Lower Hutt road closed following serious crash, motorists asked to avoid area

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / REECE BAKER

One person is seriously injured following a crash in Lower Hutt.

Rutherford Street, between Melling Link and Connolly Street, is closed as a result of the single-vehicle crash that occurred around 5.30am on Thursday.

Police said the road is expected to be closed “for some time” and motorists are asked to avoid the area.

Motorists heading into Lower Hutt cannot turn left off the Melling Bridge, police said.

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Gen Z workers least happy, 40 percent dread going to work

Source: Radio New Zealand

Happiness in the workplace has held steady over the past year. Unsplash

  • Two-thirds surveyed happy at work
  • Direct line managers more influential, but only 56 pct happy with their manager
  • Purpose is main happiness driver along with responsibilities
  • Job security more important for happiness, but fewer feel it
  • Nearly a third dread going to work, higher among Gen-Z

Happiness in the workplace has held steady over the past year as employees appreciate the purpose of what they do and the responsibilities that go with it.

A new report from recruitment website Seek showed 64 percent were happy at work, unchanged from the year before, with 12 percent saying they were unhappy.

Other top reasons included people were happy where they worked, the people they worked with, and work-life balance, but that was tempered by concerns about job security and some dissatisfaction with direct line managers.

Seek country manager Rob Clark said the maintenance of happiness was encouraging even with tough economic times.

“What stands out is that even with these pressures, New Zealand workers remain remarkably resilient and clear about what matters most.”

However, he said a mixed bag of factors affected sentiment, with more than a third least happy with career progression, and less than half content with company commitment to ESG (environment, sustainability, governance), salary, stress and senior leadership.

Clark said employers and senior managers should be aware of the changing factors in workplace mood.

“Happier employees are more likely to be engaged and productive, and far less likely to be looking for another role. By focusing on wellbeing, purpose and supportive management, employers can make a meaningful difference to how people feel at work.”

Gen Z least happy

The least happy group at work was Generation Z (those born in the late 1990s and early 2000s) with 58 percent saying they were happy, up from 45 percent in the previous survey.

Notably 40 percent of Gen Z workers dreaded going to work, were more likely to feel burnt out and exhausted.

Clark said Gen Z workers were most likely to have just joined the workforce and be at the bottom of the employment ladder and pay scale.

But the survey showed satisfaction among them for ESG issues, recognition, and feeling listened to or valued.

“In many instances they’re probably being asked to go the extra mile because of the current tough conditions and there’s less resource to go around … and that cohort is most likely to feel the cost of living pressures.”

Clark said the survey did not go into whether economic good times made for happier workplaces, but he suspected it probably did.

“I would say yes, simply because if we’re seeing wage growth and people are getting paid more over time then there’s more resources, and roles and responsibilities they have are a little better, their work is more enjoyable and that drives happiness.”

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No time to relax for Liam Lawson

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand F1 driver Liam Lawson. MPS AGENCY / PHOTOSPORT

Analysis: New Zealand driver Liam Lawson can probably afford to sit back and take a couple of deep breaths following the 2025 Formula 1 season, but he won’t have long to relax.

If the 23-year-old thought he was under pressure in his first full season in the sport’s elite competition, the intensity will climb to another level next season.

Lawson’s job is far from secure even in 2026.

Red Bull have not revealed the length of the new contracts for Lawson, Isack Hadjar or Arvid Lindblad, while Max Verstappen’s deal runs until the end of the 2028 championship.

It is likely that Lawson is on a one-year deal again, meaning he has to more than prove himself to stay beyond the end of next year.

He is now also the senior driver at Racing Bulls and therefore needs to be the one leading the team on the points table, anything less and his Formula 1 career will be over.

“Liam Lawson has got to get a result next year,” F1 commentator Alex Jacques said following the Red Bull driver line-up announcement.

“It is really well put from Alan Permane, (Racing Bulls team principal) peaks and troughs will not cut it in a second full season.

“He is going to have to find consistency that is higher and make the most of this brilliant opportunity that has been given to him.”

