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  • Cones must stay while asphalt cures

    Source:

    As work progresses on a hi-tech weigh station at Taupō, traffic will continue to be managed through works on the surrounding state highways and local roads.

    Five sites leading to the Commercial Vehicle Safety Centre are having in-road weighing technology installed and these will be coned off for 30 days from late April/early May to cure the asphalt before the technology is installed advises NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA)

    “So while it may look like nothing is happening beyond the cones, it is essential to give the asphalt time to cure and be ready for installing the weigh-in-motion scales,” says Regional Manager for Infrastructure Delivery, Darryl Coalter.

    “The asphalt layer at each site needs time to harden and gain strength. The new layer needs to be undisturbed for 30 days so that it hardens sufficiently for contractors to make precise cuts into it to fit the weigh-in-motion weigh plates.

    “We can’t remove the traffic management and run traffic over it because it has been laid at precise levels so the scales work properly when they are installed. We want to avoid the risk of the soft asphalt crumbling.”

    The scales are being installed on 5 of the roads heading towards the safety centre:

    • SH1 north of the SH1/5 roundabout
    • SH1 south of the roundabout
    • SH5 east of the roundabout
    • Napier Road west of the roundabout
    • Nearby Crown Road.

    Temporary lanes have been built on the road shoulders to allow traffic to pass around the work areas and minimise the use of stop/go or temporary detours.  Speed restrictions are in place and only minor delays are expected.

    The curing period will run from the end of April to the end of May.

    The Taupō weight station is 1 of 12 facilities NZTA is building on high-volume freight routes around the country for NZ Police to operate. The safety centres are part of the national Commercial Vehicle Safety Programme.

    This technology will screen passing traffic and direct any suspected non-compliant heavy vehicles into the safety centre. Police officers on site will check vehicle weights, road user charges, certificates of fitness, logbooks and driver impairment.

    Read more about the Commercial Vehicle Safety Centres:

    The Commercial Vehicle Safety Programme (CVSP)

     

  • Cyclone Tam makes for challenging driving

    Source:

    With severe weather arriving ahead of the busy Easter holiday period, NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) is advising road users in the Waikato and Bay of Plenty, to be prepared and take extra care on the roads.

    Heavy rain and strong winds are forecast, with MetService issuing a severe weather warning from tonight until end of day on Friday 18 April for Coromandel and Western Bay of Plenty.

    The orange warning is likely to be extended further into the Waikato and across the Kaimai Range.

    With school holidays, and Easter approaching, it’s busier than usual on our roads, and Waikato Journey Manger for NZTA, Andrew Brosnan, urges motorists to be vigilant.

    “Essentially, the message is –  be ready for difficult driving conditions. There’s the potential for surface flooding and slips. Anticipate that there could be trees or debris on the road just around the next corner. There’s also a risk of downed powerlines – so expect the unexpected.

    “If you need to travel, allow extra time for your journey. Slow down and keep a safe following distance from the vehicle in front. Keep your headlights on to increase visibility.

    “Thunderstorms are possible on Friday. While the current estimate is up to 250 mm of rain to fall on the Comomandel Ranges, there is potential for this to increase.

    “Be aware that streams and rivers may rise rapidly. Strong winds are creating dangerous coastal conditions around the upper North Island, with large waves potentially causing coastal inundation and erosion. The highest risk for the Coromandel is around high tide.”

    NZTA contractors are out clearing critical drainage areas on the network and have crews on standby to manage any issues as the weather takes hold.

    Road uses should be aware that there may be some areas of the network where traffic management or temporary speed limits are in place. There will be traffic management in place on State Highway 25 at the Pepe Steam Bridge at Tairua over both Easter and Anzac weekends, to help keep traffic moving over the holiday period.

    “Please adhere to temporary speed limits and follow the directions of traffic management in work zones, even if you can’t see active work underway. It is there for your protection, the protection of workers and other motorists. This is especially important in poor weather,” Mr Brosnan says.

    Plan ahead before you travel with the Easter and Anzac travel advisory in the NZTA Journey Planner.

    Easter and Anzac holiday weekends 2025 | NZTA Journey Planner(external link)

  • SH29 Tauriko Enabling Works project driving towards major milestones 

    Source:

    Poor weather has delayed the opening of two new intersections at Tauriko.

    The new intersection in Tauriko Village will now open with a temporary layout on Monday 5 May, providing access to a new carpark for Tauriko School and Playcentre.  

    The new roundabout at the intersection of SH29 and Redwood Lane will now open on Wednesday 7 May. 

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) apologises for the delay.

    This updates the information below:


    16 April:

    Road users will be enjoying 2 new Tauriko West intersections by May, as part of the State Highway 29 (SH29) Tauriko Enabling Works project. 

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) advises that a new intersection in Tauriko Village, near where the former service station was, will open with a temporary layout on Tuesday 29 April, providing access to a safer, new carpark for Tauriko School and Playcentre.  

    Motorists will be travelling through a new roundabout at the intersection of SH29 and Redwood Lane from Thursday 1 May, also under temporary layout. 

