Why Israel and the US are in lockstep – and why that might be changing

Source: Radio New Zealand

US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House in Washington, DC on September 29, 2025. ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS

As the Iran war affects the global economy, Americans are asking if their ties with Israel look like the tail wagging the dog.

The United States was one of the first countries to recognise an independent Israel in 1948, and since then their ties have deepened.

But in the last two years, two conflicts – in Gaza and in Iran – into which America has poured billions in the form of military aid into Israel – have had a sizeable effect on the way young Americans in particular are seeing that relationship.

They’ve seen horrific images on social media of victims in Gaza, an attack on Iran that has been deemed illegal under international rule, and it’s causing huge economic hardship and disruption.

US President Donald Trump seems to be looking for an offramp from the Iran conflict but Israel differs on the next steps – they’re no longer quite as in lockstep as they used to be.

Today on The Detail we speak to two foreign affairs experts, Otago University’s Professor Robert Patman and geo-political analyst Dr Geoffrey Miller, about the special relationship between the two nations, and why it might be changing.

“The United States sees Israel as one of the few democracies in the Middle East region,” says Patman.

“It sees Israel as a very close strategic partner, and that closeness is symbolised by the fact that the United States provides about $4 billion in military assistance every year to Israel.

“Interestingly in terms of diplomatic goals they have drifted a bit, but with the advent of the second Trump administration the relationship has got even closer. And Mr Trump and Mr [Benjamin] Netanyahu seem to have an exceptionally close relationship.”

A crucial factor in explaining the closeness between the two countries is the Israeli penetration of domestic politics in the US.

“AIPAC – the American-Israeli support lobby – [is] a very powerful, influential group in United States politics. The Israeli lobby funds both major parties, Democrats and Republicans, and that’s been a factor going back to the 70s.

“Israel I think by the 70s realised it had to become a player in American domestic politics, and it has successfully done so.

“Although interestingly since the Gaza crisis, AIPAC has become, at least when it comes to funding Democratic candidates for office, much less visible because there is certainly a change of opinion within the United States amongst young people, particularly in progressive politics.

“Sometimes closeness to AIPAC is seen as a disadvantage, particularly with the ICJ [International Court of Justice] indicating that war crimes were committed in Israel’s reaction to the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.”

Patman believes it was a catalyst in the transformation of many young people’s views about Israel.

Another issue for Americans is their President’s inability to be clear about the reasons for invading Iran, including that it was to stop a threat – when last June after another skirmish in Iran, Trump said the threat had been obliterated.

Dr Geoffrey Miller Supplied

Religious basis

Miller says some of the connection is based on religion.

“The idea of Christian Zionsim, the belief that the return of Jews to the Holy Land is a Biblical pre-requisite for the second coming,” he says.

“The Republican Party [in the US] relies very heavily on Evangelical voters, and particularly from the 1970s onwards there was a real push from Evangelicals to demand greater support for Israel as part of Republican candidates’ platforms.

“It’s just been a truism that if you want to be successful in politics and you are on the Republican side you have to support Israel very, very, strongly. Even on the Democratic side that has largely become a truism.”

He says Israel on its part sees the United States as the only true friend they can rely on.

“European countries place far more conditions on support than the United States does. When it comes to weaponry, for example, many European countries wound down sales to Israel after October 7; limited supplies and so forth. The United States did not.”

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Jobseekers and advocates disturbed as companies screen applications with AI

Source: Radio New Zealand

Thomas Lefebvre / Unsplash

Advocates say the use of AI to screen job applications is dehumanising and creates bias.

The technology is used by companies like McDonalds and Woolworths to process applications en masse, but handing the reins to a computer has Unite Union’s assistant national secretary Gerard Hehir uneasy.

“AIs are basically black boxes, because they’re not just implementing the code, they are learning and developing their own logic and system, it basically becomes a black box” he said.

“No one actually knows, at the heart of it, an AI system, how it actually makes a decision.”

Though the technology had first been marketed as a way to eliminate bias, Hehir said it had done the opposite.

“Time and time again over recent years we have seen, and there’s been in-depth studies, that of course the processes themselves often reflect the biases of those that wrote them and designed them,” he said.

“Far from actually removing the bias, they reinforce or even amplify the bias.”

Hehir said AI worked best when it was screening applicants against clear requirements, such as having a driver’s licence or the correct visa.

But he feared some companies were using AI to make subjective decisions about an applicant’s personality.

“If it’s used to assess hard, measurable criteria, no, not a problem. But when it’s making evaluations like what’s your emotional response to a question or whether you sounded a bit stressed or depressed or something like that, that is a major problem, I think it is dehumanising.”

Feedback on teen’s personality

Kapiti mum Louise Hinton had been helping her 16-year-old son apply for jobs, but was shocked when the AI used by Woolworths gave unsolicited feedback about his personality.

The AI told her son he would struggle with distractions, and didn’t like to try new things, all based on a short text conversation.

“I’m worried about his confidence, he’s dyslexic and he does have the barriers and he’s also colourblind,” Hinton explained

“For him to have that feedback, it was kind of tearing strips off him. It’s like, well, why would you want to go through that again?”

Hinton said using AI instead of a real person felt cheap.

“Just lazy, soul-destroying,” she said.

“These internationally run companies, well, the staff on the ground have no say in anything. They’re not on the ground level, they’re not talking to real people, they’re not understanding the needs and wants, they’re just all behind computers, looking at data.”

Project Employ, an organisation that trained neurodiverse New Zealanders and helps them find work, had similar concerns.

Its employment programme lead, Emily Norton, said AI created a barrier for many of the people she works with.

“Anybody who is a little bit outside the box is really disadvantaged. I don’t know exactly what the AI is looking for, but I’m guessing that it’s things like extroversion and eye contact and smiling and being articulate, and all of that’s so hard for our grads,” she said.

