Call for changes to tackle overheating homes in summer

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

Too many new homes are overheating in the increasingly hot summers and the government is being urged to follow other countries’ leads and do something about it.

There is currently nothing in the Building Act to prevent new builds – particularly terraced homes and apartments – from experiencing “unacceptably high indoor temperatures”, as is being “widely reported by homeowners, designers, and the construction sector”, an open letter to Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk released on Monday morning read.

The letter was signed by Phil Wilson, chief executive of Auckland Council, and his counterpart at the New Zealand Green Building Council, Andrew Eagles, and backed by a range of groups covering architects and the construction industry.

“As we approach the warmer months, there is increasing evidence that many recently built homes are experiencing unacceptably high indoor temperatures during summer,” the letter said.

“The Building Act’s primary purpose is to ensure people can use buildings safely and without endangering their health. Current regulatory settings do not adequately address overheating, particularly in modern higher-density housing typologies.”

Penk himself acknowledged the issue at a housing summit in May, saying changes were needed to avoid people being “cooked alive in their own house”.

At the time, the minister said he was disappointed the issue had been raised and debated through the media rather than being foreseen when upgraded energy efficiency standards – such as better insulation – were put in place.

Monday’s letter said with the number of days with temperatures above 25C projected to more than triple by 2050, changes were needed to prevent cost blowouts for occupants resorting to air conditioning.

“From an economic and environmental perspective, reliance on air conditioning to manage these conditions places additional cost burdens on households and adds to peak electricity demand, creating unnecessary strain on the national energy system and sadly undoing great strides towards being energy efficient in our houses.”

Current designs prioritised access to sunlight, the letter said, but not shade, and the “shift toward higher-density housing has intensified the issue, as terraced and apartment dwellings have fewer external walls and openings, reducing opportunities for natural cross ventilation”.

It proposed similar measures to those used in Australia, where architects were required to model overheating at the design phase, and show a building would stay within reasonable heat limits.

In May, Penk said the government would be raising ventilation regulations and requirements for new builds.

An Auckland Council study conducted last year found some newly built terraces and duplexes in the city were getting too hot.

Council urban design manager Lisa Dunshea said a combination of poor window placement, minimal shade, and a lack of natural ventilation was behind the problem.

Wilson said there were already tools available to help designers build cooler homes, but they were optional.

“It would be good to see this mandated in the Building Code for terraced housing and apartments.”

Speaking to Morning Report, New Zealand Green Building Council chief executive Andrew Eagles said it was a “real sad situation” at a time where people should be happy about moving into a beautiful new home.

“All too often we’re finding that people are getting quite upset about the discomfort they are feeling, they’re getting really high temperatures at night, we’ve got people saying ‘my home is like an oven’ or ‘it’s like a sauna without the fun’. That’s causing sleep issues and real concerns and often it’s a really difficult issue to remedy.”

Eagles said his organisation and Auckland Council had expressed concerns for some time now and was calling for action.

It was a simple fix – as shown overseas – and just required designers to check if a home was at risk of overheating at the design stage.

Designers could then get the information and consider how to rectify the issue – such as using ventilation, shading and orientation.

Eagles said he sees “hundreds of homes” getting it right and delivering comfortable homes for Kiwi families – but with more about 50 percent of homes terrace or apartments – and at greater risk of overheating – the change was needed in the code.

He said it did not require legislative change and would only take “three lines” in the code.

It would not make building more expensive – if any, there would be less cost involved, he said.

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

Kiwis to open Rugby League World Cup against Australia

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Kiwis celebrate Phoenix Crossland of the Kiwis try (C) during New Zealand Kiwis v Tonga XIII, round 3 of the Pacific Championships at Eden Park. Photosport

The Kiwis have been drawn with defending champions Australia for next year’s Rugby League World Cup.

They are in a four-team Group A along with Fiji and Cook Islands.

England, Samoa and Lebanon are in Group B, while Tonga, Papua New Guinea and France are in Group C.

Group A teams will each play three matches against the other teams in Group A. Group B and C teams will each play three matches against the teams in the adjacent group.

The top two teams from Group A will progress to the Semi-Finals, while the top two teams from a combined table of Group B and Pool C will progress to the Semi-Finals.

New Zealand and Australia will meet in the tournament opener in Sydney on 15 October, 2026.

