‘Culture is the winner’: All Stars clash proves it’s more than just a game

Source: Radio New Zealand

Adam Pompey leads a Māori cultural performance in the build-up to the Māori v Indigenous All Stars Rugby League match at FMG Stadium, Hamilton. DJ Mills

“Culture is the winner at the end of the day.”

That’s how Indigenous Men’s captain Nicho Hynes summed up this year’s NRL All Stars clash – a draw on the scoreboard, but something far bigger off it.

“We all want to win,” he said.

“But when you look back on it, two proud cultures are walking away winners. Culture is the winner at the end of the day. That’s way more important than the end result for me.”

The annual fixture between the Indigenous All Stars and the New Zealand Māori side began in 2010 as a deliberate platform to showcase Indigenous excellence and leadership in rugby league.

More than 15 years on, players say the kaupapa remains important, not just as a game, but as a space to stand in their culture, reconnect with who they are, and inspire the next generation watching on.

Tthe Māori v Indigenous, Women’s All Stars Rugby League match at FMG Stadium, Hamilton. DJ Mills / Photosport

Māori Wāhine Toa All Star captain Kennedy Cherrington said the jersey sits above Origins and World Cups.

“I’ve been honoured to play in Origins, World Cups and Grand Finals,” she told RNZ.

“But we’re Māori first. Culture is the number one.”

Cherrington said the message she wanted rangatahi to take away from kaupapa like this is to stand tall in their identity.

“The conversation I really want to get through to our young rangatahi coming through is to be proud to be Māori. No whakamā around being Māori.

“I want people to have that mana and strength in saying, ‘I’m Māori,’ not that whakamā and going, ‘Oh, I don’t really want to tell anyone.'”

Her own haerenga of reconnection has been closely tied to the All Stars environment, she said.

“The message I want to get across to our Māori living overseas, or that may be born somewhere else, is to come home, visit home more often and reclaim our language and our culture because home is calling you, our tūpuna are calling you.”

Asked who she was playing for, Cherrington said it went beyond the name on her jersey.

“There’s a lot more than just the last name,” she said.

“It’s the thousands of generations that have come before.”

Kennedy Cherrington says the Maori jersey stands above them all. Instagram

That same sense of whakapapa and responsibility was reiterated across the Māori camp.

Zahara Temara said players were left feeling inspired during the week, after hearing from Te Pāti Māori MP for Hauraki Waikato Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke.

“She said ‘everyone watches sport, you know, not everyone watches politics and your voice does have weight’.

“We do have a platform and we should use it.”

That kōrero resonated across the packed out room, she said.

“We were all inspired by it… we’re inspired to help our indigenous brothers and sisters over across the ditch and, of course, ours back home.”

That cultural pride, Temara said, cannot be confined to a single fixture.

“It needs to be 365 days of the year,”

“We’re Māori first and we’ve got to represent that.”

Shanice Parker says becoming a mum has strengthened her passion to learn more about her Māori whakapapa and her son’s First Nations heritage. Instagram / Shanice Parker

Teammate Shanice Parker described the match as part of her own journey home.

She told RNZ she did not connect with her biological father’s whānau until her mid-teens.

“I felt like there was a missing piece of me,” she said.

“And then once I found that, so much made sense.”

Parker said the match offers more than visibility, and was in fact “more than just a game”.

“The social impact initially for both of our people, they are at a social disadvantage in both of our countries,” she said.

“But this showcases that we can be the pinnacle of whatever we want to do. Sport is just the vehicle. Culture underpinning this week feeds our wairua and who we are.”

The indigenous team deliver a cultural performance before the Māori v Indigenous Women’s All Stars League match at FMG Stadium, Hamilton. DJ Mills

Across the Tasman, Indigenous co-captain Quincy Dodd said the game itself was only “the little sprinkle on the top”.

“The whole week is what makes it,” she said.

“We create our own little story this week. Everyone starts their own little journeys, but we just keep building each and every year.”

Indigenous coach Jedd Skinner said the visibility of Māori, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in elite spaces was crucial.

