1000 customers each weekday have power disconnected

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prepay customers have their power disconnected more often. RNZ

More than 10,000 households a month have their power disconnected, new data shows.

The Electricity Authority has published a new disconnections for non-payment dashboard, including prepay customers who have been disconnected.

It shows that between January and October, for people on contract accounts, there are an average of 810 disconnections a month.

For 44 percent of them, they lasted less than one day.

Prepay customers were disconnected more often. There were 27,000 disconnections a month affecting 10,000 prepay customers, or 35 percent. Prepay customers are automatically disconnected when they run out of credit.

Almost 60 percent were disconnected more than once but 94 percent lasted less than one day.

Kate Day, co-director of Common Grace Aotearoa, said the data was helpful to help address the problem.

“We are particularly sobered to see data on prepay disconnections. Prepay is used by roughly 28,000 households and is a last resort for many low-income people with poor credit history who can no longer access standard plans. A reason we believe disconnections on post-pay – standard plans – are not increasing is those having trouble paying are increasingly having to move to prepay. This makes prepay disconnections a crucial part of the picture of energy hardship.”

Day said the figures were grim.

In July, power companies cut off electricity to 12,075 households due to non-payment, including people on contracts and prepay.

“That was an average of 390 households switched off per day. The vast majority of households disconnected were on prepay, and most of those faced two or more disconnections in that month. A full 183 households were disconnected 11 times or more, meaning on average they spent time without power every three days.

“Over the full ten months of the dataset, companies disconnected households 282,370 times, an average of 28,327 disconnections per month. Each month, an average of 11,000 households faced disconnection.

“While a small minority of these households may genuinely choose to disconnect, for instance, because their property is unattended for a significant period, many households would have disconnected due to lack of funds,” Day said.

“It is positive that the majority of disconnections lasted less than 24 hours and this shows effort from companies to help people reconnect quickly. However, looking at July as an example, there were still 1848 disconnections that lasted between one and seven days. That was an average of 60 disconnections occurring per day in July that would last longer than 24 hours.”

She said that meant many households spent one or more winter nights with no lighting and potentially no cooking or heating.

“These figures show we have a long way to go before everyone can afford the electricity they need. This new data provides a vital baseline, now the Electricity Authority and companies must accelerate work to reduce the numbers of people cut off from the essential service of electricity.”

Jake Lilley, spokesperson for the financial mentor network Fincap, said his organisation was concerned at the scale of disconnections for non-payment – at more than a thousand each weekday.

“For comparison, the state of Victoria in Australia, where prepay automatic disconnections are prohibited, has a larger population but recently averaged just over a thousand disconnections a month.

“Energy is an essential service, needed to keep healthy and keep up with the world. It is the front line of our health system, affordable heating and home cooked meals can prevent presentations to hospitals. The Consumer Care Obligations that set out what electricity business must to do help people offer next to no protection from automatic disconnection when someone runs out of money on prepay power. This needs urgent attention.”

He said some people had no option but to choose prepay power.

“We need a right for all to connect to a post-pay electricity arrangement at a fair price in Aotearoa to prevent serious harm for whānau who otherwise could not maintain ongoing access to the electricity they need.”

Jessica Walker, communications and campaigns manager at Consumer NZ, welcomed the data being made public.

“The rationale given for the previous exclusion of pre-pay disconnections was an assumption that consumers accept disconnection as part of the pre-pay product. We, along with other advocates, have strongly disagreed. Many households do not actively choose pre-pay; they end up on it as a last resort. In many cases, non-payment or a poor credit history result in households being required to go on to a pre-pay plan in order to get connected. For these households, pre-pay is not a genuine choice.

“In the absence of official data, Consumer NZ has previously relied on extrapolations from our own ongoing survey work and estimated that there could be around 40,000 disconnections for non-payment each year. Some of the industry disputed this, arguing that we were overstating the scale of the issue. The newly published data shows the opposite: if anything, our estimates were conservative.”

Electricity Retailers and Generators Association chief executive Bridget Abernethy said members were focused on supporting customers who were struggling.

“For those managing multiple bills, prepay can be a helpful way to keep overall household finances in check. Retailers may offer this option when it fits well with a customer’s situation. The number of prepay customers is falling, around a 6 percent reduction since 2023.

“The data clearly shows that of those who reach the disconnection point, most prepay customers reconnect quickly – over 90 percent within just 24 hours. Only a small number are disconnected for more than three days at a time.

“A prepay disconnection might be due to hardship, but it could also mean the customer is away, the property is vacant, or it’s for temporary use, like a holiday home. Providers gain these insights in their interactions with customers. The dataset is broad and includes both small businesses and residential properties.

“We welcome the Electricity Authority providing more detailed disconnection information publicly available. Having reliable data is essential for addressing energy hardship effectively. At the same time, it’s vital to look at the new dashboard carefully to help us make informed decisions about where support is best placed.”

Andrew Millar, general manager, retailer and consumer Electricity Authority, said that given less than 0.1 percent of most customers had been disconnected, New Zealand’s consumer obligations were working as intended.

