Christchurch school launches internal probe over mouldy lunches

Source: Radio New Zealand

One of the meals. Supplied / Haeata Community Campus

The Christchurch school at the centre of a dispute about mouldy lunches served to students has launched an internal investigation.

Haeata Community Campus is at odds with New Zealand Food Safety and provider Compass Group about how mince and potato meals covered in mould came to be served to children on Monday.

Principal Peggy Burrows said she was [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/580912/principal-says-school-not-to-blame-for-mouldy-lunches-as-authorities-review-footage dismayed by comments made by New Zealand Food Safety and Compass Group that the school was to blame, before the investigation had been completed.

Contrary to claims made by Compass, she said the school’s camera footage clearly showed all food boxes, known as Cambros, were collected from the school on the previous Thursday and no food had been “left behind to sit in the sun for three days”.

Burrows said the school did not retain any of the boxes, rather they were collected and returned to the Compass distribution centre at the end of each day.

She said one box that only contained rubbish was left at the school last Wednesday but was collected by Programmed Facility Management staff, which manages the property, and returned to Compass the following day.

“The Cambros are barcoded and tracked and all meals are accounted for as there are strict food safety requirements for students with dietary needs. The contaminated meals were discovered dispersed across multiple Cambros by Haeata staff. This is confirmed by the camera footage,” she said.

Burrows said the school maintained robust systems at all times to ensure school lunches were safely distributed at the school and none of the systems had failed in the last week.

“The school does not accept responsibility for the operational failure of the supplier, the Compass Group, and disagrees with statements by both Mr Harbey [School Lunch Collective spokesman] and New Zealand Food Safety deputy director-general Vincent Arbuckle regarding Haeata Community Campus staff being responsible for the reheating and distribution of contaminated food,” she said.

The school was committed to student safety and transparency in serving food and planned to release the findings of its own internal investigation next week.

Select committee scrutiny

The mouldy meals were raised at the Ministry for Primary Industry’s annual review before the select committee on Thursday.

Ministry director-general Ray Smith said while the investigation into the meals at Haeata had not been completed, officials felt it was important to clarify their preliminary findings given public commentary on the risks posed by the meals.

“We would not have issued an interim view on it had the thing not been in the public domain in the manner it was that alarmed parents, no question about it, so we had to quickly either tell parents there’s a problem with Compass and deal with Compass or suggest there’s an issue at the school,” he said.

Of the 300 meals delivered to the school, between 10 to 20 meals were affected.

The lunches had been delivered to 15 other schools in Christchurch on Monday.

Food Safety deputy director-general Vince Arbuckle said investigators had visited Haeata Community Campus and Compass in Christchurch several times this week as part of the investigation to determine what had happened.

“Only one school had this experience and only one part of the school had this experience, the canteen, which all adds up to suggest that somehow in the canteen some meals remained in a box, got intermingled with incoming meals on the Monday and innocently served out,” he said.

“The weight of evidence suggests that the contaminated food being distributed to students was a result of a human error at the school.”

The investigation was ongoing and New Zealand Food Safety was happy to work with the school on its processes, Arbuckle said.

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State Highway 2 north of Dannevirke closed after truck crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

St John says one person with serious injuries is being flown to Palmerston North Hospital. RNZ / REECE BAKER

State Highway 2 north of Dannevirke is closed following a crash involving a truck.

Police said the crash near Okane Road in Matamau was reported just before 10am.

Fire and Emergency confirmed a truck was involved, and said its crews helped free the driver who was trapped. Crews are still on scene assisting police.

St John has a helicopter and two ambulances at the scene, and said one person with serious injuries is being flown to Palmerston North Hospital.

Police said drivers should avoid the area and expect delays.

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$33,000 pendant swallowed in Auckland jewellery heist ‘recovered’

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Fabergé locket was worth more than $33,500. SCREENSHOT

A Fabergé locket worth more than $33,500, swallowed by a man during an alleged theft at an Auckland jewellery store has been “recovered”.

Police confirmed it was back in their possession last night.

They said the 32-year-old man who swallowed the pendant remained in custody and would appear in Auckland District Court next week.

