Vocational Education Minister reveals first polytech council appointments post-Te Pūkenga

Source: Radio New Zealand

Penny Simmonds said there were three or four ministerial appointments for each council and they took effect immediately. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Vocational Education Minister Penny Simmonds has announced her appointees to the governing councils of the first 10 polytechnics to leave super-institute Te Pūkenga and return to stand-alone status.

The institutes being removed from Te Pūkenga include two that were formerly separate organisations – MIT and Unitec in Auckland.

Simmonds said there were three or four ministerial appointments for each council and they took effect immediately.

She also appeared before the Education and Workforce Select Committee on Tuesday.

Course cuts, aimed at ensuring the stand-alone polytechnics were viable, would not reduce the training opportunities available in regional centres, she said.

“The courses that have been closed by the polytechnics are not full of people. Polytechs don’t close courses that have 18 or 20 or even 16 people in them. They close courses that aren’t viable because they’ve got very small numbers in them,” she said.

Regional institutes would have a greater variety of courses available through the Open Polytechnic, she said.

Committee member Labour MP Shanan Halbert asked Simmonds what the government was doing for the 90,000 young people not in employment or training (NEET).

Apprenticeship numbers dropped by thousands after a subsidy for employers introduced by the previous government, the Apprenticeship Boost, ended, he said.

Simmonds defended the government’s decision.

Apprenticeship Boost was a post-covid policy that expired at the end of 2024 she said.

Labour MP Shanan Halbert asked Simmonds what the government was doing for the 90,000 young people not in employment or training. VNP / Phil Smith

The government continued some but not all of the funding and the main reason for the drop in apprentices was the poor performance of the economy, she said.

“As the economy comes out of that recession, we will see employment pick up and we’ll see apprenticeships pick up.”

Earlier, Tertiary Education Commission chief executive Tim Fowler told the committee post-covid subsidies encouraged a massive increase in work-based training and apprenticeships which dropped sharply when those subsidies were removed.

“As soon as those came off, they dropped, and we saw some pretty poor outcomes I think for learners and apprentices as a consequence because employers dropped apprentices when the subsidy got ditched,” he said.

However, despite the slump in numbers there were now more apprentices than in 2019, he said.

Fowler said some polytechnics became less relevant to their local regions and their enrolments declined as a result.

He said the newly-established polytechnics would have a good chance of succeeding if they responded to local skill needs.

“I think there is going to be a test for all of those new institutions to ensure they are nimble,” he said.

“I think it’s less about systems and more about, frankly, attitude of the governance of those new institutions and especially the senior leadership to create the environment that says, for staff, ‘we are here for the local employers in our region and therefore we need to be really close to them’.”

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Scrutiny Week: Top cops field questions in Parliament

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers and other top cops appear before a Select Committee as part of Parliament’s Scrutiny Week. RNZ / Anneke Smith

The top figures in the police are appearing before a Select Committee as part of Parliament’s Scrutiny Week.

Commissioner Richard Chambers, along with the deputy commissioners, assistant commissioners, and figures like police’s chief people officer and chief financial officer are all appearing before the Justice Committee to answer questions about Police’s 2024/25 annual review.

Despite the recent Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) report appearing outside of the 2024/25 review time period, it is likely MPs will ask about the report and the actions of the former police leadership.

Chambers told the MPs he was very proud of police, despite the challenges faced in the past year including “most recently of course the IPCA report”.

He said he was looking forward to a new leadership team in 2026, and he would welcome questioning on the audit report, which identified contract management, asset management, procurement, and change in appropriation in road policing.

“Given events of this year trust and confidence is an absolute priority, I said that on day one. Nothing has changed… we’ve taken some hits, we will make sure we move forward and do our absolute best for our country.”

Chambers said despite the damning IPCA report he did not believe the organisation had a culture problem.

Labour’s Ginny Andersen questioned that given the IPCA found there was a problem with police culture, but Chambers said it would be grossly unfair for the report to reflect on the 15,000 employees who “do a tough job and a very good job across the country day and night”.

Chambers said he was working on a performance review of police to correct behaviours that fall short of expectations.

“Those that do fall below expectations – my expectation is that we act on that and we deal with them. And I’m confident that – albeit hugely disappointing – it’s a reminder to all staff that expectations are there and we’ll act on anything that falls below.”

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers and other top cops appear before a Select Committee as part of Parliament’s Scrutiny Week. RNZ / Anneke Smith

He said the focus for 2026 was on the four priorities he outlined a year prior: core policing, supporting the front-line, leadership and accountability, and fiscal responsibility.

