Summer drowning numbers tracking high than last year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Water Safety New Zealand chief executive Glen Scanlon says ways to mitigate the risk of drowning include not doing water activities alone, wearing life jackets and to swim between the flags. Surf Lifesaving NZ

The number of people that have drowned across the country this summer is tracking higher than last year, Water Safety New Zealand says.

There had been 30 deaths over the past two months in waterways, lakes and beaches which compared to 34 in total last summer.

Water Safety New Zealand chief executive Glen Scanlon said in 2026 18 people had died in the water – seven more than the same time last year.

“Many of those have happened when the weather was last at its best, so earlier in January.”

Water Safety New Zealand chief executive Glen Scanlon. Water Safety NZ

Scanlon said often days of bad weather kept people away from the water, so it was weekends like the one ahead which were of particular concern to the organisation.

“It is often that people sort of underestimate the conditions when the weather comes clear again, and they unexpectedly find themselves in trouble.”

He said there were ways to mitigate the risk of drowning such as not doing water activities alone, wearing life jackets and to swim between the flags.

Water Safety New Zealand encouraged people to have a great time in the water this weekend, but to enjoy beaches and waterways safely, he said.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

‘For our mokopuna’: Rangatahi voices rise at Waitangi

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tai tamariki from Te Wharekura o Tauranga Moana at Waitangi hold a paraikete (blanket) gifted to rangatahi MP Tamatha Paul, inscribed with ‘Ka hao te rangatahi’ – a message that the next generation will take up the work and responsibility. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Rangatahi at Waitangi say the decisions being made today must be grounded in the wellbeing of future generations, with many calling for stronger action on climate change and greater Māori participation in decision-making.

Taane Aruka Te Aho, who has been attending kaupapa alongside iwi leaders in Te Tai Tokerau, said being present in those spaces was about preparing the next generation of leaders.

“It’s important for us to understand what sort of mahi goes into the iwi chairs forum because we are the next generation of leaders,” he said.

“Because we want to be a part of it. We want to make a difference to ensure that our mokopuna, to ensure that our uri whakatipu are living in flourishing futures.”

Te Aho was one of the rangatahi leaders of Te Kāhu Pōkere – the group that travelled to Brazil for COP30 last year on behalf of Te Pou Take Āhuarangi, the climate change arm of the National Iwi Chairs Forum.

Taane Aruka Te Aho was one of the rangatahi leaders who travelled to Brazil for COP30 last year. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Tumai Cassidy, a Ngāi Tahu rangatahi leader who is also attending Waitangi this year, said caring for the environment was central to that future.

“Something that’s quite close to my heart is around our environment and how do we look after the environment and how do we stop these impacts from climate change that are battering our communities,” he said, adding that rangatahi had a crucial role to play.

“I think it’s important for rangatahi to be at the table, to listen, to learn, so that when they’re of that age where they’re leading their iwi, they have a broad range of experiences, all that history, those kind of things to inform our future decision making,” he said.

“But I think it’s good for rangatahi to be at the table and offer a different perspective as well.”

Tumai Cassidy (Ngāi Tahu) says caring for te taiao is key for future generations. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Iwi leaders say that involvement is already being seen on the ground.

Pou Tangata chairperson Rahui Papa said rangatahi were not just observing this year’s iwi chairs forum, but actively helping run them.

“Some of the rangatira, especially from Te Kahu o Taonui, have designated some of their rangatahi, and they’re wandering around, they’re being the hosts, they’re taking part in actually the facilitation of the hui, which is awesome,” he said.

“So you have some of the older folk that sit as chairs and things like that, but they’re actually bringing an air of succession into the facilitation of these hui.”

Papa said rangatahi from across the country had also travelled to Waitangi to help shape what their own future pathways could look like.

“They will be the stewards, they will be the custodians and the guardians of all aspects of te ao Māori in their time.”

Three kōtiro gift rangatahi MP Tamatha Paul a paraikete (blanket) inscribed with the kupu ‘Ka hao te rangatahi’ – a message that the next generation will take up the work and responsibility. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Ngāti Kawa Taituha, Te Tii Marae chair said rangatahi involvement reflected a long line of intergenerational responsibility.

“It’s just again, adding and enhancing the mana of our tūpuna, the signatories, and then down to us, the descendants,” he said.

“And here we are today, carrying out all that mahi of our forebearers. Putting in all the effort to set up our next generation. Obviously, that’s what it’s all about for us.”

He said rangatahi were playing roles both behind the scenes and in visible leadership spaces during the commemorations.

“I think this is kind of really cool to see these groups of rangatahi coming to the marae, being part of the pōwhiri,” he said.