New Zealand driver Liam Lawson of Visa Cash App RB F1 Team. Eric Alonso / PHOTOSPORT

Red Bull obviously see something in Lawson and they are now hoping to nurture it.

“Liam is talented, he’s very talented, and my mission will be to get him to operate at the level he can operate at when things are all working for him,” Permane told F1.

“In some of the most difficult situations we’ve had this year such as Vegas Qualifying or Baku Qualifying, he’s excelled – and he’s having some really strong races. I know he’s capable of that and he knows he’s capable of that and I just want to work with him to get him at that level every single time he goes in the car.”

Lawson struggled early on in 2025 driving the first two rounds with Red Bull before being demoted to Racing Bulls.

It wasn’t until the eighth round in Monaco that he picked up his first points and while he finished fifth in Azerbaijan and sixth in Austria, there were plenty of times where he was unable to make an impression on the top ten.

That won’t be acceptable in 2026, but what car Racing Bulls is able to produce next year will be a key.

New regulations come into force with the cars smaller and lighter with different aerodynamics and there will be an increase in electrification in the power unit.

Commentators are expecting the Mercedes powered cars (Mercedes, McLaren, Williams and Alpine) to get up to speed quickly in 2026 but there is a question mark surrounding Red Bull who will leave Honda and will produce their own power units with the help of Ford.

It is also worth noting that Red Bull kept Yuki Tsunoda on as their test and reserve driver for 2026 meaning they have someone who is capable of stepping back into one of their cars at short notice if any of the other three (Hadjar, Lawson and Linblad) have any problems.

Liam Lawson during qualifying for the Qatar Grand Prix in Doha. AFP

The championship will be decided this weekend in Abu Dhabi with Lando Norris, Max Verstappen and Oscar Piastri all in contention.

For Lawson it is another opportunity to pick up points and thank the bosses for putting faith in him.

“I’m very excited to finish off the season in Abu Dhabi, after a strong finish in the points at the weekend.

“It’s a hugely enjoyable track which I raced at for the first time in Formula One back in 2021.

“We had strong race pace in Qatar, which we hope to take into the final race as we continue our fight for P6 in the Constructors’.”

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Weather watches remain for North Island following stormy night

Source: Radio New Zealand

The rain radar as of 6am Thursday morning. Supplied / Metservice

Weather watches remain in place for parts of the North Island following a stormy night for some regions.

Heavy rain and powerful winds swept through Te Ika-a-Māui overnight.

MetService says the wettest areas included parts of Tai Rāwhiti, including Wharerata which has seen 57 millimetres of rain fall over the past 12 hours.

Rain is continuing to fall in Gisborne which has seen downpours of almost 40mm.

Strong gusts have also jolted exposed parts of Northland, Auckland, Hawke’s Bay, Waiarapa and Wellington.

Winds of 142 kilometres an hour have been felt at Cape Turnagin.

“Many parts of Northland copped winds of over 100km/h,” Metservice said.

The strong wind watch for the upper North Island is due to expire at 7am, and Wairarapa’s at 8am.

Meanwhile, the watch for eastern areas of the Tararua District and Hawke’s Bay is expected to continue until 1pm.

More than 13,000 lightning strikes and 2 centimetre hailstones were recorded on Wednesday as torrential downpours swept the North Island.

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Paediatrician worries new measles wave spreading undetected

Source: Radio New Zealand

Health New Zealand has confirmed five new cases of measles. 123rf

A paediatrician is worried that a new wave of measles cases means the disease is spreading undetected.

Health New Zealand (HNZ) confirmed five new cases on Wednesday – one person in Dunedin, one in Waikato and three people in Auckland.

It said it brought the number of reported infections since 8 October to 27, with 22 people no longer infectious, and expected there could be more.

The new cases were as yet unlinked to others, with HNZ’s public health medicine specialist Dr Matt Reid saying they were currently being investigated to establish any links to previous reports or locations of interest.

Chairperson of the Immunisation Taskforce Dr Owen Sinclair said the new cases were concerning, as measles was a deadly disease.

“We should be really worried, as I think this is a sign that this is spreading.

“This would be highly unlikely to be spontaneous international visitors [that’s] occurring, this is transmission that’s happening within our community.”