The Kiwi Ferns are in Group B of the women’s tournament along with Papua New Guinea, France and Fiji, while Australia, England, Samoa and Wales are in group A.

Each team will play three matches against the other teams in their Group. The top two teams from each Group will progress to the Semi-Finals.

There is a double-header in Christchurch on 25 October with the Kiwis playing Cook Islands and the Kiwi Ferns playing France.

The finals will be played in Brisbane on 15 November.

Kiwis’ World Cup draw

Kiwis v Australia: October 15, Sydney

Kiwis v Cook Islands, October 25, Christchurch

Kiwis v Fiji, October 31, Gold Coast

Kiwi Ferns’ World Cup draw

Kiwi Ferns v Fiji, October 18, Newcastle

Kiwi Ferns v France, October 25, Christchurch

Kiwi Ferns v Papua New Guinea, October 31, Gold Coast

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

Seach for missing fisherman, Tapotupotu Bay

Source: New Zealand Police

The search for a missing fisherman off the coast of Tapotupotu Bay, near Cape Reinga, will resume this morning.

At about 3.20pm yesterday, emergency services were called following a report of a man who had been swept off the rocks while fishing in the remote location with friends.

Detective Sergeant Paul Overton, Northland Police Search and Rescue Team Leader, says Auckland Westpac Rescue Helicopter was dispatched immediately.

He says Police crews, alongside Search and Rescue, Coastguard Air Patrol, Customs, Surf Lifesaving and Northern Rescue Helicopter searched the area until dark.

“This is a particularly remote area and crews searched into the night, however the man was not located.

“Our crews will head back out on the water this morning to continue the search.

“I would like to thank all the agencies that have been involved in the search so far, as well as the locals in the area who have made themselves available to assist – it’s very appreciated.”

ENDS.

Holly McKay/NZ Police

Woman says son pleaded to leave boarding house days before death

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lisa Hawkeswood and her son Jack on mother's day in 2023.

Lisa Hawkeswood and her son Jack on mother’s day in 2023 Supplied

This story discusses suicide.

Lisa Hawkeswood said her son Jack lasted three days in the lodge before pleading to live with her because he hated his accommodation.

A woman whose adult son was discharged from a mental health unit into an Auckland boarding house says the living conditions were appalling and unfit for such a vulnerable person.

Tragically, he died in a suspected suicide after moving in with her.

Lisa Hawkeswood said her son Jack lasted three days in the lodge before pleading to live with her because he hated his accommodation.

“He was discharged alone,” she said.

“Within 72 hours of discharge, he felt like he was having a breakdown and he didn’t feel safe, he didn’t feel safe living there.”

Her son had addiction and mental health challenges and his relationships had fractured by the time he was admitted to Auckland’s acute mental health unit, in November 2023.

Jack was there for three weeks before being discharged to a boarding house.

She said he had called her and left a message in distress, then called an ambulance to be taken back to hospital.

“He said ‘can you help me out and get me out of here, they’ve put me into this kind of motel unit, there’s blood on the carpet and there’s gang members trying to make me do meth’.”

Hawkeswood said he came to live with her and she was devastated when he tragically died three weeks later.

She said she later visited the boarding house he had been discharged to and the manager told her they also housed people released from prison.

“I know this is a problem, safe housing for people after discharge.”

A boarding house manager not linked to the case said he is regularly asked to take people who have been discharged from mental health care.

Fred Ofa owns Charlton Property Management which runs eight boarding houses in Auckland – he said they have about 20 people who are mental health patients, referred to them by support agencies.

“We’re housing them in facilities that are sanitary, facilities that are safe, in facilities that you or I would live in. That brings some normality to their life as well.”

“They’re getting care or wraparound service that’s different from your normal joe blogs. This type of care where you’ve got nurses that are coming on site and making sure that they’re taking their medication, that’s not normal and there’s support to take them to programmes. There’s some normality throughout their day.”

Fred Ofa says he only takes on people from mental health units if they have wrap-around support.

“The worst thing operators like myself and people who supply this type of accommodation is to take anyone and everyone because we’re not trained to look after these people we’re there to supply houses.”

“I’ve seen where they’ve put anyone and everyone into housing and it doesn’t work.”

He says having a support person as a point of contact for tenants receiving mental health care in the community is crucial.

