ACC ‘breaking promise’ of flexible work arrangements – PSA

Source: Radio New Zealand

ACC needs to stick by its original commitment to its workers ,says the union. File photo. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

The public service union wants the Commerce Commission to investigate whether ACC breached the Fair Trading Act with its job ads.

The Accident Compensation Corporation recently told staff it wanted them in the office three days a week, rather than two.

But the Public Service Association (PSA) said this was in contradiction to job advertisements which ran from June 2023 until at least July 2025 that “explicitly promoted working from home up to three days a week as a key benefit of working at ACC”.

It has written to the Commerce Commission, seeking an investigation into ACC for breaching the Fair Trading Act.

“ACC deliberately advertised flexible work arrangements to attract staff, and is now looking to break that promise – this is exactly the kind of misleading conduct the Fair Trading Act is designed to prevent,” said PSA national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons.

“The job adverts from ACC are very clear. They say you can have a work-life balance, no late nights, and up to three days a week working from home.”

She said workers made major life decisions – resigning from jobs, relocating, arranging childcare – based on ACC’s advertised working conditions.

“Many feel deceived and betrayed with the proposed change to its remote working policy.”

She said ACC needed to stick by its original commitment to its workers.

“The Commerce Commission needs to investigate whether ACC breached the Fair Trading Act, which applies to employment advertising. Job seekers deserve accurate information about working conditions, which employers are obliged to honour”.

The PSA also lodged legal action with the Employment Relations Authority following ACC’s proposed WFH policy change, to which it said ACC agreed to pause the changes and consult with staff, with implementation delayed until early next year.

“While we welcome ACC’s decision to finally consult staff, the consultation proposal is the same and doesn’t change the fact that they misled job applicants about working conditions in the first place,” Fitzsimons said.”

ACC was approached for comment, in response chief executive Megan Main said: “We have consulted with our people on our working from home proposal and are considering their feedback. We will share the outcome of the consultation shortly.”

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Critically endangered wētā thriving as breeding programme numbers surge

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mahoenui giant wētā come in two colour morphs – dark brown and a speckled gold. Robin Martin / RNZ

A captive-breeding programme that helped bring the critically endangered Mahoenui giant wētā back from the brink is expecting a bumper breeding season this summer – in more ways than one.

Not only is the purpose-built lab at the Ōtorohanga Kiwi House expecting to hatch more wētā than ever before, but they are likely to be bigger than ever.

Ōtorohanga Kiwi House wildlife manager Matthew Ronaldson is busying himself in the reserve’s Mahoenui giant wētā maternity centre.

“We’ve got about 30 egg fields or what we all egg fields here waiting to hatch again here this January.

Ōtorohanga Kiwi House wildlife manager Matthew Ronaldson. RNZ/ Libby Kirkby-McLeod

“Basically, it’s an ice-cream container with some soil in it that the female adult Mahoenui giant wētā can lay her eggs in after breeding.”

Then it’s a waiting game.

“Eggs can take anywhere from 10 months to two years to hatch, so we put a 10-month time limit on them and put the date when we expect them to hatch, and the last lot we actually had hatch right on time.

“You end up with hundreds and hundreds … I think we were just over 400 juveniles or wētā that hatched last time, and that was from half of the egg fields we have in here now.”

A critically-threatened Mahoenui giant wētā, at the Ōtorohanga Kiwi House. Robin Martin / RNZ

Ronaldson is expecting up to 600 Mahoenui giant wētā to hatch this summer.

The wētā are thriving too.

“I guess having a greater food source, these animals have grown bigger than what either iwi or DOC have seen at the Mahoenui Reserve.

A very young critically-threatened Mahoenui giant wētā, in a milk-bottle cap. RNZ/ Libby Kirkby-McLeod

“Even when we brought in our second cohort of adults in, they came in a younger age, eighth and ninth instar, and they have grown bigger than the previous cohort, and we even had offspring that were bigger than the mother [when adult].”

Fully-grown wētā have been through 10 development stages or instars.

Adult females weigh in at about 25g and are about the size of a mouse.

Wētā handler Danielle Lloyd said that’s a far cry from where they start.

Mahoenui giant wēta handler Danielle Lloyd explains how juvenile wētā are released inside a bamboo tube. Robin Martin / RNZ

“If you do have hatches in there, they are really, really small – they hatch from an egg the size of a grain of rice.

“They are bright, fluorescent green when they hatch, so if you’ve got grass in, there as well, it can be a bit hard to find them, so we have torches, magnifying glasses if we need them.