It was fortunate that sick children weren’t flooding hospitals, he said, but he maintained it was only a matter of time if the spread continued.

“There is no specific cure for measles once you get it, so the only way to stop the spread is to ensure that we have extremely high rates of measles vaccination.”

Sinclair said if cases were being seen in highly vaccinated populations, the spread could just fizzle out, but cases in Waikato and Auckland were a worry.

“The last outbreak was centred in Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland) – it started in west Auckland and then moved to south Auckland so those populations are vulnerable.

“And there are also high numbers of, particularly Māori, in Waikato that have very low rates of immunisations.

“It’s a great concern, we really don’t want it affecting those populations.”

Dr Nikki Turner, Immunisation Advisory Centre principle medical advisor, said while disappointing, the new cases were unsurprising.

“It’s not totally unpredictable, but it’s a bit of a bummer.

“The health services have put a huge amount of effort into trying to contact trace around the previous cases, but of course you have to wait for the next two weeks, the next four weeks to check that they haven’t infected somebody else.”

Turner said the spread was likely driven by domestic and overseas travel.

“I think the general problem is that New Zealanders travel, and we travel a lot.

“So these cases could either be new ones that have come in internationally – because there’s a lot of measles internationally – or they’re just caught from people travelling around the country who were unaware they were incubating measles.”

She said children were at the highest risk of becoming seriously ill with measles, so the priority was to raise vaccination rates in young children and infants.

But she said there were also unknown numbers of mid-life adults who missed out on being immunised when they were younger.

“It’s a call to action for everyone.

“If you’re not sure you’ve had two vaccines and you’re under the age of about mid-50s, then go and check. Basically, we’re all just travelling around a lot and you can carry this virus before you know you’ve got it and you can spread it.

“It is so virulent.”

Sinclair urged people to view vaccination as positive.

“Please just make a little bit of effort to do it. You could save your life, your child’s life, and someone else’s life.”

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Ditching the traditional Christmas tree

Source: Radio New Zealand

Now it’s December, people throughout the country have been hunting for the perfect Christmas tree.

But that doesn’t always mean a fir, spruce, pine… or plastic.

Christmas is celebrated in summer after all… so why bother with an evergreen tree?

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Calls for urgent action over deer control

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wild deer can be found in both the North and South Islands of New Zealand on public conservation land and private property. Supplied

In a war between hunters and conservationists over the control of one of our most damaging pests, only the deer are winning.

It’s nearly 100 years since deer were first declared a pest in New Zealand and we are no closer to coming up with a resolution, says hunter and conservationist John Bissell.

While we procrastinate and argue, the ngahere is suffering, he says.

“There’s a wide range of views on deer, in particular, from absolute hatred to highly valued,” says Bissell. “No matter what people like myself say, we’re going to upset or offend somebody or some people.”

There are estimates of 1.8 million deer across the country. They cost farms hundreds of millions of dollars in damage and repair bills every year and they are now invading the most precious corners of our native bush.

Bissell runs Backblocks Environmental Management in Wairarapa, specialising in pest and predator control. He says he’s increasingly getting calls from farmers to control the deer on their farms.

“It’s hitting them in the back pocket more and more on a larger and larger number of properties around the country,” he says.

Until now, deer have been “totally mismanaged” and the only way to bring them under control is for people with different interests and different solutions to work together, he says.

‘Every landowner has a responsibility’

Today The Detail looks at the decades-long debate on deer control, new measures by the government to work with interested parties, and the controversial legislation that would see some deer breeds protected and managed.

Federated Farmers meat and wool chair Richard Dawkins says the explosion in numbers has not been helped by a slump in venison prices that put off commercial hunters.

Prices have picked up but not to the same level as the boom and bust days in the 1970s and 80s.

Dawkins has experienced the ravages of deer first hand on his farm near Blenheim, when deer ran amok through a forestry block.

“When trees are young, just been planted, they are very susceptible to browsing damage. Unfortunately we had about five hectares chewed out,” Dawkins says.

The grass was knee-high but the pests came through and picked out the seedlings.