AFP/ NurPhoto – Jonathan Raa

‘A slightly perverse situation’

Dr Andrew Lensen, a senior lecturer on AI at Victoria University, said the technology had radically changed the employment process on both sides.

He said jobseekers were using AI to generate their applications, while employers were using AI to read them.

“We sort of ended up in a slightly perverse situation where we have people who write lots of applications with AI and then we have employers who are using AI to screen applications,” he said.

“So you kind of end up with AI screening AI, which is a little bit dystopian, right?”

Lensen said being involved in hiring decisions himself made him understand the need for a human touch.

“More often than not, it’s not until you actually meet someone and talk to them that you get a good sense of, first of all, whether they’re a good fit for the job and whether the job’s a good fit for them, but also how much of what they said on their CV or application is actually true in practice,” he explained.

Woolworths told RNZ it regularly reviewed its tools for bias and offered non-AI alternatives to candidates who requested them.

“We use AI tools to help manage the initial stages of recruitment for some roles, but AI does not make hiring decisions; those are always made by our hiring leaders,” a spokesperson said.

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Easter egg prices jump again

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

Easter egg prices have increased again as the price of chocolate pushes up costs.

A survey of pricing shows a 325g bag of Cadbury marshmallow eggs is now on special for $10 at Woolworths, down from $13.

Last year, it was $8, down from $12. The same pack was $9.90 at Woolworths in 2022, or $6.50 on special.

Cadbury eggs seem now usually include mini eggs rather than chocolate bars.

Last year, these were on special for $9.90 at Woolworths, down from $15, and a pineapple lumps egg was $12. This year, all of the Cadbury gift box eggs are $13, down from $16.50.

Shopping around might help – Pak’n Save had 325g bags of Cadbury marshmallow eggs for $7.99 on Thursday and a pineapple lumps gift box egg for $7.49. A Caramilk gift box egg was $9.79.

Westpac senior economist Satish Ranchhod said Easter eggs felt more expensive from a shopper’s perspective.

“Global cocoa prices have come down over the past year, but are still pretty high compared to history,” he said.

“We also tend to see prices for boxed – or fancier – chocolates spiking around this time of year. However, Easter eggs aren’t on sale all year round.

“I still think standard chocolate blocks are the best value – albeit not as much fun as the traditional egg shape. Easter eggs and boxed chocolates typically sell for much higher per unit prices than a standard chocolate block. And the chocolate blocks are often nicer chocolate depending on what you by.”

123RF

Otago University’s Murat Ungor said the price increases reflected earlier cocoa price rises.

“Cocoa commodity prices hit their highest levels in nearly 50 years in 2024. Although prices have since fallen by nearly 70 percent from that peak, retail prices have not adjusted as quickly.

“We can point to two economic mechanisms: forward contracting and supply chain lags, and incomplete cost pass-through.

“First, chocolate manufacturers often purchase cocoa months in advance through futures contracts. This means their effective input costs reflect historical prices rather than current spot prices, effectively decoupling retail prices from current market conditions.

“Second, even as cocoa prices have corrected sharply, manufacturers and retailers face no immediate commercial pressure to reduce shelf prices in step. There is a tendency for retail prices to rise quickly when input costs increase, but fall slowly when those costs decline.”

He said there were cost pressures on other ingredients, such as sugar, and the cost of labour had risen, too, which could push up prices.

Stats NZ said in its most recent food price update that a block of chocolate was $6.88 per 250g in February, up 20.3 percent annually.

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Next generation of Blues inspired by Joeli Vidiri’s brilliance

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Blues and Fijian Drua will in future play for the Joeli Vidiri Memorial Trophy whenever they meet in Super Rugby. PHOTOSPORT

There were few sights in the late 90s more thrilling than Joeli Vidiri in full flight during the early days of Super 12.

The blockbusting winger ignited excitement alongside a superstar Blues team.

Often overshadowed by his wing partner and close friend Jonah Lomu, Vidiri’s impact cannot be understated.

He formed a lethal combination with Lomu, helping propel the Blues to the most feared, exciting, and successful side in the first years of the competition.

But like Lomu, Vidiri battled kidney issues his whole career.

Vidiri against the Cats in 1999. Photosport

His condition forced him into retirement from rugby in 2001 after beginning dialysis treatment. Tragically, Vidiri passed away in California in 2022 at just 48-years-old.

As a tribute to the late legend, the Blues and Drua will play for the Joeli Vidiri Trophy in their round seven Super Rugby clash on Saturday night.

Blues coach Vern Cotter said the side was shown a video package of Vidiri this week, showcasing his sensational career with the franchise.

“It’s always emotional around that stuff. You get to share a little bit more for people that don’t know his life, how he saw things, and the challenges that he went through as a man. It’s just one of those things that it’s about humanity, life, it’s pretty cool.”

Cotter said the Fijian flyer was a generational talent.

“He could play today. He was a a great, great rugby player, the skillset he’s got.”

Vidiri playing for the All Blacks in 1998. Photosport

Vidiri debuted for Counties Manukau in 1994 and the Blues in their inaugural Super Rugby season in 1996.

He scored 43 tries in 61 appearances for the Blues and was a part of a backline that included Lomu, Eroni Clarke and Carlos Spencer.

The sight of a rampaging Vidiri sparked awe in some of the younger players not born when he was at the peak of his powers.

“When we saw the highlights of what he was doing, I think it inspired the players that’ll go out for us this weekend.”

Joeli Vidiri playing for Fiji in 1994. ALAN_LEE

Making his All Blacks debut off the bench in 1998, Vidiri scored with one of his first touches at Eden Park against England.