“These groups here are really organised leadership groups, and specifically honing in on really being in tune with our taumata, and capturing all this kōrero.”

Te Rangitukiwaho Edwards, Rangatahi MP for Te Tai Tokerau, welcomes Parliamentarians to Waitangi. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

‘Haere ki te pōti’

With an election year approaching, some rangatahi also linked their hopes for mokopuna with political participation.

Aruka Te Aho encouraged whānau to focus on their own communities and lift Māori voter turnout.

“We have three options,” he said.

“One is to elect a government and work with a government that prioritises te iwi Māori and the environment to increase climate funding.

“Two, we stop moaning about what this government can’t do for us and seek funding opportunities globally or elsewhere to ensure that we get that ‘moni’ motuhake. Or thirdly, we just keep doing what we’re doing and suffer the consequences.”

He said increasing Māori participation in voting was key.

“What we need to do is look at our own backyard, look at our own rohe and see what we can do to get soldiers out in terms of getting the voting up to ensure that Māori have a seat at the table so that we can make real change,” he said.

“Haere ki te pōti.”

Cassidy’s focus this election was centred on the environment.

“Vote for the taiao, vote for the environment. Without the environment, we’re not going to be here,” he said.

The focus on mokopuna and future generations is also being carried by a group of rangatahi taking part in a six-day hīkoi from Cape Rēinga to Waitangi, due to arrive on 6 February.

Many of the young people involved say they are marching to stand up for future generations and to send a message about honouring Te Tiriti.

The hīkoi is expected to make its way across Waitangi following waka celebrations.

The hīkoi made its way through Kerikeri on Wednesday morning, on is way from Cape Rēinga to Waitangi. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Watch live: Dawn ceremony kicks off Waitangi Day

Source: Radio New Zealand

Celebrations getting underway for Waitangi Day, starting with a dawn service which we are livestreaming on this page. Plus, follow our live coverage of all the action through the day from Waitangi and around the rest of Aotearoa on our liveblog below.

Follow our live coverage of all the action through the day at the top of this page.

The people of Ngāpuhi deliver a powerful haka, welcoming parliamentarians onto the upper Waitangi Treaty Grounds. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Super Bowl LX: Everything you need to know

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kansas City Chiefs Wide Receiver Demarcus Robinson jumps on the confetti as he celebrates winning the NFL Super Bowl LIV game against the San Francisco 49ers in in 2020. Photosport

Seattle Seahawks v New England Patriots

Kick-off: 12:30pm, Monday 9 February

Levi’s Stadium, Santa Clara, California

Live blog updates on RNZ Sport

Part sport, part spectacle, part national holiday.

Whether they are tuning in for the iconic halftime show, the unforgettable ads, or maybe even some football, one hundred million eyes glued to screens during Super Bowl 60.

The Vince Lombardi Trophy goes on the line in the biggest day of the US sporting calendar.

Here is everything you need to know.

Who, where and when?

The Super Bowl returns to Levi’s Stadium for the first time in a decade as the Seattle Seahawks meet the New England Patriots at 12:30pm NZT Monday 9 February. Home of the San Francisco 49ers, the Silicon Valley stadium boasts a capacity of just under 70,000 and is hosting the Super Bowl for only the second time.

The teams

New England Patriots

It’s no exaggeration to say that the Patriots experienced a massive and unexpected turnaround this season. After consecutive 4-13 seasons, they finished the regular season with an impressive 14-3 record, earning first place in the AFC East and first division title since 2019.

Both offence and defence were excellent, going undefeated 8-0 on the road and posting their best winning percentage (.824) since their 2016 Super Bowl season.

The Patriots defeated the LA Chargers 16-3 in the Wild Card Round, then the Houston Texans 28-16 in the Divisional Round. In the AFC Championship Game, they pulled out a hard-fought 10-7 victory over the Denver Broncos.

That earned their first Super Bowl appearance since the Brady-Belichick era, an ominous sign to everyone that had consigned the perennial powerhouse franchise to history.

Seattle Seahawks

The Seahawks finished with a 14-3 record, good enough for top seed in the NFC and their best regular-season mark in franchise history.

They carried that momentum into the playoffs, securing their first playoff win since 2019 and advancing through to defeat the LA Rams 31-27 in the NFC Championship Game.

The win marked their first Super Bowl appearance since the 2014 season and only the fourth in franchise history. They will be desperate to make up for the last time they made it this far, when they lost in dramatic fashion to the Patriots in Super Bowl XLIX.

Key players

Patriots quarterback Drake Maye has thrown for over 4000 yards and became an MVP candidate. Strategic additions like wide receiver Stefon Diggs elevated the team’s playmakers, while rookie running back TreVeyon Henderson also made a major impact, rushing for 911 yards and nine touchdowns.