“They see it. They can do it,” she said.

“And at the end of the day, if we keep inspiring Māori boys and girls and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander boys and girls at home to play this great game, then we’ve done our job regardless of the score.”

She said the match carries a broader purpose.

“It’s about reconciliation, right? We’re trying to educate the wider society of two strong First Nations cultures. And I think, that is success as well.”

“We hold each other, we walk with each other and we go on this journey and celebrate each other…This week helps us do that.”

Skinner described the relationship between the two cultures as close and familiar.

“Sport and politics, they don’t usually mould well together, but sport does show what we can do and it does show how strong we are. And I think that when we get it right on and off the field, we only elevate each other.

“Younger sister, older sister, we fight in the same fights,” she said.

Indigenous’ Nicholas Hynes (L) & Māori’s James Fisher-Harris (R) during the Maori v Indigenous, All Stars Rugby League match, Hamilton. DJ Mills / Photosport

Speaking to media post-match Hynes said criticism that the fixture has “run its time” missed the point.

“If you’re going to talk about this in a negative light, come spend a week in camp,” he said.

“Come to the marae, come to the cultural dinner, come and sit in a session when we talk in a circle about what it means to us.”

He pointed to the packed jersey presentation as evidence of its significance for players and wider whānau.

“That’s because their parents and family come over for this game because that’s how much it means to them,” he said.

Coach Ron Griffiths said the impact stretches beyond the field.

“At this point in time, 44 percent of out-of-home care children in Australia are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander,” he said.

“For us, it’s about creating generational change by inspiring people or understanding that at that moment in time, whether it’s Nan or Pop or Mum or Grandad who have spent their hard-earned money to come here or pay for Sky TV or whatever that is, for that moment in time, they get to forget about their problems and just watch their stars and get lost in that.

“For 80 minutes, whatever’s going on in their life, they can just shelve that and watch their heroes.”

James Fisher-Harris in action for the NZ Māori against the Australian Indigenous men at FMG Stadium. PhotoSport / DJ Mills

Hynes agreed and said there would be tamariki in the stands, or watching at home, imagining themselves in the jersey.

“Our young Indigenous kids out in rural areas don’t get much. What they do have is dreams.”

“And dreams can turn into reality by seeing these events,” he said.

“There’s probably some Māori kids out there going through some tough times, but they probably rocked up here today seeing their idols do the haka, everyone’s singing and dancing in the grandstands and they want to be a young James Fisher-Harris or a Keanu Kini or Briton Nikora. That’s their hopes and dreams.

“And some people don’t get hopes and dreams and we’re able to provide that.”

He reflected on his own journey, and said while it was a tough road to get where he was today, “it’s so worth it”.

“For people like me, I didn’t grow up in my culture and I’ve always been loud and proud ever since coming into these camps,” he said.

“No one can ever take that away from me and no one can take that away from our people.”

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Iwi welcomes government’s two year ban on harvesting rockpools north of Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

People with buckets by the rock pools at Army Bay on the Whangaparāoa Peninsula. MARK LENTON / SUPPLIED

Local iwi Ngāti Manuhiri has welcomed the government’s two-year ban on harvesting rockpools in the north of Auckland.

The ban is for all of the Whangaparāoa Peninsula, and further north at Kawau Bay and Ōmaha Bay and will take affect from 12 March.

All seaweed, invertebrate and shellfish were covered as well as sponges, starfish, anemone and sea cucumbers.

Spiny rock lobster and scallops were already covered by existing closures, sea urchin (kina) were also excluded and can still be taken within current recreational fishing limits.

Ngāti Manuhiri Settlement trust chief executive Nicola Rata-MacDonald said the announcement couldn’t have come fast enough.

“Every year we see a lot of people enjoying our beaches, fantastic, but what we also see is unprecedented harvesting and foraging of really vulnerable ecosystems and we just can’t take it anymore.”