“We had a recent case where the support person left their details with us and as soon as something happened we were able to contact them. The situation was quite severe, he tried to burn down one side of the house. The fact that we said hey look you can’t do that again, we’re going to get you support [after] he slipped up, he didn’t take his medication that day.”

Health NZ’s director of specialist mental health and addiction, Karla Bergquist, said their practice is not to discharge people to homelessness.

“Many people who are admitted to mental health inpatient care are discharged home to their previous accommodation,” she said.

“If this is not possible, clinical services work closely with housing and social service partners to ensure people leaving mental health inpatient care have safe and appropriate accommodation.

But she said there are not any reliable figures on where people are sent to.

Bergquist said a programme to help homeless people move from inpatient care to stable housing with wrap around support began in 2021 in Auckland and Waikato, called Rapua Te Āhuru Mōwai.

Since then more than 90 people in Auckland have been discharged into accommodation that is not a boarding house.

The programme, delivered in partnership with the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development, houses people in self-contained units or apartments in low or medium density blocks across the Auckland region.

It followed a 2020 report released by the Chief Ombudsman that raised concerns about two Auckland mental health units in which people were staying longer than clinically needed because they had nowhere to live.

At the time, a lack of suitable accommodation meant that 13 people were staying longer than they needed in Auckland City Hospital’s Te Whetu Tāwera Acute Mental Health Unit, one for up to 17 months.

The Chief Ombudsman found another five people had been in Waitākere Hospital’s Waiatarau Mental Health Inpatient Unit for over six months, for the same reason.

Lisa Hawkeswood said when her son was discharged to a boarding house and then lived with her, there was no safety plan for his care – something she has questioned and RNZ understands is part of an ongoing coronial inquiry.

“It was on the last day, on the 11th of December, that the key worker said to me you do know that he shouldn’t be left home alone, which I was confused about because no one had ever told me that.”

Hawkeswood is still grieving for Jack whom she said was outgoing, kind, creative and intelligent and keen to get into acting.

She finds solace in songwriting and has set up a Waikato trust to help others struggling with mental health and addiction, access information and services.

Where to get help:

  • Need to Talk? Free call or text 1737 any time to speak to a trained counsellor, for any reason
  • Lifeline: 0800 543 354 or text HELP to 4357
  • Suicide Crisis Helpline: 0508 828 865 / 0508 TAUTOKO. This is a service for people who may be thinking about suicide, or those who are concerned about family or friends
  • Depression Helpline: 0800 111 757 or text 4202
  • Samaritans: 0800 726 666
  • Youthline: 0800 376 633 or text 234 or email talk@youthline.co.nz
  • What’s Up: 0800 WHATSUP / 0800 9428 787. This is free counselling for 5 to 19-year-olds
  • Asian Family Services: 0800 862 342 or text 832. Languages spoken: Mandarin, Cantonese, Korean, Vietnamese, Thai, Japanese, Hindi, and English.
  • Rural Support Trust Helpline: 0800 787 254
  • Healthline: 0800 611 116
  • Rainbow Youth: (09) 376 4155
  • OUTLine: 0800 688 5463
  • Aoake te Rā bereaved by suicide service: or call 0800 000 053

If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111.

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

‘We want it to end’; Hui on Te Pāti Māori schism

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mariameno Kapa-Kingi RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

That came from a hui called for by Te Rūnanga Nui Ā Ngāpuhi where more than 200 people packed into Kohewhata Marae in Kaikohe to speak with Kapa-Kingi face-to-face and decide on their response to her and Tākuta Ferris’ expulsion from the party this month.

Among those in attendance were Ferris, Tāmaki Makaurau MP Oriini Kaipara and whānau from across Te Tai Tokerau and Muriwhenua.

There was broad support for Kapa-Kingi at the hui to remain the MP for Te Tai Tokerau and hopes Te Pāti Māori could mend the current schism in time to contest the 2026 General Election as a unified party.

Many also called for the party’s president John Tamihere to stand down.

Te Pāti Māori’s National Executive declined an invitation to attend the hui citing concerns around potential legal trouble – a move described as “extremely disheartening” and “insulting by hui organisers.

The party has alleged Kapa-Kingi “overspent” her electorate budget and, along with Ferris, plotted to take over the leadership of the party. Kapa-Kingi has denied both claims.

