Storm-hit areas brace for another round of gales

Source: Radio New Zealand

Flooding in Ōakura. Supplied

Storm-hit parts of northern New Zealand are bracing for strong winds that MetService warns could topple trees on sodden ground.

The weekend’s forecast is for drier conditions for rescue and recovery operations that are underway, though there will be showers.

Meanwhile, a scientist said the country could see wetter summers.

Climate change could “potentially enhance summer rainfall extremes”, Chris Brandolino, principal scientist at Earth Sciences New Zealand, formerly NIWA, told Summer Report on Friday.

By Friday morning, a tropical low had moved clear of the Chatham Islands, where a heavy rain watch had been lifted.

Whitianga Campground was flooded. Charlotte Cook

Strong winds were expected ahead in the Northland, Auckland, Coromandel and Bay of Plenty.

“Especially on Saturday and Sunday, those very strong westerly to southwesterly winds look like they move through that area, and of course, with that ground already quite sodden, trees and things like that, it won’t take very much wind for those maybe to topple over,” meteorologist Mmathapelo Makgabutlane told Summer Report.

The winds were not likely to be strong enough to justify a warning, said MetService’s website, and the same applied for the rain forecast for Southland and parts of Otago, Marlborough and Banks Peninsula.

A severe thunderstorm watch was put in place on Friday morning for Christchurch and the Canterbury plains and high country, with localised heavy rain and large hail forecast from 1.30pm until 9pm on Friday.

Gisborne Civil Defence has been warning that finer weather does not mean the risks have disappeared.

“One of the biggest dangers are landslides. They can happen without warning, often triggered by heavy rain but may also occur in the period following the storm, even if the weather looks fine,” it said online

“We have reports of people walking over landslides to collect water and food from welfare hubs. Please don’t,” it posted.

The northern end of Tairāwhiti had copped a lot of rain, it said.

Brandolino, while talking about the triggers for this week’s flooding in the northern North Island, said as seas got warmer, climate drivers like El Niño and La Niña – the latter of which NZ is currently in – had their effects exacerbated.

“Put simply, there is more water vapour in the air that is the fuel for heavy rain.”

This made storms more likely, more frequent and more intense, he said.

Countless slips on the Russell-Whakapara Road near Ōakura are being cleaned up by contractors making the road, previously known as Old Russell Road, passable with care. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

La Niña already loaded the dice from airflows over New Zealand from the tropics and subtropics, for more rain in the north and east of the North Island.

Some models suggested a warming Tasman Sea could also affect the tropics, in turn making for wetter summers here, said Brandolino.

“The intensity’s growing.”

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Motorcyclist dies in Auckland crash on Thursday night

Source: Radio New Zealand

The accident occurred at 11.15pm on Thursday. 123rf

A motorcyclist has died after driving into the rear of a truck in Auckland.

Police said at about 11.15pm on Thursday night they detected a motorcycle travelling south at high speed on the Southern Motorway near Ōtara.

Superintendent Shanan Gray said police signalled for it to stop however it continued at high speed.

The police motorways unit, which had been carrying out radar speed detection on the southbound lanes of State Highway 1 near Ōtara, did not pursue the motorcycle, he said.

A short time later, the unit was flagged down by the driver of an attenuator truck after the motorcycle collided with the rear of his vehicle just north of the East Tāmaki Road off-ramp, he said.

The man on the motorcycle sustained fatal injuries and died at the scene.

Southbound lanes of State Highway 1 were closed after the accident while a scene examination was carried out but they reopened shortly before 5am on Friday.

The man is yet to be formally identified and the Independent Police Conduct Authority will be informed of the incident.

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Queenstown’s Skippers Bridge could be abandoned amid safety concerns

Source: Radio New Zealand

Queenstown’s historic Skippers Bridge. Google Maps

Popular Queenstown tourist attraction Skippers Bridge could be abandoned, according to an engineer’s report the council released on Thursday.

