Better banking competition one step closer for Kiwis

Source: NZ Music Month takes to the streets

The Government is moving swiftly to ensure Kiwis will be able to benefit from open banking by Christmas this year, says Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson. 

“Recently our Government passed the Customer and Product Data Act – one of the items in our Quarter 1 Action Plan to improve competition in banking, energy, and other key sectors that touch the daily lives of Kiwis. 

“I’m pleased to announce that Cabinet has now agreed to designate banking as the first sector under the Act. This sets out the rules for how open banking will work in practice in New Zealand.”

Open banking allows third parties such as fintech (financial technology) companies to access data held by banks on behalf of a customer, with the customer’s consent. Fintechs use that data to develop innovative products and services that traditional banks might not offer, such as faster payments, speedier mortgage comparisons, and money-saving apps.

“The big four banks – ANZ, ASB, BNZ, and Westpac – will need to make sure their open banking systems meet the new requirements by 1 December. Kiwibank will need to be ready by June 2026.

“Our Government is absolutely committed to boosting competition in the banking sector to provide greater choice and lower costs to Kiwis, and that’s why we’ve acted promptly to bring open banking another crucial step closer to reality. We are leaving no stone unturned to boost competition across our economy, and I expect the banks to be fully prepared so their customers can take advantage of open banking from day one.

“Designating the banking sector is necessary to speed up the uptake of open banking in New Zealand. It will ensure the major banks are not creating unnecessary barriers for fintechs and smaller players.

“There are many examples overseas of open banking in action, and I can’t wait to see similar success stories in New Zealand. For example in Australia, open banking has helped speed up home loan applications as customers can share their banking data with brokers much faster than before.

“I’ve also seen innovative apps that help consumers find and cancel forgotten or unwanted subscription services, which would otherwise be quietly siphoning their hard-earned money.

“I’m hoping this Christmas will be an extra joyous one for Kiwi consumers, with better competition among our banks and greater choice on the horizon.”

Note to editors:

A fact sheet with further information is attached.

Training for trapping in Taumarunui

Source: Police investigating after shots fired at Hastings house

Date:  01 May 2025

Invasive predators like rats, stoats, and possums are putting pressure on nature, and are part of the reason New Zealand has one of the highest rates of threatened species in the world.

With the support of the Department of Conservation (DOC), Nelson Marlborough Institute of Technology (NMIT) is presenting the Level 3 unit Predator Trapping Methods at the DOC Simmonds Rd workshop.

DOC Community Ranger Garry Davis says there are 12 spots still available, and DOC Whanganui will fund a limited number of people to attend free of charge.

“We’re looking to sponsor people who will be willing to share their skills further, whether it be to their neighbours or with other parts of the community.”

The in-person workshop allows participants to develop understanding and practical skills in a supportive environment.

“The course is aimed at anyone interested in predator control and will benefit those who would like to trap predators on their property or in the community,” says Garry.

DOC Kaitohu Matua Treaty Partner Relationships Moira Rihia is a Taumarunui local, and thinks the time is right for the trapping workshop.

“We are passionate team for the taiao here in Taumarunui, and unsurprisingly we’re seeing growing community interest in trapping and other ways to protect nature.

“We know DOC can’t do it alone. There’s nature everywhere in our communities, it’s not just wrapped up in conservation land. All of us can contribute to make a real difference to the places we love – and predator trapping is one way to help.”

For more information or to register your interest, email gdavis@doc.govt.nz.

Background information

Course information is on the NMIT website, but sponsored positions are only available by contacting DOC.

Contact

For media enquiries contact:

Email: media@doc.govt.nz

Watercare completes new $115m watermain 20% under budget

Source: Secondary teachers question rationale for changes to relationship education guidelines

A final piece of Watercare’s $115 million new watermain carrying water to west and central Auckland was slotted into place recently after a six-year construction effort spanning seven suburbs. 

The 914mm-diameter Huia 1 watermain begins at the Titirangi reservoirs and carries water all the way to Gillies Ave in Epsom, supplying communities along its 15.5-kilometre route. 