Speaking to the crowd, Kapa-Kingi addressed the claims of financial mismanagement. She said she had received an email from the Parliamentary Services Office that she was in fact within her Parliamentary budget – by $1.

“I want to share that with you, because there’s so many other mischievous and bad stories that have been told for bad reasons… and I want to be able to correct those things so that people know better what has actually happened from me.”

Kapa-Kingi said there were dynamics of “sexism”, “narcissism” and “misogyny” at play within the party.

“What is getting played out against me, and against my colleagues – and one of my dear colleagues that is no longer here – is all of that horrible, yuckiness, targeted at wāhine Māori.” she said.

She said some Māori might feel like the last 12 months had been “the worst ever”, the worst was still yet to come.

“I love you, and I am here for you and I’m not going anywhere.” she said.

“And how do we end this? We stand JT down. That’s how we end it.”

Looking ahead

The ultimate goal of the hui was for Te Tai Tokerau to discuss strategies on how to respond to Kapa-Kingi’s expulsion and find consensus on how move forward.

All who wanted to speak where invited to do so, while note takers gathered their kōrero to report back on later in the evening.

The hui was both jovial and tense, at times, as kaikōrero took turns sharing their whakāro to the whare. Some spoke about the need for young people to step up into leadership positions while others spoke of how Te Whakaputanga needed to be at the centre of decision making.

Among the speakers Ngātiwai rangatira Aperahama Edwards who said many people were feeling hurt and confused, especially after the unity displayed during Te Hīkoi mō te Tiriti.

“We want it to end,” he said.

“We don’t want our people led into the trenches to have choose sides.”

Edwards said the ructions within the party had taken attention away from other kaupapa, like the recent changes to the Marine and Coastal Areas Act (MACA).

“I ended up going down to Parliament , so I’m probably the last person to give advice to either of them on how to get back in there. I went down and got kicked out of there to try and draw attention to what’s happening in front of our eyes.”

“But the only kōrero that was being consumed in the media and on social media was the inferno raging within Te Pāti Māori.” he said.

Edwards said it would be the taimariki who carried the mauri of the hīkoi to Parliament that would be most affected.

“Where’s the aroha for those taitamariki? Because they’re looking at all their superheroes sitting across both camps, embroiled in this raru, and their hearts break.” he said.

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

F1: Apologies all round after Liam Lawson mistake and McLaren disqualification

Source: Radio New Zealand

Liam Lawson of New Zealand RUDY CAREZZEVOLI / AFP

Liam Lawson apologised to his team after he squandered valuable F1 points at the Las Vegas Grand Prix.

A first-corner clash forced the young Kiwi into the pits and out of the points.

Lawson started the race sixth on the grid after an impressive qualifying series in the wet, and hopes were high that he’d be able to add to the points he picked up with his seventh-place finish in the last round in Brazil.

However, the very short run to the first corner in Vegas caused problems for a number of cars and Lawson had too much speed and was forced to go wide and made contact with the Oscar Piastri’s McLaren.

While he immediately lost a place it appeared that Lawson hadn’t suffered too much damage. However two laps later he was forced into the pits to change the front wing, dropping him to the back of the field.

“Apologies to the team, it was extremely slippery into turn one and once I committed to brake, the cars in front started checking up and I didn’t have anywhere to go,” Lawson said afterwards.

Lawson’s Racing Bulls teammate Isack Hadjar did manage to finish in the top 10, enhancing his reputation, as both drivers look to confirm their places for 2026.

“I’m disappointed for the team today as the car has been fast this weekend,” Lawson said.

“We should have had two cars in the points today, so it’s a shame given where we started.”

Liam Lawson during the Las Vegas Grand Prix, 2025. Joao Filipe / PHOTOSPORT

Lawson wasn’t the only one apologising after the race.

McLaren had both cars disqualified for a technical infringement, meaning the championship race remains alive with two Grands Prix remaining.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen won the Las Vegas Grand Prix, while Lando Norris, who was second, and fourth-placed Piastri had their points stripped after a post-race FIA inspection found the thickness of the under-car skid-plank assembly was below the permitted minimum.

It appears the skid-plate was thinner because of excessive wear on the rough Las Vegas track.

It means Norris has a lead of 24 points over Verstappen and Piastri, with Qatar and Abu Dhabi the last two Grands Prix of the season.

