Oceania Healthcare posts profit, despite revenue drop

Source: Radio New Zealand

File image. 123RF

Retirement village operator Oceania Healthcare has made a first-half profit, despite a slight drop in total revenue.

The company’s total unit sales rose 5 percent to 271 units, including 161 care suites and 110 independent living units.

Key numbers for the six months ended September compared with a year ago:

  • Net profit: $4.9m vs $17.1m net loss
  • Revenue: $131.6m vs $132.6m
  • Underlying profit: $41.5m vs $38.6m
  • Total assets: $3.04b vs 2.82b
  • Interim dividend: nil

Sales at the Auckland-based Franklin complex were strong with 11 villa sales ahead of completion of construction, which was on schedule.

“The early sales success at our Franklin development reflects the growing strength of Oceania’s sales capability, with product design, pricing, and location increasingly aligned to customer demand,” chief executive Suzanne Dvorak said.

“The project illustrates the effectiveness of Oceania’s disciplined approach to development.

“The broader housing market has constrained our residents’ ability to sell their family homes over recent times, acting as a handbrake on sales. However, once the housing market cycle starts to improve, we expect the strong demographic drivers to return to the fore.”

Chair Liz Coutts said Oceania would not pay an interim dividend in line with the policy targeting a payout ratio of between 40 and 60 percent of free cash flow, subject as well to capital and investment requirements.

“Dividend payments are expected to resume when the business achieves positive free cash flow from operations, supporting a return to payment of dividends,” Coutts said.

She said the focus was on reducing debt, increasing sales and cutting costs.

Oceania planned to take an annual $20.4m out of the business from the next financial year, with four divestments expected to release about $40m in capital.

Dvorak said progress had been made to ensure Oceania’s strategy can deliver stronger cash generation, a leaner cost base and with balance sheet improvements.

“We said we’d strengthen sales, improve operational efficiency, and reduce debt. We’re delivering on all three,” Dvorak said.

“That disciplined execution gives us confidence as we move into the second half and beyond.”

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Te Pāti Māori turns down hui offer

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tai Tokerau MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi. VNP / Phil Smith

The chairperson of Te Rūnanga Ā Iwi o Ngāpuhi says he is “extremely disheartened” by Te Pāti Māori declining an invitation to meet with Te Tai Tokerau voters.

Rūnanga chair Mane Tahere had invited the national executive of Te Pāti Māori to attend a face-to-face hui at Kohewhata Marae in Kaikohe this Sunday to discuss the expulsion of Tai Tokerau MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and what the strategy for the electorate would be heading into next year’s general election.

Te Pāti Māori declined Tahere’s invitation, saying in a letter they had been advised by “multiple rangatira of Te Tai Tokerau” not to attend “at this time”.

The letter said the party was also dealing with some legal proceedings and had been advised that attending may be seen as “interfering with that process”.

“We acknowledge and appreciate the intention behind your invitation and remain committed to the wellbeing of our people and to appropriate kōrero at the right time and in the right way,” the letter said.

In a response sent out on Thursday, Tahere said the national executive’s absence would send a loud message about how Te Pāti Māori values its northern voter base.

“At present, it appears that value is very little.

“I cannot accept the reasons given for your non-attendance. My invitation made it absolutely clear that this hui would be held under tikanga on the marae, a setting that Te Pāti Māori, of all political movements, should instinctively understand, respect, and be guided by.”

Tahere said claiming multiple Te Tai Tokerau rangatira advised them not to attend did not stack up with the personal conversations he had leading up to the hui.

“I have spoken with many rangatira across Te Tai Tokerau who recognise the importance of this hui for our whānau and who believe firmly that Te Pāti Māori must be present, because showing up is who we are as iwi Māori.”

Speaking to RNZ, Tahere said more than 10,000 people voted for Mariameno Kapa-Kingi to be their MP, another 7000 gave their party vote to Te Pāti Māori and a few hundred were registered to attend the weekend’s hui.

“We are not hillbillies sitting up here with pitchforks. We’re a mature lot, many of our Ngāpuhi people are quite on to it.

“The whole point of the programme was for whānau and even Whāea Mariameno to have their kōrero and to ‘hohou te rongo’ because we were cut out of much of the decision-making about our own candidate – we still have that mamae (pain) as voters in that it’s just off-kilter.”

He said the way Kapa-Kingi was expelled from the party was “un-Māori” and it “glaringly obvious” the national executive was following “Pākehā ture”.