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Highs of 30C for parts of South Island before scorching weather moves north this weekend

Source: Radio New Zealand

Warm weather is forecast for most of the North Island over the weekend. RNZ / Richard Tindiller

Very hot weather is forecast for parts of the South Island today moving to the east coast of the North Island on the weekend.

MetService is forecasting temperature highs of 30C for Christchurch, Ashburton and Oamaru on Friday with Dunedin expected to reach 28C and Timaru and Blenheim 29C.

Northwesterly winds will drive up the temperatures in the east of the South Island and MetService has a strong wind watch for Southland, Otago and Canterbury High Country south of Aoraki / Mount Cook until 7pm on Friday. Gusts of 100km/h can be expected, especially inland.

It is also expected to be warm in the North Island on Friday with temperature highs in the low to mid 20s.

The weekend is expected to be dry for those in the North Island with hot temperatures for some. Gisborne, Napier and Hastings are forecast to exceed 30C on Saturday, Sunday, and Monday.

Napier is forecast to have a high of 32C on Saturday and Monday, while Hastings is expected to reach 32C on Saturday and 33C on Sunday and Gisborne is forecast to reach 31C on all three days.

Saturday temperatures are forecast to be in the mid 20s for the upper North Island including Auckland.

A dry weekend is expected for those in the North Island, but the West Coast of the South Island could expect some showers on Saturday.

MetService is forecasting more substantial rain in the west and south of the South Island on Sunday.

“Saturday will be the pick of the days this weekend in the South Island; perfect timing for runners to complete the Kepler Challenge and be off the mountain before the rain rolls in overnight,” MetService Meteorologist Michael Pawley said.

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Live: Black Caps v West Indies first test – day four

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Black Caps are in firm control of the first cricket test against the West Indies after a dominant day three in Christchurch.

Centuries for skipper Tom Latham and number four batter Rachin Ravindra helped New Zealand set a solid foundation to reach 417-4 at stumps with a lead of 481 runs.

Close to half of the Black Caps runs came in boundaries on Thursday.

First ball is at 11am.

Rachin Ravindra and Tom Latham Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz / Photosport Ltd 2025

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Sprinter Eddie Osei-Nketia switches allegiance to Australia

Source: Radio New Zealand

Eddie Osei-Nketia. PHOTOSPORT

New Zealand sprinter and national 100m record holder Eddie Osei-Nketia has officially switched allegiances to Australia.

Osei-Nketia broke his dad Gus Nketia’s record at the 2022 World Championships in Eugene, stopping the clock at 10.08 seconds. He came close to breaking the 10 second barrier earlier this year.

The 24-year-old, who is based in the US, is now set to race for Australia.

Governing body Australian Athletics posted on Instagram to announce the news. “Welcome, Edward Osei-Nketia,” the post said.

“He has been lighting up Australian tracks for years but Edward Osei-Nketia is now officially eligible to represent Australia on the world stage, successfully completing his transfer of allegiance from New Zealand.

“The 10.08-second man joins the nation’s rising sprinting stocks. This is going to be fun.”

Osei-Nketia is also the New Zealand 200m record holder, bettering the mark with a 20.24s finish earlier this year at a meet in the US.

He also ran 9.96s over 100m at a college meet in Texas in April although it was wind-assisted.

He last represented New Zealand in 2022 at the World Champs and earlier this year Australian Athletics confirmed he had requested a transfer of allegiance.

Osei-Nketia moved to the US after leaving New Zealand and had a crack at American football in Hawaii, before getting back on the sprinting track for the University of Southern California in 2024.

He has been based in the US since.

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Monty Knight’s alleged killer has name suppression extended while mental state assessed

Source: Radio New Zealand

Monty Knight. RNZ/Carol Stiles

Name suppression for a woman accused of murdering well-known Far North businessman Monty Knight has been extended until April next year while experts determine whether she is mentally fit to stand trial.

The 57-year-old appeared in the High Court at Whangārei on Friday morning, almost three weeks after Knight was found critically injured at his home just outside Kaitāia.

He could not be saved despite the efforts of emergency services.

