Urgent care boost for Dunedin, Invercargill, and Timaru

Source: NZ Music Month takes to the streets

South Island communities will have better access to urgent and after-hours healthcare as part of a nationwide investment, Health Minister Simeon Brown says.“Improving access to urgent and after-hours services is a key part of our plan to ensure all New Zealanders – whether they live in cities, towns, or rural areas – can get timely, quality care when they need it,” Mr Brown says.“Budget 2025 delivers new and enhanced urgent care services across the South Island, making it easier for people to get the care they need closer to home.“In Dunedin, a new 24/7 service has been identified to ensure the community has round-the-clock access to care every day of the week, easing pressure on the city’s hospital. This means people in Dunedin will be able to get urgent care any time of the day and night, while our Government continues to prioritise delivering the New Dunedin Hospital.“New daytime services have been identified for Invercargill and Timaru, building on existing after-hours services to offer more consistent, reliable care.“Rural and remote communities will also benefit from improved urgent care access, including better access to diagnostic services, urgent medicines, and on-call clinicians. “This investment means South Islanders will have faster access to care, with shorter trips and more treatment available locally – especially outside of normal hours – while reducing pressure on emergency departments.Key Budget 2025 initiatives for the South Island include: 

A new 24/7 urgent care service identified for Dunedin by late 2025.
A new daytime urgent care service identified for Invercargill and Timaru, building on the existing after-hours services.
Maintaining all existing urgent and after-hours healthcare services in the region.
Improved after-hour services identified for Alexandra, Ashburton, Balclutha, Golden Bay, Gore, and Oamaru.
Around 30 rural and remote communities to benefit from improved services, including better access to diagnostics, urgent medicines, and 24/7 on-call clinical support.

“This Government is investing more in health than ever before, with a record $16.68 billion over three Budgets to improve health outcomes for Kiwis.“Alongside new and improved urgent care services, our investment will better support rural clinicians with tools, diagnostics, and more connected care – helping deliver timely, quality services across the South Island,” Mr Brown says.

Whangārei and Counties Manukau to receive 24/7 urgent care boost

Source: NZ Music Month takes to the streets

Faster, more accessible urgent care for communities across Auckland and Northland will be delivered through Budget 2025, Health Minister Simeon Brown says.“The Government is making a significant investment to improve access to urgent and after-hours healthcare nationwide, including across the Northern region,” Mr Brown says.“Strengthening urgent and after-hours care is a key part of our plan to ensure all New Zealanders – including Aucklanders and Northlanders – can access timely, quality healthcare, when and where they need it.“Budget 2025 will fund a new 24/7 urgent care service identified for Counties Manukau, providing more accessible after-hours options and easing pressure on the region’s already busy emergency departments, including Middlemore.“A new 24/7 urgent care service in Whangārei has also been identified, significantly improving access to care outside normal hours in Northland’s largest city.”Communities across Auckland and Northland will also benefit from extended opening hours, and greater support for rural and remote providers, with changes being rolled out over the next two years.“These investments will give people – especially in rural and remote communities – greater access to essential services like diagnostics and urgent medicines when they need them.“More options in the evening, overnight, and on weekends for locals will also reduce pressure on emergency departments and deliver better outcomes for patients.”Key Budget 2025 initiatives for the Northern region include: 

A new 24/7 urgent care service identified for Counties Manukau by late 2025.
A new 24/7 urgent care service identified for Whangārei from 2026.
Maintaining all existing urgent and after-hours healthcare services in the region.
Extended after-hour services identified for Dargaville, Hokianga, Kaitaia, and Wellsford.
Improved services for rural and remote Northland communities, including better access to diagnostics, urgent medicines, and 24/7 on-call clinical support.

“This Government is investing more in health than ever before, with a record $16.68 billion over three Budgets to improve health outcomes for Kiwis.“Our investment will give Aucklanders and Northlanders more choice, reduce wait times, and bring care closer to home,” Mr Brown says.