A Queenstown Lakes District Council spokesperson said the council had yet to consider the contents of the report and would be assessing the proposed options as part of the annual plan process.

First closed following a safety inspection in October last year, the Queenstown Lakes District Council announced last week the 124-year-old bridge would stay closed indefinitely due to safety risks.

The report, completed by engineering firm Stantec in mid-December, warned the bridge should not be reopened to either pedestrians or vehicles until damaged cables could be repaired or replaced, which it said would be “difficult and neither cheap nor quick to implement”.

It noted the “extensive brittle failure” of wires in the bridge’s cables made it impossible to test load capacity, but that testing would not necessarily prove the bridge’s capacity because of the risk of the cables failing unpredictably, and that testing itself could cause a sudden, catastrophic collapse.

Excavation of the portion of cables buried underground in December had revealed “severe brittle failure” of wires on the left of the bridge.

Engineers had found around one-fifth of cable cross sections were lost in some spots, while the initial report from October found between 30 and 60 percent of sections lost cables. Both reports said there was no visible damage to the cables above ground.

It was thought that the damage was caused by stress corrosion cracking and exacerbated by the bend of sections of cable over a ‘roll over’ plate.

Stress corrosion cracking can result in “a disastrous failure” occurring unexpectedly, the report said.

A photo from a report by engineering consultancy Stantec showing snapped wires making up some of the cables on the historic Skippers Canyon suspension bridge. Stantec

Three options were presented to maintain access: reaffixing the existing above-ground cables into new or extended anchor blocks on both sides of the bridge, replacing the cables or abandoning the existing bridge and constructing a new, shorter, lower pedestrian bridge about 300m downstream.

Plant and materials, including concrete, excavators and drill rigs, would have to be flown to the site by helicopter. Though consultants suggested it could be possible to construct a temporary flying fox to transport some construction materials across the river.

Either of the repair bids would be likely to cost more than a million dollars, the report said.

No cost was given for the new pedestrian bridge option, but the report noted it would make access “very challenging” and “possible only to a few people”.

The report noted a number of issues relating to the rest of the bridge that would have to be taken into account when considering whether to attempt to repair the worn cables.

These included that the 120-year-old towers at either end were unlikely to be earthquake safe, that the timber trusses and deck planks showed signs of decay, and concerns about the suitability of the site.

It was considered unlikely a replacement bridge in the same location would get a building consent or meet the Building Code.

A Stantec report from May noted there would need to be a significant increase in maintenance and upgrades to keep the bridge open going forward.

“Recent average annual maintenance expenditure on the bridge has been approximately $62,000 (+ GST) per year. We anticipate that considerably more maintenance effort will be required immediately and within the next 20 years a variety of significant upgrades are likely to be required to maintain the bridge in a trafficable state.”

In a statement, the QLDC said the report contained “a number of high-level options for the future of the structure” that would require further investigation and development before they could be properly costed and presented for a decision by the council.

The 96m long single lane bridge is the country’s highest suspension bridge, suspended on wire cables 91 metres above the Shotover River.

The bridge is the only route from Queenstown to Skippers Canyon and the Mount Aurum Recreation Reserve.

It forms part of theHeritage New Zealand category 1 historic places listing for Skippers Road. It is “one of the most outstanding of New Zealand’s surviving nineteenth century roads,” and one of the country’s “most enduring tourist attractions”, according to the Heritage New Zealand listing.

It also features on Engineering New Zealand’s Engineering Heritage Register.

It provides the only access to the 9100 hectare Mount Aurum Recreation Reserve and the historic Skippers Point School – the only significant building which remains from the settlement established in Skippers Canyon following the 1862 gold rush. The school, which opened in 1879, closed in 1927, and after a period as the Mount Aurum Station woolshed, fell into disrepair before before being restored by the Department of Conservation in the 1980 and 90s.

The neighbouring Mount Aurum Homestead was burnt to the ground in 2018.