Justice David Johnstone said the defendant’s fitness to stand trial was an issue, so he ordered two health assessors to independently prepare reports under the Criminal Procedure (Mentally Impaired Persons) Act. Those reports were likely to take until April next year.

Johnstone extended the interim name suppression granted at her first appearance in the Kaitāia District Court, given the “appreciable risk” publication would cause her extreme hardship.

He also requested the health assessors consider whether future publication of her name would create risk to her safety.

The entrance to Monty Knight’s home and vineyard cordoned off in November. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

The defendant appeared by audio-visual link (AVL) from prison dressed in a grey sweatshirt, and appeared calm throughout the 20-minute hearing.

No plea was entered and she was remanded in custody until a case review hearing on 17 April next year. That appearance was also expected to be by AVL.

The accused woman was represented by high-profile lawyer Arthur Fairley, while prosecutor Bernadette O’Connor appeared for the Crown.

Johnstone acknowledged the family members present in court.

Successful business career

Knight, who had recently turned 80, was one of Kaitāia’s best-known characters and entrepreneurs.

His retail career started with a tiny record shop on the town’s main street, then expanded into electronics, appliances and beds.

He took over the family business, Knights the Jewellers, and opened a second outlet in Kerikeri.

When told it was impossible to grow grapes in Kaitāia, Knight proved the doubters wrong by establishing an award-winning winery, Okahu Estate.

He was inducted into the Northland Business Hall of Fame in 2010, the same year he was elected to the Far North District Council. He also won a seat on the Northland Regional Council in a 2015 by-election.

More than 300 people attended a memorial service at Kaitāia’s Te Ahu Centre on 25 November.

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Are pōhutukawa trees flowering early this year? A botanist explains

Source: Radio New Zealand

Pohutukawa, Mt Victoria, Wellington Robyn Jaquiery

Flowering pōhutukawa trees are the sign summer is here – and many we have seen are already in full bloom.

But are they flowering earlier this year?

Ecologist and botanist Associate Professor Bruce Burns, from the University of Auckland, says no.

“We have had some stunning displays. I live up here at the Whangaparaoa Peninsula and and you know, it’s just been amazing, the intensity of the blooms on some trees,” he told Morning Report on Friday.

“But… it’s still within the regular flowering period of pōhutukawa. They tend to start flowering about the end of November, beginning of December, and trees will flower all the way to the end of January.”

Every pōhutukawa is different, he explained.

“Trees vary very much in when they flower., So you know, one tree itself will flower for about a month, but it will have this period of intense flowering for only about two weeks.

Pōhutukawa in flower. Bryan Crump.

“So over a population of pōhutukawa, you will get trees that flower at different times through that two-month period. So you might go out and see that we have these trees at the moment with stunning blooms, but you’ll also see trees around them with flower buds that haven’t opened yet and some trees that aren’t going to flower at all this season.”

Nor can the time and intensity of a pōhutukawa’s bloom be used to predict what kind of summer we are going to have, as some have reportedly suggested.

“Would be wonderful, wouldn’t it? To [be told that] the summer is gonna be great. And I hope very much that it will be,” Burns said. “But logically, how it flowers is really about what’s happened in the past, rather than what’s gonna happen in the future.”

And that is a combination of genetics, the environment and weather.

“People have looked at pōhutukawa and found if a tree flowers early one year, then it’s pretty much gonna flower early every year. So there is a certainly a genetic component to it… but otherwise it’s about, you know, the time leading up to the flowering season – how the weather has been, whether it’s been warm and wet and the tree’s had plenty of time to corral it’s resources to get that flowering going.”

As for where to see the best trees, Burns says pretty much anywhere in the country – but especially the top half of the North Island.

“And of course it occurs down in Wellington as well, and people around Wellington really gush about the amazing pōhutukawa around there, and I’ve heard that the trees around Te Papa are also ones that flower early and have incredible blooms. So I’m not sure there is a particularly great place to look at pōhutukawa. I mean, everyone will vote for their own local pōhutukawa, I’m sure.

“But there’s quite a lot of variety within pōhutukawa itself, so you know, there will be really great trees in just about every location in New Zealand.”