“A hui at the marae can break through all of that.”

Mane Tahere. RNZ/Peter de Graaf

Despite the no-show, Tahere said the hui would still go ahead and the door would be open for Te Pāti Māori to attend.

“I was also encouraged by the positivity coming out from many of the attendees and whānau I’ve spoken to about being strategic, having some outcome that is focused on us as a people and being collective and united.

“You go through some riri, but you also come out with ‘ko puawai tēnei, he mea rawa mō te iwi’… the pressure should be put on them so that they reconsider and turn up.”

Tahere said Te Tai Tokerau represented a key electorate for Te Pāti Māori and not turning up on Sunday could spell disaster for the party at next year’s election.

“Everybody will be assessing the political structuring of ‘where to next’, whether it’s Labour or New Zealand First… the Te Pāti Māori voters, I would say, from what I’ve been hearing, are very much hōhā.

“This could be the make-or-break, and, perhaps by not turning up, political suicide for Te Pāti Māori.”

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How does Jenny-May Clarkson feel about leaving TVNZ?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Just days after announcing she would leave TVNZ after nearly two decades on air, Jenny-May Clarkson found herself in a place she had almost forgotten: the middle of a crowd, the music at a Lenny Kravitz concert pulsing around her.

For six years, the early alarms and unbroken cadence of Breakfast — the country’s morning-news ritual — had kept her from much of life that unfolded outside studio hours: the late nights, the concerts, the small but accumulating milestones within her whānau.

That night, she turned to her husband and said: “The woman that you fell in love with is returning”.

Jenny-May Clarkson was the first wahine Māori to be appointed to the Breakfast co-host role.

TVNZ

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Double blow for Phoenix with season-ending injuries

Source: Radio New Zealand

Phoenix Alyssa Whinham sits injured on the field. Marty Melville / PHOTOSPORT

The Wellington Phoenix will be without Tessel Middag and Alyssa Whinham for the remainder of the women’s A-League as both midfielders have suffered season-ending knee injuries.

Middag ruptured the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) graft in her left knee in the opening minutes of her A-League debut against Canberra United at Sky Stadium earlier this month.

It’s the same ACL she had repaired in 2017 and then again in 2018, which saw her miss out on representing the Netherlands at the European Women’s Championship in her home country and FIFA Women’s World Cup in France.

Scans have since revealed the ACL graft rupture.

Scans have also confirmed Whinham ruptured the ACL in her right knee in the second half of the Phoenix’s round three match against the Newcastle Jets at Porirua Park on Sunday.

Whinham has been an integral member of the Phoenix women’s team since it was established in 2021 and is the side’s second most-capped player.

“They’re big losses because both of them could feature in any A-League team,” said head coach Bev Priestman.

“Alyssa was reaching new heights early in her fifth season with the Phoenix, but I’m sure she’ll be back fitter, faster and stronger.”

The club said it had undertaken a thorough review with director of football Shaun Gill finding the Phoenix women’s ACL injury prevention practices are comprehensive and aligned with industry standards.

“We emphasise strength training, neuromuscular control, movement quality and injury risk screening,” Gill said.

“Female athletes are currently four to eight times more likely to rupture their ACL than males. We will continue to do everything we can to try and defy those odds.”

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Pharmacists pick up 1257 mistakes in prescriptions in a week

Source: Radio New Zealand

An audit at 68 pharmacies in Manawatū and Bay of Plenty found 26 percent of mistakes by prescribers – like doctors, midwives and dentists – had a high risk of patient harm. RNZ

  • 1145 reports submitted with 1247 “issues” identified
  • Dose issues most common (25.93 percent), followed by quantities, missing details and inappropriate medications
  • 26 percent of problems “high risk of harm” to patients
  • Pharmacists spent 347 hours in total resolving problems
  • Mean resolution time just under 19 minutes

More than one in four prescription errors picked up by pharmacists had a potentially serious risk of harm to patients, an audit has found.

In total, 68 pharmacies in the Midland Region took part in the week-long Script Audit – the first exploration of electronic scripts in New Zealand – using a purpose-built reporting app.

Midland Community Pharmacy Group chief executive Pete Chandler – who co-ordinated the audit and built the app for it using AI – said a major driver for the initiative was the tragic death of a two-month old baby in Manawatū earlier this year.

This came on top of long-standing concerns among pharmacists about system-wide clinical risk, he said.

“That was a wake up call for pharmacists around the country to the fact that if they miss something on the script, the consequences can be tragic.”