Watercare head of water Sharon Danks was there to see the final four-metre section of pipe lowered into the ground in Heaphy St, Blockhouse Bay. 

“It’s really exciting to have our new Huia 1 watermain about to go into service. 

“It replaces an old pipeline built in the 1940s that was nearing the end of its life, and also adds capacity to our water network to support new housing. 

Watercare head of water Sharon Danks and Watercare capital delivery general manager Suzanne Lucas.

“To start with it will carry on average 30 million litres of water a day – water that originated in the western dams and we’ve treated at our Huia Water Treatment Plant. But we’ve futureproofed the Huia 1 pipeline to accommodate population growth.” 

Watercare capital delivery general manager Suzanne Lucas says the project had an approved budget of $143.5m but will be delivered for considerably less. 

“We’re thrilled to be delivering this project safely and significantly under budget. It’s tracking at $115m – almost a $30m saving on the budgeted cost.

“We found efficiencies by involving our contractor in the planning and design of the later stages of the project, and by working closely with Auckland Transport to optimise our traffic management arrangements.” 

Crews installed the pipe in stages, and not in a linear fashion. Most of the watermain is within the roading network. 

A final section of the Huia 1 replacement pipeline is lowered in.

“We’ve brought parts of the pipe into service along the way, so communities have already been seeing the benefit of this new watermain, though they may not have known it! 

“We recognise this project was disruptive to communities and commuters along the route, and we’d really like to thank everyone for their patience while we built this critical watermain. 

“It goes a long way to improving the resilience of our water network in these areas and will supply drinking water to western and central communities for generations to come.” 

Renewing and upgrading ageing infrastructure forms a major part of Watercare’s 10-year Business Plan, which the company released last month. 

About half of the $13.8 billion investment planned for the next decade will be spent on projects that replace or upgrade existing infrastructure, improving the reliability of Auckland’s water and wastewater services.  

“Reliability and growth are at the heart of our Business Plan – and this project delivers on both accounts,” Lucas says. 

Hihi thrive in new regional park home

Source: Secondary teachers question rationale for changes to relationship education guidelines

A conservation effort led by Auckland Council rangers to assist one of Aotearoa New Zealand’s most treasured native birds is delivering groundbreaking results.

At least 55 rare hihi chicks have hatched in Shakespear Regional Park’s Open Sanctuary over the summer period of 2024 / 2025 – a first for the species in more than a hundred years.   

Shakespear Regional Park’s Open Sanctuary.

Auckland Council Parks Committee chair, Councillor Ken Turner, says the commitment from staff, local iwi, volunteers, and the Department of Conservation to reintroduce hihi to the Auckland mainland is a significant step to secure the future of this distinctive forest songbird.

“I’m hugely thankful for the work that our rangers and others do to build on the conservation of our region’s flora and fauna. The success of this project will give hihi the boost it needs to flourish again, and Aucklanders an opportunity to experience these little treasures in their natural environment,” Cr Turner says.

The new chicks have emerged following a carefully managed journey in June 2024 for 40 adult hihi, also known as stitchbirds, from predator-free Tiritiri Matangi Island to a new mainland home at Shakespear Regional Park.

Senior Ranger of Shakespear Open Sanctuary Matt Maitland says the council’s Regional Parks northern team, Shakespear Open Sanctuary Society (SOSSI) and Ngāti Manuhiri Settlement Trust, who all worked together on the translocation, have been thrilled to see so many of the birds breeding.

“The number of healthy chicks to arrive has exceeded all our expectations, given it’s the first breeding season in their new home,” says Mr Maitland.  

“They are the first hihi – one of NZ’s rarest forest birds – to hatch and succeed in the area since disappearing from mainland Auckland in the 1870s.”

Mr Maitland credits an ongoing focus from partners involved in the project for its success, with translocation support provided by the Hihi Conservation Charitable Trust, the Department of Conservation Hihi Recovery Group, and Supporters of Tiritiri Matangi.

A couple of hihi were lost due to natural causes, but this is a great result compared with an unsuccessful translocation attempt in 2022, Mr Maitland says. 