“We have to search through the entire thing to see what’s in there, and because they are in an ice cream container, they like to hide just under the rim on the outside.”

A female Mahoenui Giant Wētā lays her eggs in a container of soil. Ōtorohanga Kiwi House

She’s trying to wrangle a female going by the name of Bugg-Tsunade.

“Generally, in the eighth instar, we’ll give them a name more often than not based on their little personalities, so this one’s Bugg-Tsunade.

“I actually named her after an anime I like because she’s quite feisty, and I named her after a feisty character.

A Mahoenui giant wētā nymph. Robin Martin / RNZ

“One was called Bugg-Wonky. She had a wonky leg that she was able to fix through her instar changes, which they can do.

“And then we’ve had a Bugg-Chunky as well, and that was because she devoured all the food we put in there almost every day.”

Lloyd used to be terrified of giant wētā, but not anymore.

A Mahoenui giant wētā that is about five months old. RNZ/ Libby Kirkby-McLeod

“Their feet are, I guess, quite prickly, is the kind of word, on your skin, but they’re really light, and you don’t really feel them on you.

“You can kind of feel them digging into you with their tarsus [final segment of their leg] when they walk.

“But it doesn’t really faze me anymore, but I guess if you’re not used to it, you probably would be a bit freaked out because it can feel like it’s stabbing into you a little bit.”

Meanwhile, Ronaldson said there’s nothing to fear.

Ronaldson gives a male Mahoenui Giant wētā a health check. Ōtorohanga Kiwi House

“I actually find them extremely gentle. Once you get the hang of them and they get used to being handled, as long as you’re gentle and calm with them, they’re generally calm and gentle with you.

“You may actually catch us talking with them, calling them sweetheart and all sorts of cute names, but we do become quite attached to them, our animals, and they’re just like little puppy dogs really.”

The Ōtorohanga Kiwi House is aiming to eventually hatch 3000 Mahoenui giant wētā and see them come off the critically endangered species list.

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Meet Auckland’s 11-year-old beekeeper keeping the community sweet

Source: Radio New Zealand

Aidan Thompson says one bee produces 1/12th of a teaspoon of honey over their entire lifetime. Ke-Xin Li

Buzzing behind a tall fence in the inner city suburb of Green Lane in Auckland are Aidan Thompson’s bees.

At the age of 11, Aidan already has years of beekeeping and business experience, with the help of some neighbours.

“My beekeeping journey started when I was seven years old. I was looking for a job to earn money, and Mrs Parker had an idea that I could sell their honey and earn a little profit.

“I started off with buying 10 of them, and then I sold them on the side of the road, and I soon had to keep going back on my bike to get 10, and then at the end, I was getting 30 at a time, that my sisters had to help me with. And then I had enough money to buy my own beehive, and Mrs Parker and Mr Parker helped me look after it and harvest honey from it, and then I got to sell my own honey.”

Eleven-year-old Aidan Thompson’s bees are working hard for the summer harvesting season. Ke-Xin Li

By spring, the bees have waxed down the lid onto their hive boxes, and Aidan uses a hive tool – a metal that looks like a set square – to crack open the box and check on his bees.

“One bee makes one-twelfth of a teaspoon of honey in their lifetime,” Aidan said. He finds the little creatures’ productivity fascinating.

Last season, Aidan harvested about 150kg of honey.

His sister Emma did the maths and found it would take about 360,000 bees to make that much.

With a master’s grasp of the subject, Aidan explains how the honey is made.

Apart from extracting honey, Aidan also makes beewax candles and sells them at markets. Ke-Xin Li

“So the bees have pollen on it, they put it into cells, and then they use fluids from water, and then they eat the pollen, then they vomit it back up. So when you eat honey, you’re basically eating vomit.”

A fact that doesn’t bother Aidan.

“I didn’t really care. It tastes good, even if it’s vomit.”

It took Aidan about a year selling honey on the roadside to save the $300 for his own hive.

And now, he’s saving his money for grander plans.

Aidan Thompson’s bees help him save money towards a bee farm, and help him support the dreams of others. Ke-Xin Li

“I’m going to save up for a house or a bee farm in the future. That’s what my bank has as my goal, $999,000. Don’t have that yet.”

But Aidan is serious, and he’s thought it through.

“I want to have a bee farm, but then sometimes I’m like, I might just have that as a little side hobby and just have two hives.

“Because I’ve found out that if you make 2,000 or 5,000 pots of honey a year, it’s quite hard to sell. So if I did get a farm, I’d probably be selling quite a lot overseas.”

By saving for his dream, Aidan is supporting others both locally and abroad.