Meanwhile, Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold, who signed a major free-agent deal, has delivered one of the best seasons of his career. Darnold has also thrown for over 4000 yards and came up clutch in the postseason. Wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba led the league in receiving yards with 1,793 and broke the Seahawks single-season receiving record. Cornerback Devon Witherspoon and safety Nick Emmanwori’s big seasons have helped the Seahwaks defence rank among the league’s top units.

Any Kiwis?

There is! Seahawks runningback George Holani was born in Auckland and moved to the US at three-years-old.

Holani is of Tongan heritage and is one of 11 children. His football journey started at the age of eight, before also trying his hand at rugby.

Holani has been with the Seahawks since 2024 after joining as an undrafted free agent.

The 24-year-old is second on the depth chart and should get a few carries on Monday.

Halftime

It’s no secret that the halftime show is often more anticipated than the game for the many bandwagon fans.

This year will see the most streamed artist in the world take centre stage, the “King of Latin Trap”, rapper, singer, and songwriter, Benito Ocasio, better known as Bad Bunny.

The choice has been met with some backlash in conservative circles, who have lashed out with ugly rhetoric against the Puerto Rican, in a similar vein to what Kendrick Lamar dealt with in 2025.

Whether or not you’re familiar with his music, expect a spectacle, as the man knows how to hype a crowd.

Fans will also get a dose of nostalgic punk rock courtesy of Green Day, who surged to popularity in the early 2000’s with his such as American idiot and Boulevard of Broken Dreams.

Trump and Bad Bunny

Just as he inserted himself into the Super Bowl narrative in 2025 due to his feud with Taylor Swift, president Donald Trump has again bogarted headlines with his staunch opposition to Bad Bunny.

To the utter horror of a certain portion of American fans, spurred on by the president, the selection of a an artist who almost exclusively sings Spanish to perform at halftime is a crime against their country, Ironically ignoring the fact that Bad Bunny is a US citizen.

The Puerto Rican has been an outspoken critic of Trump, and the President in turn has boycotted the Superb Bowl.

“I’m anti-them,” Trump said. “I think it’s a terrible choice. All it does is sow hatred. Terrible.”

Bad Bunny hit back at the president and his ICE squad during his Grammy acceptance speech.

“We’re not savages, we’re not animals, we’re not aliens. We are humans and we are Americans,” he said deriding the recent wave of latino deportations.

History

The game came about due to there being two competing football competitions, the American Football League and the National Football League. The first AFL/NFL Championship game was held in 1967 after numerous attempts to make it work throughout the decade but it wasn’t officially named the ‘Super Bowl’ until 1970 when the leagues merged. Each edition became denoted by Roman numerals two years later.

The numbers

By the time the ball is kicked, billions will already have been banked. Tickets are starting at around $6000 NZD for the ‘cheap seats’, ad slots are selling for more than $12 million for 30 seconds, and Americans are set to spend north of $20 billion on Super Bowl Sunday.

Spare a thought for the poultry, with more than a billion chicken wings to be eaten and washed down with 300 million gallons of beer.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Fast track panel declines Taranaki seabed mining over risk to marine life

Source: Radio New Zealand

Taranaki seabed mining protest in 2025. RNZ / Emma Andrews

The fast track approvals panel has declined plans to mine the Taranaki seabed in a draft decision.

Trans-Tasman Resources (TTR) has wanted to mine 50 million tonnes of sea bed a year for 30 years in the South Taranaki Bight.

In May the company’s executive chair Alan Eggers said they had identified a world-class vanadium resource that could contribute $1 billion annually to the economy.

That was reported at the same time the project application to be considered by the Fast Track Panel was approved.

In a draft decision released on Thursday evening, the panel found that there would be a credible risk of harm to Māui dolphins, kororā/little penguin and fairy prion.

The panel also found there was uncertainty as to the scale and extent of the sediment plume and underwater noise generated from the project.

It said the adverse impacts of the plan were sufficiently significant to be out of proportion to its regional and national benefits.

In May, the head of Kiwis Against Seabed Mining Cindy Baxter said she was “livid” at the approval of the project to the panel.

She said there was “massive opposition” to the project and seabed mining in general.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Waitangi wrap: Speeches, celebrations and heckling

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon speaks at Waitangi on Thursday. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has faced sustained heckling and had to fend off questions about a revived Treaty Principles Bill as he returned to Waitangi this year.

ACT leader David Seymour predictably attracted his own jeers, and NZ First’s Winston Peters focused on a return serve.