Specifically, he had set specific goals around service, safety and trust, including getting trust and confidence up to 80 percent.

“We’ve been there before there’s no reason we can’t do it again… we’ve taken some hits on trust and confidence, particularly recently.”

The other benchmarks included getting satisfaction for services to 80 percent from its current 71 percent, a15 percent rise in resolutions for retail crime, and a 15 percent reduction in violence in public places.

He also pointed to a 20 percent increase in Māori at police over the past five years.

“I think that’s a success story…. it’s a value we all subscribe to that we find better ways to achieve outcomes for all communities across New Zealand.”

Andersen questioned him about the progress towards the 500 additional police officers target promised by the coalition, which missed its two-year deadline last week.

He said police was aiming to meet the target “as soon as possible in 2026”, noting that over the past 12 months they’d had close to 9000 applications, compared to over 5000 the previous year.

He said they had signed on about 900 staff this year, about 100 of whom were rejoins.

“We’ve never achieved that in a 12-month period and we’ve worked incredibly hard to promote policing in New Zealand as a career, and even some of our colleagues who’ve gone across to Australia, we’ve had some big successes with them coming home.”

Andersen also pointed to previous funding being assigned for one officer per 480 New Zealanders, which had since shifted to one officer per 510 New Zealanders.

Chambers said he was focused on achieving the 500 new officer target, but alongside that was an initiative to ensure sworn staff – even those not on the front line – were able to get out and make a difference.

Andersen pointed to a drop outlined in the annual report showing a drop in people’s perception of police effectively responding to serious crime in the past couple of years, and asked if that was related.

Chambers said they were working as hard as possible to provide the best possible service across all the demands police managed.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers and other top cops appear before a Select Committee as part of Parliament’s Scrutiny Week. RNZ / Anneke Smith

Earlier on Tuesday, Public Service Commissioner Sir Brian Roche confirmed “good progress” had been made regarding the fate of former Commissioner Andrew Coster.

Coster has been on leave from his role as Secretary for Social Investment since the release of the report, and has been in an employment process with the Commissioner.

“We’ve made really good progress. I’m confident that we’ll be able to have a decision in the not too distant future,” Roche said.

“I don’t have an exact date, but I’m really confident that we’re going to get there and remove the uncertainty that everyone has. I recognise this has got a high level of public interest.”

Chambers rejects systemic bias exists within police

Independent MP Tākuta Ferris asked about the audit’s finding that police had weak outcome reporting around Māori achievement or advancement.

Chambers said police needed to celebrate successes better.

“The results are there – if I think about the high percentage of non-reoffending rates in Te Pae Oranga as one example, the fact that we’ve got 12 rangatahi TPOs opportunities across the county, we’ve got 30 for adults, it’s all there. Perhaps we just don’t celebrate it enough.”

Green MP Tamatha Paul highlighted concerns around systemic bias or racism within police, which Chambers said he did not accept was the case.

“Systemic bias and racism is not saying every police officer is racist,” Paul said. “It’s saying that the structures and the rules – for example the use of discretion, look at the way that is used between Pākehā and Māori cannabis possession charges, it is disproportionate.

“Māori in the last year are now more highly charged in the possession of cannabis than Pākehā, despite the fact we are only 15 percent of the population and Pākehā are the majority – so how does that work out?”

Chambers said he wanted to see the circumstances and situations staff were encountering, but Paul said that’s what the Understanding Police Delivery report was about. However, she was cut off by the committee chair Andrew Bayly.

“You’ve asked your question,” Bayly said, praising ACT’s Todd Stephenson for raising a new line of questioning around financial management.

Paul later came back to the topic and asked how else Chambers could explain the discrepancy in cannabis possession charging statistics.

He said it was not as simple as looking at statistics and he wanted to look into the circumstances for each event police had turned up to.

“It’s quite a complex set of considerations,” he said.

Bayly again interrupted saying Chambers had offered to come back with more information speak to the matter in a more meaningful way “rather than just on the hoof”.

“Well it’s not on the hoof, Mr Chair, we’ve been asking about this for a long time,” Paul responded.

“Commissioner’s been clear he doesn’t have access to information. Let’s get an informed decision. That’s cool.”

Police Minister Mark Mitchell has long maintained no systemic bias or racism exists within police, despite the 2024 report by an independent panel finding both bias and structural racism meant Māori men were more likely to be stopped, prosecuted and tasered.

Chambers noted spending on consulting and contracting had been reduced by about $90m, down from about $135m a few years ago.