“We had to do a full replant but that’s reflective of what I’m hearing from my Meat and Wool Council nationwide and whether it is damage to farm forestry or pastures or crops it is certainly a theme that’s been going on for a few years now,” he says.

A Federated Farmers survey found that the damage and repair costs to farms amounted to $200 million a year.

Dawkins says no solid data has been collected on deer but based on population estimates of 1.8 million, numbers need to be culled to 500,000 to 800,000.

“Everyone has a part to play in this. Pointing fingers isn’t really a pathway forward and we think every landowner has a responsibility,” he says.

‘Deer everywhere’

Cromwell journalist Jill Herron was motivated to write a series for Newsroom about pest problems in the southern region after her own experiences hunting, tramping and walking her dog.

“You just keep hearing the same thing, about the level of damage that’s happening quietly out in the bush.

“I think it doesn’t really hit you until you see it yourself.”

Herron’s noticed a significant increase in numbers in the last 10 years around the Southern Lakes and Southland.

“Deer everywhere,” she says, from the backcountry to the outskirts of towns.

“Where I live in Central Otago I see deer pretty much every second day when I walk my dog down the river or on the council reserve.”

She says that the biggest concern that shocked her was the damage to native bush that leads to canopy collapse, when deer strip out the understorey of native forest so there is nothing left for the birds to eat or for insects to live in.

“What it means is that the whole forest falls down and dies.”

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New primary English, maths curriculum results exceeding expectations, ministry says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Associate Education Minister David Seymour. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The Education Ministry says the English and maths curriculums introduced by primary schools this year have had a bigger impact than expected.

Appearing before Parliament’s Education and Workforce Select Committee, the ministry’s chief executive, Ellen MacGregor-Reid, said she was thrilled for children.

“The results have exceeded my expectations. We’d been working for some time on structured literacy as an approach, we’d identified for some time we had issues in mathematics teaching. The investment that has been made in recent years has outstripped my expectations in terms of what we are now seeing coming through for children,” she said.

Asked why it did not move faster, she said: “We took a while working with people, working with the sector getting buy-in. My reflection in hindsight is while that worked, a short amount of time in the life of an adult is a long time in the life of a child. So that’s my overall reflection is we need to get the right balance between getting changes to occur in the classroom but making it manageable for the teachers and leaders.”

Asked if introducing the new primary school English and maths curriculums quickly had been the right decision, MacGregor-Reid said “For maths and literacy, yes, it was the right decision and I think our teaching profession has done themselves proud”.

MacGregor-Reid said she had heard anecdotal reports of children telling their teachers and others that maths was their favourite subject.

“That’s a big thing for this country,” she said.

MacGregor-Reid held out some hope for schools and early childhood services facing big bills for cleaning up asbestos contamination from colour sand.

She said the ministry was looking at “some options” but had not made any decisions.

Questions overs free lunch scheme

Later in the hearing, Associate Education Minister David Seymour appeared before the committee and Labour Party education spokesperson Willow-Jean Prime challenged him over complaints about the cut-price free school lunch scheme.

Labour Party education spokesperson Willow-Jean Prime. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

“At what point after a child has been burnt, another has bitten into plastic, bugs have been served up in lunches, will you concede that this programme has been a flop,” she asked him.

“About the same time as you get an Oscar for that performance,” Seymour responded.

Prime suggested Seymour bullied people who criticised the lunch programme.

“This is supposed to be an exercise in evaluating value for taxpayer money, if you’re looking for another career as an actor then I don’t like your chances,” Seymour said.

That prompted Labour’s Phil Twyford to interject.

“Give it a rest. Jerk,” he said.

Education Minister Erica Stanford also appeared before the committee and was challenged over the government’s decision to cancel schools’ legal obligation to uphold the Treaty of Waitangi.

Education Minister Erica Stanford. RNZ / Mark Papalii

She denied the 1500 schools that had since publicly affirmed their commitment to the treaty was proof the government got it wrong.

“We always said it is up to schools if they wish to confirm that. As long as they are doing the things that we ask of them which are very clearly laid out – raise Māori achievement, offer te reo Māori, and be culturally responsive. Over and above that, if schools wish to uphold the treaty as many have reconfirmed their position, then they are free to do so,” she said.