“We apologise to Lando and Oscar for the loss of points today, at a critical time in their Championship campaigns after two strong performances from them all weekend,” McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said in a statement.

“As a team, we also apologise to our partners and fans, whose support means so much.

“While this outcome is extremely disappointing, we remain fully focused on the last two races of the season.”

Lawson officially finished the Las Vegas race in 14th place and he remains 14th in the Drivers’ Championship.

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

‘It just seems cruel’: Councillor shocked by comments after cycling accident

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland councillor Julie Fairey says her fellow councillors who are women – particularly women of colour – often receive more abuse than their male counterparts. RNZ/ The Detail – Sharon Brettkelly

Auckland councillor Julie Fairey has become accustomed to abusive comments – but she was still shocked by what she saw on social media after she was hit by a car while cycling and suffered a broken leg.

Fairey has spent several years in local politics – and has been called all sorts of things.

“I’ve been called communist scum, which I find interesting.

“I get a fair bit of abuse about my husband, who is a former cabinet minister, that I’m just his appendage and not my own person, which is difficult. We’ve both been involved in politics for a long time, well before we were together.”

But she was still surprised by the cruelty of some of the comments she saw after she was hit by a car while cycling in Sandringham earlier this year.

“People were basically one step on from blaming me. It was like I deserved it and that it would be nice if they finished the job or if it happened again, and that’s hard to read.

“How could another human being write that to another person? You’re making this comment about someone, an actual person. How could you wish such ill on anybody? To me, it just seems cruel, and I don’t understand it.

“I’ve been doing this a long time, and a lot of it doesn’t bother me, although probably it should. But what bothers me is the idea that my kids or my mother might see it, and that would be upsetting for them, and that’s not okay.”

When Auckland Council surveyed last term’s councillors and local board members, 81 percent of those who responded said they had been harassed or bullied by members of the public.

Sixty-five percent had been abused or harassed online, with the majority of those targeted being women.

Thirty-three out of 170 members responded to the survey done in April, which was released to RNZ last week.

Councillor Fairey said her fellow councillors who are women – particularly women of colour – often received more abuse than their male counterparts.

“For women, there tends to be more appearance-based attacks. It’s not something I’ve had to deal with too much, being of a smaller size and having pale skin. But I’ve seen colleagues and friends be told to shut up because they’re fat or things of that nature.

“I have several friends who would make great local government elected members who have told me straight that they will not stand because of the fear of abuse. These are staunch women with plenty of useful experience that they could bring to the table, some of them in day jobs or volunteer work where they have stood up to power in the past and they’re not prepared to put themselves up for the election process because of the harassment they know they’ll face, in particular online, and they way that sometimes people’s family members can be targeted as well.”

She challenged the idea that elected members should have to put up with vicious comments, including from each other.

“I have colleagues who, the way they feel about it, is that if it’s too hot, get out of the kitchen. But actually, the kitchen shouldn’t be that hot.

“Politicians have a role in bringing down the temperature themselves. Often, the narratives we engage with publicly heat things up, and we need to exhibit the kinds of standards we expect from the community and not make attacks on other people, be they staff, the organisation, or other elected members that are really personal and hurtful.”

Sixty-nine percent of the 33 people who responded to the survey said they had been targeted by fellow elected members.

Fairey said that as of last term, the council started using a platform called Done Safe, where members can report comments that cross the line or persistent abuse.

Councillor Alf Filipaina said he was not active on social media but had received a few odd emails about his support for Māori wards.

“They say things like you’re being divisive, you’re disgusting. But who cares, I just ignore them.”

Another councillor Andy Baker said he avoided social media because of personal attacks.

“I don’t live my life on social media and at times have taken myself off platforms because I was sick of the comments, just in general, how ridiculous some of them are.

“But it is an issue, and some of the comments can be so nasty, so personal, they’ll say ‘you’re just a dickhead’ and use abusive language.

“We can debate and disagree on issues, but when it becomes personal and sometimes they attack family, it just steps over that line.”

Baker said that working as a police officer gave him thick skin.

“Someone pulled a knife on me, I got shot at, so these sorts of comments are inane to me. I actually laugh at them. Deleted and blocked them and moved on.”

He agreed that councillors needed to watch their own behaviour.

“We’re not perfect either, in meetings some of my colleagues will climb into staff knowing they can’t respond.”