“That sounds like a pretty sweet deal to me,” National’s Rima Nahkle said, “I’ve put some chocolate there for you.”

Police tackling recent spike in youth crime in Christchurch

Chambers noted there had been a bit of a spike in youth crime recently in Christchurch, particularly in the past two weeks.

Acting Deputy Commissioner Tusha Penny said they met at 8am every morning to discuss youth crime, and it was an “inter-agency” problem with support from Oranga Tamariki and community groups, whānau and more.

“As of Monday they’ve actually established an operation to supplement the specialist youth investigators and youth officers that we have every single day.”

She said the “Fast Track” or “circuit breaker” programme had been very effective in reducing youth crime, with 81 percent of young people who went through it not reoffending.

“The beauty of that programme is it’s required agencies to come together within that first 24 hours to look at not just the youth that’s been apprehended but the wider circumstances that’s brought the responsibility and the accountability on the whanau and on the partners who are going to support it through.

“That’s been incredibly successful.”

She said the government’s military-style youth academies or “boot camps” were very similar and police would welcome any such intervention that involved proper housing, proper engagement with education and healthcare, and support to whānau because it could have an effect.

She agreed with Labour’s Duncan Webb that recent cases of young people being held in police cells for about six days was “not okay”, but said they were constantly working to avoid that where possible by working with agencies to find “more appropriate placements” for them.

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Tom Phillips injunction hearing concludes at Hamilton High Court

Source: Radio New Zealand

Phillips died after a shootout with police in the early hours of 8 September. Supplied/NZ Police

A hearing challenging extensive court orders that prevent media from publishing certain details related to the Tom Phillips investigation has concluded.

Phillips died after a shootout with police in the early hours of 8 September.

Justice Layne Harvey reserved his decision, following a two day hearing in the Hamilton High Court.

It comes after lawyer Linda Clark filed an urgent injunction on behalf of Tom Phillips’ mother, hours after Tom Phillips was shot.

The injunction prevented media, police and Oranga Tamariki from publishing certain details related to the case.

Media are only permitted to report the fact of the hearing and that it involves challenges to existing restrictions including those ordered by the Family Court.

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Rotten lunches remained at school without refrigeration for three days – NZ Food Safety

Source: Radio New Zealand

One of the meals that was served up to students on Monday. Supplied / Haeata Community Campus

The rotten food served to students at a Christchurch school had likely been delivered on Thursday, remained at the school without refrigeration until they were accidentally re-served on Monday, says NZ Food Safety (NZFS).

Haeata Community Campus students were served rancid, mouldy meals as part of the government’s school lunch programme on Monday.

The school, which covers from Year 1 to 13, said a teacher noticed the meals were off after they had been distributed to a number of children.

New Zealand Food Safety deputy director-general Vince Arbuckle said NZFS had a team onsite at the school and Compass today investigating the affected meals.

“We have considered all possible causes.

“We think it is more than likely that the affected meals at the school had been delivered the previous Thursday, remained at the school without refrigeration, and then were accidentally re-served to students alongside fresh meals delivered on Monday. This would explain the deterioration of the meals.”

Associate Education Minister David Seymour said Compass had been smeared for something it more than likely had nothing to do with.

“We can never be absolutely certain but on the balance of probabilities it is the person who has vociferously and politically gone out in the media on this issue, attacking me, the government and Compass, the food provider, who is responsible.”

Compass has been contacted for comment.

– more to come

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New weapon in war against invasive yellow-legged hornet

Source: Radio New Zealand

The new tech includes a small tracking device with a small antenna on it, which can go onto the male hornet. File photo. Biosecurity NZ

Advanced tracking technology from the Netherlands to trace hornets back to their nests is set to be introduced by Biosecurity New Zealand in the next phase of the eradication project.

More than half of the 30 queen hornets found by Biosecurity New Zealand on Auckland’s North Shore showed evidence of having a nest.

But the Ministry of Primary Industries will soon be able to turn the pests’ insatiable desire to build nests against them.

North commissioner Mike Inglis said high tech tracking technology from the Netherlands has arrived after advice from international and domestic experts.

In the latest update on Tuesday, 19 of the 30 confirmed queen hornets were found with either developed nests or evidence of nesting while seven worker hornets were found in nests.

Inglis said the tracking strategy will focus on male worker hornets.

“What happens over the next sort of four to six weeks, if we’re starting to find males, we can put traps out which actually catches the male hornet.

“We then put this tracking technology on the hornet and what we can do is then follow it back to the nest. We then go to the nest and destroy it.