“So I sponsor the Ellerslie Women’s First team. I give them ‘player of the day’, honey, so whoever gets the player of the day gets a little bottle of honey. I was sponsoring Brighton in Tanzania.

“Every $100 I made, I gave him $10. We lived over there for a year, and my mum [suggested it], because we were friends with some of them over there, so we help them now.”

With the help of his sister Lara, Aidan is growing his business and has an Instagram page called “thekidbeekeeper“, where he advertises a free honey delivery service on his bike.

But the busy beekeeper said there’s still lots to learn about running a buzzing business.

“I really like harvesting honey from the beehive, scraping off the wax on top of the honey and spinning it to get out the honey. But I’ve learnt that selling honey on the side of the road is a lot harder than getting it out from the beehive.”

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ASB confident economy will turn around in 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

Chief economist Nick Tuffley said consumer spending is up especially for big-ticket items like cars and electronics. 123RF

  • Economy in recovery mode for 2026 – ASB Bank
  • Lower interest rates, exports, tourism, consumers drive growth
  • Growth forecast to average 2-3 pct over next couple of years
  • Inflation back at 2 pct target mid-2026, unemployment above 5 pct all year
  • Official cash rate starts rising end of 2026.

ASB Bank has raised a flag of confidence over the economic outlook for next year, driven by a mix of lower interest rates, solid exports, and consumer spending.

Chief economist Nick Tuffley said the economy has turned the corner after recession.

“We’re seeing clear signs that the recovery is gathering pace. Consumer spending is up, especially on big-ticket items like cars and electronics, and rural incomes are holding strong despite global uncertainty.”

He said the benefit of falling interest rates would continue to be felt as households refix their mortgages, which would likely support consumer spending.

Tuffley said the rural sector would retain strong incomes even as milk prices eased from highs, Fonterra shareholders had the added bonus of a $3.2 billion capital return, and beef producers were currently exempt from US tariffs.

He said the growth outlook for country’s main trading partners was still below average, which had been caused by the US tariffs, but New Zealand has been diversifying markets, while tourism had shown only slight growth.

“Continued tourism recovery will be linked to improvements in global growth and confidence, which will both take time to come through.”

Inflation, unemployment down, rates up or down

Tuffley expected the slack in the economy would keep pressure on prices, which would see the annual rate fall from the current 3 percent level, at the top of the Reserve Bank’s target zone, towards the 2 percent midpoint around the middle of next year.

Unemployment, currently at 5.3 percent, was forecast to take longer to recover, not falling below 5 percent until 2027.

“The jobs market is also stabilising after a period of overall job losses … Job ads are on the way up, and 2026 should bring strengthening employment prospects.”

A modest lift in the housing market from lower borrowing costs, plenty of listings, and still relatively flat prices.

“Mortgage rates are about as low as they are likely to go. People who have been waiting for interest rates to reach the lows before acting have nothing further to wait for.”

Prices are expected to rise 3-4 percent.

Tuffley doubted there would be any more rate cuts by the Reserve Bank unless the recovery stalled.

“The RBNZ has very likely done enough to get the recovery going sufficiently strongly, even if it has taken longer than anticipated to show through.”

ASB forecast the official cash rate to be held at 2.25 percent through next before a couple of rises in early 2027.

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Questions remain on unity in Te Pāti Māori following long-awaited AGM

Source: Radio New Zealand

Te Pāti Māori president John Tamihere RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Te Pāti Māori’s leadership is adamant the annual general meeting was a “magnificent day for” the movement, despite issues around the decision to expel an MP and the party presidency remaining unresolved.

The meeting showed the party was “anything but a party in disarray” says Te Pāti Māori president John Tamihere as he batted away suggestions he should stand down, with one person in attendance calling for everyone to “eat a humble kumara.”

During the pōwhiri, the party leadership was asked by Ngira Simmonds whether they were the right people to unify the party.

Another member asked Tamihere during the AGM whether he would be willing to step down if it was for the good of the party.

In attendance were Māori leaders such as Dame Naida Glavish and Taame Iti. Expelled MP Tākuta Ferris was not at the meeting.

Speaking to reporters after the AGM, which ran much later than expected after general business was opened up after all, Tamihere said he’d stand down if there was a “good reason” to stand down.

“If it’s a reason that a few people don’t like me, that doesn’t cut the mustard.

“You got to have reasons about policy, about program, about politics, not personality. Just because you don’t like somebody doesn’t mean to say you should guillotine them.”