As part of the inaugural presentation, the Vidiri family will play a central role in match-day proceedings, with a special on-field moment planned to award the trophy.

Cotter said that much like Vidiri, the Drua can be incredibly dangerous if given an inch.

“Just Fiji and rugby. It can be hot and cold during the game. When it’s on, you’ve got to shut them down. You can’t give them any air, otherwise the fire will spread. So it’s just about being structured and well organised.”

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Super Rugby preview: Vidiri legacy honoured, Carter to centre for Chiefs

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Blues and Fijian Drua will play for the inaugural Joeli Vidiri Trophy this weekend. Photosport

The final piece of the All Black’s puzzle now awaits.

With Dave Rennie’s coaching squad assembled, the new crew will now turn their attention to the players they will task with resurrecting the national side.

Their next audition comes in round seven of Super Rugby Pacific, where the men from the capital still lead the pack. The Hurricanes sit in top spot with a game in hand and will host a resurgent Reds side fresh off an upset in Fiji.

All Black flyer Leroy Carter will start at centre for the Chiefs as they travel to Perth to take on a flailing Force outfit.

The late, great Joeli Vidiri’s legacy will be celebrated as the Blues and Fijian Drua battle for his namesake trophy at the ground where he electrified crowds in the late 90’s and early 2000’s.

Though buoyed by his All Blacks promotion, Tana Umaga has the unenviable task of dragging Moana off the bottom of the ladder as they host the Highlanders in Albany.

The defending champion Crusaders have the bye.

Selection notes

Highlanders halfback Nic Shearer has been given the No.9 jersey for his first match in Super Rugby, with Folau Fakatava dropping out of the 23 altogether.

Giant lock Fiti Sa will bring his 2.03 metre frame off the pine for a Chiefs debut while Damian McKenzie has been moved to fullback with Josh Jacomb taking the reins at 10.

Paula Latu will get his first Super Rugby cap off the bench for Moana, as will loose forward Jed Melvin for the Blues. Highlanders centre Jonah Lowe plays his 50th Super Rugby match.

Injury ward

The Chiefs are without All Blacks Tupou Vaa’i and Wallace Sititi with midfielders Daniel Rona and Lalakai Foketi also sidelined.

Julian Savea’s return for Moana Pasifika lasted just five minutes last weekend before dislocating his shoulder, while Tom Savage sits the week out with a head knock.

For the Highlanders, Mitch Dunshea’s calf is still at least two weeks from full fitness with Cam Millar still out with concussion.

The Blues have three players out with concussion; Laghlan McWhannell, Sam Nock, and Zarn Sullivan, with All Blacks Dalton Papali’i, Stephen Perofeta and Hoskins Sotutu all joining the side’s growing injury list.

Callum Harkin is also missing this week for the Hurricanes after failing an HIA at the weekend.

Key stats

  • The Hurricanes have won the last 10 on the trot against the Reds.
  • Brumbies flanker Charlie Cale leads the try scorers with eight.
  • Moana Pasifika are on a five-game losing streak.
  • Force lock Jeremy Williams leads the pack for lineout steals with seven.
  • Quinn Tupaea at the Chiefs tops the turnover charts with eight.
  • The Blues have never lost to the Fijian Drua.

Moana Pasifika vs Highlanders

Kick-off: 7:05pm Friday 27 March

North Harbour Stadium, Auckland

Live blog updates on RNZ

Moana Pasifika:

1. Abraham Pole 2. Millennium Sanerivi 3. Feleti Sae-Ta’ufo’ou 4. Veikoso Poloniati 5. Allan Craig 6. Miracle Faiilagi (c) 7. Niko Jones 8. Dominic Ropeti 9. Joel Lam 10. Jackson Garden-Bachop 11. Glen Vaihu 12. Lalomilo Lalomilo 13. Tevita Latu 14. Solomon Alaimalo 15. William Havili.

Bench: 16. Samiuela Moli 17. Malakai Hala-Ngatai 18. Paula Latu (*debut) 19. Alefosio Aho 20. Ola Tauelangi 21. Siaosi Nginingini 22. Patrick Pellegrini 23. Tevita Ofa.

“I have great belief about what we’re trying to do here and the movement behind Moana Pasifika, I still do, and will always have a place in my heart with this club and this movement,” – Coach Fa’alogo Tana Umaga.

Highlanders:

Ethan de Groot 2. Jack Taylor 3. Angus Ta’avao 4. Oliver Haig 5. Tomas Lavanini 6. Te Kamaka Howden 7. Veveni Lasaqa 8. Hugh Renton (cc) 9. Nic Shearer (Super Rugby debut) 10. Reesjan Pasitoa 11. Jona Nareki 12. Tanielu Tele’a 13. Jonah Lowe 14. Caleb Tangitau 15. Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens.

Bench: 16. Henry Bell 17. Daniel Lienert-Brown 18. Rohan Wingham 19. Will Stodart 20. Sean Withy 21. Adam Lennox 22. Andrew Knewstubb 23. Timoci Tavatavanawai (cc).

“They are a big, physical side that play a direct style of game, and we will need to meet that challenge. In this competition every week is a tough game,” – Highlanders coach Jamie Joseph.

Hurricanes vs Reds

Kick-off: 4:35pm Saturday 28 March

Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington

Live blog updates on RNZ

Hurricanes:

1. Xavier Numia 2. Asafo Aumua 3. Tyrel Lomax 4. Caleb Delany 5. Warner Dearns 6. Devan Flanders 7. Du’Plessis Kirifi (cc) 8. Peter Lakai 9. Cam Roigard 10. Ruben Love 11. Fehi Fineanganofo 12. Jordie Barrett (cc) 13. Billy Proctor 14. Bailyn Sullivan 15. Josh Moorby.

