoy the outdoors but there’s a safe way to do it.

“While its admirable that people tried to help, we don’t want any dead heroes.”

The involved agencies responded quickly and were able to bring all seven people to safety by 8pm.

“I commend the Coastguard, Harbourmaster and my Police colleagues, whose quick thinking and coordinated response ensured these seven people were safely rescued.

This situation could have been drastically worse, and their actions prevented a potential tragedy.”

Police remind the public that for any water related emergency, always call 111 immediately.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre.

Serious crash, Rissington

Source: New Zealand Police

Puketitiri Road is closed following a serious two-vehicle crash.

Emergency services received reports of the crash about 6:30am.

One person is understood to be seriously injured.

Police are in attendance and motorists are asked to delay travel if possible.

The Serious Crash Unit has been advised.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre.

Police probe death of rider found beside his motorbike at Auckland property

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police are making enquiries into a sudden death in Taupaki near Kumeū on Wednesday night.

At around 9pm, officers attended the incident on a shared driveway off Nixon Road.

Detective Senior Sergeant Megan Goldie, of Waitematā CIB, said a man in his 50s had been riding his motorbike before he was found dead lying beside his motorbike.

“While there are no suspicious circumstances, police will make further enquiries to establish how the man has died and whether he had been involved in a crash.”

A post mortem examination will be carried out as part of these enquiries.

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How to catch and move the country’s tiniest bird

Source: Radio New Zealand

If you want to catch a tiny bird and move it to a new home, you need expert help and your car’s aircon on.

Overheating is a threat to the rifleman.

And buzzing cicadas can get in the way of finding them in the first place as a group rounding up riflemen at the Wainuiomata water catchment area found out.

Behind four locked gates and among a gazillion buzzing cicadas, 30 volunteers intent on capturing up to 40 of the country’s tiniest birds unpacked on a bush road at the weekend.

They tested their radios, gathered together tent poles to spread out their so-called ‘mist’ nets – because they have such a fine mesh – and tested the half-a-dozen calls on the phone app they would play through speakers to lure the birds in.

The rifleman or tītitipounamu is New Zealand’s smallest bird. Steph Raille

Jim O’Malley laid out the high stakes to the three capture teams.

O’Malley helped set up the years-long Kotukutuku Ecological Restoration Project to move 40 or so birds north to a restored forest near Paraparaumu.

“The thing with riflemen is that they’re time critical,” he told them.

“After four hours, their mortality rate from stress goes up a lot. So we’re working in a window of three and a half hours from capture to release at Kāpiti.”

Volunteers at the banding station table. RNZ / Phil Pennington

Only trained people would get to handle the birds.

Greg Sherley would lead the banding team – he did his doctorate in the rifleman or tītitipounamu.

“Ornithologists will say there’s a ‘giz’ about a bird, a G-I-Z, which is talking about the essential nature of a bird,” Sherley said.

“And rifleman males are green mainly on the top, and in the light, they glow … they glow a green. If you get them in the right sunlight … [it’s] very very much like green pounamu.”

Morag Fordham with a rifleman. RNZ / Phil Pennington

Morag Fordham had this take on the birds.

“They look like wee squeaky brussel sprouts,” Fordham laughed.

They are the country’s smallest but do not rate in the world’s top 10 tiniest, dominated by humming-birds (the smallest bee hummingbird is a third of the weight of a rifleman).

It had taken years and a 150-plus-page report to get the permits for the project – that was “the most frustrating part,” said Sherley – but now they were here.

Fordham would lead one of the three capture teams.

Another team walked in with Simon Fordham – the Fordham pair from Auckland between them have caught over a thousand of the birds (though Morag is more a kōkako specialist).

However, it was evident from the word go there was going to be a problem. The crunch of our footfalls on the gravel road was muffled by another sound.

“We’re trying to find any birds, and so we do have a problem today with cicada noise,” Fordham said.

“That not only makes it harder for us to hear where birds are, but also birds need to be closer to hear the calls that we play.”

The keen ears of Victoria University ecology students proved crucial – Ryan and Harry, who studies the North Island robin, were both on their first bird hunt but seemed especially good at hearing the super-highpitched squeak of riflemen.

A rifleman is carefully extracted from the net. RNZ / Phil Pennington

A squeak heard, the team I am in set up the net, 4m high and 7m long, along the gravel road and hung the speakers in branches either side.

After an hour waiting we have had no luck and were about to move on.

“I haven’t heard any,” said Simon Fordham. “Emma has.”

Then suddenly, we spot a bird in a tree. It flies into the net, and Fordham and a trained volunteer hurry in, then quietly and calmly get it out.

We radio in the day’s first catch to the banding station.

“Woo-hoo, that’s awesome, great work … we’ll see your rifleman soon,” they radio back.

At this point the three-and-a-half hour countdown to get the bird to Kāpiti began, from the net, to a small soft drawstring bag, to a volunteer to walk it back to the banding station on a fold-out picnic table.

Then into a wee box with a takeaway meal.

“Sometimes you’re lucky if you’re standing by the boxes, you’ll hear this ‘tu, tu, tu, tu, tu’ – it’s the wee riflemen are picking up the mealworms,” said Morag Fordham.