“It’s like a small tracking device with a small antenna on it, which can go onto the male hornet and again, we then trace that back at particular times of the day or night back to the nest.”

Biosecurity NZ North Commissioner Mike Inglis. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

Inglis said the tracker had been extremely effective and successful in the United Kingdom.

He said the timing was also important, with the nest making behaviour of the hornets to change in the coming weeks.

Biosecurity NZ will also look to start using a bait poison called Vespex.

“The next stage will be this, as they start to develop the secondary nest, it will get slightly bigger and be found in higher trees.

“So it is important that we utilise this technology as well as part of that is putting out more protein traps and we will also use a product called Vespex in terms of protein bait.”

“That will also potentially, if the males pick that up, take it back to the nest, that will also destroy the inhabitants of the nest too.

“So it’s a mixed approach, we make sure that we’re belt and braces, so a bit of trapping, a bit of surveillance, the electronic sort of tagging of the hornets as well as doing the work that we’re doing all guided by that technical advisory group and scientific evidence.”

Spreading the message

Inglis said Biosecurity NZ has had an excellent response from the public, with nearly 4400 notifications received to date.

Tomorrow he will be speaking at a forum hosted by Tauranga Moana Biosecurity Capital (TMBC), bringing together national experts to discuss the ongoing yellow-legged hornet response.

Inglish said it was important to spread messaging not just within Auckland, but across the North Island.

“I’ve spent my time also in Northland speaking to Northland Council’s biosecurity team going into Tauranga.

“Just expanding that as we’ve been doing over the period. Again, we’ve been really pushing in terms of that message and out there. The website and the Facebook hits have been incredible.

“If you’ve got a photograph, then send it in to us and we’ll send our expert team. So it is important that we’re in this together, that members of the public, our beekeepers are all involved in terms of that active surveillance as we all together try and ensure that we eradicate this hornet.”

The Bay of Plenty group – which was launched in 2018 – aims at leading a co-ordinated community response to biosecurity risks and advocating for better biosecurity protections.

TMBC comms and event manager Natalie Rutene said the group played an important role in ensuring members and the wider community stayed informed about biosecurity risks like the yellow-legged hornet.

“As a neighbouring region to Auckland, we are closely following all information, guidance, and updates released by MPI regarding the yellow-legged hornet, and we continue to share relevant advice to support a coordinated, informed response.

“TMBC will host an online Partners Forum focused on this issue, providing an overview of the current operational response, discussion of potential impacts on apiculture, horticulture, communities, and wider industries, and guidance on how individuals and organisations can support early detection and rapid reporting.

“Attendees will also have the opportunity to ask questions and hear directly from leading experts,” said Rutene.

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Former Covid-19 response lead Alister Thorby stole $1.8m DHB funding during pandemic

Source: Radio New Zealand

Alister Thorby was jailed for two years and eight months after defrauding $1.8 million of Covid-19-response money. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

  • Man who defrauded $1.8 million of Covid-response funding jailed
  • Fraudster says he wants to serve community as a priest
  • First, he’ll serve two years and eight months behind bars
  • Judge says offending a serious breach of trust

A former district health board employee who says he wanted to be priest is instead off to jail for fraudulently obtaining just more than $1.8 million of government Covid-19-response funding.

Alister Thorby said he gave some of the money to Māori wardens, but he also bought a property, vehicles, a motorhome and overseas travel.

The 28-year-old was arrested in July 2022 at Auckland Airport as he was about to leave New Zealand.

He said that was funded by a Lotto win, but his fraud was real as he double dipped on the taxpayer.

In the Palmerston North District Court today he was sentenced to two years and eight months in jail, as Judge Bruce Northwood declined defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC’s plea for a sentence of home detention.

Thorby had previously admitted and was convicted on one charge of obtaining by deception.

Invoices for made up companies

The offending happened between March and June 2022.

Thorby was employed by the Capital and Coast and Hutt Valley district health boards between October 2021 and June 2022 to provide services, such as security and logistics, at MIQ sites.

Among the invoices he submitted were false ones under his company Moutoa Māori Wardens for security he never provided.

He also submitted invoices under the names of two made-up companies, Te Awahou Cleaning and Horowhenua Motorhome Rental, again for work he did not provide.

When he was arrested, he was heading to Brisbane, and claimed to be travelling with district health board staff.

Judge Northwood said Thorby had a long history of community work, including with Māori wardens, and was well thought of.

He aspired to be a Rātana and Catholic priest and to service his community through the priesthood.

However, there were inconsistencies raised in Thorby’s pre-sentence report from probation, although Mansfield said the probation officer was working from an old version of the summary of facts.