He said it was too soon to tell whether the numbers of prepay disconnections reflected the cost of living crisis, as this was the first time the data had been released.

Millar said some people liked prepay because it gave them more control of their electricity use, and some used it for properties or holiday homes that were not always in use. But he said he would not recommend prepay for people who were medically dependent, because their electricity could be cut off.

Disconnections that lasted over several days were concerning, he said, and would be something the authority would be talking with retailers about.

He said the disconnection data would be released monthly – and he hoped in time it would be able to track if people were moving between postpay and prepay plans.

“This data is about really looking under the hood of the retail market for the first time and giving more visibility. It’s important we have this information out there so ourselves, retailers and other advocates can have a really informed discussion about consumers, their needs and where energy hardship may be.”

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

A permit for trapping feral cats may get much easier to obtain after a U-turn by DOC

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hunter Victor Tindale in Fiordland. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Permits for trapping feral cats on conservation land may become easier to obtain.

At present, individuals need to adapt a possum fur trapping permit and contact local Department of Conservation (DOC) offices for permission to trap.

Gaining permission can take weeks, and requires filling out paper forms and supplying maps with trapping areas marked.

In contrast, hunting permits can be obtained by completing an online form on the DOC website, and approval is automatic. A 12-month permit is emailed within 15 minutes of the form being completed online.

Since RNZ reported hunter Victor Tindale’s struggle to trap cats in Fiordland, DOC’s stance on the matter has changed.

Initially, DOC told RNZ it was satisfied with the current system of adapting the possum permit.

Tindale said he had now received a letter from DOC following his request to make the system simpler, saying the permit system is being investigated. The letter states: “As part of our regulatory modernisation programme, DOC is seeking to improve efficiency and usability of the permissions system. This includes exploring the integration of trapping authorisations and online hunting permits.”

The hunter – who trapped five cats, two stoats, a ferret and 18 possums on a recent trip to Fiordland – thinks many hunters would be happy to do some trapping on hunting trips to help out the environment.

He’s “rapt” at the positive response from DOC and hopes it results in a consistent nationwide approach for online trapping permits, as he had experienced different attitudes from different regions.

Being able to help native bush out with some trapping during hunting trips, “welcomes more of us as part of a team, without barriers which put us off”.

The idea should be well promoted on the DOC permit site to encourage involvement, he said.

“Good hunters care about this sort of stuff and good hunters make great trappers.”

Feral cats captured by a thermal imaging camera in Fiordland National Park. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

New Zealand Deerstalkers Association Taupō president Alan Bullick said simplifying the permit system for trapping would be a good move.

Hunters can get vilified as rednecks because they use guns, Bullick said, but “most hunters are ardent conservationists”.

“They want the bush to thrive. They want the [feral] cats gone.”

Members have told him they’ve seen feral cats while out hunting and would like to take traps into conservation land to help limit the damage they cause.

“Some people shoot them with a high-powered rifle when they see them, but that also destroys their chances of getting a deer that day.”

Bullick said DOC needs to include clear instructions for safe trap setting in any new permit system to avoid by-catch, such as kiwi or weka. He’s confident hunters who make the effort to take traps with them would be capable of following instructions related to setting traps high enough to avoid by-catch.

DOC’s letter to Tindale said trapping permits will include conditions related to animal welfare, non-target species and public safety.

Tindale is a keen hunter and outdoorsman, eager to protect conservation land from damage caused by pests. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

The letter said the recent addition of feral cats – wild cats which live without human interaction – to Predator Free 2050’s target species list, “will likely trigger more interest in making it easier for the public to access trapping permits where feral cats are being targeted”.

The inclusion of feral cats in Predator Free 2050’s list of target species was promised in a 2023 election debate, and announced after RNZ’s reporting on the issue.

Tindale said the current beech mast event, which was expected to be the biggest in seven years, meant it was the perfect time for hunters to lend a hand. The increased seeds from the trees is expected to swell predator numbers.

DOC director of regulatory transformation Joanna Clifford said phase one of the modernisation programme is due to be completed by the end of June 2026. Work to integrate permits into an online system will start after that. In the meantime, people could still apply for trapping permits by adapting the possum trapping permit.

See more about New Zealand’s growing feral cat problem in Feral, a special RNZ investigation.

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

Can you donate your poo in New Zealand?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Poo transplants may sound unglamorous, but researchers say the early evidence has been encouraging, and it’s grabbed attention around the world.

Nelson infectious disease specialist Richard Everts (of Richmond Health Centre) and researchers at Auckland’s Liggins Institute say fecal microbiota transplants (FMT) can help certain patients — yet finding eligible donors is rare.

Public interest is high. Liggins Institute professors Justin O’Sullivan and Wayne Cutfield, who were some of the early researchers in the field in New Zealand, say a public call for study volunteers would spark global attention. But enthusiasm alone isn’t enough. Donating is a demanding process, and only a small fraction of volunteers make the cut.

Liggins Institute researchers working in the lab that’s undertaking studies into FMTs.