The hihi is nationally threatened, with Te Hauturu-o-toi Little Barrier Island holding the only naturally-surviving population since the 1880s.

Recovery efforts have recently established small populations in pockets around the North Island, including at Tiritiri Matangi. Shakespear Open Sanctuary now brings the total number of hihi habitats to eight.

There are thought to be around 2000 hihi in the country, making it one of New Zealand’s rarest native birds.

The council and SOSSI volunteers will continue to closely monitor the new population at Shakespear Regional Park, while working with other partners to provide enhanced protection to their habitat alongside education initiatives.

SOSSI volunteer Maree Johnston and Auckland Council ranger Bruce Harrison carefully undertake the task of banding a hihi chick.

Auckland’s biggest practice-run for emergency response

Source: Secondary teachers question rationale for changes to relationship education guidelines

If you’re out and about in the Auckland region on Friday 2 May, you may see a hive of activity around some of our community centres as our emergency responders take part in Auckland’s biggest emergency relief and welfare-focused emergency response exercise.

Auckland Emergency Management’s Head of Business and Welfare John Cavanagh says this is an ambitious exercise, designed to test our emergency relief community support functions.

“Firstly, if you see emergency responders, Auckland Emergency Management staff and even some volunteer ‘actors’ busily setting up a civil defence centre in your local area, don’t be alarmed!

“We’re putting our emergency relief and welfare plans through their paces on Friday, which includes physically setting up sites and working in collaboration with our agency partners and community organisations.

“I can’t give too much away about the scenario – the nature of an exercise means we like to keep the details as real as possible, which means delivering them to our teams in ‘real time’ – but what I can say is that it will be a severe weather event.

“It won’t come as a surprise to many why we’ve chosen weather – Auckland is experiencing more of these volatile weather events and the impacts of severe weather can be widely felt,” he says.

Do you have a plan?

Preparing your home or property and making a plan with friends, neighbours and family can go a long way to staying safe in an emergency. Some emergencies may mean you need to leave your home at short notice.

  • Know your risk: visit Auckland Council’s Flood Viewer to find out if your home or property will be affected by flooding (take the link or search ‘Auckland Council flood viewer’).

  • Visit aucklandemergencymanagement.govt.nz for guides on making a plan and preparing for an emergency.

  • getready.govt.nz also has lots of useful information, including alternate formats like New Zealand Sign Language; audio, large print, easy read and Braille guides; and translated information.

Weather forecasts and alerts

Exercise note

If a ‘real’ emergency situation arises during the exercise, Auckland Emergency Management and our partner agencies have protocols in place to either move out of exercise mode or manage concurrent monitoring and emergency response.

All exercise communications will be clearly labelled as Exercise Manaaki and should not be published on public channels, however if the public does see or hear more about the exercise, they should not be alarmed.

Discover midtown’s hidden art gems

Source: Secondary teachers question rationale for changes to relationship education guidelines

Etched into the walls of our city, street culture never grows old.

This arts season, discover some exciting and mysterious art that you might never have noticed before.

Auckland Council Head of City Centre Programmes Jenny Larking calls it a hidden collection of our art history.

“Standing in a single spot in Durham Lane West it’s possible to take in the city’s oldest existing piece of graffiti culture, a mid-1990s view of place, and a contemporary portrayal of what our feet stand on beneath the central city.

“Some of these artworks are a celebration of Te Waihorotiu stream, which flows underground, a treasured stream that’s also honoured in the name of the new station taking shape in the area,” she says.  

Here’s more about this unique urban experience:

Durham Lane West

Lane Change by John Radford 1995 – in Durham Lane West.

Artist John Radford’s Lane Change, on the wall of an underpass off Durham Lane West, remembers a slice of Auckland’s history. The artwork cements a replica façade of an 1880s building, which was in Shortland Street, into the wall.

Directly opposite Lane Change is a John Radford mural ‘…that was then, and that was then…’ completed in 1994 in this backstreet shrine to street culture.