The trust applied for a two-year prohibition on harvesting all shellfish and seaweeds from rockpools across the eastern coastline of the Rodney Local Board and Hibiscus Local Board areas, made under section 186A of the Fisheries Act.

As part of its formal application the Trust will also place a rāhui over the same area and species.

Rata-MacDonald said two years will be a start for shellfish to recover and the iwi will be working with Fisheries New Zealand, DOC and community groups to monitor the rockpools.

Whether they ask to extend the ban after two years will depend on whether there is a recovery of shellfish populations, she said.

“But one thing we will know is that you can bet your bottom dollar we’ll be going out to those beaches and checking up on them.”

Rata-MacDonald said she has spoken with Fisheries Officials who were keen to look at ways the local community can get involved.

“Our oceans are under serious pressure. The long term focus is can we actually recover species that are on the brink of decline, we’ve seen that in the Hauraki Gulf with koura with crayfish with scallops so we need to really look at how do we ensure the intertidal species don’t disappear, they are the very engineers of the ocean and without them everything collapses.”

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Campers evacuate overnight after Wainui River burst its banks

Source: Radio New Zealand

There were six campers at the Herbertville Campground when it was evacuated. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

Campers and some residents of the tiny coastal settlement of Herbertville rushed to the community hall in the early hours of this morning after the Wainui River burst its banks.

The evacuation came three years and two days after the river last burst its banks in the Tararua District township, southeast of Dannevirke, flooding the pub and campground during Cyclone Gabrielle.

On that occasion, a build up of slash at the road bridge into Herbertville’s entrance created a dam, which diverted the water.

Last night, there was no slash, but there was enough water in the river for it to rise fast.

Herbertville Campground manager Chris Cawsey said on Monday he’d had a sleepless night due to the storm.

“About 1.15am the river burst its banks about halfway down the campground,” he said.

“It rose about 4 1/2 feet in 49 minutes. The remaining campers who were in the campground, we got to evacuate.”

Herbertville Campground manager Chris Cawsey says the rising river burst its banks about 1.30am. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

Six campers headed to the community hall and have since found other places to stay. Cawsey said his family spent the night at another house in the settlement away from the danger.

The river was still flowing quickly when RNZ visited at lunchtime on Monday, but had dropped from its peak.

Cawsey and his family were back at the campground and he said he’d keep an eye on the river’s level.

There was surface flooding near the campground entrance.

Surface flooding was still visible at the campground on Monday. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

Cawsey said he was disappointed the town’s flood warning system didn’t activate, and that settlement residents didn’t receive any warning through their phones, although he did get a call from the council on Sunday night.

Herbertville Inn owners John and Miki Sedcole also evacuated to the community hall.

John Sedcole, who managed the campground when Cyclone Gabrielle hit, said this time the water did not funnel down the street like it did in 2023.

“We came back to the hotel about 5.30am after the high tide and the water had receded a bit,” he said.

“Now, power’s our biggest problem, but thank goodness we bought a generator and we’re able to have all our fridges on the generator, so we’re okay.”

John Sedcole. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

Sedcole was not sure if he would open tonight, but said it might be a good idea so locals could have a place to gather and discuss what had happened.

He emptied his rain gauge this morning and it had 150 millilitres of water in it – Cawsey reported more than 120ml in his.

Gusts of more 200kmh were recorded at nearby Cape Turnagain. Although it was windy in Herbertville, Sedcole said it wasn’t at that level.

Cawsey said it was violent in the early hours of the morning, but the area was used to high winds.

Roads around the settlement had some fallen branches and debris from trees on them, but roading crews were in the area doing clearing the surfaces.

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Winds gust to 240km/h on lower North Island’s east coast

Source: Radio New Zealand

A tree blown onto a car in the Wellington suburb of Brooklyn. RNZ / Pokere Paewai

Wind gusts measuring up to 240km/h have been recorded on the east coast of the lower North Island with gusts of up to 190km/h hitting high parts of Wellington.

MetService said the strong winds and heavy rain were set to linger over the lower North Island before gradually heading southwards later on Monday and on Tuesday.