“You said you understood that the dishonestly obtained money had been repaid, but this of course is contradicted by a reparation report from the Crown,” the judge told Thorby.

Judge Northwood made a reparation order for the full defrauded amount.

Mansfield said about half of that had been frozen so would soon be released back to Health New Zealand.

Archbishop pleads for slap on hand

Judge Northwood gave Thorby discounts on his sentence for his guilty plea, remorse, previous good character and prospects of rehabilitation.

The judge said he read through impressive references.

“I’ve read of an interesting and varied carer both in the aviation and other areas. Clearly you’re a man of skill. Clearly you’re well thought of … It seems to me you’re well placed to put this offending behind you,” the judge told Thorby.

Among those references was one from an arch bishop, who urged the judge to give Thorby a slap on the hand and not limit his potential.

However, Judge Northwood said during the Covid-19 pandemic there was chaos and the government built a system to quickly get funds into the community that relied on trust.

Thorby betrayed that and swiftly came up with a plan to make money.

Mansfield had said the money didn’t go on a lavish lifestyle, but Judge Northwood disagreed.

The judge also said there was no proof he’d given money to the Māori wardens.

‘A sad day’

Mansfield noted the support Thorby had in court, and his great promise. However, he was presented with an opportunity he had exploited.

“This is a very sad day for Mr Thorby,” Mansfield said.

“It’s a significant fall from grace from a young man who was seen and treated as a leader in the community.”

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Watch live: Top cops field questions in Parliament

Source: Radio New Zealand

The top figures in the police are appearing before a Select Committee as part of Parliament’s Scrutiny Week.

Commissioner Richard Chambers, along with the deputy commissioners, assistant commissioners, and figures like police’s chief people officer and chief financial officer are all appearing before the Justice Committee to answer questions about Police’s 2024/25 annual review.

Despite the recent Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) report appearing outside of the 2024/25 review time period, it is likely MPs will ask about the report and the actions of the former police leadership.

Chambers told the MPs he was very proud of police, despite the challenges faced in the past year including “most recently of course the IPCA report”.

He said he was looking forward to a new leadership team in 2026, and he would welcome questioning on the audit report, which identified contract management, asset management, procurement, and change in appropriation in road policing.

“Given events of this year trust and confidence is an absolute priority, I said that on day one. Nothing has changed… we’ve taken some hits, we will make sure we move forward and do our absolute best for our country.”

Chambers said despite the damning IPCA report he did not believe the organisation had a culture problem.

Labour’s Ginny Andersen questioned that given the IPCA found there was a problem with police culture, but Chambers said it would be grossly unfair for the report to reflect on the 15,000 employees who “do a tough job and a very good job across the country day and night”.

Chambers said he was working on a performance review of police to correct behaviours that fall short of expectations.

“Those that do fall below expectations – my expectation is that we act on that and we deal with them. And I’m confident that – albeit hugely disappointing – it’s a reminder to all staff that expectations are there and we’ll act on anything that falls below.”

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers and other top cops appear before a Select Committee as part of Parliament’s Scrutiny Week. RNZ / Anneke Smith

He said the focus for 2026 was on the four priorities he outlined a year prior: core policing, supporting the front-line, leadership and accountability, and fiscal responsibility.

Specifically, he had set specific goals around service, safety and trust, including getting trust and confidence up to 80 percent.

“We’ve been there before there’s no reason we can’t do it again… we’ve taken some hits on trust and confidence, particularly recently.”

The other benchmarks included getting satisfaction for services to 80 percent from its current 71 percent, a15 percent rise in resolutions for retail crime, and a 15 percent reduction in violence in public places.

He also pointed to a 20 percent increase in Māori at police over the past five years.

“I think that’s a success story…. it’s a value we all subscribe to that we find better ways to achieve outcomes for all communities across New Zealand.”

Andersen questioned him about the progress towards the 500 additional police officers target promised by the coalition, which missed its two-year deadline last week.

He said police was aiming to meet the target “as soon as possible in 2026”, noting that over the past 12 months they’d had close to 9000 applications, compared to over 5000 the previous year.

He said they had signed on about 900 staff this year, about 100 of whom were rejoins.

“We’ve never achieved that in a 12-month period and we’ve worked incredibly hard to promote policing in New Zealand as a career, and even some of our colleagues who’ve gone across to Australia, we’ve had some big successes with them coming home.”

Andersen also pointed to previous funding being assigned for one officer per 480 New Zealanders, which had since shifted to one officer per 510 New Zealanders.