The opposition was not spared criticism either, with Labour accused of backstabbing, and Te Pāti Māori given a stern word to sort out their internal problems and finish the work it started at Parliament.

But Luxon was clearly the one attracting the most ire.

Even before MPs walked onto the upper Treaty Grounds, a group of 40 or so protesters led by activist Wikatana Popata gathered as he made a rousing speech beneath the flagstaff – calling the coalition “the enemy”.

“These fellas are accountable to America, they’re here on behalf of America e tātou mā. Don’t you see what my uncle Shane [Jones] is doing? My uncle Shane, he’s giving the okay to all the oil drilling and the mining because those are American companies e tātou mā. So wake up.

“We’re not quite sure who our enemy is, well let me remind us: those people that are about to walk in, that’s our enemy… we’re not scared of your arrests, we’re not scared of your jail cells or your prisons. We’ve been imprisoned… we kōrero Māori to our tamariki at home, we practise our tikanga Māori at home, so you will never imprison us.”

The group performed a haka in protest of the politicians’ presence amid the more formal haka welcoming them to the marae. A small scuffle broke out as security stopped some of the protesters – who were shouting ‘kupapa’, or ‘traitor’ – from advancing closer.

Speaking from the pae in te reo Māori on behalf of the haukāinga, Te Mutunga Rameka paid tribute to retiring Labour MP Peeni Henare and challenged Māori MPs working for the government, asking “where is your kotahitanga, where is your unity?”.

The next speaker, Eru Kapa-Kingi, acknowledged the protesters outside – saying he had challenged from outside in the past and now he was challenging from within the marae.

“Why do we continue to welcome the spider to our house,” he asked.

“This government has stabbed us in the front, but others stabbed us in the back,” he said, referring to Labour.

“Sort yourself out,” was his message to them, and to Te Pāti Māori, which in November ousted two of its MPs. Kapa-Kingi was arguably a central part of those ructions, however, having been employed by his mother Mariameno – one of those ousted MPs – and leading some of the criticism of the party’s leadership.

His criticism of Labour highlighted the departure of Henare, who he said had been – like his mother – silenced by his party.

Henare soon rose to his feet, saying according to custom those named on the marae were entitled to speak – and he spoke of humility.

“We must be very humble, extremely humble. And so that’s why I stand humbly before you… Parliament kept me safe over the years.

“We have reached a point in time where I have completed my work. And so I ask everyone to turn their thoughts to what was said this morning: the hopes, aspirations, and desires of our people.”

Henare and his soon-to-be-former boss, Labour leader Chris Hipkins, have both batted away speculation about other reasons behind his departure – not least from NZ First deputy Shane Jones.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins faces the media following the formalities of Waitangi 2026. Mark Papalii

Hipkins himself acknowledged Henare in his speech, saying “our hearts are heavy today. We know we are returning you to your whānau in the North, but you are still part of our whānau . And we know where to find you”.

He later told reporters Kapa-Kingi was talking “a lot of rubbish”, that the last Labour government did more for Māori than many others, and Labour had already admitted it got the Foreshore and Seabed legislation wrong.

Seymour was up next and spoke of liberal democratic values; dismissing complaints of colonisation as a “myopic drone”; and saying the defeat of the Treaty Principles Bill was a pyrrhic victory because – he believed – it would return and become law in future.

David Seymour at Waitangi. RNZ/Mark Papalii

Defending his comments on colonisation later, he said it had been more good than bad, as “even the poorest people in New Zealand today live like Kings and Queens compared with most places in most times in history”.

Conch shells and complaints about growing sick during Seymour’s speech clearly fired up the next speaker, Winston Peters – who said he did not come to be insulted or speak about politics.

“There’s some young pup out there shouting who doesn’t know what day it is,” he said, calling for a return to the interests of “one people, one nation”.

As the shouting started, Peters repeated his line there would come a time where they wanted to speak to him long before he wanted to speak to them.

Green Party co-leader Marama Davidson then rose to speak from the mahau, echoing the words of the late veteran campaigner Titewhai Harawira, urging the Crown to honour the Treaty, “it is not hard”.

Green co-leaders Chlöe Swarbrick and Marama Davidson sit alongside ACT’s deputy leader Brooke van Velden. MARK PAPALII / RNZ

The party announced during the events on Thursday it would be standing candidates in three Māori seats, including list MP Huhana Lyndon, lawyer Tania Waikato, and former Te Pāti Māori candidate Heather Te Au-Skipworth – and Davidson staked out her party’s claim to those seats.

“When the giants, the rangatira of our Green Party – before the Pāti Māori was even formed – were the only party in the 2004 Foreshore hīkoi to meet the people, the masses, to uphold Te Tiriti,” she said.