Bench: 16. Vernon Bason 17. Siale Lauaki 18. Pasilio Tosi 19. Isaia Walker-Leawere 20. Brayden Iose 21. Ereatara Enari 22. Lucas Cashmore 23. Jone Rova.

“We’re really looking forward to playing a top-quality side in the Reds, who have won four games on the bounce,” – Hurricanes coach Clark Laidlaw.

Blues vs Fijian Drua

Kick-off: 7:05pm Saturday 28 March

Eden Park, Auckland

Live blog updates on RNZ

Blues:

1. Ofa Tu’ungafasi 2. Bradley Slater 3. Marcel Renata 4. Josh Beehre 5. Sam Darry (c) 6. Torian Barnes 7. Anton Segner 8. Malachi Wrampling 9. Taufa Funaki 10. Beauden Barrett 11. Caleb Clarke 12. Pita Ahki 13. AJ Lam 14. Cole Forbes 15. Payton Spencer.

Bench: 16. James Mullan 17. Mason Tupaea 18. Sam Matenga 19. Che Clark 20. Jed Melvin (debut) 21. Finlay Christie 22. Xavi Taele 23. Codemeru Vai.

“The Drua are a dangerous side when you give them space. They play with a lot of flair and confidence, so for us it’s about being accurate, controlling the tempo and making good decisions under pressure,” – Blues coach Vern Cotter.

Western Force vs Chiefs

Kick-off: 9:35pm Saturday 28 March

HBF Park, Perth

Live blog updates on RNZ

Chiefs:

1. Jared Proffit 2. Brodie McAlister 3. George Dyer 4. Josh Lord 5. Naitoa Ah Kuoi 6. Samipeni Finau 7. Luke Jacobson (c) 8. Simon Parker 9. Xavier Roe 10. Josh Jacomb 11. Etene Nanai-Seturo 12. Quinn Tupaea (vc) 13. Leroy Carter 14. Emoni Narawa 15. Damian McKenzie.

Bench: 16. Samisoni Taukei’aho 17. Ollie Norris 18. Sione Ahio 19. Fiti Sa 20. Kaylum Boshier 21. Cortez Ratima 22. Kyle Brown 23. Kyren Taumoefolau.

“We don’t take the Force lightly, especially on their home patch and after the loss to the Brumbies last week it’s important we get the little things right on Saturday,” – Chiefs coach Jonno Gibbs.

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‘No response’: Jevon McSkimming yet to pay back taxpayer funded hotel stays during affair

Source: Radio New Zealand

Former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Disgraced former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming has not replied to a request to pay back up to 10 taxpayer-funded stays at hotels during his affair, three weeks on.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers wrote to McSkimming on 4 March asking him to pay back the funds.

The request came after the Independent Police Conduct Authority released a summary of its investigation into McSkimming’s decision to invite a woman he was having an affair with – Ms Z – to stay with him in hotel accommodation paid for by police, on numerous occasions, primarily in 2016.

On Wednesday, Chambers confirmed to RNZ that “as yet there has been no response to my request”.

“I continue to hope Mr McSkimming will do the right thing.”

Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

In Chambers’ letter, obtained by RNZ under the Official Information Act, he referred to the IPCA’s report in relation to his “overnight stays in Wellington hotels with Ms Z”.

“You have confirmed that 8-10 times you stayed with Ms Z in Wellington hotels at the expense of police, but ultimately the taxpayer. The IPCA made an adverse finding in this respect.

“It is appropriate for you to reimburse police for these 8-10 hotel stays, and you are asked to reimburse police as soon as possible. You have knowledge of the hotels in which you stayed and the approximate cost at the time.”

Chambers said he welcomed McSkimming’s response and “swift reimbursement”.

The hotel stays

The IPCA had not been able to review McSkimming’s credit card expenditure, and relied on the evidence of the complainant, McSkimming, his former executive assistant and one of his supervisors at the time.

“In 2016 and 2017, Mr McSkimming’s workplace was at Police National Headquarters in Wellington. He lived about 60-70kms away.”

McSkimming and his executive assistant at the time told the IPCA that he was regularly required to attend functions or late meetings in Wellington or catch early morning flights.

“On those occasions, his executive assistant would book accommodation at a Wellington hotel, paid for by police. The rationale for these bookings was explained to us as being to avoid a long drive home after a work event, or where he was required to attend a social function to ensure he was not having a drink and then driving.”

McSkimming told the IPCA he thought Ms Z stayed with him eight to 10 times.

“This is corroborated by Ms Z. Mr McSkimming breached policy by not informing his senior manager approving the travel that she would be staying with him. If he had done so, we consider it highly likely that approval would have been declined.

“In any case, whether or not he informed his manager, he breached the Police Code of Conduct by staying in hotels at Police expense and inviting the woman with whom he was having a sexual relationship to join him. If he had paid for the hotels himself, that would have been a different matter. However, the fact that the hotels were paid for by police gives rise to the perception that he was using taxpayer money to further a clandestine affair, thus bringing police into disrepute.”

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Civil Defence teams to assess damage caused by latest storm

Source: Radio New Zealand

Flooding in Kāeo township NZTA/Supplied

Civil Defence teams are heading out in Northland to assess how much damage the latest storm has caused.

A red heavy rain warning expired at 4am Friday and the Far North and Whangārei remain under a state of emergency for another six days.

Kaitaia is cut off and some people in remote parts of Kaipara, Hokianga, Whangaroa and the southeastern Bay of Islands have evacuated because of rising waters.

Around 17 marae welfare centres were set up for people in remote communities.

Road closures include two sections of State Highway 1 at Kaitaia, and sections at Whakapara, Mangamuka and Rangiahua. State Highway 10 is closed at Kaeo, State Highway 12 at Waimamaku, State Highway 15 at Parakao, Pakotai and Kaikohe. Two dozen local roads are closed in the Far North and nine in Whangārei due to slips and flooding. People are urged to avoid unnecessary travel and are advised not to drive through floodwaters.