Councillor John Watson said the conduct around the council table could be appalling.

“The council has to look at itself before it even starts to look at the public. It should be encouraging a far higher standard of discourse amongst elected members. People have different points of view, and they’re entitled to say them, but they should be respectful.

“Walking the talk and leading by example is a good way of ensuring that quite disturbing behaviour being signalled through this survey isn’t normalised.”

Council spokesperson Lou-Ann Ballantyne said the level of intimidation and threats was worrying.

She said the council had taken actions, including de-escalation training for members and promoting the need to log incidents.

“We acknowledge there’s more to do, and we’re working through a range of possible tactics to help improve elected member safety and wellbeing as we go forward.”

Local Government [LGNZ] vice president and Gisborne mayor Rehette Stolz said the problem was nationwide.

She said they had seen many examples of local and central government politicians being abused, including herself.

“People sometimes talk to you in a way that is inappropriate. They send messages about how useless you are, that your council is a bunch of losers, or to ‘go back to where you came from’.

“People put their names forward for local and central government to serve their communities, and everyone has the right to be treated with respect.”

She hoped recent changes to stalking and harassment legislation would improve safety for councillors across the country.

“LGNZ have been active in supporting members who are victims of abuse and worked closely to get this legislation across the line. Now it’s gone through the house, we’ll support members to know what this means for them, and how they can use it to make sure they are safe and respected.”

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

Woman says son pleaded to leave boarding house in distress

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lisa Hawkeswood and her son Jack on mother’s day in 2023 Supplied

Lisa Hawkeswood said her son Jack lasted three days in the lodge before pleading to live with her because he hated his accommodation.

A woman whose adult son was discharged from a mental health unit into an Auckland boarding house says the living conditions were appalling and unfit for such a vulnerable person.

Tragically, he died in a suspected suicide after moving in with her.

Lisa Hawkeswood said her son Jack lasted three days in the lodge before pleading to live with her because he hated his accommodation.

“He was discharged alone,” she said.

“Within 72 hours of discharge, he felt like he was having a breakdown and he didn’t feel safe, he didn’t feel safe living there.”

Her son had addiction and mental health challenges and his relationships had fractured by the time he was admitted to Auckland’s acute mental health unit, in November 2023.

Jack was there for three weeks before being discharged to a boarding house.

She said he had called her and left a message in distress, then called an ambulance to be taken back to hospital.

“He said ‘can you help me out and get me out of here, they’ve put me into this kind of motel unit, there’s blood on the carpet and there’s gang members trying to make me do meth’.”

Hawkeswood said he came to live with her and she was devastated when he tragically died three weeks later.

She said she later visited the boarding house he had been discharged to and the manager told her they also housed people released from prison.

“I know this is a problem, safe housing for people after discharge.”

A boarding house manager not linked to the case said he is regularly asked to take people who have been discharged from mental health care.

Fred Ofa owns Charlton Property Management which runs eight boarding houses in Auckland – he said they have about 20 people who are mental health patients, referred to them by support agencies.

“We’re housing them in facilities that are sanitary, facilities that are safe, in facilities that you or I would live in. That brings some normality to their life as well.”

“They’re getting care or wraparound service that’s different from your normal joe blogs. This type of care where you’ve got nurses that are coming on site and making sure that they’re taking their medication, that’s not normal and there’s support to take them to programmes. There’s some normality throughout their day.”

Fred Ofa says he only takes on people from mental health units if they have wrap-around support.

“The worst thing operators like myself and people who supply this type of accommodation is to take anyone and everyone because we’re not trained to look after these people we’re there to supply houses.”

“I’ve seen where they’ve put anyone and everyone into housing and it doesn’t work.”

He says having a support person as a point of contact for tenants receiving mental health care in the community is crucial.

“We had a recent case where the support person left their details with us and as soon as something happened we were able to contact them. The situation was quite severe, he tried to burn down one side of the house. The fact that we said hey look you can’t do that again, we’re going to get you support [after] he slipped up, he didn’t take his medication that day.”

Health NZ’s director of specialist mental health and addiction, Karla Bergquist, said their practice is not to discharge people to homelessness.

“Many people who are admitted to mental health inpatient care are discharged home to their previous accommodation,” she said.

“If this is not possible, clinical services work closely with housing and social service partners to ensure people leaving mental health inpatient care have safe and appropriate accommodation.