Gusts measuring up to 240km/h have been recorded at Cape Turnagain on the east coast of the lower North Island.

While in Wellington, winds have reached up to 190km/h in high parts – and about 130km/h in the city.

MetService meteorologist John Law said a low pressure system sitting to the east of the North Island was expected to track slowly southwards.

He said heavy rain and severe gales were expected to continue over central and southern parts of the North Island as well as reaching eastern parts of the South Island and Chatham Islands.

“The good news is – as we head through the day today – we should start to see those winds easing off – so we’ve probably seen the peak of those winds. But even by Wellington standards it’s a very windy start to the week,” Law said.

A flooded Waiwhetu stream in Lower Hutt. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Law said “intense bursts of rain” had seen up to 200mm of rain fall over parts of Wairarapa overnight Monday.

“With that low pressure out to the east of the North Island it’s been pushing the rain in particularly across those lower parts. Cape Palliser has seen some of the highest rainfall. Intense bursts of rain through there and just prolonged rain through the night-time. As we saw In parts of the Hutt Valley that combination of strong winds and heavy rain are bringing all sorts of impacts,” Law said.

He said hard hit parts of southern Waikato, such as Otorohanga, should see clearing conditions over the oncoming days.

“The good news – as we head through today – this rain is clearing away down towards the south. Still a few showers possible but nowhere near the level we’ve seen in recent days. While a few showers are still possible for today things are getting better,” he said.

Law said that more weather warnings could be on the way as the low pressure system slowly headed southwards.

“This weather system is sticking with us. A big area of high pressure out to the east is blocking the movement of this low so it stays close by. It will sink southwards which will push that rain in towards parts of the South Island. So places like the Kaikōura Coast, parts of Canterbury particularly – places like Banks Peninsula – already have some severe weather watches and warnings. We may well find more issued for parts of those eastern areas of the South Island,” Law said.

Law said rain over the eastern side of the South Island was less likely to be as intense as the system migrated southwards over coming days and south westerly flows were expected to help clear the system during Tuesday and early Wednesday.

“That’s when we finally say good-bye to this weather system,” Law said.

Other notable MetService weather stats:

  • Gisborne, Taupō, Waiouru, Wellington, Whanganui and Kaikōura have already exceeded the amount of rainfall they would typically expect to receive in February.
  • The Baring Head buoy in Wellington Harbour recorded a significant wave height of 7.54 metres at 11.06pm on Sunday. A significant wave height is the average height of the highest one-third of waves.
  • Mt Kaukau and Wellington Airport measured 193 km/h and 128 km/h, their strongest winds since June 2013, when they reached 202 km/h and 143 km/h respectively.
  • The Kelburn weather station recorded 133 km/h, its strongest winds from a southerly direction since June 2013, when a southerly wind of 141 km/h was measured.

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Youth motocross in focus as coroner orders joint inquest into four fatalities

Source: Radio New Zealand

10-year-old Jack Willson died in a motocross accident in Taupō in April 2023. Supplied

The deaths of four young people in separate motocross accidents over a two-year span will be the focus of a joint Coronial inquest, placing the safety of the sport under scrutiny.

At a case management hearing in Auckland on Monday, Coroner Ian Telford ordered a joint inquest into the deaths of Jack Willson, 10, Luke Ngeru, 15, Eli Hankins, 12, and Wai’aryn Mills, 14. The boys died in accidents between April 2023 and September 2025 at tracks around the North Island.

Telford said that while each case was individually challenging, taken together they presented “a very complex matrix of issues” that required careful and coordinated examination.

The precise scope of the inquest is yet to be determined.

“At this stage it is impossible to say what the scope of the inquest will be …I’m conscious that a lot of work needs to be undertaken before we are at that stage,” he said.

Telford said he anticipated one of the key issues for the inquest to determine is whether “the public interest would be served by these matters being investigated by other authorities”.

Motorcycling New Zealand and the four boys’ respective clubs will be interested parties to the inquest.

Telford acknowledged the weight of the proceedings for the families involved.