Stanford said the government’s reforms were having a positive effect and the biggest improvements were among Māori and Pacific students.

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Oh. What. Fun. is a light, frivolous Christmas comedy – about motherhood and female rage

Source: Radio New Zealand

The telltale signs that Christmas is coming have begun appearing in shops and malls around the country. Fairy lights and tinsel adorn store displays while Mariah Carey’s ‘All I Want for Christmas’ plays on repeat.

Nowhere is the intersection of tradition and commercialisation more apparent than in the Christmas movie genre. Not surprisingly, the viewing of these films has become a holiday tradition in itself.

Oh. What. Fun. is Prime Video’s most recent foray into the festive season genre. In a self-referential gesture, wife, mother and grandmother Claire Clauster (Michelle Pfeiffer) wonders in a voice-over “where are the holiday movies about moms?” before pointing out “I could name a dozen about men”.

Kraven the Hunter is a Christmas turkey

The film promises to subvert genre expectations through foregrounding a disenchanted, disgruntled maternal point of view.

Facing the mental load

As her name would suggest, Claire comes into her own at Christmas. She shops, bakes and lovingly decorates the family’s Texan home complete with “Don’t get your tinsel in a tangle” sequined cushions and life-size inflatable figures of Santa for the front lawn.

This year, all Claire really wants for Christmas is appreciation – preferably in the form of a nomination for the Holiday Mom of the Year contest from talk show host Zazzy Tims (Eva Longoria).

The opposite occurs when the family embarks on an outing without Claire, unwittingly leaving her home alone (in a clear nod to the 1990 John Hughes classic).

Feeling bereft and abandoned, Claire sets off on a road trip across the state.

Recent motherhood movies have been “heavy on despair”, intent on mapping the disjuncture between culturally valorised maternity and mothers’ more lonely, dissatisfying experiences. While Oh. What. Fun.’s lighter, more frivolous tone under director Michael Showalter sets it apart from these examples, its portrayal of the depleting effects the holiday season can have on mothers is serious.

Social media posts and blogs are replete with such examples. Predecessors can also be found in the Christmas movie genre. A Bad Moms Christmas (2017) and Catherine O’Hara’s iconic “Kevin!” scream in Home Alone (1990) both offer comic depictions of the mental load mothers carry. Emma Thompson’s quietly devastating performance in Love Actually (2003) reveals the efforts mothers make – often at the expense of their own happiness – to ensure Christmas is a magical experience for their children.

Research indicates that the pressure to manage Christmas is worsened when systemic inequities are at play: domestic and family violence rates surge during the holiday season and, in the current economic climate, many families are struggling to provide basic necessities, let alone celebratory food and presents.

Of course, Oh. What. Fun. wouldn’t be a Christmas movie without a happy ending.

Prime Video

Embracing the female rage

In framing Christmas from the beleaguered mother’s point of view, Oh. What. Fun. unabashedly targets middle-aged women, a decision that is entirely in keeping with the Hallmark holiday film.

But where the cable channel’s Christmas movies purport to be timeless and “your place to get away from politics”, Oh. What. Fun. taps into the current zeitgeist of female rage.

Rage is increasingly accepted as a normal part of contemporary motherhood, coexisting with feelings of love. Far from dissipating as children mature, research suggests these ambivalent maternal feelings endure. And, as Claire herself acknowledges, they are even exacerbated by fears of no longer being needed by one’s children.

In a society where women’s value is defined by either their appearance or reproductive capabilities, ageing women are often rendered obsolete.

Claire’s refusal to vanish can be read as indicative of changing social and cultural conversations surrounding menopause. These seek to normalise the many hormonal, neurological and social changes perimenopause brings, which can include a reduction in people-pleasing.

The shift from amenability to assertiveness Claire undergoes is also the source of many of the film’s pleasures: watching Pfeiffer flirt with an older cowboy, say “fuck” on national television, and bad-mouth her family while sipping neat whiskey is an undeniable delight.