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‘Does not help their national team’: French coach fires shot at NZ Rugby

Source: Radio New Zealand

France head coach Fabien Galthié. Brett Phibbs / www.photosport.nz

French coach Fabien Galthié has fired a shot a NZ Rugby after the sacking of Scott Robertson as All Black coach. Galthié, who named his side for the upcoming Six Nations tournament yesterday, said he was “perplexed” at the decision making around Robertson and his predecessor Ian Foster.

“New Zealand’s national policy does not help its national team. That’s my point of view,” Galthié told L’Equipe.

“Today, I don’t know the reasons for Scott Robertson’s departure. They make decisions and take responsibility for them. That’s their problem.”

David Kirk, the chair of NZ Rugby, speaks to media following the departure of All Blacks coach Scott Robertson Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Galthié said he was in the same room as Foster when the All Black coach learned that his place would be taken by Robertson in 2023.

“In the same way as when I was with Ian Foster at Shape of the Game (a World Rugby forum) in spring 2023. All the coaches who were taking part in the World Cup were there,” he said.

“Around midday, I’m in a workshop. Someone comes to see him, shows him something, and he learns that Scott Robertson has been appointed in his place. They had already started preparing for the World Cup, which was taking place a few months later.”

Galthié was impressed with the way Foster took the news.

“He reacted with great class; he didn’t dwell on it. I just felt a buzz around him. I didn’t find (the situation) very tactful.”

Galthié’s French side comfortably beat the All Blacks in the opening match of the 2023 World Cup, however sensationally lost to eventual champions South Africa in the quarterfinals. Foster’s All Blacks made it all the way to the final before going down 12-11 in a dramatic final.

Nolann Le Garrec of France clears the ball against the All Blacks. Photosport

France will travel to Christchurch in July to open the All Black test season, with the FFR this week confirming that it will likely be a weakened team due to the series overlapping with the Top 14 finals. Galthié brought France to New Zealand last year under the same circumstances and lost the series 3-0, although his impressive young side pushed the All Blacks in the first and third tests.

Meanwhile, the French coach caused a shock with his squad selection this week, dropping the experienced trio of Grégory Alldritt, Gaël Fickou and Damian Penaud.

“You have to be fair, create healthy competition and healthy rivalry,” said Galthié.

“There’s a reassuring, supportive psychological approach, close to what we call building trust, but you also have to be open to other potential players… again, the most important thing is to be fair and that’s the case for these three players.”

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

Chinese dragon boat crews to make Auckland regatta debut

Source: Radio New Zealand

Guangzhou’s Liede Dragon Boat Team is poised to participate in the Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta on 26 January. Supplied / Xiaoying Huang

More than 500 paddlers are poised to make a splash at the Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta on Monday.

Four visiting crews from China will participate in the regatta for the first time in the event’s history.

The regatta can be traced back to Auckland’s earliest days.

The first event was held in 1840, the year the city was founded, and early programmes mixed working boats with leisure craft, including dinghies, whaleboats and Māori canoes.

According to the Auckland Dragon Boat Association, dragon boats first appeared in Auckland in the 1980s, propelled by a small group of advocates that included Olympic gold medallists Paul McDonald and Ian Ferguson.

The first major event was launched by Alan Smythe in 1988, and the sport grew quickly.

It later weathered lean years, particularly around the 2008 recession, before settling into a new phase as a mainstream community sport.

Regatta chair Bill Lomas said dragon boat racing had grown in popularity nationwide in recent years.

Paddlers compete in the Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta in 2025. Suellen Hurling / Lvie Sail Die

Lomas said the participation of teams from China represented a major milestone for the event.

“It’s of great significance,” Lomas said. “It’s amazing that we’re able to have teams from Guangzhou come over and paddle with us.

“A lot of Auckland paddlers are excited to compete against a pure Chinese team and to show what we’re made of here on this side of the ocean.”

Lomas said dragon boat racing in China often brought multiple generations onto the water, and he hoped Auckland could create the same kind of broad, family participation over time.