“It is without question an extraordinarily difficult day for everybody involved, and particularly the parents of Jack, Luke, Eli and Wai’aryn,” he said.

“No parent would wish to find themselves in a coroner’s court speaking about their children in such dreadful circumstances.”

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The joint inquest builds on earlier proceedings into Jack Willson’s death. The Cambridge 10-year-old died after a crash while racing at the Digger McEwen Motocross Park in Taupō in April 2023.

Telford had previously issued findings on the specific circumstances of Jack’s death, with a second stage planned for October last year to examine how similar serious crashes might be prevented.

That hearing was paused after Telford became the responsible coroner for three other young riders who died in what he described as “broadly similar circumstances”.

Details of those cases were temporarily suppressed to allow their families to be informed of the process. The suppression order was lifted on Monday.

The additional cases to be considered involve Luke Ngeru, who died in September 2023 following a motocross accident in Whanganui; Eli Hankins, who died in February 2025 after sustaining a serious head injury during a club day at Auckland’s Pukekohe Motorcycle track; and Wai’aryn Mills, of Pirongia, who died in September last year after a training accident on a Huntly track.

The inquest will seek to establish the circumstances of each death and to consider whether any broader recommendations can be drawn.

A timetable for the inquest is yet to be set.

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Two assaults in central Auckland over the weekend

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Yiting Lin

Two separate assaults in the Auckland CBD over the weekend are being investigated by police.

Police received a report of a person being assaulted in Quay Street by a group of men unknown to them at about 11.40pm on Saturday.

The victim’s phone and bag were also stolen, and they were taken to hospital with moderate injuries.

Police said they were making inquiries to identify those responsible.

Just after midnight on Sunday, another person was injured under the Nelson Street off-ramp overbridge and was taken to hospital with an apparent stab wound.

Police said they were determining the exact circumstances of the incident and who was involved.

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Moa Point sewage failure to be independently reviewed

Source: Radio New Zealand

Moa Point. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The government has confirmed there will be an independent review looking into the Moa Point treatment plant failure.

On 4 February, the plant failed, sending millions of litres of raw sewage into the Cook Strait per day.

Last week, Wellington Mayor Andrew Little met with Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Local Government Minister Simon Watts to discuss the treatment plant’s failure.

Following the meeting, Little said the three agreed an independent inquiry was needed.

Watts said the failure of the capital’s wastewater infrastructure, and the impact it has had on communities, the economy and the environment were “completely unacceptable” and an “independent and transparent” inquiry was required to determine the causes.

“The public is owed the assurance that we understand what led to this failure and that we are taking steps to prevent it from happening again.”

The Crown review team, made up of independent senior water services sector figures with “relevant technical engineering, governance, commercial and legal expertise” will be appointed to both Wellington City Council and Wellington Water.

Mayor Andrew Little. RNZ / Mark Papalii

“The review team will be tasked with delivering clear, actionable recommendations which set out concrete next steps, including specific actions for Wellington City Council where necessary,” Watts said.

Because management of water services will move from Wellington Water to the new council-controlled organisation Tiaki Wai Ltd, Watts said timely findings and recommendations were needed.

On Sunday, Wellington Water chair Nick Leggett resigned, saying stepping aside would allow Wellington Water to focus on fixing the problems and restoring public trust.

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District court judge accused of yelling at Winston Peters faces cross-examination

Source: Radio New Zealand

District Court Judge Ema Aitken at the Judicial Conduct Panel on Monday. Finn Blackwell / RNZ

A district court judge has told a judicial conduct panel she was her normal self and not affected by alcohol, as she fights an accusation she disrupted a New Zealand First event.

Judge Ema Aitken is before the panel accused of yelling at Winston Peters during an event at Auckland’s Northern Club in November 2024, saying he was lying. She argues she did not yell, did not recognise Peters, and did not know it was a political event.

The panel continued to hear from Aitken on Monday, resuming her evidence from last week.