MetService said Kaitaia had 193 millimetres of rain, more than double the town’s average monthly rainfall for March. Kerikeri received more than a month and a half’s worth of rain and Auckland more than a month’s worth.

Toto Nicholson says the local Pak’nSave, McDonalds, car wash and Bells Produce store in Kaitaia are inundated with water from the Awanui River which runs behind the area. Supplied / Toto Nicholson

River levels across Northland exceeded their flooding risk, with many spilling onto roads. Data from the Northland Regional Council showed that at least nine rivers went over their warning level for potential flooding.

A Northland woman said the flooding was the worst she had seen in years. Stella Matthews had to walk through floodwaters to reach her home near Kiripaka. She said sheds, vehicles and paddocks on her property were inundated by waist-high floodwaters.

Far North mayor Moko Tepania said the storm was worse than the flooding in January, because it had been more widespread. He hoped to get a better idea of how communities have fared on Friday.

He said in January, floodwaters swept mud through homes on Northland’s east coast, damaged roads and triggered landslides and the latest storm had presented more challenges.

“We’ll be requesting funding from central government just to help our people out. Just from that January event alone, we have had over $240,000 in applications for relief funding for our whanau. We know that this is more widespread and we’re going to have whanau that need that and we’ll have to start helping once this weather clears.”

Assessment teams would be out on Friday morning to gauge the extent of the damage and Tepania said a mayoral relief fund would be set up on Monday.

State Highway 1 is closed at the slip-prone Mangamuka Gorge in the Far North as a safety precaution. Supplied/NZTA

Storm moves towards Coromandel, Bay of Plenty

Fire and Emergency said extra resources were on the ground in Coromandel and the Bay of Plenty, as storms move on from the North.

Director of operations Brendan Nally said crews would stay ready to respond as the risk moved down into the Coromandel and Western Bay of Plenty.

“We’ve got extra resources that we have pre-positioned and sent in to support the local staff,” he said.

“Those specialist resources have been busy, so we were well ready for this event.”

Nally said they were keeping an eye on another turn in the weather expected toward Monday.

Meanwhile, he was urging locals to stay safe and warned motorists against driving in flood waters.

“Our specialist water teams and our [urban search and rescue] teams have been pulling cars out of flooded areas, or getting people from areas that have been surrounded and marooned from floods,” he said.

In one case, three people had been rescued from a car trapped in flood water on Thursday, Nally said.

“It’s one of those things that we see in floods, people, generally, underestimating how difficult it is to cross flooded areas.”

Nally said the safest thing was not to drive on flooded roads.

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These Waikato hydro lakes are supposed to be safe to swim in, but a toxic algae problem is getting worse

Source: Radio New Zealand

In a finger-like branch of Lake Ohakuri the water is as green as the grassy paddocks surrounding it.

It’s thick with algae. The microscopic plant-like organisms lack leaves or roots, but possess a prodigious ability to feast on nutrients and with the help of sunlight, multiply exponentially, turning clear water into a murky, and sometimes toxic, spinach soup.

As unappealing as the water looks, today is a “good” day. On bad days, the algae clump together like old friends embracing, creating snot-like mats of slime. On really bad days, there’s a stench of rot and death.

Despite a legislated vision for the water to be safe to swim in and talks starting more than a decade ago to reduce nutrients in the river, summer algal blooms plague Lake Ohakuri and other hydro lakes along the Waikato River.

Swimming in this water is dicing with illness.

Peter Withers co-owns a five acre block on the Whirinaki Arm of the lake. It was intended to be a summer bolthole, but the water conditions here are frequently poor.

A pontoon moored off the shore bobs hopefully in the green water. It was built to support summers of fun, but there are days when the pontoon stays dry. Withers swims here sometimes, but not on the days when it’s radioactive green, or when the snot clumps have formed.

Yes, sometimes the water gives him a sore throat, he says, but he likes to think he judges the conditions well enough to not get seriously ill. He’s careful about not putting his head under.

He’s far more cautious when it comes to his children; they are often banned from entering the river completely. Algae can produce toxins which attack the liver.

Peter Withers RNZ / Farah Hancock

Leanne Archer lives further around the lake. She describes the water as often neon-green, and sometimes smelling of rot. She would like to spend summer enjoying the lake but the potentially toxic algal blooms means she keeps her distance. Her dog Misty loves to swim, but has to be kept inside. The few times she escaped and played in the water she became sick, “vomiting and vomiting,” says Archer.

Katrin Halbert is another Lake Ohakuri local with a dog. On its worst days she says the Whirinaki Arm of the lake is fluorescent green. “You know, The Hulk, The Incredible Hulk, when it turns green, it’s like that.” Last year one of her dogs drank from the lake and within half an hour started vomiting. The days of walking her dogs in the reserve are over, she says.

Leanne Archer and Katrin Halbert RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Toxic algae can be fatal for dogs. Misty became sick after brief exposure to the water. Supplied

For dogs, cyanobacteria can be lethal even when the toxins are at a level below what would trigger a public health warning.

There’s a bevy of organisations playing a part in the Waikato River.

Mercury Energy runs the hydro electric power plants that slow the river’s flow. The Waikato Regional Council grants resource consents and sets the rules for land and nutrient use in the catchment. The Waikato River Authority is responsible for the legislated vision of a river that is safe to swim in. Joining them are property owners dotted along the river including farms, forests and industry.

All the big players are aware of the algal blooms, but each says it’s following the rules. An algal bloom working group they belong to has met for the past three years, but frustrated locals aren’t seeing any concrete action. They have taken to documenting lake conditions on a public Facebook page. It’s littered with images of sunny days and lurid green water.