In Bellamere Duncan’s case it was an error at the pharmacy – but pharmacists say in most cases, they are the ones picking up problems.

Two-month old Bellamere Duncan died in Starship Hospital on 19 July, after an error at the pharmacy. Supplied

During the week-long audit, pharmacists reported 1257 problems in prescriptions sent by GPs, specialists, midwives, dentists and other prescribers.

The most common related to inaccurate drug doses, followed by wrong quantities, missing details or patients prescribed “inappropriate” drugs, which could interfere with other medicines they were taking, for instance.

Most disturbingly, 26 percent of mistakes had a high risk of patient harm, if the pharmacist had not intervened.

The estimated rate of “interventions” varied widely between individual pharmacies, ranging from problems found in fewer than 1 percent of scripts to some identifying problems with 11.25 percent of total prescriptions sent to them.

The report noted the pharmacies with the highest intervention rates were known to the leadership teams of Bay of Plenty Community Pharmacy Group and MidCentral Community Pharmacy Group as “highly competent and thorough in clinical checking”, which suggested it could reflect more robust identification.

“Pharmacists have become the default safeguard against electronic deficiencies and other prescribing issues, yet this safeguard is neither resourced nor acknowledged in current funding or workforce planning. This is happening at a time when pharmacists should be contributing far

more to reducing hospital and primary care pressures.”

Chandler said whenever there was a problem with a script, pharmacists had to contact the prescriber involved and sort it out – and that could take minutes, hours or even days.

“You can see the minutes ticking away into hours while the pharmacist is waiting for a response.”

This could involve trying to track down a junior doctor who had now finished a hospital shift, or getting through to a busy GP.

“Some things are just irritating rather than being unsafe. So if your barcode won’t scan, it’s a pain and it wastes time. If a patient’s details don’t come through on a script, it needs chasing up.

“There are a range of issues that can happen, but this is time that we really need to use for something else.”

Midland Community Pharmacy Group chief executive Pete Chandler.

Invisible work of pharmacists not funded

A smaller survey of 20 pharmacists by the Pharmaceutical Society earlier this year found 45 percent were making up to five clinical interventions every day and 6 percent were making up to 40.

North Shore pharmacist Michael Hammond, president of the Pharmaceutical Society, said problems with scripts were annoying for everyone involved, including the patient having to wait for it to be sorted out.

“There are supply chain issues as well, so we’re having to have conversations with patients about why something is out of stock and then go to the prescriber and explain they need an alternative, or they can only dispense one month’s supply.

“So there’s a lot of unseen activity by pharmacists that needs to be recognised and funded appropriately.”

While electronic prescribing had fixed the historic problem of illegible handwriting, this audit revealed that technology had spawned a new set of problems.

The report on the audit found training, knowledge of drug changes and the inherent complexity of patient care remained contributing factors.

“However, the scale and pattern of findings indicate that IT system flaws do appear to be responsible for a substantial proportion of script issues increasing the workload and risk for both pharmacists and prescribers.”

Pete Chandler said it was frustrating for everyone involved.

“Often what the GP thinks they’ve asked for is not what the pharmacist sees. And pharmacists are obsessively diligent in their work, they’re very careful people, so they will do what it takes to sort it out.”

GPs also frustrated

The College of General Practitioners medical director, Dr Prabani Wood, said none of the software systems available were completely fit-for-purpose.

College of General Practitioners medical director Dr Prabani Wood. Supplied / RNZCGP

“There aren’t really those fail-safe mechanisms in our electronic health systems that stop you from making a crazy error by multiplying the number of tablets you’re asking for by a factor of 10 or 100. That still doesn’t happen.”

While Health NZ was working towards a shared digital health record, it was almost impossible for busy GPs to keep up with which medicines were currently funded by Pharmac or subject to supply problems, she said.

“I did a prescription last week for a person with ADHD and they are on a number of different medications and different doses, a couple of which were available at their normal pharmacy and one that isn’t. So it gets quite tricky.

“The system is not in place to help things run more smoothly. For me, I think having easier communication between general practice and pharmacy would help.”

The report itself concluded that many of the problems reported could be significantly reduced with co-ordinated action and “a willingness to address root causes rather than relying on workarounds”.

Promising micro-improvements were already emerging, including a dedicated text-only line for pharmacy prescription enquiries at one GP practice.

However, systemic improvement would require some national level, some regional level and some local level (i.e. local pharmacy and general practice) quality improvement, including working with IT providers to improve their systems.