The last minute reinstatement of Mariameno Kapa-Kingi as a member to the party, following her expulsion alongside former member Tākuta Ferris, meant remits and resolutions in relation to the court ruling were unable to be discussed at the AGM.

MP for Te Tai Tokerau, Mariameno Kapa-Kingi. File photo. VNP / Phil Smith

That included the decisions to expel two MPs, as well as the party presidency. Those issues will be addressed in substantive hearings in February, on the eve of Waitangi Day celebrations.

In terms of welcoming Kapa-Kingi back to the party, Tamihere said it was an issue of trust, which had been “so badly broken” that it was a difficult issue in his mind.

“It might not be in others.”

Newest Te Pāti Māori MP Oriini Kaipara greeted Kapa-Kingi warmly on the day and both stood to sing in support of Simmonds after he spoke.

But Tamihere maintained the party didn’t want to welcome Kapa-Kingi back into the fold.

Co-leader Rawiri Waititi wouldn’t be drawn on whether it was nice to see Kapa-Kingi on the day, “it was nice to see everybody”.

He said the AGM was about the “people,” and the people “turned out today”, and we’re “really pleased” with the outcome.

Ngarewa-Packer added they thrive in face-to-face spaces.

“We had up to nine hours with our people. Some of the busiest people in their marae turned up to make sure their movement heard them,” Ngarewa-Packer said.

Tamihere said the party didn’t file the proceedings, but as someone who was experienced around litigation, “we just go with the system.”

Instead, the AGM reset the “confidence” of the majority of the electorates he said.

“Because they’re the ones that turned up in big numbers, and they felt that they were being adversely impacted by not the leadership, but by the conduct of others.”

In response to Simmonds’ criticism, co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer said Simmonds had come up to her and Waititi after the meeting and told them he had 100 percent confidence in their leadership.

“That’s a strong position, and I think that’s the significance of today, is actually being able to eyeball each other and ask the hard questions.”

A resolution was passed during the meeting in support of the co-leaders.

TPM co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. File photo. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Kapa-Kingi told RNZ it had been a great day to “show face” as the Te Pāti Māori MP for Te Tai Tokerau “who never left”.

She said her electorate reaffirmed the resolutions settled upon by people in Te Tai Tokerau at their Kohewhata hui “some weeks ago.”

But there was a sense of frustation by some as they made their way out of the hui that it had been a waste of time, given key issues couldn’t be discussed.

Hemi Piripi from Te Tai Tokerau told RNZ he believed there was still a lot of division.

“There’s a lot of ‘he said, she said thing’.

“Everyone just needs to eat a humble kumara.”

He said there was a generation who were watching the “waka go down” and he wanted to float the waka and relash it so Māori could come together.

He wanted the president to step down, for the executive to be looked at and for a rotation in leadership roles to be considered.

“He does need to go for the waka to start rising again.”

The AGM was closed to media, but over a number of hours there was intense discussion, with cheers and boos heard at various times and many members leaving as the day went on.

Te Tai Tonga also raised the expulsion of Tākuta Ferris. The electorate had invited the leadership to meet this coming weekend, but Tamihere said he was unavailable due to the family memorial for his son who had passed.

During the AGM, Tamihere gave a speech which Waatea news obtained a copy of.

In it he said “no MP is above the Party. No MP is below the Party.”

“Without discipline – we descend into anarchy. With discipline – we ascend into power,” he said.

Tamihere said he wasn’t concerned at how this would impact the party at the next election, and dismissed suggestions not reinstating the expelled MPs would risk losing support for the party.

There was “time on our side” to repair something based on feelings and personality as opposed to good process, policy and programming.

“It’ll be definitely sorted out before the election.”

Furthermore, Ngarewa-Packer spoke of those who turned up to “make sure their movement heard them, their movement saw them.”

“Their movement felt their absolute unity in going forward and taking this government out.”

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Better reading, maths results but two new curriculums a massive job – principals

Source: Radio New Zealand

Some teachers are still “unpacking” the new English curriculum and are focused on maths. File photo. Supplied / Ministry of Education

A Dunedin primary school says the new English and maths curriculums have changed the way its teachers teach.

In South Auckland a school says it has noticed big improvements in children’s maths.

And in Tauranga, a principal says the core of the new curriculums brings focus to things teachers already know and do.

The principals of all three schools told RNZ introducing two new curriculums in one year was a massive job and one that was far from complete.

They said they deliberately focused this year on one or other of the new documents, not both, and they had more work to do next year.

At Rowandale School in Auckland, principal Karl Vasau said teachers were still “unpacking” the new English curriculum and had focused on maths.