Cicada noise on the first day made it difficult to hear any rifleman. Steph Raille

Paddy and Gill get the job of driving the first bird to Kāpiti, the aircon on full.

“No smoking, no talking, no stereo in the car, no phones, no slamming doors … no coffee stops,” they go through the rules.

“It was a silent, freezing trip for an hour,” Paddy said.

“It felt much longer,” Gill said.

It turns out to be the only bird caught on Saturday.

On Sunday morning, coordinator Jen Andrews updated the teams.

“I thought I would mention the bird that was caught yesterday, we heard from Peter the release went really well – he arrived safe and happy, shot out-of-the-box.

“So today we’re really hoping to catch some friends, so he’s not quite the loneliest rifleman in Kāpiti.”

As it turned out, the wee male won’t be.

Sunday was earlier, greyer and the cicadas were a little quieter. It paid off.

Nine birds were caught. I got to walk one out for banding.

Morag’s team ended up catching six of Sunday’s nine.

“Phew,” she said looking down at a juvenile female in her hands. “Hello sweetheart.”

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Is it time to abandon postal voting for local elections?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Several Auckland councillors think it’s time to abandon postal voting for local elections. RNZ / Eveline Harvey

Is it time to abandon postal voting for local elections?

Several Auckland councillors think so, with voter turnout in the region continuing to decline.

Less than a third of Aucklanders voted in the 2025 local elections. Twenty-nine percent or 345,004 registered electors voted, even fewer than in the previous two elections, where 35 percent voted.

This week, the Auckland Council released data on who is voting, and who is not.

The data reflects a lot of what we already know about local elections, including that young people are less likely to vote, and that voter turnout generally increases with age.

In Auckland, the number of 18 and 19-year-olds participating in local elections dropped from 31,691 in 2019 to 20,791 in 2025, a 34 percent decrease.

Voting had increased for most age groups over 25 in that time. But there was a decline in voter turnout for those aged 61 to 75 in 2025. In 2019, 54 percent of electors in that age group voted, compared to 44 percent in 2025.

As seen in previous elections, in 2025, voter turnout was the lowest in what the council identified as socio-economically deprived neighbourhoods, particularly in southern and western Auckland.

Whau ward councillor Sarah Paterson-Hamlin. Supplied

Whau ward councillor Sarah Paterson-Hamlin said the data was “depressing but not surprising”.

“It’s really upsetting, and what’s particularly gutting about it is that the trends are getting worse, and it shows around the local board tables and council table in terms of what lived experience is being represented and what’s being discussed.”

She supported a change to in-person voting for local elections.

“Postal voting isn’t helping. Central government elections have a turnout that’s really enviable, but our local elections don’t. One of the reasons for that has to be that one is postal and one isn’t.

“The fact that it’s all done by postal vote means it takes a lot of effort to change your electoral details when you move, and if you’re renting, you’re possibly moving quite frequently. It’s another thing that increases the lack of representation from people in lower socio-economic areas.”

She suspected postal voting was also a barrier for voters with disabilities, although the council did not collect data on that demographic.

Manukau councillor Alf Filipaina. RNZ / Felix Walton

Manukau councillor Alf Filipaina agreed more should be done to increase the number of people voting in his area.

“We need to change the system and hopefully engage more people, particularly the young.”

He said several years ago, Manukau City councillors and staff would visit local schools and talk to students about issues with roaming dogs, rubbish, and wastewater and stormwater.

“I know it was taken up by most of the high schools. When we explained what the council actually does it surprised quite a few of them.

“I think that’s one way to get rangatahi engaged.”

He believed there were a lot of issues with postal voting, and that it made sense to explore other options.

His fellow Manukau councillor Lotu Fuli said voting in Auckland had reached a new low.

Manukau councillor Lotu Fuli. Nick Monro

She described postal voting as “archaic” and she strongly supported moving away from it.

She said postal voting was also “vulnerable to tampering by those seeking to undermine democracy” as seen in Papatoetoe in the last elections.

Associate professor in politics at Victoria University of Wellington, Dr Lara Greaves, said: “It’s a concern that pretty much every local election we talk about voter turnout being a really big problem. There have been multiple reviews now saying this. But we are seeing government after government not doing very much to change anything.

“Hopefully, at some point central government does something to value local government and make it a bigger part of people’s lives, perhaps making it more efficient and investing in ways to make democracy better.

“A lot of people argue that if the Electoral Commission brought in their mandate and was funded to do so, they would run local government elections in a more efficient way than the private companies who are contracted by local councils. But there’s not a lot of information about how these companies operate in the public domain.”

Political scientist & Victoria University of Wellington Associate Professor Dr Lara Greaves RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

She said the government needed to seriously look at whether postal voting was still suitable.

“There has been a decline in New Zealand post services across the country, and certain groups, especially lower socio-economic groups and younger people, are more likely to move house.

“Perhaps it’s time to rethink postal voting. Having more in-person voting locations is one thing that has often been promoted.”

She said people not knowing enough about candidates or the role of local government was also known to deter voters.

“Many components of local government and democracy could do better to explain what local government is.

“But the public aren’t necessarily crying out for more stories or information about local government, and therefore journalists and local government people don’t provide that. It becomes a bit circular and quite impossible to solve.”

Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown has been contacted for comment.

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