Supplied / Matt Crawford

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

Ōtara-Papatoetoe election re-do a ‘nail in the coffin’ for the postal voting – law professor

Source: Radio New Zealand

A judge has ordered a new election to take place for seats on the Auckland local board due to manipulation of voting papers. RNZ / Eveline Harvey

A law professor says a judge’s order for a new election to take place for seats on an Auckland local board – due to manipulation of voting papers – is another “nail in the coffin” for the postal voting system for local elections.

Former Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board deputy chairperson Lehopoaome Vi Hausia took a petition to the Manukau District Court, calling for a judicial inquiry, after receiving reports of voting papers stolen from residents.

Vi Hausia did not get re-elected, coming fifth after four candidates from the Papatoetoe-Otara Action Team – Paramjeet Singh, Sandeep Saini, Kushma Nair and Kunal Bhalla – secured the four seats in the Papatoetoe subdivision of the Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board.

The inquiry identified 79 voting papers cast without voters’ knowledge.

Judge Richard McIlraith on Tuesday ruled that irregularities had materially affected the election results and voided the Papatoetoe subdivision’s election results.

Otago University’s Professor Andrew Geddis said the ruling was significant in that it was the first electoral petition that had led to findings of deliberate attempts to manipulate the results of an election in New Zealand.

“It’s very worrying, whenever one of our democratic processes is found to have so fundamentally failed that we just cannot trust the results, because of course it’s the process of electing people that then allows our system of government to work,” he said.

Professor Geddis said it was a “wake-up call” for New Zealand to rethink how local elections needed to be run in the future.

“What it does show, though, is that the postal voting system that we use is susceptible to this sort of manipulation or this sort of irregularity,

“Another perhaps nail in the coffin of using the postal system to run local elections,” he said.

Andrew Geddis is a law professor at University of Otago. Supplied

Professor Geddis said the most secure system would be an in-person voting system, which was used in national elections.

He said while that would cost more than the current postal system, it was worth the investment.

“Given those risks and the costs that then come with having to redo elections, the cost of not changing may well in the future be as much, or even greater than moving to a system that’s secure and more trustworthy,” he said.

“I suspect that what we’re going to find, is we just are going to have to bite the bullet and say, if we want to have trustworthy elections that produce legitimate outcomes, we’re going to have to pay to allow that to happen,” he added.

Meanwhile, the independent electoral officer for Auckland Dale Ofsoske said he was ready to undertake a new election for the Papatoetoe seats in the Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board, which was estimated to cost between $175,000 and 200,000.

He said any voting system had its weaknesses, and it was a matter of mitigating the risks and informing voters when to check for their postal voting papers.

Ofsoske said the new election date for the Papatoetoe seats would be 9 April next year, and would also be done through postal ballot voting.

Voting packs would be delivered in early March, he said.

The minister for Local Government Simon Watts said in as statement that what occured was “disappointing”.

“This is a matter that I am watching very closely, and I will continue to assess the situation,” he said.

However, he said the processes showed that appropriate guardrails were in place and functioning as they should.

“Local councils are responsible for running their own elections, in this matter the case was referred to police by the council and its electoral officer and a petition for inquiry was brought by a candidate who noticed something unusual. This is in line with the appropriate process,” he said.

Meanwhile, Papatoetoe-Otara Action Team’s Kushma Nair was not available for an interview on Tuesday.

“I am looking into the matter and am not in a position to comment until I get full information,” he said in a text message.

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

What to bring to a barbecue that isn’t a boring potato salad

Source: Radio New Zealand

One of the best things about summer gatherings is how happily everyone contributes to the table; a salad here, some barbecue meat there, or the show-stopping summer pudding that disappears in seconds every time.

Most of us have a few go-to dishes that get rolled out as soon as the invites start coming. A signature dish is always a winner, but every now and then, it’s fun to try something new.

We sought fresh inspiration for this summer by chatting with some chefs and restaurateurs from other parts of the world who now live in New Zealand.

Brazilian, Regi Gallina, owner and chef at Tambo in 269 Parnell.

Supplied

How to feed vegetarians at a barbecue

Traditional Christmas Mincemeat

Regi Gallina, Brazil

As a Brazilian, Regi Gallina, South American caterer, ex chef tutor at NZMA and chef at Maungakiekie Golf Club, lives for barbecue anytime of the year. “In Brazil, it’s our favourite way to eat,” he says. “Back home, it sometimes takes all day, and everyone chats and catches up while everything is being prepared and cooked. Churrasco is our traditional method of cooking, using an open flame from charcoal or wood – it’s the only way to cook!”

Gallina’s favourite cut, which is very popular in Brazil, is Picanha (rump cap), and he highly recommends it for a barbecue if your butcher has it. “We usually just use salt as a marinade, but to make it a bit more exciting, we sometimes serve it with a punchy sauce or salsa. My favourites from back home are tomatoes, bell peppers, onions, and garlic, all smoked on charcoal, then blended with fresh herbs and a hint of chilli – or a really fresh, green, herby sauce. I like to blitz fresh parsley, basil, oregano, garlic, olive oil and lemon zest – and juice – and it’s perfect with a good picanha.”