Dragon boat racing in China traces its origins to the southern region more than 2000 years ago, emerging from local rituals and contests between villages.

In competition, the boats are typically fitted with dragon heads and tails, while a drummer at the bow faces the paddlers and drives the cadence, keeping strokes timed and unified.

The sport is closely tied to the Dragon Boat Festival, held on the fifth day of the fifth month of the Chinese lunar calendar, usually in late May or early June.

The festival commemorates Qu Yuan, a revered poet and statesman, and is marked by dragon boat races and the consumption of sticky rice dumplings.

Guangzhou’s Liede Dragon Boat Team is the first from China to join the Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta. Supplied / Xiaoying Huang

What began as a regional tradition has since travelled widely.

Today, dragon boating is a mass-participation paddle sport raced in waterways around the world.

With support from the Auckland Dragon Boat Association and ShareBoating, about 50 paddlers and supporters from the Guangzhou Liede Dragon Boat Team will join the Auckland regatta.

The Liede team comes from Liede Village in Guangzhou’s Tianhe District, a historic riverside community on the northern bank of the Pearl River with more than 900 years of history.

Rooted in local river and village tradition, the team is widely regarded as one of Guangzhou’s leading community dragon boat crews.

Wayne Huang, chief executive of ShareBoating, said the visit represented a cultural milestone for Auckland’s diverse communities.

“Many Aucklanders have roots in Guangzhou and across Guangdong province,” Huang said. “So, this visit carries real cultural significance.

“It is also a powerful example of how sport can connect people, cities and communities across the Pacific.”

A crowd watches a dragon boat race in the Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta in 2025. Suellen Hurling / Live Sail Die

Holly Claeys, chair of the Auckland Dragon Boat Association, agreed.

She said having an international crew join the Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta added something special to the day and reflected the long-standing sister city relationship between Auckland and Guangzhou.

“Their participation will be a historic first for our event and an important step in building deeper cultural and sporting ties between Auckland and Guangzhou,” Claeys said.

Dragon boat racing will run from 8:30am to 5pm on Monday at Auckland’s Viaduct Harbour.

With more teams and paddlers on the water, organisers expect a deeper field and a livelier spectacle for spectators along the waterfront.

The day’s wider programme will also feature classic yachts, sailing dinghies, waka ama, keelboats, launches, tugboats and radio-controlled yachts.

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

E-scooter rider dies after being struck by train in Christchurch’s Addington

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / REECE BAKER

A person has died after being struck by a train while riding an e-scooter in Christchurch’s Addington on Friday Morning.

Police were called to Lincoln Road at 3.30am and officers said the person died at the scene.

Road closures are in place to allow the Serious Crash Unit to undertake an examination of the scene.

Motorists were asked to avoid the area.

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E-scooter rider dies after being struck by train Christchurch’s Addington

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / REECE BAKER

A person has died after being struck by a train while riding an e-scooter in Christchurch’s Addington on Friday Morning.

Police were called to Lincoln Road at 3.30am and officers said the person died at the scene.

Road closures are in place to allow the Serious Crash Unit to undertake an examination of the scene.

Motorists were asked to avoid the area.

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Conflict of interest messages between Teaching Council Chair and Education minister

Source: Radio New Zealand

Chair of Teaching Council, David Ferguson Supplied – David Ferguson

The New Zealand Educational Institute (NZEI) and the Council of Deans of Education say messages obtained under the Official Information Act show a conflict of interest between the head of the Teaching Council, David Ferguson and Education Minister Erica Stanford.

The messages show Ferguson asked Stanford for advice and support about government funding for a teacher training institute he was helping set up before Stanford appointed him to the council.

They included Ferguson thanking the minister after the Teachers Institute, an organisation founded by several Auckland schools to provide in-school teacher education, received confirmation of the government funding it would receive in 2025.

Stanford’s office told RNZ she did not provide any ministerial assistance and Ferguson said he had sought clarification about funding.