He said they had already seen significant improvements in children’s results, but that was due at least in part to improvements in basic literacy thanks to the school’s adoption four years ago of a structured literacy approach for teaching children to read.

“If you’re strong in literacy you can understand the questions, you can understand the context and so when we have delivered some standardised tests to our kids, our children have made massive gains,” he said.

Vasau said teachers were finding the maths curriculum helpful.

“Teachers are finding teaching mathematics a little bit easier because it’s prescribed as to what you are to deliver,” he said.

“If maths is not necessarily their strength, having a structured numeracy programme allows for teachers to not really struggle with their gaps because it’s very clear what they need to teach and then they’ll probably be teaching themselves as they go to get stronger with their own content knowledge.”

Vasau said he was a fan of the structured approach to learning, but he was concerned about the “knowledge-rich” focus of the curriculums.

It was great for children to learn about Ancient Egypt as proposed in the draft Social Sciences curriculum, but they also needed to know where they came from, he said.

Vasau said the school wanted to retain its localised curriculum because that was how it engaged children.

It also wanted to continue integrating different curriculum areas together.

“If we’re doing a wonderful unit on floating and sinking of course you want to write about that, you want to read about that… so integrating wherever possible the topic into literacy and numeracy is always going to have a benefit for the learning for the kids. That makes sense.”

A change in approach

At Dunedin’s George Street School, principal Robyn Wood said the maths and English curriculums changed not only what the school taught, but also how.

“I guess the whole thing I need to probably put across with the English and maths is that it’s a whole new teaching pedagogy. It’s not just a curriculum, it’s a pedagogical shift and we’ve done a huge amount of work in the way that we are now teaching,” she said.

Wood said the pedagogical changes involved “high-leverage” teaching practice, high expectations, and gradual release of information to students as they were ready to learn it.

“A lot of teachers have changed their rooms so that every child is now looking at the teacher when the teacher is teaching. Because with this new curriculum, you’re meant to teach the whole class and all of that sort of thing. So you’ve actually got that real engagement,” she said.

Wood said in some classes pupils used mini whiteboards to write answers so teachers could quickly scan the room and see what children had understood and what might need to be re-taught.

She said the whiteboards worked well and the school was introducing them school-wide next year.

“It’s quite a big shift from where we’ve been,” she said.

Wood said the school of nearly 430 pupils from Years 0-6 was well-placed to introduce the new maths curriculum having focused on teacher training in the subject in the previous three years.

She said it was retaining techniques it previously adopted, such as using a lot of problem-solving and asking students to discuss their methods for solving maths questions.

Wood said it was hard to introduce the curriculum without a matching assessment tool – something that had been promised for this term but would not now be available until next year.

But she said the maths curriculum had clearly had an effect.

“I’ve just been going around gathering student voice around the school, and one of the things that children are really talking about now is their times tables. Before this new curriculum, you would get to your times tables in due course when you got to multiplicative thinking and things like that. Now, I believe it’s being taught younger and certainly it’s on top of the heads for our children,” she said.

“I think the expectations are quite a lot higher and it kind of assumes that children might have some background knowledge before they get to school, and that’s not necessarily the case these days with children. So there’s a lot of work to be done right at the junior level and to move kids really fast.”

Wood said she had not even looked at revisions to the maths curriculum – announced in October – because she had simply not had time.

She said her school focused on the English curriculum this year looking at structured literacy in “huge depth” and it had a big effect.

“We’re seeing a huge engagement with our children,” she said.

“We’ve noticed a big, big uptake in vocabulary with our children. So our children now talking around words, asking questions, learning, our older children are talking grammatically – prefixes, suffixes, subordinating conjunctions things like that – grammar terms that they’ve not had before.”

Wood said some teachers worried older students would be bored by the structured literacy approach, but an “ah-ha moment” came when they saw that children in Year 3 and above were better prepared to engage with “authentic texts” thanks to their prior focus on decoding words.

“As a teacher when you’re doing the decodable stuff – the letters and the sounds of phonemic awareness and all of that – for older children you’re going ‘Oh my goodness, this is getting boring’.

“But once children have learned how to read and to decode and encode, as in writing out the sounds and exploring vocab, once they’ve got that foundation and they are able to do that then you get to choose whichever text… it’s not until they get to that that it actually starts to make sense for teachers.”

She said prior to the use of structured literacy, some children had gaps in their knowledge of letters and sounds and how to put them together.

“So now that that gap has been essentially closed they can fly on the authentic texts and it’s making sense to people.”

She said it was especially helpful for children for whom English was a second language and for its dyslexic learners.