Jessica Tang, Hong Kong

Hong Kong-born Jessica Tang is the owner of Dragons.

Supplied

Hong Kong-born Jessica Tang is the owner of Dragons, an institution in Wellington for yum cha for nearly two decades. She says a classic cucumber salad is the perfect thing to bring. “In Hong Kong, we always had smashed cucumber as an appetiser, especially during that hot, humid summer weather. You could hear the ‘thwack, thwack, thwack’ sound from the kitchen, which meant Mum’s delicious salad was coming – and we’d always end up fighting over the last piece,” she says.

Tang’s favourite recipe involves placing the cucumber on a cutting board and using the flat side of a heavy cleaver or a rolling pin to gently, but firmly, ‘smack’ it along its length until it cracks and splits open, allowing you to break it into irregular chunks. “We place the pieces in a colander, toss with a teaspoon of salt and let it sit for 10 minutes over a bowl or in the sink to draw out excess water.” While it’s sitting she makes the dressing from a combination of three cloves of garlic and a teaspoon of chilli flakes (or a chopped up bird’s eye chilli if you prefer) in one bowl, and two tablespoons light soy sauce, one tablespoon of Chinkiang vinegar, one teaspoon of sesame oil, one teaspoon of sugar and one tablespoon of neutral oil whisked together thoroughly in another. “After 10 minutes, you rinse the cucumber and pat it dry, then mix the contents of your two bowls of dressing ingredients together, pour it over the cucumber and toss it before serving. We always garnish with plenty of toasted sesame seeds and thinly sliced spring onion.”

Jonas Jessen Hansen, Denmark

Caitlin Holloway and Jonas Jessen Hansen own ADJØ in Dunedin, which specialises in Nordic-inspired food (Jonas is originally from Denmark). This popular cafe serves up traditional favourites with modern twists. Holloway says Danish hot dogs (called Pølsebrød) are great for feeding a crowd at a barbecue. “They’re more traditionally a street food – at food trucks or kiosks, but they’re a really beloved dish for Danes and perfect for feeding large groups.” Pølsebrød are made from grillpølse, which is a long, thin sausage, made specifically for hot dogs, but the couple say you could definitely use bratwurst. The hotdog bun is light and fluffy and traditionally made with white and rye flour, but any homemade, supermarket or bakery rolls will work. You top it with ketchup, mustard, pickled cucumbers, fried shallots and remoulade [a bright yellow sauce made from mayonnaise, pickles, seasonal vegetables and curry powder like this one] “We’ve made these as a special in the cafe loads in the past, and they’re particularly good if you make your own freshly battered and fried onions to put on top.”

Koji Kiminami, Japan

Supplied

Koji Kiminami is Group Executive Chef of the Tanoshi Restaurant Group, which started with one restaurant in Cow Lane in Queenstown 10 years ago, and has expanded through Queenstown, Wanaka and Christchurch. When he thinks of summer barbecues back home in Osaka, he immediately thinks of Yakiniku- Japanese-style grilled meat. “It’s such a social and popular dish. You grill bite-sized raw meat and vegetables over charcoal or gas at the table and eat it with dipping sauces”, says Kiminami. While this is often done on small grills at restaurant tables, he says it would translate easily to a classic Kiwi barbecue too. “Choose a lean beef cut like ribeye or loin, chop into one or two-inch cubes, then place onto wooden skewers with a mix of vegetables like bell pepper and mushrooms. Create a Japanese marinade by mixing soy sauce, sake, brown sugar, garlic, ginger, sesame oil and black pepper and pour on top of your skewers in the container that you are taking with you to the dinner – the Yakiniku will continue to marinade until your dish hits the grill, and it will be so delicious.”

Emily Tsaliagkou-Montes, Greece

Emily Tsaliagkou-Montes, co-owner of Emily’s Greek Kitchen cooking school in Browns Bay, Auckland.

Supplied

Emily Tsaliagkou-Montes, co-owner of Emily’s Greek Kitchen cooking school in Browns Bay, Auckland, (as well as the two branches of Meditaste European food stores she owns with her husband Donald) says Greek food is made for summer barbecues. “As most people know, we love our mezze platters with things like olives, dolmades, sardines, stuffed peppers and cheese. We really believe in the joy of sharing – we rarely have a single plate but lots of small dishes so we can pass them around and enjoy them together.” A big part of that is always fresh pita bread and good dips. “We make them fresh at both Meditaste shops, and they sell so fast, but some are also easy quite easy to make at home,” says Tsaliagkou-Montes “A good Tzaziki just needs grated and peeled cucumber – always squeeze it to remove excess water – extra virgin olive oil – of course, we recommend Greek, because we think it’s the best in the world – and red wine vinegar, crushed garlic and fresh chopped dill all mixed into thick Greek yoghurt. And another one that will always impress your friends if you bring it to a summer dinner is Htipiti which we make by mixing feta, Greek yoghurt, red roasted pepper, chilli peppers, garlic and extra virgin olive oil. It’s so good”

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

‘Crunch point’: Stretched rheumatologists decline half of referrals in some regions

Source: Radio New Zealand

A computer illustration of a person with foot pain. KATERYNA KON/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

Rheumatologists in some regions are turning down about half the specialist referrals they receive from GPs in order to provide adequate treatment for their existing patients.