Tauranga to benefit from urgent care boost in the region

Source: NZ Music Month takes to the streets

Communities in Gisborne, Bay of Plenty, Waikato, Lakes, and Taranaki will have access to faster, more accessible healthcare under Budget 2025, Health Minister Simeon Brown says.“Strengthening urgent and after-hours care is a key part of our plan to ensure all New Zealanders – including Kiwis living across the Midland region – can access the right care when they need it,” Mr Brown says.Budget 2025 delivers a significant investment in urgent and after-hours healthcare across the region, making it easier for people to access care closer to home.“Urgent care services in Tauranga will be strengthened to ensure more consistent, high-quality care, with a new 24/7 service urgent care service identified to meet the growing needs of the city’s expanding population and reduce pressure on hospital resources.“Rural communities such as Tokoroa, Te Awamutu and Matamata will also benefit from better urgent care access, including extended opening hours, better diagnostic access, and more support for local health teams.“This investment will ensure that people through the Midland region – whether in larges centres of smaller towns – can get urgent care more quickly outside of normal hours, without needing to travel long distances.Key Budget 2025 initiatives for the Midland region include: 

A new 24/7 urgent care service identified for Tauranga by mid-2026.
Maintaining all existing urgent and after-hours healthcare services in the region.  
Extended after-hour services identified for Thames, Whakatane, Tokoroa, Gisborne, Taupo, Te Kuiti, and Hawera.
Improved services for rural and remote Midland communities, including better access to diagnostics, urgent medicines, and 24/7 on-call clinical support. 

“This Government is investing more in health than ever before, with a record $16.68 billion over three Budgets to improve health outcomes for Kiwis.“Our investment is delivering a healthcare system that works for every New Zealander – easing pressure on hospitals, strengthening our frontline workforce, and improving outcomes for patients across the region,” Mr Brown says.

Palmerston North and Lower Hutt to receive new and improved urgent care services

Source: NZ Music Month takes to the streets

Access to urgent and after-hours healthcare is being expanded across the central and lower North Island as part of Budget 2025 to deliver faster, more accessible urgent care, Health Minister Simeon Brown says.“We’re investing in new and extended urgent care services across the Central region to ensure people can get the right care, at the right time, closer to home,” Mr Brown says.“These improvements will make it easier for New Zealanders to get help when they need it – whether late at night, on weekends, or in more remote communities, while also reducing pressure on emergency departments.“In Palmerston North, a new 24/7 service has been identified to provide the community with consistent access to timely, quality urgent care around the clock.“A new daytime urgent care service has been identified for Lower Hutt, adding to the existing after-hours service and expanding access to urgent care seven days a week. This means people living in the Hutt will be able to access care during the day, without needing to wait or travel further for non-emergency support.”These new and improved urgent care services will be introduced over the next two years, alongside continued support for existing providers and improvements to rural access.“This investment will make a real difference for patients – with shorter travel times, better local options, and faster access to essential treatments like diagnostics and urgent medicines.”Key Budget 2025 initiatives for the Central region include: 

A new 24/7 urgent care service identified for Palmerston North by mid 2027.
A new daytime urgent care service identified for Lower Hutt, building on the existing after-hours service in late 2025.
Maintaining all existing urgent and after-hours healthcare services in the region, with capability to extend hours in central Wellington.  
Extended after-hour services identified for Dannevirke, Masterton, Levin, and Wairoa.
Improved services for rural and remote communities, including better access to diagnostics, urgent medicines, and 24/7 on-call clinical support.

“This Government is investing more in health than ever before, with a record $16.68 billion over three Budgets to improve health outcomes for Kiwis. “Our investment means people living in cities, towns and rural areas across the Central region will have better access to the care they need, when they need it,” Mr Brown says.

New and improved urgent and after-hours healthcare

Source: NZ Music Month takes to the streets

Kiwis needing urgent health care will benefit from a big funding boost for urgent and after-hours healthcare services across New Zealand, Health Minister Simeon Brown says.

“Strengthening urgent and after-hours care is an important part of our Government’s plan to ensure all New Zealanders have access to timely, quality healthcare,” Mr Brown says.

“Budget 2025 is investing $164 million over four years to expand urgent and after-hours healthcare services across the country. This means 98 per cent of New Zealanders will be able to receive in-person urgent care within one hour’s drive of their homes.

The funding will establish a new 24-hour urgent care service identified for Counties Manukau. It will also support:
 

  • New 24-hour urgent care services identified for larger provincial centres, including Whangārei, Palmerston North, Tauranga and Dunedin.
  • New and extended daytime urgent care services identified in other provincial cities and towns, including in Lower Hutt, Invercargill and Timaru.
  • Maintaining all existing urgent and after-hours healthcare services across the country.
  • Better after-hour services in remote rural locations with 24/7 on-call support to deliver enhanced services.

“Around 5,000 New Zealanders visit urgent care clinics every day, but the availability of after-hours services has declined in recent years, and access remains variable across the country.

“Making it easier to see a doctor or nurse is a key priority for this Government. We’re taking action to ensure Kiwis can access the care they need, when and where they need it.