This artwork also explores themes of buildings past. Both artworks were funded from a donation by a property development company responsible for a large development in the area at the time, part of Auckland City Council’s incentive scheme for the creation of public art and public spaces by private companies.

In ‘…that was then, and that was then…’ words and phrases overlap and intersect to represent the passage of time. The words draw from Auckland’s history and include the names of Māori pā sites, natural features, and local businesses that have been built over and around in the landscape of Tāmaki Makaurau.

In 2010 an unknown contractor inadvertently painted over the mural. The artist, John Radford, restored the work leaving some of the grey paint to add to the evolution and meaning of the artwork.

“I think it adds to the look of the work. There are now more traces of layers on the wall,” the artist told The Aucklander at the time.

Walk further into the underpass and discover the Queen Street City Beat mural created in 1986 by Opto & Dick Clique (Otis and Dick Frizzell).   

In 1986, 15-year-old Otis Frizzell recruited his well-known artist father as free labour to help him with this historic graffiti mural painted in the alleyway. Otis recalls the council of the time wanted to brighten up the inner city and he was commissioned to create the mural.   

The only real graffiti art reference available at the time was the movie Beat Street, so the artist wrote QUEEN STREET CITY BEAT. The mural depicts a characterisation of Queen Street at the time featuring recognisable buildings – the Classic Cinema, Auckland Town Hall, Keans Jeans, the neon cowboy and McDonalds. 

Otis Frizzell says: “I’m stoked to get a chance to breathe some new life into this old mural. Of course when I painted this with my Dad back in ’86 I had no idea it would last so long, and eventually become one of the oldest existing Street Art pieces in Aotearoa.”

Opposite the Frizzell work is Holly Mafaufau’s Tāmaki Makaurau completed in 2024.

Holly enjoys the conceptual, problem-solving aspect of design and takes a similar approach to the walls she paints. She says that words are weapons, and public walls are an opportunity to speak to people.

“This artwork acknowledges the historic bodies of water of the area and their importance in the provision of kai (food). It was created with the intention to soften a hard urban space while contributing to the collection of existing artworks in this space,” Holly says.   

Airedale Street  

Artist Poi Ngawati.

Exciting new artworks curated by Ross Liew for Auckland Council have transformed the Airedale Street steps, a popular pathway between Auckland University of Technology and Queen Street.

A mural has been created by artist Poi Ngawati (Waikato Tainui, Ngāti Patupo, Ngāti Whawhaki, Ngāti Mahuta, Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Hine). 

Titled Te Huinga Tai – The gathering of tides, this vibrant piece of street art talks about the meeting of tides from all around the world. Depicted via a modern Māori stylised pūhoro design, the work reflects five key values; people first, pursue excellence, embrace change, act with integrity and serve our world. 

The north facing walls are painted in shades of violet purple and the south facing walls shades of teal. This colour combination speaks of day and night, light and dark, and how the waters of Te Waihorotiu continue to flow beneath the streets.

Accompanying the mural is a new collaborative light work suspended in the tree above, created by Poi Ngawati and Angus Muir to complete the transformation of this space. The design speaks to the connection between the stars, ocean, and iwi guiding our journeys and shaping our stories.

The flowing forms represent rain, linking Ranginui and Papatūānuku. By day, it moves with the environment; by night, it connects to the stars above. 

Midtown street parties

On the way to or from the next midtown street party – on the third Thursday of each month – Aucklanders are encouraged to stroll to Durham Lane West and Airedale Street to witness street art they might never have noticed before.

Midtown street parties are enabled by Auckland Council to build vibrancy and support local businesses in the newly-emerging neighbourhood around Te Waihorotiu Station, with funds from the city centre targeted rate.

Read the midtown street party schedule at OurAuckland.

Greens mark May Day with Green Jobs Guarantee

Source: It’s time to fix the secondary teacher shortage

The Green Party has marked May Day with a pre-budget announcement in Tokoroa, detailing the party’s plan for a Green Jobs Guarantee.