However, they say even with restricting “in-flow” in that way, wait times for first specialist appointments – and critical follow-up appointments – continue to grow.

Anna*, a fit and healthy 27-year-old, started feeling unusually fatigued in August last year.

“I work quite a high-stress job and I study, so I initially thought, ‘It’s burnout’. But then the fatigue continued and I then noticed swelling and stiffness and odd things I had never experienced before.”

Her GP immediately suspected rheumatoid arthritis and referred her to the rheumatology service in Auckland – and kept updating that referral as Anna’s symptoms worsened.

Accepted best practice is for rheumatoid arthritis patients to be seen within three weeks – she waited six months.

At her appointment in February (five days before she left Auckland for a job in another city), she was prescribed a drug to suppress symptoms.

Unfortunately, she suffered a bad reaction.

“The medication caused extreme nausea, it would last for five days. I had quite a bit of my hair fall out. I was always sick, and then I began to develop a dry cough. It suppressed my symptoms but the cons definitely outweighed the pros.”

Her new GP made an urgent referral to the local rheumatology service – but it was another three months before she was seen.

“I honestly at this point think that if I did not have a severe reaction that I probably would not have got in to see him as quickly as I did.”

Anna has seen a specialist twice more this year, and undergone multiple tests but is still waiting for a definitive diagnosis.

She has had to quit her “dream job”.

“There were days that I could not walk around, I could not get up out of bed on my own, I couldn’t stand up on my own,

“I needed help just to do the basic things, like brush my teeth.”

The best advice she has had on how to manage symptoms and live her life has come from Arthritis New Zealand’s online support group, she said.

“Sometimes you get lucky – like I got lucky – and you have really great GPs who advocate for you, who help you, who take what you need to the rheumatologist and say ‘You have to see this person’.

“But if you don’t have a good GP that’s just not going to happen for you.”

Patients waiting longer than ‘target

In April – the most recent month for which data is available – 281 patients had waited longer than four months for a first appointment with rheumatology: more than 14 percent of patients are waiting too long.

It varies dramatically nationwide, from less than 2 percent in some centres, to nearly half of all patients in Nelson-Marlborough and Northland.

Long-time Waikato Hospital rheumatologist Alan Doube said there was usually “no quick fix” for rheumatology patients; they needed long-term follow up.

Waikato “accumulates” another 300 patients every year.

“So over 10 years that’s an extra 3000 patients. And unless the facility expands to facilitate that, you get to a crunch point.”

As of April, Waikato had 46 patients who had waited longer than four months for a first specialist appointment (FSA) – more than one in five.

However, Doube said many others did not even get on the waiting list because the service was already stretched.

“Currently we decline about 50 percent.”

Sometimes, specialists could advise GPs on how to manage those patients, Doube said.

“But even then we still can’t see the 10,000 patients [on their books] in the way that they need to be seen over time. So the model that’s been put forward to us doesn’t help us – the focus on FSA.

“You can either see those FSA or you can see the follow-ups. But you can’t do both.”

Osteoarthritis can occur in a number of joints, and mobility can be impaired when it occurs in the hips, knees and ankles. Wikimedia Commons / Milorad Dimic MD CC BY-SA 3.0

Poor access to specialist and medicines

Rheumatology Association spokesperson Hugh de Latour said there had been a huge surge in rheumatology referrals post-Covid – but New Zealand also had much fewer specialists per capita compared with other developed countries.

“So even with our select grading, our timeliness to see patients is less than ideal.”

In his region, Waitematā, routine follow-ups were “six months overdue”.

Arthritis alone cost the country millions in terms of lost productivity but inflammatory disease generally was not really prioritised, de Latour said.

“New Zealand is well behind compared to any other country both in terms of what we have and the threshold you must get to in order to actually qualify for it.”

The quicker patients were seen by a specialist, the more effective their treatment and management of their condition, he said.

New medicines available could completely alter the outlook for people with symptoms of inflammatory disease.

“But no-one is really going to get upset if someone’s rheumatoid arthritis didn’t get seen within three weeks, which is our target.

“If you get rheumatoid, you should be seen within three weeks.”

De Latour said in recent years New Zealand had lost most of its newly qualified rheumatologists to jobs in Australia.

The Royal College of Physicians recommends 1.16 full time equivalent (FTE) rheumatologists per 100,000 people in the public sector.

A 2019 paper found none of the 20 district health boards met the guideline in the public sector, and only four areas reached this level when private FTE were included.

Arthritis NZ estimates the specialist workforce would need to increase by 13 FTE rheumatologists to achieve the guideline.

It has recommended greater efforts to recruit and train specialist nurses to support rheumatologists in their practice.