“Our investment will also support more timely care, reducing pressure on emergency departments, and improving outcomes for patients.

“Urgent care supports patients with non-life-threatening injuries or medical problems not severe enough to require emergency department care, but who can’t wait until the following day for medical attention.

“Expanding community-based urgent care will help ease pressure on hospitals and keep emergency departments wait times down for those with the most serious conditions.

“It also gives people more choice, particularly in rural and remote areas where options have been limited.”

This investment builds on the Government’s comprehensive primary care package announced in March, including:
 

  • 100 clinical placements for overseas-trained doctors
  • Recruitment incentives for up to 400 graduate nurses annually for five years
  • 100 additional doctor training places over the course of this Government
  • Up to 50 graduate doctors training in primary care annually
  • Up to 120 training places for nurse practitioners in primary care
  • Accelerated tertiary education for up to 120 primary care nurses
  • A $285 million uplift to funding over three years for general practice from 1 July, in addition to the capitation uplift general practice receives annually
  • Better access to 24/7 digital services.

“This Government is investing more in health than ever before, with a record $16.68 billion over three Budgets to improve health outcomes for Kiwis.

“Today’s announcement will ensure more consistent access to urgent care across the country, so all New Zealanders can get timely, quality healthcare when and where they need it.”

Fatal crash, Waipawa

Source: New Zealand Police

One person has died after a single-vehicle crash in Waipawa early this morning.

Emergency services were called to Racecourse Road about 4.05am.

Sadly, one person has died.

The Serious Crash Unit has examined the scene, and enquiries are ongoing.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media 

Save the Children says Budget 2025 must commit to improving children’s wellbeing

Source: Save the Children

Ahead of this week’s Budget announcement, Save the Children is calling on the Government to provide greater investment in children following a damning report showing New Zealand ranks among the lowest countries in the OECD for child wellbeing and mental health.
UNICEF’s global report card – released this week – shows New Zealand ranks 32nd out of 36 wealthy countries analysed for children’s wellbeing, while also highlighting New Zealand has the highest youth suicide rate among the 36 -nearly three times the average-and ranks last for child and youth mental health. It also shows that bullying remains a widespread issue, with New Zealand posting the second-highest rate of bullying among children.
Other reports from Save the Children’s own climate modelling showing the impact of climate change on children’s lives, alongside Government statistics, show children’s wellbeing, including their physical and mental health, basic needs including food security, housing and access to healthcare are under threat.
Additionally, a report released by the Auditor-General, revealed that child-informed budget decisions are critical if we are to avoid harming already vulnerable children and families due to cuts to funding of critical services.
“Government budget decisions have a direct impact on the lives and wellbeing of every New Zealander,” says Save the Children New Zealand’s Advocacy and Research Director Jacqui Southey.
“It’s clear that greater investment is needed to improve the wellbeing of our children. If New Zealand is to have a prosperous future, we need to invest to ensure our children live good lives now and have bright futures to look forward to.
“New Zealand ranking the worst in the world for youth suicides is devasting. Greater government investment in child health, wellbeing and the essentials they need to live good lives now is critical. We need to ensure that as a nation we are making funding decisions that improve the lives of our children and families.”
Ms Southey says investing in children also means investing in families to ensure they have liveable incomes, healthy and affordable housing, enough healthy food and access to quality healthcare and education for all ages. These are the foundations of a healthy thriving society.
“The grim reality for many New Zealand families living on the lowest incomes is that they are struggling to afford the very basics. The high cost of housing, food, and electricity, combined with growing unemployment particularly for youth, increased numbers of avoidable hospital admissions and rising child poverty levels are all worrying signs that life is very tough for thousands of New Zealand families, and it is those families who will struggle most in the event of a climate emergency.
“Targeted investment is needed in ensuring liveable incomes for all families, alongside a greater focus on climate emissions reduction and investing in climate resilient child-critical services.”
About Save the Children NZ:
Save the Children works in 120 countries across the world. The organisation responds to emergencies and works with children and their communities to ensure they survive, learn and are protected.
Save the Children NZ currently supports international programmes in Fiji, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Laos, Nepal, Vanuatu, Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea. Areas of work include child protection, education and literacy, disaster risk reduction and climate adaptation, and alleviating child poverty.