Chambers said he was focused on achieving the 500 new officer target, but alongside that was an initiative to ensure sworn staff – even those not on the front line – were able to get out and make a difference.

Andersen pointed to a drop outlined in the annual report showing a drop in people’s perception of police effectively responding to serious crime in the past couple of years, and asked if that was related.

Chambers said they were working as hard as possible to provide the best possible service across all the demands police managed.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers and other top cops appear before a Select Committee as part of Parliament’s Scrutiny Week. RNZ / Anneke Smith

Earlier on Tuesday, Public Service Commissioner Sir Brian Roche confirmed “good progress” had been made regarding the fate of former Commissioner Andrew Coster.

Coster has been on leave from his role as Secretary for Social Investment since the release of the report, and has been in an employment process with the Commissioner.

“We’ve made really good progress. I’m confident that we’ll be able to have a decision in the not too distant future,” Roche said.

“I don’t have an exact date, but I’m really confident that we’re going to get there and remove the uncertainty that everyone has. I recognise this has got a high level of public interest.”

Chambers rejects systemic bias exists within police

Independent MP Tākuta Ferris asked about the audit’s finding that police had weak outcome reporting around Māori achievement or advancement.

Chambers said police needed to celebrate successes better.

“The results are there – if I think about the high percentage of non-reoffending rates in Te Pae Oranga as one example, the fact that we’ve got 12 rangatahi TPOs opportunities across the county, we’ve got 30 for adults, it’s all there. Perhaps we just don’t celebrate it enough.”

Green MP Tamatha Paul highlighted concerns around systemic bias or racism within police, which Chambers said he did not accept was the case.

“Systemic bias and racism is not saying every police officer is racist,” Paul said. “It’s saying that the structures and the rules – for example the use of discretion, look at the way that is used between Pākehā and Māori cannabis possession charges, it is disproportionate.

“Māori in the last year are now more highly charged in the possession of cannabis than Pākehā, despite the fact we are only 15 percent of the population and Pākehā are the majority – so how does that work out?”

Chambers said he wanted to see the circumstances and situations staff were encountering, but Paul said that’s what the Understanding Police Delivery report was about. However, she was cut off by the committee chair Andrew Bayly.

“You’ve asked your question,” Bayly said, praising ACT’s Todd Stephenson for raising a new line of questioning around financial management.

Police Minister Mark Mitchell has long maintained no systemic bias or racism exists within police, despite the 2024 report by an independent panel finding both bias and structural racism meant Māori men were more likely to be stopped, prosecuted and tasered.

Chambers noted spending on consulting and contracting had been reduced by about $90m, down from about $135m a few years ago.

“That sounds like a pretty sweet deal to me,” National’s Rima Nahkle said, “I’ve put some chocolate there for you.”

Police tackling recent spike in youth crime in Christchurch

Chambers noted there had been a bit of a spike in youth crime recently in Christchurch, particularly in the past two weeks.

Acting Deputy Commissioner Tusha Penny said they met at 8am every morning to discuss youth crime, and it was an “inter-agency” problem with support from Oranga Tamariki and community groups, whānau and more.

“As of Monday they’ve actually established an operation to supplement the specialist youth investigators and youth officers that we have every single day.”

She said the “Fast Track” or “circuit breaker” programme had been very effective in reducing youth crime, with 81 percent of young people who went through it not reoffending.

“The beauty of that programme is it’s required agencies to come together within that first 24 hours to look at not just the youth that’s been apprehended but the wider circumstances that’s brought the responsibility and the accountability on the whanau and on the partners who are going to support it through.

“That’s been incredibly successful.”

She said the government’s military-style youth academies or “boot camps” were very similar and police would welcome any such intervention that involved proper housing, proper engagement with education and healthcare, and support to whānau because it could have an effect.

She agreed with Labour’s Duncan Webb that recent cases of young people being held in police cells for about six days was “not okay”, but said they were constantly working to avoid that where possible by working with agencies to find “more appropriate placements” for them.

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Govt needs to buy carbon credits or come clean on emissions commitment – opposition

Source: Radio New Zealand

Green Party climate change spokesperson Chlöe Swarbrick told RNZ it was “wishful thinking” that New Zealand could remain committed to Paris without buying carbon credits. RNZ / Mark Papalii

There is no way New Zealand can honour the Paris Agreement without buying offshore credits and the government needs to be upfront about that, the opposition says.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis cast fresh doubt on whether New Zealand will pay for the offshore carbon credits it currently needs to meet its 2030 promise to halve greenhouse gas emissions.