Health NZ responds

In a written response to RNZ’s questions, Health NZ’s national chief medical officer Dame Helen Stokes-Lampard said there were “a range of challenges related to workforce shortages in healthcare”.

“The Health New Zealand Workforce Plan has a series of workstreams that are considering total workforce numbers, as well as newer ways of working to optimise the efficiency of all our existing healthcare professionals and support their wellbeing.

“Discussions are under way to see how we can reduce rheumatologist workloads.”

*Name changed for privacy reasons.

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

Former New Plymouth mayor bids for Kāinga Ora flats neighbouring his apartment development

Source: Radio New Zealand

Former mayor Peter Tennent is developing two buildings across the road including one which will house a family apartment overlooking the Tasman Sea. RNZ / Robin Martin

A former New Plymouth mayor has put in a bid to buy two blocks of Kāinga Ora flats – planning to bowl them and build apartments alongside an upmarket development he already has underway.

Peter Tennent said he’d had enough of the unacceptable behaviour of some social housing tenants – and wanted to move his family into the neighbourhood.

The successful hotel owner served three terms as mayor of New Plymouth between 2001 and 2010 and is redevelopling two sites on Dawson Street – one featuring an apartment overlooking the Tasman Sea for his family.

He made no secret of the fact he had made frequent complaints about the behaviour of his Kāinga Ora neighbours.

“I have become a vexatious emailer, I think, to the Minister [of Housing Chris Bishop] and all and sundry concerned about the behaviour of some of the tenants across there.

“It’s no surprise that while property is doing well in New Plymouth and Taranaki, properties have been selling well below RV in and around those flats. It’s been a disgrace, and I’m keen to see it sorted.”

One of Peter Tennent’s developments which will house an apartment overlooking the ocean. RNZ / Robin Martin

Kāinga Ora has confirmed it is putting the 1940s vintage flats on the market.

Tennent had gone so far as to make bid for the properties – four of which had recently been boarded up.

“I’ve made an offer on the land myself, but that will go through due process. It’s fair to say my offer included a significant amount for community good, as opposed to value of the property, but I just want to see it sorted.

“Now, whether it’s us or someone else that sorts it, I don’t really mind. Kāinga Ora, whether they can have some good tenants in there, that would be great, but what was in place was totally unacceptable.”

He said if successful he would develop apartments and sell them off.

A tenant of the remaining Kāinga Ora flats, who preferred not to give his name, had been told he had to move out.

“They going to be sold off and demolished because he doesn’t want his new tenants and new flash penthouses having to look at them and that’s ridiculous.”

The remaining flats on St Aubyn Street. RNZ / Robin Martin

The man in his 60s, who lived with a terminal illness, said Kāinga Ora had been trying to relocate him.

“They wanted to offer me one place on Seaview Road but that’s been deemed medically too cold and unfit for someone in my condition and then they offered me Dawson Street [a new development], but three days later it was already gone.

“Then it was this one up here [St Aubyn Street] where units are being built. And then suddenly it’s not going to be November, it’s going to be February. Then it’s not going to be February, it’s going to be March.”

Kāinga Ora regional director for Taranaki, Graeme Broderick, confirmed all the flats were about to be sold.

“Kāinga Ora will sell two four-unit blocks on Dawson and St Aubyn streets in central New Plymouth as they are no longer suitable for social housing. Proceeds will be reinvested in delivering new, warm, dry homes elsewhere.

“One block is already empty and secured, and we’re helping tenants in the other block move to other Kāinga Ora homes. Once all tenants are rehoused, the properties will go on the open market.”

The boarded up flats on Dawson Street enjoy seasviews and are neighboured by modern townhouses. RNZ / Robin Martin

He said the move was in line with Kāinga Ora policy.

“The decision to sell reflects the age and location of the units, redevelopment potential, and property value. We’ve also considered the availability of suitable housing for affected tenants.”

Broderick confirmed Kāinga Ora ended one tenancy in the units because the tenant repeatedly breached their obligations.

The social housing provider had recently delivered 14 new one-bedroom homes at 55 Dawson Street nearby, and had another 16 one-bedroom homes currently under construction on St Aubyn Street, among other developments in the pipeline for New Plymouth.

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

The best films of 2025

Source: Radio New Zealand

Best Oscar Contender/Best Movie of the Year

One Battle After Another

Director Paul Thomas Anderson’s career-long evocation of what he loves about the movies of the 1970s reaches new heights with this fist-pumpingly righteous call to action that reminds us that films actually used to, you know, be about stuff.

As a stoned former radical forced out of hiding when his daughter (Chase Infiniti in the most star-making role of the past decade) is targeted by a military psycho (Sean Penn, channelling Elmer Fudd into a nefarious embodiment of American political hypocrisy), Leonardo DiCaprio gives one of his liveliest ever performances.