“This small snapshot validates the significant concerns pharmacists across Aotearoa have been signalling for years – that script issues are increasing, clinical risk is rising and the system is not responding to make at the pace required.

“Doing nothing is no longer a defensible option.”

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Gareth Morgan happy feral cat ‘crime family’ now on Predator Free 2050 hit list

Source: Radio New Zealand

Gareth Morgan. RNZ / Mark Papalii

New Zealand’s best-known opponent of letting cats wander where they please is thrilled the government has stopped “pussyfooting” around the issue.

Describing feral cats as “stone cold killers”, Conservation Minister Tama Potaka told RNZ on Thursday they would “join their buddies, stoats, ferrets, weasels – mustelids, rats and possums” on the official Predator Free 2050 hitlist.

“In order to boost biodiversity, to boost heritage landscape and to boost the type of place we want to see, we’ve got to get rid of some of these killers.”

The move comes two years after then-prime ministerial candidate Christopher Luxon promised they would be added, and 12 years after economist-turned politician Gareth Morgan controversially called for an end to all wandering cats – feral or domestic.

The ‘Cats to Go’ proposal was widely criticised at the time and was dismissed by many as being a bit extreme.

“The condemnation was absolutely universal,” Morgan told Morning Report on Friday.

“I went from, according to Reader’s Digest, the sixth-most trusted New Zealander that we had at the time because of my work on funds management, to the most-hated New Zealander, in a period of about six weeks – so it just showed you the intensity of the opposition.

“But I think people misunderstand the issue. The issue is not anti-cat. The issue is anti-wandering cats, and feral cats are a big part of that crime family.”

No one knows just how many feral cats there were in New Zealand. Estimates range from 2.5 million to 14 million.

Morgan said the government’s move was “better late than never”, but still did not go far enough.

“Cats wander to kill – they don’t wander for the exercise. So feral cats are just part of this greater crime family that’s out there killing New Zealand wildlife.

“Wandering cats are the issue. Feral cats are a subset of that. So the next step is to deal with domestic cats that are let out wandering.

“The only cat that should be protected is the cat in the lap, the one that you own, and the plea, I think, from rational people, is keep it to yourself.”

Morgan suggested previous prime ministers’ cat ownership – John Key’s Moonbeam and Jacinda Ardern’s ill-fated Paddles, for example – got in the way.

But he praised Key and the National-led government of the time for creating the predator-free goal in the first place, and for extending it to cover some cats.

“I think we can all be forgiven for being a bit ecstatic for achieving this step, even though it’s just one small step with respect to cats.”

He doubted however the hitlist would be extended to cover wandering domestic cats.

“Oh, no, it’ll be another 12 years of intensive lobbying because the opposition to this is entrenched.”

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Man charged after series of fires lit in Dunedin

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Police have arrested and charged a man with arson after a series of fires across Dunedin this week.

Police said the charges related to a deliberate fire at a vacant property on Lees Street at about 12.30am on Tuesday.

It was followed by a building fire on Harrow Street at about 11.30pm on Wednesday, and then a vegetation fire on Brighton Road at about 1.20am.

The 48-year old man appeared in Dunedin District Court yesterday charged with “wilfully setting fire to property knowing that danger to life was likely to ensue”, and was remanded in custody until his next appearance on 16 December.

Detective Senior Sergeant Nik Leigh said investigators were still looking into the circumstances around the fires.

“The arrest is a significant development for us; the investigation team has been chasing down a lot of leads but there’s still work for us to do.

“We’re grateful for those people who have provided information, but we still need to hear from anyone with information who has yet to reach out.”

Nobody was injured, but that didn’t make the fires any less serious, he said.

“Fire spreads incredibly quickly and it puts everyone at risk, from the public to emergency services.

“We treat these events seriously, and the arrest we’ve made in this case is a welcome development.”

Anyone with any useful information could update police online or by calling 105, with the reference number 251118/1721.

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Black Stick Grace O’Hanlon named international keeper of the year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Grace O’Hanlon of the Black Sticks. © Photosport Ltd 2019 www.photosport.nz

Black Sticks player Grace O’Hanlon has been named the International Hockey Deferation (FIH) Women’s Goalkeeper of the Year for 2025.

It is the first time a New Zealander has won a senior FIH global award.

Stacey Michelsen’s Rising Star accolade in 2011 is the only other time a New Zealander has been recognised by the world body.