With the government trampling treaty and environment while corporations benefit, she said giving land back was core.

While her speech was welcomed with applause, the government’s hecklers soon turned up the noise for the prime minister’s.

After skipping last year’s pōwhiri amid tensions over the Treaty Principles Bill, he began by saying it was a tremendous privilege to be back, someone already shouting “we’ve had enough”.

Christopher Luxon at Waitangi. RNZ/Mark Papalii

He spoke about the the meaning of the Treaty as he saw it, and the importance of discussing and debating rather than turning on one another.

“It speaks so highly of us that we can come together at times like this, but it is also relevant on Waitangi Day as we think about how we’ve grappled and wrestled with other challenging issues as well,” he said.

Shouts and jeers could be heard throughout, but he ploughed on undeterred.

“… I think we have the Treaty to thank for that, because that has enabled us to engage much better with each other and we should take immense pride in that.”

One person could be heard yelling “treason” as Luxon spoke. He later said it was “typical of what we expect at Waitangi … I enjoyed it”.

Asked if his government was honouring the Treaty, he said “yes”.

“We take it very seriously. It’s our obligation to honour the Treaty, but we work it out by actually making sure we are lifting educational outcomes for Māori kids, we work it out by making sure we are lifting health outcomes, we work it out by making sure we’re making a much more safer community.”

Luxon has been rejecting the idea of a revived Treaty Principles Bill since the day after it was voted down, but his coalition partner Seymour has been pledging its return for even longer.

The prime minister has reiterated his stance several times in the lead-up to Thursday’s pōwhiri, and did so again: “David can have his own take on that but I’m just telling you, it ain’t happening,” he said.

Ahead of the 2023 election, he had said redefining the Treaty’s principles was not his party’s policy and they did not support it, that a referendum – as the bill proposed – would be “divisive and unhelpful”, and a referendum would not be on the coalition table.

He was asked, given that, how ironclad his guarantee could be with an election campaign still to come and governing arrangements yet to be confirmed.

“We’ve been there and we killed it, so we’re done,” he said, clearly hoping for finality on the matter.

Te Tai Tokerau kaumātua and veteran broadcaster Waihoroi Shortland bookended the speeches.

Beginning with a Winston Churchill quote – that democracy is a bad form of government but the others are worse – Shortland said it was easy to remark on how divisive Māori were “when you all live in the most divisive house in the country”.

He called for Henare to be allowed to leave politics with dignity, but extended no such luxury for Te Pāti Māori co-leader Rawiri Waititi.

Te Pāti Māori co-leader Rawiri Waititi. MARK PAPALII / RNZ

“Rawiri, I cannot allow you to come away. Your work is not done. It is crushing to see and to hear what the House does kia koutou, kia tātou, ki te Māori – but we sent you there nevertheless, and that work is not done. Find a way.”

Waititi had spoken earlier, thanking Eru Kapa-Kingi for what he had said.

“I can hear the anger and I can feel the pain. And the courage to stand before the people and say what you had to say,” he said.

He said the party wanted to meet with Ngāpuhi but had been “scattered” when invited to a hui in November, and indicated an eagerness to meet.

“We are still eager to gather with you but we must make the proper arrangements before we can,” he said.

“It’s alright to have problems. But we must experience those problems in our own house. If those problems go outside, the horse will bolt.”

He said the current government was “nibbling like a sandfly” at the Treaty, and there was “only one enemy before us, and it is not ourselves”.

But that fell short of what Mariameno Kapa-Kingi had hoped for, telling reporters she initially thought an apology was coming.

She said she was disappointed Waititi did not fully address their stoush in his speeches, and she was committed to standing in Te Tai Tokerau – presumably, regardless of her party affiliation.

“I’m not going anywhere until our people tell me otherwise. I’ve got much to do.”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

New ‘Māori gothic’ film Mārama draws on horror of colonialisation

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand-born film maker Taratoa Stappard didn’t set out to make a horror film. But as he took a dive into the history of colonisation in Aotearoa, it became clear he was writing a ‘Māori gothic’.

“It became apparent to me very quickly as I was writing it and developing it and learning more and more about the colonisation of Aotearoa that it was a horror film,” he said.

“It’s about the horror of colonisation, about the horror of cultural appropriation, perhaps, or theft.”

Ariāna Osborne in Marama.

© Mārama

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

Could sewer robots be used to prevent repeat of Moa Pt sewage spill?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Untreated water is leaking onto the capital’s south coast beaches due to the Moa Point Treatment Plant flooding. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Sewer robots are being used to patrol pipes elsewhere in the world to keep them from blocking, but what about in New Zealand?