Wood said she did not like everything in the new curriculums, but she liked a large part.

She also said the government was trying to introduce too much too fast.

“It’s a really hard balancing act trying to do two new curriculums in one year,” she said.

“We’re kind of flying the plane and building it all at the one time.”

“My big concern is that it’s just going to get tipped over because it’s too fast. There’s a large number of things I do like. I’m not saying I like everything, so please don’t quote me on that, but there are a large things a number of things I really do like.”

Pace of change

At Tauranga’s Tauriko School, principal Suzanne Billington said the new curriculums provided a lot more detail about what teachers should teach at each year level.

She said teachers had been asking for that, but introducing two new curriculums had been a massive undertaking and the school concentrated on English this year.

“A lot of the new learning has been around structured literacy, so staff are utilising that so they stick to the recipe and ensure that they are delivering that with fidelity,” she said.

“Next year we’re looking more at the writing side of things… we will start with things like where are we at with structured literacy and handwriting and then we’ll move beyond that to writing and the quality of the writing and the types of writing that our children are exploring at different age levels.”

Billington said one of the biggest changes in the English curriculum was the use of structured literacy through to Year 8, the final year of primary school.

“Structured literacy is around the phonetic component of learning, so that isn’t a rich English curriculum, but it’s a really good base to build from. So we’re also aware of the need to look at what our whole English curriculum looks like with that as a strong component in it,” she said.

Though Billington said there was a lot of work involved, much of the content was not new.

“Teachers have always used phonetics, but they’ve got a deeper understanding of it because it’s been explicitly outlined and they understand it in more depth and probably more professionally than they did before,” she said.

“When you look at the science of learning many, many aspects of that, we have already been doing… like knowing that it’s important to work out what kids’ prior knowledge is, that they have time to practise, that we use explicit teaching… all those aspects we have always used before, it’s just that they’ve all been brought together in the label of science of learning.”

Billington said teachers had put in a lot of work this year but she felt like they were going “back to the drawing board” because the government changed the curriculums in October.

On top of that, they were expected to provide feedback on draft curriculums for six other learning areas by April.

“That won’t happen here and in many schools around the country,” Billington said.

“Our teachers have to have time to get their heads into stuff, trial it and practise in classrooms, understand how it works.”

She said the government risked undermining the improvements it was trying to make.

“The pace of the change is what I think needs to really be looked at,” she said.

“If we rush this, we’ll be doing some surface learning with staff that won’t shift their practice enough to bring about the improvements that we all acknowledge need to happen.”

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Do you know what to do in these emergencies?

Source: Radio New Zealand

If you’re at the beach and a child gets in trouble in the water or someone collapses near you, would you freeze or would you know exactly what to do?

St John’s Three Steps for Life delivery lead Mia Noyes shares life-saving actions for when the unexpected happens — from allergic reactions and cardiac arrest to choking and drowning.

Allergies

A person can have an allergic reaction from various things like food, medication, venom or chemicals.

St John’s Three Steps for Life delivery lead Mia Noyes.

RNZ / Isra’a Emhail

What to look for: Swelling, a rash, nausea, dizziness, diarrhoea, or trouble breathing.

Help them to take their allergy medication – if they have one. If they don’t improve, use an EpiPen (or you can administer it for them) and call 111 for an ambulance. Or if you are unsure, call the 0800 Healthline.

If you get a bee sting, first remove the stinger with tweezers, your fingernails or scrape over it using a plastic card from your wallet.

RNZ / Isra’a Emhail

How to use an EpiPen: Pull off the safety release at the top. Stab the pen into the thigh for three seconds then remove and set aside.

Heatstroke and heat exhaustion

ProCare clinical director Allan Moffitt says the two conditions differ – heat exhaustion is dehydration through excessive sweating, while heat stroke is overheating. Both can lead to unconsciousness and cardiac arrest if untreated.

What to look for: Sweating, agitation, feeling thirsty and dehydrated.

What to do: If someone’s overheating, move them to a shaded spot, loosen or remove clothing on their chest, fan them, and get them water. Dr Moffitt warns against ice baths as they trap heat in the skin. Instead, wipe them down with a wet towel and let the water evaporate off the skin.

ProCare clinical director Allan Moffitt.

Supplied / Gino Demeer

For heat exhaustion, Dr Moffitt recommends drinking electrolytes because the body absorbs them quicker than water.

If they become unconscious, call an ambulance.

Cardiac arrest

A cardiac arrest is when the heart stops beating.

A person having a cardiac arrest will:

What to do: Call an ambulance. The call handler will guide you. If they confirm it’s a cardiac arrest, they’ll ask you to start CPR.