O’Hanlon delivered world-class performances at the FIH Nations Cup and Oceania Cup with New Zealand winning both events.

The 33 year old was also named both Player of the Year and Players’ Player of the Year at the Black Sticks Annual Awards, voted by team-mates, coaches, and staff.

“There is truly no one more deserving,” said captain Olivia Shannon.

“Grace is a once-in-a-lifetime generational player, she’s shaped and changed the way goalkeeping is played, inspiring not just our team but future Black Sticks as well.”

Women’s head coach Phil Burrows echoed the significance of her achievement.

“Grace’s win is a historic first for New Zealand hockey and a reflection of her outstanding year.

“Her performances, leadership and genuine care for her team-mates have been exceptional. Grace will be proud of this award, but even prouder of the part she played in our team’s success.”

New Zealand will host a four-nation tournament involving South Korea, Japan and the United States in Dunedin in January.

They will compete in the 2026 World Cup in Belgium and the Netherlands in August.

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Lawyers bring own audio equipment to run-down Rotorua District Court, say upgrades needed

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rotorua District Court ranked the lowest in the nation for satisfaction with its facilities. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

A building which ties up the hands of justice – that’s how many feel about Rotorua’s courthouse which has suffered years of delays to a slated redevelopment.

Rotorua District Court ranked the lowest in the nation for satisfaction with its facilities in this year’s Ministry of Justice Court User Survey.

Crown prosecutor Amanda Gordon said things started off badly for people as soon as they arrived at the courthouse.

Jurors, victims, defendants and witnesses must all go through a single entrance.

“Everyone has to individually go through security which takes an enormous amount of time, so on a day … where it’s pouring with rain, people are sometimes standing outside in the rain for two hours.”

Rotorua criminal lawyer Scott Mills pointed out the many problems with this arrangement.

“On Monday mornings the jury line stretches right back to the corner. There’s simply nowhere for people to go. Witnesses, defendants and complainants are shoulder-to-shoulder in the same waiting areas, fights have broken out more than once.”

Rotorua’s courthouse. Supplied / Ministry of Justice

It was no better once people got inside.

“It just doesn’t meet standards, for example if you have a disabled defendant they can’t get to the cells – the stair access is really steep and narrow – so there’s no way people with mobility issues can be placed in the cells when they potentially should be,” said Gordon.

Because a new building kept being promised, Gordon said no one would spend money on proper fixes or upgrades.

It was so bad the lawyers bought in audio equipment themselves just so jurors could hear video evidence properly.

“The court system and the police system don’t work together very well, so the DVDs we provide the court, they can’t turn the volume up so the jury can’t hear what the witness is saying,” she said.

She said Rotorua should have another judge to cope with the level of cases, but there’s nowhere to put a judge and nowhere they could hear cases.

Gordon said this meant judges were bailing people who they might otherwise not, and people were waiting years to get justice.

“Some decisions that judges are making are becoming entirely focused on the fact that someone might have to spend three years in custody before they get a trial and that that’s not ok, and it’s definitely not ok,” she said.

“It’s a democratic right that people get tried in front of a jury of their peers and our courthouse doesn’t serve any of the participants.”

Victim advocate Louise Nicholas. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Victim advocate Louise Nicholas supported people going through the court in Rotorua and said it was not a pleasant place.

“I’m sitting there supporting a survivor and I’m having to kill cockroaches, and you are sitting in the courtroom and you look on the wall and there’s a cockroach running up the wall,” she said.

Nicholas said when vulnerable victims were facing an intense and anxious time, they were put into a hot room to give evidence via CCTV, with distracting noises just on the other side of the door.

“When you’ve got people walking up and down a corridor, they are loud, we’re having to stop – we’ve had judges actually bring out the registrar and say, ‘remove yourself, we are actually in trial here’,” she said.

She thought it was time to get a new courthouse building up and running.

“Justice really isn’t getting served here, because of that building,” she said.

Courts Minister Nicole McKee said she was well aware of the challenges at the Rotorua courthouse and the Ministry of Justice was developing plans for a future rebuild to ensure Rotorua had a modern, fit-for-purpose courthouse.

“Across the country, we are progressing upgrades and new builds for a number of courthouses. However, financial constraints mean we cannot do every project at once.

“In Rotorua, the ministry has already purchased land for a proposed new courthouse and is working with the local council to secure resource consent in early 2026. This will allow the ministry to move quickly once funding is available.”