Wellington Water has suggested the main outfall pipe into the Cook Strait was blocked, causing a back-up into the Moa Pt treatment plant, but it did not know how.

“Catastrophic” flooding has damaged perhaps 80 percent of the plant’s equipment and may take months to fix, chief executive Pat Doughtery told Midday Report on Thursday.

It was “as bad as we feared”, he said.

RNZ asked the agency if it used robots in sewers or had looked into using them.

A spokesperson responded, “No. Would it work?That’s probably not an approach we are considering at the moment.”

The pipe has not been inspected internally since its construction almost 30 years ago in 1998.

Dougherty told both RNZ and the Herald they suspected the cause but were checking.

“We have got a TV camera on the site and we will be getting that to have a look at the outfall pipeline to try to understand what went wrong that caused a backup into the building,” Doughterty told Midday Report.

Earlier, he told the Herald, “The outfall wasn’t able to cope with that volume and backed up into our worksite.”

It was inspected annually by divers, but it is hard to get into a pipe that was carrying high volumes of wastewater every day, Dougherty said.

“So I don’t think we have … any regular inspections of that pipe,” he said.

Dougherty agreed that it was a problem.

The agency later on Friday told RNZ it was still working through what happened and there needed to be a thorough investigation.

“It would be inappropriate at this stage to speculate. The outfall pipe is just one of several areas under investigation – ultrasonic cameras and divers are being deployed over the weekend,” it said.

“The long outfall pipeline is only one part of the overall investigation.”

Ultrasonic cameras were being deployed with divers.

Inspection robots

The sewer robot industry has been expanding rapidly.

While using them in an ocean outfall, like in Cook Strait, might be complicated, the robots have been used widely in cities overseas.

Arlington in the US in 2021 completed a survey of 80km of land-based big sewers in 2021 using robots with cameras, laser and sonar.

China has floating robots to both spot damage and others to do repairs.

In London, experts in December held an online forum about using AI to boost robot inspections of the Thames Tideway super-sewer.

“The pipe inspection robot market will expand rapidly between 2025 and 2035 owing to the increasing demand from oil and gas, water and wastewater, sewage and industrial manufacturing industries,” said Future Market Insights.

It could grow to five times the current global size of $8 billion in a decade.

Online promos for one robot said the data was collected and stored on-board for a “fast and objective profile of 900mm to 3,000mm pipes, and information about corrosion, debris under the flow line and surface damage on top of the standard systems deliverables, without the need for anyone to enter”.

Aside from adverts like this, though, a scientific review in December said both that “research on sewer defect detection has grown significantly” and that “research on robotic systems for sewer pipe inspection is still limited”.

It only looked at robots using CCTV – not much use in an outfall – and said they had obvious limitations but also that some of these AI models demonstrated “outstanding performance” for speed and accuracy.

Very highly crictical assets

Wellington Water said it last inspected the outfall in March last year, 11 months ago.

“This is an external inspection for structural integrity (visual) of the exposed portions of the outfall pipe, condition of the diffuser ports, and assessed for erosion or scour around the exposed sections of the pipe,” said a spokesperson.

There was an annual assessment of the rust protection system.

“It is not our standard practice to internally inspect a pipe of this type and age.”

While it regularly used floating cameras to inspect sewer lines elswhere, this was a “different scenario” to an outfall.

These sewer lines were “more prone to blockages” from debris and fat/scum especially in smaller or low-flow pipes. But the outfall discharge came after the treatment processes that removed such debris, scum, and fats.

The agency, which is about to morph into a new government-mandated entity, already had huge stresses on its finances from having to do big fixes to avert more crises, before the biggest one ever hit on Wednesday at Moa Pt.

However, it had recently undertaken what it called a successful if partial assessment of “failure modes” of critical assets.

“The focus of this project meant that all potential ‘showstoppers’ were identified and assessed,” said an internal report.

“By tailoring asset management approaches towards assets that are most critical, Wellington Water is aiming to avoid large scale disruption to communities and environmental damage.”

Another “potential showstopper”, the Seaview outfall, runs from the Hutt to Eastbourne and on to Pencarrow.

Built in the 1962, it had been running at half-capacity and “needs renewing or upgrading with no budget provision for physical works – expected to be around $700m,” said an asset management plan last year.

Both Moa Pt and Seaview treatment plants were “very highly critical” assets, or VHCAs.

They were built and operated under 25-year contracts that expired in 2020.

“The expected lives of many of the mechanical and electrical assets means that a significant renewals burden has arisen post termination of these contracts.

“Failure of these assets heightens the risk of consent non-compliance and unplanned discharges to the environment,” it said.