Budget 2025 must commit to improving children’s wellbeing

Source: Save The Children

UNICEF’s global report card – released this week – shows New Zealand ranks 32nd out of 36 wealthy countries analysed for children’s wellbeing, while also highlighting New Zealand has the highest youth suicide rate among the 36 -nearly three times the average-and ranks last for child and youth mental health. It also shows that bullying remains a widespread issue, with New Zealand posting the second-highest rate of bullying among children.
Other reports from Save the Children’s own climate modelling showing the impact of climate change on children’s lives, alongside Government statistics, show children’s wellbeing, including their physical and mental health, basic needs including food security, housing and access to healthcare are under threat.
Additionally, a report released by the Auditor-General, revealed that child-informed budget decisions are critical if we are to avoid harming already vulnerable children and families due to cuts to funding of critical services.
“Government budget decisions have a direct impact on the lives and wellbeing of every New Zealander,” says Save the Children New Zealand’s Advocacy and Research Director Jacqui Southey.
“It’s clear that greater investment is needed to improve the wellbeing of our children. If New Zealand is to have a prosperous future, we need to invest to ensure our children live good lives now and have bright futures to look forward to.
“New Zealand ranking the worst in the world for youth suicides is devasting. Greater government investment in child health, wellbeing and the essentials they need to live good lives now is critical. We need to ensure that as a nation we are making funding decisions that improve the lives of our children and families.”
Ms Southey says investing in children also means investing in families to ensure they have liveable incomes, healthy and affordable housing, enough healthy food and access to quality healthcare and education for all ages. These are the foundations of a healthy thriving society.
“The grim reality for many New Zealand families living on the lowest incomes is that they are struggling to afford the very basics. The high cost of housing, food, and electricity, combined with growing unemployment particularly for youth, increased numbers of avoidable hospital admissions and rising child poverty levels are all worrying signs that life is very tough for thousands of New Zealand families, and it is those families who will struggle most in the event of a climate emergency.
“Targeted investment is needed in ensuring liveable incomes for all families, alongside a greater focus on climate emissions reduction and investing in climate resilient child-critical services.” 

Fatal crash, Wairoa

Source: New Zealand Police

One person has died after a single-vehicle crash in Wairoa overnight.

Emergency services were called to the crash on Kopu Road about 1.05am.

Sadly, one person died at the scene.

The Serious Crash Unit has examined the scene and enquiries into the circumstances of the crash are ongoing.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

Chris Hipkins Speech Auckland regional conference

Source: New Zealand Labour Party

The energy in this room shows exactly why I believe we are on track to make history and ensure this is New Zealand’s first one-term National Government.

Because after just 18 months in office, it’s clear: this Coalition is out of ideas, out of touch, and out of time.

New Zealanders were promised stability, leadership, and solutions. What they’ve had instead is broken promises, bad choices, division, and dysfunction.

And that’s why Labour is working tirelessly—to build the next government. One that’s stable, focused, and relentlessly committed to making things better for all New Zealanders.

Earlier this year, right here in Auckland, I set out the priorities of the next Labour Government.

It’s a simple and powerful vision: jobs, health, and homes.

We will deliver a fair economy with secure, well-paid jobs.

We will rebuild a health system New Zealanders can rely on.

And we will get back to building warm, affordable homes in thriving communities—backed by quality local schools.

In other words, we’ll go back to what matters—and push forward to what’s next.

We won’t govern by nostalgia or try to turn the clock back to some fictional golden age. The world is changing too fast for that.

New Zealanders don’t need fairy tales. They need leadership that looks forward, not backward.

We will tackle the big challenges head-on: climate change, child poverty, the disruption of artificial intelligence, and the rising cost of living.

Because that’s what real leadership looks like—facing the future with courage, honesty and determination. Not blaming, not dodging, not dividing—but bringing people together and moving the country forward.

This is what Labour stands for: a government that fights for you. Whoever you are.

Whether you’re a nurse in Palmerston North, a teacher in Ōtaki, a small business owner in Timaru, a cleaner in South Auckland, a builder in Rotorua, or a farmer in Wairoa—your contribution matters.

Whether you’re Māori, Pākehā, Pasifika, Asian or a new Kiwi, whether you’re young or old, gay, straight, transgender, wealthy or struggling—Labour sees you. Labour hears you. Labour is fighting for you.

Because we are the party of inclusion, unity and fairness. The current Government? They govern for a few—and it shows.

Christopher Luxon and Nicola Willis keep telling us there’s “no alternative.” That the economy is in such a dire state, they can’t invest in the things that matter—like jobs, health, and homes.

But don’t be fooled. There are always choices.

And this Government is making the wrong ones.

They say there’s “no alternative” as they hand $3 billion in tax breaks to landlords.