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Tax change could leave family businesses with bigger bills

Source: Radio New Zealand

IRD said it was bringing the treatment of loans in line with other countries. (File photo) RNZ

Inland Revenue is planning to crack down on shareholders taking loans from companies, in a move that could hand some an extra tax bill.

Inland Revenue (IR) is asking for feedback on proposals to improve the way new loans by companies to shareholders are taxed.

David Carrigan Inland Revenue deputy commissioner for policy, said it would bring New Zealand’s treatment of loans in line with other similar countries, while still allowing the normal business use of short-term drawings.

“We recognise that most companies manage their loans to shareholders and drawings responsibly. However, the current rules can allow some loans to become unmanageable, to the point they may never be repaid. For instance, our data has revealed some very large outstanding loans from companies to their shareholders.

“For the 2024 tax year, IR data shows about 5,550 companies had outstanding loan balances of more than $1 million each.

“When a shareholder borrows a large amount from their company and doesn’t pay it back, our current rules mean they can pay less tax compared to other shareholders who receive taxable dividends or taxpayers who earn income through salary or wages.”

The current rules often failed to collect tax on the funds left in the hands of the shareholder when a company was wound up, Carrigan said.

He said the main proposal was for a time limit that would treat certain shareholder loans as dividends, and tax them accordingly, if they were not paid back within 12 months from the end of the income year in which they were made.

“The change will only apply to new loans made after today, so it won’t apply to existing loans. To ensure it does not impact small businesses and ordinary transactions, the proposed time limit would only apply to companies whose total lending to shareholders is $50,000 or more.

“In addition to this main proposal, the issues paper also consults on proposals for outstanding loans to be taxed when a company is removed from the Companies Register and for improved reporting obligations on companies.”

Inland Revenue was going through a consultation period until February before it gives advice to ministers on the proposal.

Deloitte tax partner Robyn Walker said the proposal made it clear loans were common and a legitimate way to manage cashflow, and “not a problem per se”.

Deloitte tax partner Robyn Walker. (File photo) Supplied / Deloitte

“However, the paper cites data about loan balances, with the key concern relating to companies and shareholders with material loan balances which have been outstanding for some time.

“For example, 5500 companies have shareholder loans outstanding of over $1m and 540 have loans of over $5m. The concern is that the use of loans with limited/no repayment provides an unintended tax benefit as compared to paying shareholder salaries or declaring dividends, and the use of – in some cases poorly documented – loans can be a contributing factor to other business issues such as being unable to pay creditors or outstanding tax debt.”

She said the impact would be most felt by small, family businesses.

“In some cases, there is a lot of blurring of the boundaries between business and personal expenses, particularly by using current accounts. The consultation paper indicates for around 50 percent of such businesses there is absolutely no issue because the outstanding loan balances are below the proposed threshold of $50,000; for the other businesses, 2026 should possibly be the year for talking with an accountant and putting in place a plan for managing how shareholders take money from the business.

“The paper points out that current accounts are not a problem in themselves, but it shouldn’t be one-way traffic of a balance just getting larger and the shareholder never earning anything in their own right.

“While interest is charged on loans and tax generated on that income, it results in a generally lower amount of tax in the short term and different timing of tax compared to when other taxpayers are paying tax for those who have no ability to pick and choose such as sole traders, employees …”

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Debt levels see Fletcher Building move on funding structure

Source: Radio New Zealand

npo caption Fletcher Building

Fletcher Building has simplified its funding structure as debt remains above its guidance range.

The building materials firm prepaid all outstanding United States Private Placement notes and associated cross-currency interest rate swaps at a total cost of $7.2 million, along with measures to increase its liquidity over the next three years.

Andrew Reding Supplied

Fletcher Building managing director Andrew Reding said changes to its funding structure would give it greater flexibility, lower the ongoing cost of capital, while supporting its strategic reset.

He said there were no internal concerns regarding compliance with its standard bank covenant level, but dividend payouts would be suspended as long as debt remained above its target.

“We remain committed to reducing leverage and ensuring the business is well positioned to navigate current market conditions and return to sustainable, long-term performance,” he said.

“Simplifying our funding structure and extending key facilities gives us greater flexibility, lowers our ongoing cost of capital, and supports the disciplined execution of our strategic reset.”

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