  1. Lay the person flat on a hard surface. Make sure any hazards are out of the way.
  2. Check their airway: tilt their head back, open their mouth, and clear anything you can easily reach.
  3. Look, listen, and feel for breathing for 10 seconds.
  4. If there’s one breath or no breathing, start CPR.

Place your hands in the centre of the chest (one over the other and lining your wrist with their nose), keep arms straight, and push hard and fast — 30 compressions. If you are comfortable doing rescue breaths, blow two mouth-to-mouth breaths while pinching their nose after every 30 pushes.

RNZ / Isra’a Emhail

Dr Moffitt says the chances of CPR success increases with a defibrillator. The AED Locations app locates the nearest Automatic External Defibrillator to your current location.

Defibrillators contain instructions and sometimes come with a speaker that communicate the steps for you.

For infants: If a baby becomes unresponsive and stops breathing normally, call 111.

Lay them flat on a firm surface, clear the airway if possible with your pinky finger, and check for breathing. If there’s one breath or none in 10 seconds, use your thumbs in the centre of their chest to do 30 compressions, followed by two gentle breaths (covering their nose and mouth with yours). Then repeat.

RNZ / Isra’a Emhail

Drowning

Surf Life Saving coastal safety manager Tom Kearney says it’s crucial to swim between the red and yellow flags at patrolled beaches.

If you see someone in trouble, call 111 and ask for police. They’ll connect with lifeguards and Coastguard right away.

If you can, throw or get a flotation device to the person — a life jacket, chilly bin, rugby ball or one of the public rescue tubes at beaches. You need a floatation device for you and the person in trouble.

“If you can’t swim, obviously don’t get in the water with that bit of equipment,” Kearney says.

“Attach the equipment to yourself, swim out to that patient, create some space between you and that patient, and make sure you’re putting that flotation in between you and the patient. Make sure they hold on to the flotation, calm them down, and then essentially wait until further help arrives.”

Surf Life Saving has been installing Public Rescue Equipment at surf clubs all over the country in time for summer.

Supplied / Surf Life Saving

Trying to pull someone back to shore instead of waiting can put you both in danger, he says.

Once the person’s back on shore, check if they’re responsive. If emergency services haven’t arrived and the patient is not breathing normally, roll them briefly onto their side to let water drain, then start CPR. Keep going until help arrives.

Choking

Check if someone is choking by asking. If they are, they won’t be able to respond by voice or cough. Call 111 for an ambulance.

What to do: Start with five firm back blows between the shoulder blades. If that doesn’t work, do five chest thrusts: wrap your arms around them from behind, make a fist in the middle of their chest, and pull sharply inwards. Alternate between the two until the blockage clears.

RNZ / Isra’a Emhail

If the person is taller than you, ask them to lean over a chair so you can deliver the blows.

If the person becomes unresponsive, start CPR.

For babies, call an ambulance immediately. If the baby is limp or not breathing, support their head, turn them over and give five back blows between the should blades using the bottom of your palm.

Check after each one. If nothing comes out, turn them face up and give five chest thrusts using your thumbs in the middle of the chest. Keep alternating until the object comes out — or start CPR if they go unresponsive.

Cuts on the beach

Dr Moffitt says significant injuries on the beach – say from a stingray barb – may require a clinic visit, if you can’t control the bleeding. (Also see St John’s guide on insect and jellyfish bites.)

But if it’s a minor shell cut, for example, wash out the sand using soapy water or an antiseptic solution then dry and cover the wound. If infection is a worry, use an antiseptic cream, he says.

“Keeping it covered makes it heal quicker, and it stops bugs from getting into it or dirt.”

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

Why your credit card might offer you less generous rewards

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. 123RF

Credit card reward schemes are predicted to continue to become less generous, as the Commerce Commission clamps down on card fees.

Since 1 December, domestic Visa and Mastercard payments have been subject to new caps on interchange fees, which are paid to the card issuer for each credit or debit card transaction processed. Caps for foreign-issued cards come in next May.

It is the second stage of changes to the rules for these fees. The first step, in 2022, led to a reduction in credit card rewards schemes and this latest move is already having similar effects.

BNZ said it had reviewed its credit card rewards programme to ensure it was sustainable under the new interchange fee caps. Customers will have to collect more points to redeem rewards.

From 3 February, its cashback rate drops from $1.28 per 200 points to 94c.

Kiwibank also dropped its Airpoints partnership this year. It said increased costs and changes to the interchange fee regulations affected the value and viability of the reward programme.