She told the panel about a statement released in the wake of the alleged disruption. It had been drafted as a response from Chief District Court Judge Heemi Taumaunu, who had emailed the judge for her input.

She was called by Taumaunu while drafting her response, and told him – and media advisors listening in – that she wanted the statement to include that she did not know who the speaker was or that it was a political event, when she made her remarks.

“The verbal response to me in that call was along the lines of, ‘No, we don’t want to put that in the statement, it’s just buying a fight with New Zealand First,'” Aitken said.

“It was explained that the point of the statement from the chief district court judge was to try and shut the whole thing down in the press.”

Aitken said by 18 December 2024, she had not sought or received legal advice.

“I genuinely did not appreciate the seriousness of the situation, in that it was being advanced as inappropriate conduct by a sitting district court judge which was intentionally and politically motivated,” she said.

Her lawyer, David Jones KC, had asked Aitken about a letter from the attorney-general to the chief justice, claiming she had called out Peters by name during the alleged disruption. That was something Aitken denied.

“I never referred to him by name,” she said. “I didn’t know who he was when I made my comments.”

The panel heard late last week from other district court judges who had been sitting at Aitken’s table during a function at the Northern Club that night. The NZ First event was happening in a separate part of the club.

Judges and others from the table had been called at the request of special counsel, but Jones asked Aitken if she had any issue with them coming to give evidence.

“If I had asked them to come along and give evidence, I have no doubt at all that they would have come,” she said. “But I also appreciated that this was likely to be a very public hearing, and I did not want to put my colleagues in the position of having to give evidence.”

Aitken said she did not want to drag her colleagues into what she called “my problem”.

“This was my conduct and not theirs.”

Then Attorney-General Judith Collins. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The panel was played a news clip of then Attorney-General Judith Collins reacting to the disruption.

Collins had said she was “appalled” by her behaviour, but Aitken said the attorney-general had the wrong information.

“I was shocked,” Aitken said. “The information the attorney is basing her comments on is incorrect. Disturbingly, this had been the tenor of media reports and commentary based on incorrect information.”

Aitken was cross-examined by special counsel Tim Stephens KC later on Monday morning.

He began by asking Aitken about the background of her legal career, her time working as a lawyer, and ultimately her appointment as a district court judge.

Stephens asked about her relationship with te ao Māori in the courts. Aitken said she kept her obligations as a judge in mind by acknowledging the crest of the New Zealand coat of arms that hung inside the courts.

“Our responsibility as Treaty partners, whether we’re pākeha or Māori, as judges is to give effect to the coat of arms, which has Māori and pākeha equally depicted in a balanced way in that coat of arms,” she said.

“So I always glance at it when I enter the court, and I do that to remind myself that I must judge without fear or favour, affection or ill will, whoever’s before the court.”

The Northern Club. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Stephens questioned the judge on what she had had to drink that night at the Northern Club. She recalled she had between one and two glasses of champagne.

It was suggested by Stephens she may have been “disinhibited” by the alcohol.

“You must have been affected to some extent?” he asked.

Aitken rejected that suggestion.

“I was not affected in any way that I felt or discerned at the time,” she said. “I was my normal, tired self.”

Stephens asked Aitken if she recalled saying Peters’ comments were lies or misinformation.

“I’ve never been able to remember the precise words that I used – I’ve maintained that from the outset because I don’t, but they would have been to that effect.”

She disputed calling the comments disgusting, saying she “did not use those words”.

“That’s just not a phrase that I would use, ‘this is disgusting’, in that context. I may have said ‘this is appalling’ – that would be the sort of phrase I might have used – but I did not use that expression.”

The hearing continues on Monday afternoon.

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Services sector growth slows but stays in expansion

Source: Radio New Zealand

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  • Services sector expands at a slower pace in January
  • Sales activity continues rising, employment falls
  • Proportion of negative comments increases
  • BNZ says economy is on the right track

The services sector recovery slowed to a crawl last month.

The BNZ-BusinessNZ Performance of Services Index (PSI) fell by 0.8 points to 50.9 in January, below its long-term average of 52.8.