“New Zealanders should be in control of our economy, our jobs and our future. We don’t need to leave our fate to be decided by international shareholders,” says Green Party co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick. 

“From the West Coast of the South Island, to Ohakune, to Tokoroa, in the last year alone, we’ve heard the same devastation driven by the same political decisions to let offshore companies decide the fate of regional communities.

“No more.

“Today, we launch our Green Jobs Guarantee, which will directly create at least 40,000 jobs across this country to rebuild our infrastructure, plant native trees and restore biodiversity, build homes and an economy that we, New Zealanders, own – and can genuinely be proud of.

“We’ve done it before and we can do it again. Before politicians took their hands off the wheel of the economy 40 years ago and sold off the assets we all used to own, we had a Ministry of Works. Our Ministry of Green Works builds on that proud tradition but is future fit for the climate transition.

“Our Future Workforce Agency, Mahi Anamata, will actively plan for the skills we need. We’ll revitalise and supercharge the roaring success of Jobs for Nature, and we’ll ensure everyone in this country who wants a good, decent, living-wage paying job will get one.

“In a time of global volatility, after a forty-year economic experiment that’s failed regular people and is currently seeing record numbers leave the country, it’s time to take back control and build our resilience.

“A better world is possible, and this is how we build it,” says Chlöe Swarbrick.

Letter to the editor

Source:

There have been many articles in newspapers in the past few years about the shortage of relief teachers, and especially now as schools struggle to replace isolating teachers and sick teachers to keep schools open, but no one is asking why this shortage exists.

During the 1990s there was a push for bulk funding teachers so that schools could pay them according to their wishes, not the existing scale. Teachers fought back and this was not enacted, except for relief teachers who were bulk funded and are now limited to being paid at level 6 on the teachers’ scale. An experienced teacher is on level 9. In the UK and NSW relief teachers are paid according to their level of experience. This means New Zealand relief teachers are paid significantly less than their experience demands, so each time they are employed they are donating part of their wages to the education system. 

There is significant prejudice against relief teachers as well. Teachers and union workers have been heard to say, ‘Well they don’t have the marking, or the moderation or the meetings’.  This is true, but neither do many groups: counsellors, management, and primary teachers and there is often subject difference in marking between teachers.

Instead, relief teachers have their own stresses including no security of employment, often improvising in subjects they do not know, being poorly informed about special needs students in the classes who they have to understand and help, and holiday pay is proportional to their work, yet they cannot be employed during the holidays.

Teachers’ pay is hard fought for and people say that, ‘there is only so much pie to be shared’ about the pay offer from the government. So often that pie has been won by trampling on the aspirations for fair pay for relief teachers. And now the government is trying to keep schools open and wondering where the relief teachers are.

– Desiree Mulligan, Hutt Valley High School

Last modified on Wednesday, 17 May 2023 09:12

Privacy News – April 2025

Source:

Read about our Privacy Week 2025 lineup and resources, IPP3A guidance and how to have your say, and new tips for using AI to contact OPC.

Read the April 2025 issue.

Te Pāti Māori: Keep the Window Open- UCOL Must Stay

Source:

Te Pāti Māori stands firmly against any moves to downsize or close UCOL Whanganui. With over 30% of students identifying as Māori, the campus is a vital lifeline for education, upskilling, and community transformation in Te Tai Hauāuru.

“Matapihi ki te Ao is more than a name, it’s a promise. A window to the world for our rangatahi and whānau,” says Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer.

“We won’t sit back while this Government shuts the door on Māori futures. Our commitment is clear—we would invest more in regional tertiary education, not less.”

Te Pāti Māori would strengthen funding for adult and rangatahi learners, expand access to kaupapa Māori support services, and ensure local iwi shape the future of learning in their own rohe.

“This Government’s attack on vocational training is short-sighted and regressive. Job cuts don’t just mean fewer roles, they mean the loss of experienced and passionate kaimahi who genuinely care for their students. It devalues the people who have held up our communities through education.

“We’re here to protect what matters: our right to learn, to lead, and to live well in our own communities. We say, keep the window open,” concluded Ngarewa-Packer.