The toxic problem

Before the Waikato River was dammed, a drop of water could travel its 425 kilometre length in seven days. Today that same drop, beginning in the clear waters of Lake Taupō, is slowed by a chain of hydro lakes. By the time it reaches Port Waikato it is murky brown, and the journey has stretched into weeks.

The eight hydro lakes along the river act as batteries for Mercury Energy, holding water to generate power and producing around 10 percent of New Zealand’s electricity.

There are eight dams along the Waikato River RNZ

Some locals think the dams and how water levels are managed contribute to conditions conducive to algal blooms. Others point to weed spraying and say the nutrients released as the weeds in the lake die, turbo charge algae growth.

Some blame a continual flow of nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus, seeping in from the farms, horticulture and industry in the area. Climate change gets a mention too, warm weather and tempestuous summer storms can sweep even more nutrients from land into the river system, providing a banquet for algae growth.

Algae aren’t necessarily bad; they’re an important part of freshwater ecosystems, providing food for the invertebrates that fish feed on. But sunshine, warm temperatures and slow water flow, combined with an abundant supply of nutrients can lead to population booms known as blooms.

The boom turns to a bust when conditions change. This might be a drop in temperature or when the algae have consumed all the nutrients in the water. As the algae decomposes its cells collapse and cyanotoxins can be released.

Not all types of algae produce toxins, but the ones that do can make the water poisonous, triggering asthma and hayfever, skin rashes, stomach upsets, tingling around the mouth, headaches, breathing difficulties and visual problems.

Worryingly, data from the Waikato Regional Council shows the proportion of cyanobacteria (the type of algae that is toxic) in the hydro lakes it monitors is slowly increasing during summer months and becoming the predominant algae.

It’s the amount of cyanobacteria present which can trigger a public health alert.

Upper Waikato Algal Blooms Working Group

At Lake Arapuni, one of the last hydro lakes on the river, Ryan Fynn keeps his dog in his ute when he meets us. It’s never allowed near the water when it looks green.

His first memory of the lake was as a four-year-old, standing on the front of his uncle’s water skis. Back then they piped the water from the lake straight to their house as drinking water. Now, it’s a different story.

Some days, when the wind blows in the right direction it drags a scent from the lake, which he describes as “sewagey”, into his windows. This summer the algae was “like a big, thick mat” his boat struggled to get through.

Ryan Fynn RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

He’s battled to get satisfactory answers from the Waikato Regional Council. “They just fob everyone off.”

Fynn thinks part of the problem stems from how long water is held in the lakes by Mercury Energy, the company which runs the hydro dams. The longer it’s held, the longer the algae has a chance to grow, he suggests.

When RNZ meets Fynn on 3 February, the water looks clear, but a sign warns there are high levels of cyanobacteria.

It’s the same sign that was seen by RNZ on a sunny Sunday in January. That day, the water also looked clear and children splashed happily next to the sign.

Keeping people safe

Data doesn’t lie, but the data Waikato Regional Council uses to assess whether the water is poisonous doesn’t necessarily give a full picture of what’s going on day-to-day.

Toxic conditions could occur more often than what has been recorded without triggering public health warnings and sometimes health warnings remain in place when water conditions have improved.

Only four lakes (Ohakuri, Maraetai, Karāpiro and more recently Arapuni) are tested for cyanobacteria once a month between November and April. Tests are done on a Monday and results come back Wednesday. If toxin levels exceed safe recreational thresholds signs are put up, and a public health warning is given. Testing is supposed to increase to at least every seven days.

Weekly sampling from December to March is done at the same four lakes, but this measures a pigment only found in cyanobacteria, not the toxin itself. The council is yet to work out how to use this result to estimate whether toxin levels breach guidelines.

Separate state of the environment monitoring is done at six points along the river. These monthly samples don’t test for cyanobacteria, but do test for nutrient levels such as nitrogen and phosphorus, which are nutrients algae feed on.

Rob Dexter is part of Let’s Be Clear, a charity aiming to help improve water quality. He has reservations about what can be learnt from snapshots in time like this.

The way he describes it, monthly cyanobacteria testing is like testing a person with diabetes once a month and saying those readings are indicative of their daily blood sugar levels.

When it comes to human health, he’s doubtful the current system of infrequent testing with a 48 hour turnaround time for results – then another lag before warning signs are erected – is adequate. Blooms may have ceased before the signs go up, or have moved further down river.

He wants continuous monitoring, with real-time data, including webcam images, shared openly.

While technology for continuously monitoring cyanobacteria doesn’t exist in a cost-effective way, he argues “surrogates” can be used. Combined with weather and flow, the likelihood of a bloom could be modelled. When cloud cover isn’t an issue satellite images can also show blooms from space, which he says could be used in conjunction with webcam images.

Dexter has installed real time monitoring systems on private properties along the river at his own cost. They have shown spikes of nitrogen entering the water after major storms, such as Cyclone Gabrielle. An algal bloom occurred in the weeks after the storm.

He believes resource consents should be evaluated against Te Ture Whaimana o Te Awa o Waikato, the legislated vision and strategy for the Waikato River, established as part of a Treaty settlement. The vision calls for water that is safe to swim in and take food from along its entire length.

“I believe almost every decision on the Waikato River is being made based on inadequate data sets that weren’t designed for the intent that it’s been used for.”

A sign warning to check for toxic algae at Lake Ohakuri. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Institutions are following the rules, but are the rules fit for purpose?

Mercury Energy, the Waikato Regional Council and the Waikato River Authority have defined roles and rules, and while organisations say they are meeting them, this is not stopping the ongoing appearance of blooms.