Seaview’s problems meant higher operating costs and an increase in treated discharges to Waiwhetū Stream, the latest around the same time this weak that Moa Pt failed so drastically.

Moa Pt was rated “poor” and significantly non-compliant with its discharge consents, local residents were told by the agency last December.

The 2025 plan also said “critical wastewater mains are in very poor condition”.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Wellington stationery drive in high demand, exhausts all funding

Source: Radio New Zealand

Organiser Nicky Smith with her kids Joshua and Harper. RNZ/Bella Craig

A Wellington charity supplying school stationery to families who can’t afford it may be forced to turn people away because demand is so high.

Te Awakairangi School Stationery Drive supplies children in the Hutt Valley with essentials such as exercise books, pens and backpacks.

It’s just one of several costs families face at the start of the school year on top of things like school uniforms.

Associate Education minister David Seymour described the price of some uniforms as totally “outrageous” and “unnecessary”.

Last year, Te Awakairangi School Stationery Drive delivered 220 stationery packs for the start of year, meeting every single request.

But already demand is well up and that could mean some tough decisions.

Organiser of the stationery drive Nicky Smith told Checkpoint they’ve already had just under 200 requests, and she expected the number to rise.

“Schools are back from next week and teachers and schools start to realise where gaps might be.”

However, the stationery drive had already exhausted all funds and the donations they had received this year to meet growing demand.

“We collected about $3000 through our Givealittle campaign, and we’ve also collected about $1400 worth of donations in physical items that have come through the community.

“But if we were to take these 200 requests and price them at standard store rates, that’s $9000 worth of stationery. So, if anything further does come through, we’ve got nothing really to fund it with.

“It does keep me awake at night knowing that I might have to turn some families away.”

Te Awakairangi School Stationery Drive has already exhausted all funds and the donations they’ve received this year. RNZ/Bella Craig

Smith said it cost on average $50-55 per student for their stationery needs. The ‘cheapest’ school list she knew of was $26 and the most expensive was $149.

If she had to turn families away, it would be the first time she’d done so.

“I can’t imagine having to do it. I want to be optimistic that we can continue to do this good work and that the community will come through and help us meet every target.”

She said the drive had received more requests this year because of the cost of living, but it also meant that less businesses were able to donate.

“Businesses I feel have been a little bit hesitant this year. We have some supporters who have come back year on year and we’re really grateful to them. But you know we’re not picking up new sponsors.

“That sort of indicates to me that there’s some hesitancy that maybe [with] economic conditions, [it’s] not favourable for a lot of businesses right now and that’s why we’re not really seeing the support.”

Every stationery pack the drive gave out was tailored to each student, she said.

“If a student is attending a school, we will go and find the stationery list for that school and that classroom, and we’ll pack it exactly to what’s on their list because we want to make sure that the kids are arriving at school with everything they do need.

“Things like a range of books, glue sticks, scissors, pens, pencils, colouring pencils.”

This year so far, the drive has distributed 6,500 thousand items. Of those, 1700 of were books, 1500 were pencils and 850 were pens.

A note from the drive. RNZ/Bella Craig

Smith said the drive often received messages from families who they had supported with school stationery.

“They talk about how receiving a pack has almost reduced them to tears because it has lifted a huge weight off their shoulders.”

The stationery drive was inspired by Smith feeling the financial strain herself, during the back-to-school season.

“There was a period there after the COVID years, where getting stationery for my own children was stressful and we went a couple of weeks without having stationery in class.

“Just that feeling of the kids coming home and saying, ‘hey mum, my teachers hassling me because I don’t have all the stuff that I need’. It makes you feel like you’re letting your kids down.”

The drive also received positive feedback from schools, she said.

“Being able to lift that from parents feels really good. But we also hear from schools because we know that we’re helping to reduce some of those really complex barriers to to coming back to school, like attending.”

Te Awakairangi School Stationery Drive has their own website, Givealittle page and Facebook page.

They also have donation points for physical items across all Hutt City Libraries.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Haeata Community Campus disputes MPI’s mouldy school lunch claim

Source: Radio New Zealand

Screenshots taken from the internal investigation done by Haeata Community Campus into mouldy lunches being distributed to students on 1 December. Haeata Community Campus

The Christchurch school where mouldy lunches were served to students says an internal investigation has found no evidence to support the Ministry for Primary Industries’ claims that contaminated meals came from the school.

New Zealand Food Safety, a business unit of MPI, is standing by its findings that “the most plausible explanation” was the accidental mixing of fresh meals with lunches meant to be served the week before.

The report by Haeata Community Campus, obtained by RNZ under the Official Information Act, said that claim was unfounded because the school only received the required number of lunches each day and did not have a facility to reheat food or store meals.