But there was no money for it in Budget 25, despite land already being purchased and ministerial support for a property partnership project to build and maintain a new courthouse being signalled to investors at the NZ Infrastructure Investment Summit in March this year.

Courts Minister Nicole McKee. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

McKee said Rotorua was only one of several courthouses nationally that needed attention and emphasis had gone to courts in Auckland.

“Rotorua is on the list… it’s very, very much on our radar,” she said.

RNZ asked if working with cockroaches climbing up the walls was ok but McKee said those claims were unsubstantiated.

“That’s the first I’ve heard about it, is from you, however, I’ve lived in Rotorua, there’s cockroaches everywhere,” she said.

Mayor of Rotorua, Tania Tapsell said the community had waited too long for what was considered by many an urgent and necessary investment in a new courthouse.

“Rotorua is one of the busiest regional courts in the country and handles complex cases from a large wider region, we need to be showing that we take our justice facilities seriously and now is the time for the government to action that,” she said.

McKee said the government did want to do better for Rotorua and get it a new courthouse.

But critics said everyone was still waiting for the money to make it happen.

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The town that wants to turn its residents bald

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Kerikeri police officer has her head shaved as part of the 2015 world record head-shaving event. Peter de Graaf

A Far North charity is revisiting a world record it smashed 10 years ago with another attempt to turn a town bald.

On 20 November 2015, a total of 462 people had their heads shaved during a Bald Angels Charitable Trust fundraising event in Kerikeri.

The feat was later recognised by Guinness World Records as the greatest number of heads shaved in one hour.

So many people went bald at once – everyone from former MP Kelvin Davis and Rugby Sevens legend Eric Rush to police officers and schoolchildren – visitors to Kerikeri in the following weeks wondered if some strange illness was sweeping the town.

Bald Angels founder Therese Wickbom said that record would be remembered with another mass head shave this weekend.

Money raised would help fill kai boxes the charity planned to give to 400 families this Christmas, and buy presents for up to 1600 children.

If more money was raised than needed, any leftover funds would go to other projects helping vulnerable tamariki (children) thrive, she said.

Ten years ago Kerikeri’s Bald Angels set a world record by shaving 462 heads in an hour. Peter de Graaf

Wickbom did not expect to set a new record, with about 50 people signed up so far.

“But we hold the record now, and no one’s beaten it. No one’s going to beat that,” she said.

What she did hope to replicate from the 2015 event was the atmosphere.

“The thing that everyone remembers about that day 10 years ago was the sheer number of people and the wairua or the goodness in the room. It was palpable and it was so unifying,” she said.

“We’d love to recreate that again, and I don’t think we need 3000 people there to do that. I think we could do it with 100 or so people.”

Among those sacrificing their locks on Saturday, will be Forest and Bird’s Northland conservation advocate Dean Baigent-Mercer.

It would be a big change for Baigent-Mercer, who had been growing his dreadlocks for 20 years and was once described as “David Attenborough with dreads and attitude”.

Baigent-Mercer said he was taking part because even the most basic needs of many young Northlanders were not being met.

He hoped the money raised would help children who in later life would have to deal with difficult problems such as climate change and forest collapse.

Once described as “David Attenborough with dreads and attitude”, Forest and Bird conservation advocate Dean Baigent-Mercer will sacrifice his trademark dreadlocks this weekend. Supplied

“We need to look after the next generation so they can deal with the stuff they end up inheriting,” he said.

Wickbom said this weekend’s Shave 4 Kids Anniversary Challenge aimed to raise at least $40,000, with $24,000 already in the bag.

The 2015 head-shave raised $62,000 but Wickbom said times were tougher now.

The event would take place from 2-5pm on Saturday, 22 November, at the Turner Centre on Cobham Road, after the Kerikeri Half Marathon.

Entry was free, Wickbom said.

“But we would like people to koha, because this is about raising funds for vulnerable children.”

Anyone who wanted to take part in the mass head shave could register on the website or on the day.

Wickbom said the 2015 world record head shave was not only a great unifying event, it also left a visible mark on the town with almost 500 people losing their hair in the space of an hour.

Puzzled patrons at restaurant she owned at the time would approach her in a whisper and ask what was going on in Kerikeri, she said.

The Bald Angels’ kai boxes and Christmas gifts will be distributed to families selected by the charity’s partner agencies.

Those agencies included iwi social services, health providers, schools, Hospice, Plunket, Women’s Refuge and police.

The Bald Angels’ first mass head shave in 2012 raised $45,000 for children in the care of Hospice Mid Northland.

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