The Educational Institute Te Riu Roa, obtained the messages and provided RNZ with a copy.

Most were texts sent in 2024 when Ferguson was principal of Westlake Boys’ High School but involved in setting up the Teachers’ Institute.

Ferguson formally took up his role as chief executive of the institute in 2025 and Stanford appointed him to the Teaching Council in July that year, initially as deputy chair but with the understanding he would chair the council from late August 2025.

The messages showed Ferguson asked for meetings and phone conversations with the minister about school onsite teacher training and advice or support related to the institute’s bid for tertiary education subsidies.

The messages were first published online by Brie Elliot, a student who made frequent social media posts critical of the government.

She told RNZ she asked the Ombudsman to investigate.

Elliott said the messages combined with a recent investigation into the handling of conflicts of interest at the Teaching Council and the council’s decision to appoint one of its members as interim chief executive raised concerns about preferential access to ministers and the council’s independence.

NZEI national secretary Stephanie Mills said the documents showed Ferguson received personal support from Stanford for successful bids for government funding for a private tertiary institute.

“The Minister then appointed him as chair of the Teaching Council, which has responsibility for approving teacher training programmes. Together with her proposed legislative changes in the Education and Training (System Reform) Amendment Bill currently before Parliament, this raises significant questions about the Minister’s management of potential conflicts of interest and risks eroding trust in her judgement,” Mills said.

The Council of Deans of Education, which represented the leaders of university teacher education programmes, said the messages indicated a conflict of interest that the minister must explain.

“Ms Stanford has some explaining to do about how a private teacher education provider came to have such a ‘cosy’ relationship with the Minister in setting up their business”, the council’s Chair, Professor Joce Nuttall said.

“This appalling conflict of interest is even more shocking given that Mr Ferguson is now Chair of the Teaching Council, the very body that approves the Teaching Institute’s programmes.”

In a statement, Ferguson told RNZ he contacted Stanford to seek clarity on funding for initial teacher education providers.

“I had committed to leading a new ITE provider; staff had been employed and students enrolled for January 2025. The ITE provider is a charitable trust; certainty of funding was important. The Minister was unable to provide clarification. Later, I followed up as a courtesy to let her know the situation was resolved,” he said.

Stanford’s office said in a statement she did not help the institute get additional funding.

“No, the Minister did not help with securing any additional support or funding for the Teachers’ Institute, and did not provide any ministerial assistance.

“David Ferguson sent a text message about TEC funding to the Minister – in a phone call, she explained she was not aware of how TEC funding worked and would have to seek more information. The Minister had a brief conversation with Hon Penny Simmonds about how, in general, TEC funding works, and overall timeframes. The Teachers’ Institute and David Ferguson were not discussed. The Minister did not call or contact Ferguson again regarding this.”

What the messages say

On 2 May 2024 Ferguson sent a text message to Stanford asking for a five-minute phone conversation about the institute’s new school-based teacher training programme.

“A conversation with you would potentially save us an enormous amount of time and energy,” he wrote.

Stanford responded early the next day suggesting a call later that morning.

On 23 May 2024 Stanford asked Ferguson in a text: “Do you have the figures on how oversubscribed the in service teacher training program was this year?”

Ferguson responded on 24 May: “We had 100 places available this year. Impossible to say how many we turned down without asking all schools but conservatively at least 120. Obviously many of these would be because schools felt they weren’t in an area where they were needed or possibly they had concerns about suitability.”

Later that month Stanford offered to put Ferguson in touch with news media including RNZ following her announcement of extra funding for school-based teacher education programmes.

Ferguson next contacted Stanford on 18 July 2024.

“Hello Erica. Hope you’re good. Would it be possible to speak to you or someone from your office at some point this week or early next week please? I had a meeting with the ministry yesterday regarding school onsite teacher training yesterday and wanted to check a couple of things with you,” he wrote.

The minister responded: “How’s now?”

On 30 October 2024 Ferguson messaged Stanford for help with its application for funding from the Tertiary Education Commission.