Of course, Oh. What. Fun. wouldn’t be a Christmas movie without a happy ending. It’s no spoiler to reveal the denouement satisfies genre expectations with a grand gesture, heartfelt apology and flash forward to one year later, depicting a champagne-swilling Claire luxuriating in a cedar hot tub while her family preps Christmas lunch.

While I’m here for holiday escapism and invocations to give mothers their due, I couldn’t help feeling curiously deflated at the film’s conclusion. Despite the promise offered in the sly, self-aware opening, Oh. What. Fun. reneges on its radical potential, sliding into sentimental cliche instead.

Like other recent films critiquing maternity, its suggestion that all mothers need is a hand in the kitchen combined with some quality “me time” (preferably at a high-end ski resort) invariably falls short.

In Claire’s own words, “this has been a nice little publicity stunt, y’all, but nothing’s really changed”.

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

Why butter prices might not fall as fast as they rose

Source: Radio New Zealand

Global butter prices are falling. RNZ / Unsplash

Finally, some good news for butter lovers: Global prices are falling.

But there remains some bad news: Any fall in the price you see at the supermarket is not likely to be as fast, or as large, as the increase you experienced when prices were on the way up.

The price of butter has been one of the big consumer issues of this year.

In July, the price of butter was up about 50 percent over a year.

In October, Stats NZ said the average price of a 500g block of butter was $8.50, up from $6.67 a year earlier and $4.83 in 2024.

But butter prices fell about 12 percent in the most recent global auction and are down a third from the peak.

Infometrics chief executive Brad Olsen said that meant that retail prices were likely to fall, “but likely not nearly as quickly as they went up”.

He said Stats NZ data already showed a flattening of prices. In August, 500g was $8.58.

“You’ve started to see the early effects of the price boost coming off. The difficulty is you’ll have a whole range of factors coming in there.”

He said some butter contracts would have been locked in when prices started to increase.

“They now need to get through that stock that was already in there … there will be a whole lot of contracting elements, I expect, that were in there. That’s often why you find it easier for prices to go up but not come down quite as quickly.”

Foodstuffs said that was the situation for its supermarkets. “Changes in global prices don’t flow through to the checkouts immediately. There is a lag because we lock in butter supply contracts on a quarterly basis. These help create certainty for suppliers and stability for customers, avoiding week-to-week price swings. As each contract rolls over, any shifts in commodity prices are then reflected in the prices customers see on shelf.

“The biggest part of the price customers pay at the checkout is the price we’re charged by suppliers and we work hard to buy well and run our business efficiently so we can keep prices as low as possible.”

Monika Grabkowska for Unsplash

He said New World and Pak’nSave in the North Island had been selling Pams butter at a loss for the last two-and-a-half years.

But he said there was also more dairy available now than previously, which should mean downward pressure on prices. “It’s not huge, but you are now seeing the largest increase in global dairy supply, at least from major exporters, in about three years. So there is a bit more of expansion coming through there.”

He said it would also be challenging for prices to fall because people had become accustomed to the higher price.

“So that does sort of set a bit of a new normal for what people are clearly willing to pay. I guess it depends on how much people have changed their consumption. Another data point that isn’t butter, but potentially gives you a bit of a view on it is what’s happened in the last couple of years to olive oil prices, which of course skyrocketed quite a bit.

“They’ve now started to pull back quite a bit as well, nowhere near back to what they were before the big spike, but they are definitely on the downward decline. That did seem to take quite a bit after you started to see olive oil future prices start to pull back for retail prices to then follow. And it does suggest sometimes some of the changes on the pullback side can take sort of up to six months to really start to show through just because of all of those contracts that are locked in and sort of pricing changes that will happen.”

A spokesperson for Woolworths said the global dairy trade auction was only one factor that went into the price of butter.

“We are also seeing the NZ dollar weaken versus the USD. This affects pricing as the GDT auctions are conducted in USD. These factors are reviewed quarterly by suppliers, therefore our retail price is set quarterly.

“We did see some global price relief on butter last month and this meant we could pass on lower prices to Kiwi customers across all major brand butter. We know it’s a tough time for Kiwi households and we’re working hard to keep butter prices as low as possible, for as long as possible.”

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