The report said questions needed to be raised with MPI and Compass Group, specifically about two different batches of meals identified at the school on Monday, 1 December, when they were prepared, by who, the dates they were distributed to schools, and why contaminated meals were found to be interspersed with uncontaminated meals.

NZ Food Safety acting deputy director-general Jenny Bishop said it received the internal investigation report from Haeata Community Campus last week and responded to the school.

“We carefully reviewed the report and note that it does not introduce any new evidence beyond what was considered in the NZFS investigation released publicly on 10 December 2025,” she said.

School investigation results

The report said when the mouldy meals were discovered on 1 December, eight Cambro boxes containing lunches were delivered to the main building Te Tai o Mahaanui at 9.16am where they were received by a member of the school lunch distribution team. Dietary-specific meals were identified and removed for distribution separately.

The report said all lunches handled by staff during distribution on 1 December were hot to touch.

Camera footage then showed eight Cambro boxes being picked up by the Compass Group delivery driver at 2.26pm.

The investigation also looked at the meals delivered and collected the previous school day, Thursday 27 November. There were no meals delivered on Friday, November 28 because it was a teacher-only day.

The report said eight Cambro boxes were delivered at 9.20am and nine were picked up at 2.26pm on 27 November, because an empty Cambro had been left on the lunch table for students to put their lunch containers in once they were finished.

CCTV screenshots show the Cambro boxes containing meals being delivered on the morning of 1 December and collected that afternoon.  Haeata Community Campus

Staff recount finding the mouldy meals

According to the Haeata report, a school nurse said she was walking through the main building on 1 December when she overheard other staff members talking about a “health issue”, with someone saying “we could have a bunch of sick children”, so she went to see if she could help.

“The ladies were opening all remaining lunches to check if there were more rotten ones. I suggested that there must be some processing batch number, and we should identify this rather than just opening all remaining lunches,” she said.

The nurse said a batch number was visible on the plastic lid above a time stamp, but both were difficult to read because of condensation on the inside of the containers as the meals were warm.

Staff identified two different batch numbers, separated the meals by number and then opened those labelled 25297 and found they were all in a state of decay.

“I estimate there were about a couple of dozen or so rotten meals but could not be sure. We checked several of the other batch numbers, and all meals were fine so we decided opening all of them would be unnecessary,” she said.

She checked the rubbish bin located by the tables but did not find any remnants of rotten food or containers with the bad batch number.

The report said a teacher aide was in reception at lunchtime on 1 December when she saw the meals another staff member had opened and asked what it was because it looked grey.

“Two staff members and I looked through the Cambros to see if there were any more of the mouldy meals. As we started looking we were finding more hot mouldy meals spread throughout the good ones, this was the case for all of the Cambros we went through,” she said.

“We noticed that all the mouldy meals had the same batch number, which was different from the good meals. Once we had gone through all the Cambros and taken out all of batch number #25297 we opened all of them and saw they were all grey and mouldy and smelt the putrid odour coming from them.”

The report also said an admin staff member went to get a lunch at around 1.50pm and noticed one of the meals was greyish in colour.

“It was hard to tell as all the meals had condensation on the inside of the lids. So, I opened it and saw a fermented/mouldly meal,” she said.

She said she looked for other meals in the same condition and found some, then took them to the principal. She said both were the same temperature.

Another admin staff member walked into the SLT office that day to find the principal and other staff members inspecting the meals, according to the report.

“An odour was coming from the lunches, I picked one of the lunches up to bring it to my nose to smell and nearly dry retched. It was definitely spoiled. The lunch was still warm when I picked it up. I then picked all three of the lunches up off the table and took them out to the atrium to discard them,” she said.

She later sent a message to alert whānau of the spoiled lunches.

Once learning about the mouldy meals, the staffer asked the lunch team if they were positive the meals had not been left from the prior week and accidentally handed out, the report said.

“I asked two of the administration team to check what was for lunch and if there was any possibility there could have been a mix up. They were absolutely sure that there were no lunches here before they arrived that morning and there was no way the lunches were leftovers as they were hot and condensation from the heat was still seen on plastic film,” she said.

Haeata Community Campus principal Dr Peggy Burrows said no food provided by the Compass Group on 27 November had been left behind for three days.

“I highlighted to investigators that one Cambro containing rubbish, not meals, was left temporarily on site on Wednesday 26 November 2025 but was properly collected the following day by the property staff and was uplifted and returned to the the Compass Group distribution facility by the delivery driver the next day,” she said.

“Haeata’s records, supported by property staff checks of the campus on Thursday 27 November, confirm no Cambros remained on site.”

Haeata Community Campus has been approached for comment.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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