Part of the film’s appeal is how difficult it is to boil it down into one thing, but I saw a patriotic, marvellously chaotic ode to the spirit of rebellion – Dominic Corry

Chase Infiniti in One Battle After Another.

supplied

Best Movie You Probably Didn’t See

Relay

Riz Ahmed in Relay

Supplied

A wonderful modern throwback to conspiracy thrillers like Three Days of the Condor and The Parallax View, this barely-released slow-burner deserved a much wider audience.

Riz Ahmed plays Ash, an ultra cautious broker for corporate whistle-blowers who’ve changed their minds but want to be able to live their lives without fearing that their former employers are going to come for them.

So Ash anonymously negotiates settlements while retaining copies of the damning information to keep the companies in line. Much of the plot revolves around the postal service and train travel, and just seeing all these tangible processes depicted is invigorating in an overly digitized cinematic world. Even phone calls feel old school here. – DC

Most Unexpectedly Moving Film

28 Years Later

28 Years Later.

supplied

I have no proof, but I remain convinced that Danny Boyle’s follow-up to his 2002 zombie hit wasn’t screened for critics ahead of its release because the the studio was afraid of how good the film was.

Specifically, that it’s an incredibly affecting and emotional story that will have reduced you to a whimpering mess by the end. I reckon they thought this would turn horror fans off, and didn’t want word to get out.

It very much qualifies as a horror film also, but I certainly wasn’t ready for how deeply felt the characters and their arcs would be. It was just one of many flourishes Boyle and writer Alex Garland brought to the film, which demonstrated just how wide open the possibilities of the sci-fi/horror genre can be. – DC

Best Reboot/Sequel

Final Destination: Bloodlines

After 15 years of being replaced in the culture by small, nasty, horror movies that take place in dark concrete cellars, the Final Destination franchise roared back to life with gusto, restating how much fun a big, nasty, horror movie that takes place in broad daylight can be.

I was skeptical that the crowd-pleasing magic (these films MUST be seen with a big audience) of the first five Final Destination movies could be recaptured, but the people who made this one, which functions as both a sequel and a franchise reboot, are clearly huge fans and brought big production values to the imaginatively sadistic set-pieces. Cinema! – DC

Best New Zealand film

The Rule of Jenny Pen

Psychological thriller The Rule of Jenny Pen stars John Lithgow and Geoffrey Rush.

Supplied / NZ Film Commission

Front loading your local film with international stars is usually something that works better commercially than artistically but James Ashcroft hit the jackpot when he cast American John Lithgow (two-time Oscar nominee) and Australian Geoffrey Rush (Oscar winner) as the battling oldies at the centre of his horror story set in a New Zealand retirement village.

The added bonus is that local legend George Henare more than holds his own alongside them.

Adapted from an Owen Marshall short story, the marketing suggested something more supernatural than we got when, in fact, much of the horror comes from the ordinary details of old folks home life, not least the food. – Dan Slevin

Best Kid’s Movie

Sketch

Also a contender for ‘the best film you probably didn’t see’ award, it’s nice to be able to recognise a film that’s genuinely original, with no franchise, or plastic toys to rely on (although there is a spinoff app that can help you animate your own sketches).

It’s in that ‘kids get into trouble, kids get themselves out of trouble and learn something on the way’ genre and while the monsters are mostly goofy and amusing – they are 10-year-old Amber’s drawings brought to life by a magic pond near her house – there are some genuinely scary moments that are perfect for youngsters who are ready for something a bit edgier than Paw Patrol. – DS

Best Straight-to-Streaming Movie

Mountainhead

Mountainhead.

HBO

Written and directed by the creator of Succession Jesse Armstrong, Mountainhead feels like it consists of ideas that were considered too outlandish for even that jaw-dropping show, but the presence of the Succession team behind the camera and an outstanding ensemble in front of it, puts it a cut above the usual streaming fare.

A quartet of tech billionaires gather for their annual Utah retreat where net worth is going to be measured and world domination plotted while simultaneously their products are causing the downfall of society. When one starts to have second thoughts, the psychopathic tendencies of the billionaire class are exposed in horrific and hilarious ways. – DS

Mountainhead is streaming on Neon and available to rent on Prime.

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

More than 10,000 children stood-down for physically assaulting other students, teachers last year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Schools cracked down on more fights and assaults last year. Unsplash/ Taylor Flowe

Schools cracked down on more fights and assaults than ever before as their rolls increased rapidly last year.

Education Ministry figures show the number of stand-downs for children who physically assaulted other students or their teachers reached 9758 and 1151 respectively in 2024.

Both figures were slightly higher than in 2023 but happened in a year when the total number of students surged to 850,999 by the middle of 2024, a high surpassed only by this year’s enrolments.

The number of stand-downs for smoking, vaping or alcohol dropped by a third, from 4992 in 2023 to 3360 last year.

That drove down the total number of stand-downs and the rate of stand-downs for every 1000 students, which fell from 39 in 2023 to 37 last year, though the 2024 figure was still much higher than every other year in records going back to 2000.

Suspension and exclusion rates also dropped last year and were lower than rates for most of the previous 24 years.

But the expulsion rate jumped, from one per 1000 students to almost two, a figure similar to most previous years.