But she said there are not any reliable figures on where people are sent to.

Bergquist said a programme to help homeless people move from inpatient care to stable housing with wrap around support began in 2021 in Auckland and Waikato, called Rapua Te Āhuru Mōwai.

Since then more than 90 people in Auckland have been discharged into accommodation that is not a boarding house.

The programme, delivered in partnership with the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development, houses people in self-contained units or apartments in low or medium density blocks across the Auckland region.

It followed a 2020 report released by the Chief Ombudsman that raised concerns about two Auckland mental health units in which people were staying longer than clinically needed because they had nowhere to live.

At the time, a lack of suitable accommodation meant that 13 people were staying longer than they needed in Auckland City Hospital’s Te Whetu Tāwera Acute Mental Health Unit, one for up to 17 months.

The Chief Ombudsman found another five people had been in Waitākere Hospital’s Waiatarau Mental Health Inpatient Unit for over six months, for the same reason.

Lisa Hawkeswood said when her son was discharged to a boarding house and then lived with her, there was no safety plan for his care – something she has questioned and RNZ understands is part of an ongoing coronial inquiry.

“It was on the last day, on the 11th of December, that the key worker said to me you do know that he shouldn’t be left home alone, which I was confused about because no one had ever told me that.”

Hawkeswood is still grieving for Jack whom she said was outgoing, kind, creative and intelligent and keen to get into acting.

She finds solace in songwriting and has set up a Waikato trust to help others struggling with mental health and addiction, access information and services.

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

Work underway to replace pipes after almost century underground in New Plymouth

Source: Radio New Zealand

Fulton Hogan workers move the new pipe into place in Robe Street. Supplied

Work is underway to replace some of the first water pipes ever installed in New Plymouth after almost a century underground.

The district council was replacing about 306 metres of 1930s cast-iron pipes in Robe, Devon and King streets with new polyethylene (PE) pipes that would be able to keep up with rising water consumption in the centre city and the needs of modern fire-fighting.

NPDC project delivery manager Sean Cressy said the new PE pipes and connections would provide a more secure supply to city centre businesses, such as its hospitality sector.

“These old cast-iron pipes were the very first public water pipes laid in central New Plymouth and we’ve seen them fail several times in recent years as they reach the end of their useful lives.”

Cressy said council, which was investing $289 million over 10 years to fix its plumbing, and its contractors Fulton Hogan aimed to keep disruption to a minimum.

“We know this might cause some disruption to traffic and we’re sorry for any inconvenience, but we’ll keep this to a minimum by drilling beneath the roads, rather than digging trenches to install the new pipes.

“We’ll also try to confine water shutdowns to times that cause the least inconvenience to businesses and residents. All our water supplies will meet New Zealand drinking water standards at all times during this work.”

Fulton Hogan foreman Josh Lehrke checks out part of the original pipe as it’s uncovered for the first time in almost a century. Supplied

Cressy said footpaths and access to all businesses would remain open during the works, which were expected to be finished by the end of the year.

Fast facts:

  • NPDC committed to investing $289 million over 10 years to 2034 to fix the district’s plumbing.
  • The district has about 2026km of water, wastewater and stormwater pipes.
  • In the 2024-25 financial year, it replaced about 5600m of old water pipes and 2000m of old sewer pipes.
  • This financial year (2025/2026), about 7000m of old water and wastewater pipes are scheduled for renewal.
  • There are four separate water supplies in the district: New Plymouth (including Ōmata, Bell Block, Waitara and Urenui), Inglewood, Ōākura and Ōkato.
  • Combined, these facilities supply approximately 28 million litres of water per day to almost 30,000 homes and businesses.
  • The main source of water in the district is Lake Mangamahoe, which holds about 10 days supply.

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

Cause of large Waiheke house fire unknown

Source: Radio New Zealand

Four firetrucks and 16 crew members tackled the blaze at its peak. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

More than a dozen firefighters were called to a large house fire on Auckland’s Waiheke Island overnight.

Fire and Emergency (FENZ) said it was called to the fire at a property on Nick Johnstone Drive around 12.30am and the fire was extinguished around 3am.

Four firetrucks and 16 crew members tackled the blaze at its peak.

FENZ said all people were accounted for and no one was hurt.

The cause of the fire was unknown.

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