She also backed away from a full commitment to meeting that goal, known as a ‘nationally determined contribution’, saying the government was making “best endeavours”.

The most recent analysis from the Ministry for the Environment shows that, even with domestic climate change policies, New Zealand will still miss the 2030 target by 84 million tonnes (Mt) of emissions – a whole year’s worth.

The analysis does not include the effect of more recent changes to climate policies, including weakening New Zealand’s methane target, ditching plans to price agricultural emissions, and easing clean car standards.

Speaking to reporters after a finance select committee hearing, Willis said former climate minister James Shaw had signed New Zealand up to an “extravagant” nationally determined contribution and had not put money aside to pay for it.

Asked if the government would pay for offshore credits if its domestic efforts were not enough to meet that contribution, Willis said it was not in New Zealand’s best interests “to send cheques for billions of dollars offshore”.

“New Zealanders who are struggling to put food on the table are not going to thank us for having a performative awards ceremony after we write billion dollar cheques to other countries to meet a Paris target that James Shaw set. No, that’s not our priority.”

However, she acknowledged that the country had a commitment “and we are making our best efforts to realise that commitment”.

Willis’s comments follow similar dismissals from Trade and Agriculture Minister Todd McClay earlier this year.

They are out of step with unequivocal commitments to the Paris Agreement target from both the Prime Minister and Climate Change Minister Simon Watts.

Ahead of the COP climate summit last month, Watts told RNZ that the priority was reducing domestic emissions, “but we are also exploring all available options to meet our [2030] commitment”.

“We are making progress on making sure we have the structures and relationships in place to access offshore mitigation, if needed in the future,” he said.

“New Zealand is exploring collaboration options with several countries, including Vietnam, Thailand, Korea, the Philippines, Singapore and others.”

However, he confirmed there was no “current” plan to buy offshore credits.

Green Party climate change spokesperson Chlöe Swarbrick, who was in the select committee hearing, told RNZ afterwards it was “wishful thinking” that New Zealand could remain committed to Paris without buying carbon credits.

“We are potentially on the hook for tens of billions of dollars, and all [Willis] can say is we’re not going to to send those tens of billions of dollars offshore, which then begs the question of how we’re going to meet our [commitment] as the government is domestically shredding climate action here at home,” Swarbrick said.

“The maths do not maths.”

Senior ministers, including the Prime Minister, had publicly committed to New Zealand’s targets, she said.

“You cannot have it both ways.”

Despite Willis and McClay’s comments that New Zealand would not be buying offshore credits, the government’s actions suggested differently.

“You simultaneously have a situation where the minister of climate change is then signing MOUs with other jurisdictions to enable … that offshore mitigation to occur,” she said.

“All signs point to the government knowing and actually actively taking steps to implement and to pay other countries for offshore mitigation, yet [they’re] not being upfront and transparent with New Zealanders about what that liability will look like.”

Asked why the previous government had not financially committed to paying for overseas credits, Swarbrick said she had pushed former finance minister Grant Roberston and Treasury on that “all of last term”.

“James Shaw also pushed on that during his tenure.”

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

Ministry signals another boot camp could be around the corner for young offenders

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The Children’s Ministry has signalled it may run another boot camp for young offenders before a law change kicks in next year.

Legislation is before Parliament to give judges the sentencing option of a military-style academy for the first time for repeat serious offenders.

The first pilot boot camp last year was with volunteers.

Reviews have found it had some success, but could have been better.

The academies occupied a large part of Oranga Tamariki’s appearance at a scrutiny week committee hearing at Parliament on Tuesday.

The ministry’s national operations manager, Janet Mays, told MPs they were planning now so they could run the next one “as soon as practical” because the camps were an important therapeutic option.

“We are giving some thought to perhaps another programme in advance of the legislation next year, if that timing were to fall into place,” Mays said.

Training was now going on with that in mind.

Earlier, when asked by Labour MP Willow-Jean Prime if March was when the next camp would run, Children’s Minister Karen Chhour said no date had been set.

Chief social worker Nicolette Dickson said it was possible they would run another programme in a youth justice residence ahead of and to prepare for the legislative changes. That related not just to military-style academies, but allowed the likes of extended residential orders and extended supervision orders in the community.

“This is more than just testing the single order in the proposed legislation, it’s testing our entire approach to some of the different orders in front of us as well.”

Prime said she would use the word “experimenting” in place of “testing”, and asked if the next one would need volunteers if the law had not been changed, and if this was the best use of $30 million in Budget 2025.

Dickson said the pilot review had led to wider changes such as more programmes in all residences, more therapeutic work and a current review of healthcare in them all.