Emily Collis is the operations lead at Mercury Energy. The company is aware of the algal blooms that plague the hydro lakes but she doesn’t accept that the power company is part of the problem.

“At this stage, there’s no evidence to suggest that the way we’re managing the river is contributing.”

The company repeatedly told RNZ it operates within the rules of the resource consents that dictate the amount of flow and the lake levels. Its contractual agreement to supply electricity also plays a part in the way it manages the lakes.

Collis has heard the suggestions that flushing the lakes will clear blooms, but doesn’t feel that would solve the problem.

“We haven’t done any particular studies that we would then go and share or publish or anything like that. But because we are active on the river every day, we do have observations that tend us to believe that even if we were in high flow conditions, a lot of the algae blooms will not move simply because of their location in those slower moving areas,” she says.

The spraying of diquat to kill weeds that can clog the dam turbines is a sore point for locals, who say they notice blooms after spraying.

Mercury says it has used diquat for 17 years and algal blooms have not always occurred after its use.

Research completed by NIWA, (now Earth Sciences New Zealand) showed weeds release a large amount of nutrients when they die. It suggested more research was needed to understand the effects in a lake system. When asked if Mercury would fund research into this Collis indicated the company was “open to opportunities”.

Is she at all concerned the company will lose social license in the communities it operates in? Mercury has a hydro stakeholder manager who is often in the community helping people understand Mercury’s role in the river, she says. The company also tries to support communities with funds and sponsorships of the Waikato River Trail.

Mercury points to Waikato Regional Council as the agency responsible for the management of the river’s water quality.

The council’s science manager Mike Scarsbrook says the organisation is worried about the changes seen in the river. He says the blooms are becoming more frequent and more severe.

“It’s not a good space for us to be in. We are working towards improving the health and wellbeing of the river, but we’re certainly seeing worrying signs.”

Climate change plays a role, but the blooms also need nutrients to grow, he says. This can come from nitrogen and phosphate washing in from farms, or other enterprises dotted along the river.

The council is proposing significant changes to how the land surrounding the river is used, which include measures to reduce the nutrients entering the water. Proposed plan change 1 is the council’s answer to meeting Te Ture Whaimana o Te Awa o Waikato’s legislated vision of water that is safe for swimming and food gathering.

The plan change was first notified in 2016 and applies to approximately 10,000 properties and covers more than a million hectares within the Waikato and Waipā river catchments. Over a decade on, it’s still not enacted. Currently it sits with the Environment Court, caught up in a slew of appeals, although interim decisions made by the court look promising for the plan’s future.

If it does come into effect, change won’t happen overnight. Improvement has been given an 80-year runway, meaning the reduction in nutrient levels in the river isn’t expected to be reached until 2096.

A drone shot from above Lake Ohakuri showing algal blooms on the water. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Not everybody thinks the reductions will have an effect. Former Fish and Game water scientist Adam Canning previously told RNZ the nutrient reduction targets in the plan were watered down to a level he described as maintaining the “status quo”.

“It’s pathetic. And we don’t have to achieve it for 80 years. 2096. I’ll be dead.”

Canning doesn’t believe the reductions will ensure the water is safe for swimming and food gathering, achieving the legislated vision of Te Ture Whaimana o Te Awa o Waikato.

Chief executive of the Waikato River Authority Antoine Coffin is the man in charge of Te Ture Whaimana o Te Awa o Waikato. The Authority has iwi and Crown representatives on its board and distributes funding for restoration projects. It sets the vision for the health of the Waikato River.

“We’ve been set up as a voice for the river,” says Coffin.

But having a voice isn’t the same as having teeth. The authority’s vision sits above other legislation, such as the Resource Management Act, but the authority doesn’t have enforcement powers. It can’t compel Mercury Energy to increase water flow to see if that affects blooms, demand the council’s new plan be put in place before the Environment Court process runs its course, or tell farmers to cut back on fertiliser.

Asked whether the Waikato River Authority was taking a leadership role on algal blooms, Coffin does not directly answer, but says long-term solutions, such as the council’s new plan are important. He doesn’t think the plan will fix everything, “but it’s a good start”.

Continuing algal blooms, “would be an antithesis to the vision and a strategy for the river,” he says.

He’s part of the Upper Waikato Algal Blooms Working Group. Other members include Waikato Regional Council, Raukawa, Ngāti Tahu – Ngāti Whaoa Rūnanga Trust, Te Arawa River Iwi Trust, Taupō District Council, Let’s Be Clear Trust, Mercury Energy, Tūwharetoa Māori Trust Board and Dairy NZ.

The group met twice in 2024 and once in 2025 and 2026. Its aim is to reach an understanding of the drivers of the algal blooms and, according to a memo from a September 2025 meeting, “to advance a Response Plan for managing the impacts of harmful algal blooms in the Upper Waikato – within the context of existing interventions to manage water quality, such as the Waikato Regional Council Proposed Plan Change 1, and Te Ture Whaimana o awa o Waikato.”

One of the things the group is working on is communication. “Together, we are also working to improve public understanding of risks, in particular, what specific language will help people to heed those risks – we understand that many people still use the water even when health warnings are in place,” a council statement said.

Coffin is confident the working group is more than a box-ticking exercise but says getting alignment between the various groups, each with their own mandate, is a “conundrum”.

Community takes control

For locals, the stance of the big players, ranging from denying any impact, to having their hands tied by rules, offers little comfort. They’re yet to see any improvement as a result of the working group.

Hope Woodward is a councillor for the Mangakino-Pouakani ward of the Taupō District Council.

“Heartbreaking,” is a term she uses repeatedly about the water condition, and she’s agitating for action.

She’s attended working group meetings and suggested a survey be conducted to understand how the water quality affects the community. The Waikato Regional Council agreed to her idea, she says, but when she asked when it would be done the council’s response was, “in the next fiscal year, funding dependent”.