“The big thing now is TEC funding which is worth $750k to us. We won’t hear the outcome there until late November. I’ve been in touch with Tim Fowler. Any advice or support would be welcomed.”

Stanford responded on 1 November asking Ferguson to call her over the weekend.

On 8 November 2024 Ferguson wrote: “Morning Erica. I wondered if you’d managed to speak to Penny Simmonds about TEC funding for us.”

On 15 November he messaged: “Morning Erica. TEC funding confirmed yesterday, thank you.”

13 March 2025 Ferguson told RNZ the institute had more interest from potential students than it was being funded for.

“…. The only handbrake to us making the progress we are capable of is the ministry not giving us the funding we need. It would be a shame if we got to the stage of turning great people away who really wanted to be teachers… I’m not asking for anything – I just wanted to let you know that we’ve made a good start start.”

He provided an update on the number of schools involved and inquiries from potential students on 4 April 2025.

“We’re aiming for 150 (100 secondary and 50 primary). Hopefully the Ministry will support us with the requisite funding,” Ferguson wrote.

On 8 April 2025 Ferguson requested a five-minute conversation about the institute and its future in 2026 and on 22 May 2025 he thanked Stanford for a Budget day funding boost for school-based teacher education programmes generally.

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

Crashes closes stretch of State Highway 2 in Dannevirke

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / REECE BAKER

A person has died after a crash on State Highway 2 in Dannevirke on Friday morning.

Police said it happened near the intersection with Aerodrome Road in Dannevirke at 5.15am.

One person, believed to have been riding a bicycle, was located unresponsive and was unable to be revived.

The road remains blocked and motorists are asked to take alternative routes where possible.

Police said enquiries into the circumstances of the crash were under way.

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Celebrated Scottish poet’s 239-year-old manuscript on display in Dunedin

Source: Radio New Zealand

The manuscript was written in 1787. Supplied / Dunedin Public Libraries

A portion of a 239-year-old manuscript used by the celebrated Scottish poet Robert Burns has gone on display in Dunedin.

The framed letter dated August 22, 1787 was believed to have been written by the poet in Edinburgh before he departed for the Highlands.

The 18th century bard was widely regarded “the national poet of Scotland”.

The year of the manuscript was when Burns reached the peak of his initial fame, following the huge success of the Second Edition, also known as the Edinburgh Edition, of his poems.

The Robert Burns statue in Dunedin.

The piece was being shown on the Dunedin City Library’s third floor ahead of traditional Burns Day celebrations on Sunday.

The Gibson family – who had connections to Dunedin – had made the piece available last year and had offered it as a permanent loan to the city library.

Part of the manuscript included the phrase “a wee bush is better than nae bield” which was used on the poet’s self-designed coat of arms.

The portion of the Burns letter reads:

We’ll seek our bield. _ A wee bush is better than nae

bield. Let the worm come and the meat wit

A pund o’ care winna pay an ounce o’debt. When

Friends meet, hearts warm; which brings me

In my regular course of method to this solemn

Truth, that I am ever,

My dear Sir,

Your sincerely

Robt. Burns

Edin.: 22 August 1787.

“We are delighted to share this letter fragment with the public for the first time, thanks to the generosity of the Gibson family, and to acknowledge their permanent loan of the letter on the occasion of Burns Day this year.” Dunedin Director of Library Services Sarah Gallagher said.

The framed Robert Burns manuscript segment is on display at Dunedin City Library. Supplied / Dunedin Public Libraries

Dunedin’s City Library collection also included Burns’ four-line manuscript poem, To Mrs Kemble. The poem commemorates his admiration for a 1794 performance by actress Elizabeth Kemble in the comic opera, Inkle and Yarico.

The Dunedin Burns Club had presented Dunedin Public Libraries with the majority of the Burns material, which numbers more than 300 items.

A statue of Burns, dating back to 1887, was a major landmark in Dunedin’s Octagon, and one of four versions around the world.

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