“They haven’t been in place and we have to build them,” she said

Mays said they were learning from the pilot to make the next camp a “more tailored” response, and in addition a new whānau programme would run alongside the camp.

Earlier, Chhour said six young people from the first boot camp, some of whom reoffended, were now out in the community and had not reoffended.

It also made a difference to the boys’ whānau.

“There were 29 siblings of these young people. And we’ve got in front of those 29 siblings, their whānau, their parents, and supported them in what they need so they don’t go down that same pathway, because there is that risk,” Chhour told the Social Services and Community committee.

Greens MP Kahurangi Carter asked if the ministry had analysed if boot camps had better outcomes than community initiatives, such as one that was cut at a marae that lost a million dollars of OT funding.

Earlier, she had questioned whether cuts in community funding by the ministry of $160m last year were linked to a 44 percent rise in ‘reports of concern’ to OT. Chhour rejected this, saying it reflected other government agencies making more reports than before to OT about children.

Chief executive Andrew Bridgman responded to Carter that there was a whole range of programmes and it was difficult to make comparisons.

Dickson said it was not a case of either/or but of “and and and”. The military-style academies worked for “some” young people but were only a part of offerings.

Mays said she would not work in any programme that abused young people.

“The term boot camp is extremely emotive… the programme we are offering these young people could not be further removed from things that we read about in the Royal Commission into abuse in care.”

Thebig rise in reports of concern to almost 100,000 in 2024-25 sparked questions from Labour MP Helen White about whether the goalposts had been moved, and concern that a target of intervening in urgent cases within 24 hours was not being met.

White said a constituent had told her about reporting on a girl hung out of a window by her mother that was not treated as urgent, and that there was way less transparency around less urgent case numbers.

Chhour said there was no evidence of reports being put into non-urgent categories when they should not be.

She added a trial was running for non-urgent cases to be sent to community partners for follow-up rather than by the ministry.

“It might not be high need now but if it’s ignored it will be high need.”

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Reserve Bank governor Anna Breman appears before Parliament’s Finance and Expenditure Committee

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Supplied

  • New RBNZ Governor has an assured first public outing
  • Anna Breman repeats a laser focus on low and stable inflation
  • Wants greater transparency on rate decision making, communication
  • RBNZ has a strong global reputation

Greater transparency and a focus on low and stable inflation were the key messages from the Reserve Bank’s new governor, Anna Breman, in a confident and comfortable first public appearance.

She appeared before Parliament’s Finance and Expenditure select committee, alongside the newly appointed chair Roger Finlay, for the annual review of the central bank’s performance.

On only her second day in the job she was not in a position to comment on what Labour’s finance spokesperson Barbara Edmonds called a “tumultuous year”, in which former governor Adrian Orr abruptly resigned, the stand-in governor Christian Hawkesby resigned when he failed to get the top job, and the RBNZ board chair Neil Quigley resigned for handling of the aftermath of Orr’s departure.

Breman essentially reprised her comments when she was unveiled as the new governor in October.

“Key focus for the bank under my leadership will be to stay laser focused on our core mandate, and that is low and stable inflation, stable financial system, and a safe and efficient payments system, and importantly that means ensuring cash is available to all New Zealanders.”

“As we head in 2026 transparency and accountability and clear communication will be our focus to maintain trust and credibility with New Zealanders.”

How the rate committee voted

Breman said she would discuss with members of the rate setting Monetary Policy Committee the prospect of publicly revealing individual voting decisions.

However, the Labour Party MPs suggested having various views of the seven members of the committee made public might be confusing, and leave members open to lobbying.

“It is imperative to have a good discussion, that people are allowed diversity of thought, it’s not just they are allowed it but should be encouraged,” Breman said, adding whatever approach was taken would be based on what was good and appropriate for New Zealand.

RBNZ governor Anna Breman. RNZ / Mark Papalii

She said that could also include in the economic forecasting ahead of decisions, with people being asked to take contrary views to test all options.

Asked about her view on the bond buying policy the RBNZ adopted to pump $53 billion into the economy during the pandemic, she said it was a mechanism that had been used by other central banks around the world at the time.

“This is an unusual monetary policy tool, you want to keep it in the overall toolbox , being very mindful of having the OCR (official cash rate) as your primary monetary policy instrument.”

Meanwhile, RBNZ officials said the recent restructuring to meet its reduced budget resulted in 68 redundancies at a cost of $2.6m.

Chairman Finlay said the RBNZ would soon release its decisions on the amount of capital banks should hold.

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