A reading above 50 indicates the sector, which accounts for nearly three quarters of the economy, is expanding.

BusinessNZ’s chief executive Katherine Rich said despite the slowdown in January the sector remained on the right side of the ledger after such a lengthy period of contraction.

Activity/sales was the only sub-index to rise in January, with a softer reading for new orders/business, while stocks/inventories, supplier deliveries, and employment moved further into contraction.

The proportion of negative comments climbed to 58.7 percent, with firms reporting low confidence, holiday shutdowns and high operating costs.

BNZ senior economist Doug Steel preferred to concentrate on the direction of travel of the data, rather than one month’s results, saying that “the big question to end 2025 was whether the economy may be turning”.

“Data since then has given us confidence that recent positive momentum can be sustained. The economy is growing.”

The combined PSI/PMI activity indicators are consistent with BNZ’s forecasts of rising GDP this year, according to Steel.

He expected the Reserve Bank to leave interest rates unchanged this week, but a key question for the Reserve Bank would be when does increasing economic growth start translating into higher inflation.

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What to pack in emergency ‘grab and go’ bags

Source: Radio New Zealand

When an earthquake, tsunami warning or flood strikes, you won’t have time to decide what to take.

National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) recommends a small bag for each person with essentials, such as sturdy walking shoes, warm clothes, raincoat and hat, water and snack food, hand sanitiser, portable phone charger, cash (small notes/coins), and copies of important documents and photo ID (printed or scanned to your phone).

Don’t forget any regular medications and special-diet items, first aid kit, mask/face covering, torch and battery/solar/wind-up radio (plus batteries) for outages. For people with disabilities, include items such as spare batteries for hearing-aids or pen and paper for sign language users.

This video is hosted on Youtube.

As for what kind of food and how much water, Ngāi Tahu iwi’s emergency guidance recommends three days’ worth of non-perishable, ready-to-eat food and a can opener plus two 500ml water bottles and purification tablets. These should be checked annually and replaced if expired.

An example of food rations employers might consider including is provided by NEMA, but the agency also notes the type of work being done should be factored in. For example, physical labour versus office desk jobs.

Consumer NZ recommends long-life food items that don’t require refrigeration so they can be placed in your bag ahead of time. The organisation also suggests adding thick gloves and hygiene supplies (tissues, wet wipes, toothbrush/toothpaste).

Wellington Region Emergency Management Office advises writing a list of evacuation actions in advance (turn off utilities and locking doors).

Some “nice to haves” may include entertainment (pack of cards, book, music player, etc), glow sticks, matches, flash drive with photos of all the rooms and contents, small shovel, hi-vis vest, Swiss army knife, waste disposal bags, and a local map marked with destinations and contacts.

Consumer NZ doesn’t recommend including sleeping bags or blankets in grab bags, unless they’re light enough to not add too much weight over a long walking distance.

“Emergency evacuation centres, such as community hubs, will usually have blankets for emergencies,” the say.

If you’re away from home

In winter driving conditions, keep a brush, shovel, tyre chains, windscreen scraper, warm clothing, walking shoes, waterproof jacket, medicines, snacks, water, phone charger lead and a torch in the vehicle.

Schools and ECEs

Early childhood centres’ emergency plan may include supplies for keeping children warm/dry as well as age-appropriate supplies, such as infant formula, clean bottles, nappies, based on numbers and needs. But there is no set supplies list, according to the Ministry of Education.

Check your child’s school evacuation plan and whether you must provide a waterproof container of items or what their plans in an emergency are.

Workplaces

NEMA says employers should hold three days’ supplies for everyone onsite (including visitors) and encourage staff to keep work grab bags in case they must walk home.

Plan for serious injuries — have blankets, stretchers and a full first aid kit until emergency services arrive.

Animals

Include pets and livestock in emergency planning — failing to plan for them puts lives at risk, NEMA says.

RNZ, the statutory civil defence lifeline broadcaster, offers additional emergency guides, including phone-use tips, protecting sentimental items and managing medication.

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