She set up a survey herself using an online tool that cost $50. Eighty-one of the almost 100 people who completed it said poor water quality stopped activities. At least 41 percent of those who responded to the survey said they or their pets had been sick after being in contact with the water.

Almost half of the comments touched on perceived inaction and fragmented responsibility.

“There seems to be nothing happening, we complained two years ago and nothing changed,” one respondent wrote.

“Somebody needs to take accountability and fix it,” another commented.

Hope Woodward Supplied / Hope Woodward

Woodward says the issue affects public health, livelihoods, tourism, property values and wellbeing.

“I think the responsible entities just need to stop having all these discussions that have no resolutions whatsoever. It just seems that nobody wants to take any accountability for what’s gone on.”

She wants farming consents to be checked, and she’s keen for more research to be done into the effect of Mercury spraying weeds in the lakes. She can’t identify a single thing being done now that will stop another summer of blooms.

“There’s a lot of data gathering and discussion happening, which is important, however we now need to see that translate into real, on the ground action.”

The working group’s eventual response plan will only satisfy the community if it’s backed by accountability and delivery, she says.

Karl Hitchcock RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

At Lake Maraetai in Mangakino, Karl Hitchcock says the blooms have gotten worse since he bought his property.

“We’ve got pictures of the lake. It’s just glowing in the dark. It looks radioactive.”

It makes wakeboarding and swimming unsafe and there’s a flow-on effect for the community. Businesses which rely on the weekend recreational visitors are struggling, people just don’t bother coming anymore. There’s only one upside, he jokes. “It’s good for the swimming pool, because all the locals will swim in the swimming pool, right?”

He’s been one of the key voices on the community Facebook page encouraging people to send in photos of water conditions and looking for opportunities to improve the situation.

Hitchcock has looked into whether a fund administered by the Waikato Regional Council might be applied to pay for webcams at the lakes, but was told it probably wasn’t the right fit for that particular fund. He had hoped giving the ability for people to see whether the water was pea soup green, or covered in scum might prevent wasted trips to the lake.

The council told RNZ webcams are one of the options the working group is considering, along with drone footage, community reporting via photo and satellite imagery.

He’s now planning to apply for funding from Mercury Energy to try an ultrasonic treatment for the lakes where blooms occur. This would consist of a solar-powered floating unit that emits sound waves that kill algae.

Without some concrete action he thinks next summer, “will only be worse”.

The river is an asset to farmers, recreational users and the country’s power generation capability. “Obviously, we’re generating a lot of power from the dam, and everybody wants cleaner, cheaper power, but we all just need to get together and fix it.”

He’s another fan of more data being gathered to help drive decisions about how to improve the water quality.

“When the water comes out of the Taupō gates, it’s crystal, it’s pristine, it’s so good up there. But then when it comes down here, it’s green, and it doesn’t need to be.”

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

Live weather: More rain, gales for upper North Island, parts of South

Source: Radio New Zealand

Heavy rain and winds continue as a deep sub-tropical low continues to make its way across the country, particularly from Northland to Bay of Plenty.

A period of large northeast waves is also expected with strong to gale-force winds.

Northland east of Kaikohe from Doubtless Bay to Whangārei remains under a red heavy rain warning, with the remainder of Northland under an orange heavy rain warning.

Auckland, Westland District, Coromandel Peninsula, Bay of Plenty, Taranaki, Tasman, Canterbury and North Otago are also under orange heavy rain warnings.

Orange strong wind warnings are in place for Auckland, Coromandel Peninsula, Taihape, Whanganui and parts of Taranaki.

It comes after Northland and Auckland received more than a month of rain since wild weather hit the regions on Wednesday.

A number of highways and local roads were closed across the upper North Island.

Further flooding and slips were still possible, MetService warned.

Follow the latest updates in our live blog above.

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As it happened: Floods close highways as heavy rain hits North Island

Source: Radio New Zealand

States of Emergency have been declared in Whangārei and the Far North

The Whangārei District Mayor Ken Couper said with communities isolated and more heavy rain forecast, declaring an emergency means Civil Defence had access to emergency powers to protect life and property.

He said that includes ordering evacuations, closing roads and public places and removing aircraft, vessels, vehicles.

Whangārei District Civil Defence Controller Victoria Harwood, said at this stage, it’s not known whether the emergency powers will be used.

Northland Civil Defence is urging Northlanders to take the current weather event seriously.

The States of Emergency will be in effect for seven days beginning 2.00pm, Thursday, 26 March.

A red weather warning remains in place for Northland east of Kaikohe from Doubtless Bay to Whangārei, with the worst of the downpours expected to hit on Thursday afternoon.

Marae in the region have been opened for those in need of support, and Fire and Emergency has deployed 19 specialist rescue personnel to Northland and Auckland.

MetService said the heaviest rain and largest volumes were likely to be in the upper North Island, from Northland to western Bay of Plenty.

Downpours, flooding, and slips were also possible on Thursday and Friday.

Fire and Emergency assistant national commander Ken Cooper warned residents in upper parts of Northland to be ready in case the situation deteriorated.

“For that upper part of Northland, the intelligence we’ve got is there’s a large amount of rainfall over a very short period of time. I would certainly advise people to be prepared, if they’re in low lying areas or near rivers, be prepared to move.”

Cooper said anyone concerned about a risk to life or property should call 111.

Northland Civil Defence expected the worst of the rain to hit the northeast coast on Thursday night.

In a post on social media, it warned residents not to go into flood water, to avoid unnecessary travel, and to be aware of slips.

“Leave immediately if you notice cracks in the ground, leaning trees or power poles, unusual sounds, or sudden changes in streams,” it said.

Follow the latest updates in our live blog above.

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