Expulsions applied to students at or above the legal school-leaving age of 16, while exclusions involved those under the age of 16.

Schools excluded 1203 students and expelled 178 last year.

A third of the exclusions and 42 percent of the expulsions were for assaults on other students.

A ministry report said 80 percent of excluded students enrolled in a new school, the correspondence school, their original school, or were home-schooled.

It said 94 percent of the expelled students did not return to school.

It said 177 schools expelled 178 students last year, up from 77 schools and 102 students in 2023.

Part of Auckland – Tāmaki Herenga Waka – had an expulsion rate more than double that of most other areas at four per 1000 students

Home-schooling enrolments reach record high

The number of home-schooled children exceeded 11,000 this year.

There were 11,010 homeschooled students at 1 July 2025, 253 more than the same time last year and the highest figure ever recorded.

Ministry figures showed 1772 students left homeschooling this year, 24 percent of them after less than a year.

They were balanced by 2025 students entering homeschooling, 39 percent of whom were six-year-olds.

Home-schooling enrolments surged in 2022 when 4342 students enrolled and had hovered around 10,800 pupils for the past three years.

More students leave school early

Education Ministry figures showed 1342 15-year-olds were granted permission to leave school last year.

That was 51 more early leaving exemptions than in 2023.

The rate of exemption was just over 20 per 1000 15-year-olds, very slightly higher than in 2023 and the highest rate since 2007 when the figure was 32.

Boys accounted for 766 of the early exemptions and 576 were for girls.

Fewer transient students

The rate of student transience dropped to its lowest level in more than a decade last year.

Education Ministry figures showed 2442 students changed schools twice or more last year, giving a transience rate of 2.9 for every 1000 students in 2024.

The rate was slightly lower than in 2023 and well below pre-covid rates which ranged from 4-5 per 10000.

The ministry said transience could harm students’ achievement at school.

“Research suggests that students who move home and/or school frequently are more likely to under-achieve in formal education when compared with students who have a more stable school life,” it said.

“A study found that school movement had an even stronger effect on educational success than residential movement. There is also evidence that transience can have negative effects on student behaviour, and on short-term social and health experiences.”

The figures showed most of the transient students moved school twice, but 189 moved three times, 21 four times and seven five times or more.

However, figures for the cohort of 61,633 students who began school in 2019 showed 13 percent or 7889 had been transient at some point in the past six years.

Though most had changed school only twice, 1788 had three changes, 751 four, 337 five changes and 377 six school changes.

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

$4 million travel insurance claim one of thousands this year

Source: Radio New Zealand

One travel insurance claim this year is likely to top $4 million. RNZ

A travel insurance claim that is likely to top $4 million is an example of how expensive an overseas trip can be, Southern Cross Travel Insurance says.

It has released a wrap of the year, which shows the value of claims made increased a lot over recent years even as the level of cover being taken has dropped.

Chief customer officer Jess Strange said the biggest driver of claims was health events.

“People travelling overseas to certain countries… the US, for example, is quite a shocker for large health claims.”

The insurer paid more than $7.3m for medical and evacuation claims in the year to 30 November.

That covered 3350 claims.

It paid $220,000 to one person who claimed for a Covid-related illness while in Singapore. Another person claimed $642,000 for an illness in Italy. Another claim was $95,000 for a fractured hip in India.

Strange said an even bigger claim, still in progress, was for a premature baby born in the United States.

“It’s projected to be around $4 million in cost for a premature baby who has been born unexpectedly overseas.

“The US is by far and away the most expensive country but unfortunately when you’re out of your home territory it’s hard to control the costs that some of these hospitals will charge. The costs can kind of skyrocket before you know it.”

She said cruises could also be very expensive because there was no set limit on what people could be charged.

“People often think ‘oh it’s a lost bag or a cancelled flight or a dropped iPhone’, they don’t think how terrifying it can be, both from a health and cost perspective, if something happens to you medically overseas.

“Every day we see the most traumatising things happen to customers, which is heartbreaking. That poor family at the moment stuck with a premature baby, imagine if they were facing down the line of a $4 million US medical bill.”

But she said even as claims were increasing, people were taking out less cover. The proportion of travellers not taking insurance had lifted from 15 percent in December last year to 20 percent in October and 19 percent in November.

“Kiwis love to travel but travel insurance is often the last thing they think about or they are not educated enough to know they should purchase it at the time of purchasing their travel.”

Southern Cross had a big increase in claims for trips and falls, with more than $988,000 paid in claims compared to $537,000 in 2023.

There was also $1.3m paid to support customers with gastro illness.

In the last financial year, to 30 June, it paid $48.4m in travel insurance claims, up from $43.2m the same time a year earlier.

It said it was paying three times as many flu-related claims as in 2023.

It also paid $248,000 for rental vehicle claims, or about $1533 per claim.

It said 66 percent of international travellers purchased some form of travel insurance cover, another 19 percent had no cover at all and 17 percent relied on credit card insurance.

The percentage purchasing was highest among those aged 18 to 29.

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