“No alternative” as they pour hundreds of millions into tax cuts for tobacco companies.

“No alternative” as they pursue divisive, ideological vanity projects—like the Treaty Principles Bill and their culture war against gender identity and human rights.

But perhaps the clearest, most disturbing choice they’ve made is this: after a string of economic missteps and busted budgets, they’re now asking low-paid Kiwi women to pay for their mistakes.

Let’s be clear: National’s decision to change the law and wipe out all 33 existing pay equity claims isn’t just bad policy. It’s a disgrace.

They knew what they were doing. David Seymour even admitted it—saying the quiet part out loud. Scrapping equal pay, he said, “saved the Budget.”

That’s what this coalition stands for: balancing the books on the backs of the people who can least afford it.

There is only one C word we should’ve been focussing on in Parliament this week – and that’s cuts!

Women across this country—nurses, carers, educators, public servants—are being told their work isn’t worth what men are paid for the same contribution. That is unacceptable, and Labour will not stop fighting until pay equity is restored and respected.

The reality is this: after 18 months of this Coalition Government, New Zealanders have seen enough.

National has no plan for the future. No ideas. No hope.

Just slogans. Blame. And division.

But Labour? We do have a plan. A serious, credible, forward-looking plan—rooted in our values of fairness, decency and community.

We’re not just opposing this Government. We’re offering a better way forward.

  • We will create jobs, not cut them.
  • We will invest in health, not hollow it out.
  • We will build homes, not flog them off.
  • We will invest in education, not cut specialist teachers.
  • We will protect our environment and build a future where children can breathe clean air and drink safe water.

And yes—we will make the tax system fairer.

Because New Zealand needs a tax system where everyone pays their fair share. Not to punish success—but to ensure that those who’ve done well contribute to the roads that connect them, the hospitals that care for them, and the schools that taught them.

You can’t build a strong economy on a weak society. And you can’t solve a cost-of-living crisis by making it worse for the people who already feel it most.

We want to build a country where:

  • Our young people can stay and thrive.
  • Our elders are treated with dignity and respect.
  • No child goes hungry.
  • Small businesses are supported, not strangled.
  • Being a nurse, a teacher, a builder, or a farmer is a path to pride—not a path to burnout.

We want New Zealand to be the best place in the world to grow up and grow old. A place of opportunity, hope, and fairness.

We know the future won’t be easy. AI, automation, climate change—these are massive forces reshaping our world.

But these aren’t reasons to fear the future. They are reasons to shape it.

That’s why Labour will be a government of ideas and innovation. A government that sees what’s coming—and gets ready for it.

That’s why we’re doing the hard work now.

There are three things we’ve focused on since the last election—and they remain our focus today.

First, we’ve been an effective opposition. Every week in Parliament, we’ve held the Government to account. We’ve exposed the cuts, the backroom deals, and the broken promises.

Second, we’re developing new policies and ideas—solutions for the challenges of tomorrow, not just complaints about yesterday.

We’ll be rolling out some new policies in the second half of this year, and I want to thank every one of you who’s contributed ideas, shared feedback, and taken part in the regional conferences and last year’s Annual Conference.

This is the most collaborative and future-focused Labour opposition in a very long time.

And third, we’re rebuilding our movement. We’ve made enormous progress already—but the job isn’t done.

We need to keep going to where people are. Talking with them, not at them. Listening, not lecturing.

Because if the 2023 election taught us anything, it’s this: voters decide what matters. And if we’re not talking about the things they care about—then we’re not earning their trust.

We have a lot of work to do. There are tough conversations ahead. But we are Labour. We don’t shy away from the hard stuff—we get stuck in and do it together.

This next election will take all of us. Every volunteer. Every organiser. Every conversation on every doorstep.

Because we cannot afford another three years of this Government.

New Zealanders are better than what they’re being offered right now. We deserve a Government that believes in the people. That backs its communities. That builds a better future—not tears it down.

We are a country of workers and dreamers. Of doers and believers.

We are the country that gave women the vote, built a world-leading welfare state, and led the world in standing up for peace and nuclear disarmament.

We are a nation of fairness, decency and community.

And we believe the role of Government is not to sit on the sidelines—but to step up, to serve, to lead.

Labour will invest in the things that matter: jobs, health, and homes.

We will govern for all New Zealanders—not just the lucky few.

And with your help, we will win.

So let’s get out there. Let’s organise. Let’s mobilise. Let’s grow our movement and get New Zealand back on track.

We haven’t got a day to lose.

Let’s get to work.

Nō reira, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou katoa.