“The alternative to closing the products would be to reduce the rate at which points are earned or to pass on increased costs through higher interest rates – options we believe are neither fair nor in customers’ best interests, as it would mean that customers who do not repay their balance in full every month would further subsidise rewards for those who do,” said Kiwibank’s chief customer officer of retail, Mark Stephen.

Claire Matthews, a banking expert at Massey University, said she expected more pressure to come on credit card rewards.

“The rewards have to be paid for from somewhere, and the interchange fees have been the primary source – to an extent, the rewards were a reimbursement of a portion of those fees to cardholders. If the fees are lower, the funds available to cover the cost of rewards will be lower, and therefore the rewards have to be reduced.”

David Cunningham, chief executive of Squirrel and former chief executive of The Co-Operative Bank, said the biggest problem with credit cards was that interest rates were still high and had not moved a lot compared to the OCR.

“Those who pay off their balance every month are subsidised by those who don’t. The best option is a low-rate card if you use it as a debt instrument, but those cards don’t have rewards.

“Having a low-rate card if you don’t pay off your balance, or a rewards card if you do pay off your balance, is the best option. Sometimes you have both – one for each purpose.”

Consumer NZ said its analysis showed that credit card reward schemes were only benefiting big spenders who used their cards frequently and paid off the balance in full every month.

“People would generally need to spend $25,000 on their cards over two years, and not pay interest on it, to make a rewards scheme worth the fees that the cards charged.

“Low spenders, and those with interest-bearing debt, don’t benefit from rewards and are effectively subsidising high spenders. We don’t think this is fair, so we have supported the regulation of interchange, knowing this would likely result in card issuers scaling back rewards programmes, increasing card fees or cancelling schemes altogether,” a spokesperson said.

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

Australia beat England by eight wickets in second Ashes test, lead series 2-0

Source: Radio New Zealand

Australia beat England by eight wickets in the second Ashes test in Brisbane on day four on Sunday to take a 2-0 lead in the five-match series.

Australia, who won the series-opener in Perth by eight wickets, need only draw the next test in Adelaide to retain the urn.

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Joe Root and Ben Stokes DAVE HUNT

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

Walking 144 kilometres in impeccable vintage

Source: Radio New Zealand

Artist Jacqui Madelin is walking 12km a day to raise money for Project Island Song, a pest-free wildlife sanctuary spanning seven islands in the eastern Bay of Islands.

But there’s a twist, Madelin is completing each day’s walk, for the first 12 days in December, dressed head-to-toe in pieces from her extensive vintage wardrobe.

One outfit is an Edwardian swimming suit, she says.

Jacqui Madelin has been walking 12 kilometres every day to fundraise for Project Island Song, a charity working on pest eradication in the Bay of Islands.

Supplied

Return of the tie

“It’s a navy blue, all-in-one with a sailor collar that goes down to the elbow, goes down to the knees and has a skirt to button over it.

“So you unbutton the skirt and dash into the sea before anyone sees your legs and then you come back out again and quickly button the skirt around your middle,” she told RNZ Nights.

While to top is vintage, she went for more practical options on her feet.

“I don’t normally walk that far so I figured it would be crazy to wear fancy shoes. My feet would expire on day one, so I have some hiking boots that are pretty elderly.

“They’re leather and I bought them on Trade Me for not very much but they’re very, very comfortable.

“So, from mid-calf upwards I’m extremely fancy and from mid-calf downwards it’s all practical.”

Another outfit getting an airing in her charity walk is a navy and pink suit from the 1940s that she had to do considerable remedial work on, she says.

“It was being sold with pieces of the skirt apparently and possibly for use only as a pattern so I thought, well, it didn’t cost much so I bought it and it had over 200 moth holes in it

“But other than that it was in really good condition so I just spent evening after evening after evening darning hole after hole after hole and when I finally finished I went into the fabric upcycle and I got the expert darning lady in there to see if she could spot all my darns and she spotted some from the first couple of days and after that I’d got better.”

Her cause is Project Island Song, a group of 267 volunteers working to clear seven offshore islands of pests

“They’ve cleared all of the introduced animal pests from seven of our offshore islands and are now working on the introduced plant pests and slowly they’re reintroducing species that are endangered elsewhere and some of them haven’t been seen in the Bay of Islands for over 100 years.”

Once a month volunteers visit the islands with pest detection dogs to make sure that no, rats or stoats have swum across, she says.

“I think it’s amazing, absolutely amazing what largely volunteer labour can do on the smell of an oily rag.”

Donations can be made on Project Island Song’s 12ks of Christmas on Givealittle page.

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