    Regional Manager Infrastructure Delivery Waikato/Bay of Plenty, Darryl Coalter, says the opening of these intersections is a step towards a better connected Tauriko West. 

    “March marked 1 year of construction on this project, and we’re thrilled with the progress that’s being made. These 2 intersections are integral pieces of the puzzle and will result in safer and more efficient ways to move around Tauriko once completed. 

    “They will open in temporary states to enable new work areas and allow the team to continue their hard work on the surrounding infrastructure, while facilitating traffic to continue flowing. 

    “We’re also pleased to be handing over a new, safer carpark for the school and Playcentre community.” 

    The new road off SH29 in Tauriko Village will also link to the planned community in Tauriko West, being developed to help accommodate Tauranga’s growing population. 

    Tauranga City Tauriko Ward Councillor Marten Rozeboom says the project is reaching a special milestone with the 2 new intersections.  

    “Regular users of SH29 have seen significant changes take place over the past 12 months, and they’ll soon be able to use the new layout and experience how much easier it makes travelling this route.” 

    The Tauriko Village intersection will eventually feature additional lanes and be signalised with traffic lights. although it will initially open without lights while the team works on the surrounding infrastructure. This includes constructing retaining and noise walls; stormwater, wastewater, and power upgrades; and widening SH29 to allow for additional lanes and a shared path through Tauriko Village. 

    The intersection will remain in a temporary configuration until early 2026, with further layout changes to come while work is undertaken on the southern side of SH29. More information will be communicated closer to the time.  

    At Redwood Lane, traffic will be switched across to the new, temporary single-lane layout, which will see motorists on SH29 shifted slightly to the west of the current state highway lanes to approach the new roundabout. 

    Once completed, the roundabout will have 2 lanes travelling in each direction. When it first opens it will have 1 lane in each direction while work continues on widening SH29 on the eastern side, along with extending the pedestrian and cycle underpass beneath the road and completing the Kaweroa Drive extension of the roundabout. 

    The Kaweroa Drive extension, accessed via the fourth leg directly opposite Redwood Lane, won’t be in use until the roundabout works are completed. This is expected be in late 2025/early 2026.  

    Road users and the local community should prepare for:  

    Tauriko Village 

    Overnight on Wednesday April 23 and again on Monday 28 April (between 6pm and 6am) there will be a stop/go and temporary speed limit of 30km/h to relocate the safety barriers on SH29 through Tauriko Village in preparation for a new intersection opening on Tuesday 29 April.

    From Tuesday 29 April there will be a stop/go operation and temporary speed limit of 30km/h for night works to install safety barriers along the northern side of SH29 in the Tauriko Village. This work is expected to take 5 nights and continue into the following week.  

    As part of this work, traffic lanes will be shifted to the southern side of SH29 to allow for the upcoming widening work on the northern side of SH29. Traffic lanes will be maintained in both directions, along with the flush median down the centre of the road and access to businesses and residential properties will remain. However, there will be a reduction in the width of the shoulder along each side of the road, meaning reduced space available for entering and exiting driveways and heading south on SH29.

    The work on the northern side of SH29 is expected to take 1 year.  

    Tauriko Village temporary intersection map [PDF, 188 KB]

    Redwood Lane 

    Night works (between 6pm and 6am) will be carried out ahead of switching traffic onto the roundabout, starting with safety barrier relocation on Tuesday 22 April, followed by resurfacing works from Sunday 27 April for 5 nights. Overnight on Wednesday 30 April, the team will be line marking and preparing the new road, with the new roundabout expected to be in use on the morning of Thursday 1 May. These works will involve stop/go, shoulder closures, rolling blocks, and a temporary 30km/h speed limit on SH29. 

    People are asked to drive with extra care through the area, while people adjust to the new traffic conditions, allow extra time for their journeys and follow any signage or instructions provided by road workers. 

    These night works are weather dependent. If work is delayed because of weather or other unforeseen issues, it will be carried out on the next suitable night. 

    Elsewhere on the project, construction of the major retaining wall on Cambridge Road is well underway in preparation for the new signalised intersection with SH29. This includes a new connection to Whiore Avenue for people walking and cycling and bus access, only. 

    Work is also underway on the wastewater upgrades in Whiore Avenue and watermains upgrade on SH29, near Gargan Road, starting with investigative works to establish the location of existing underground services.  

    The SH29 Tauriko Enabling Works are being delivered by NZTA together with Tauranga City Council. Downer is delivering the construction for the project.  

    Redwood Lane temporary intersection map [PDF, 176 KB]

  • NZTA welcomes sentencing for 2023 Te Huia incident

    Source:

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) is welcoming a fine of $63,000 imposed during sentencing in Manukau District Court today in relation to an incident on 17 June 2023 in which the KiwiRail-operated Hamilton to Auckland Te Huia commuter service failed to obey a red signal in the busy Auckland Metro Rail Network.

    NZTA prosecuted KiwiRail as the operator/licence holder of the Te Huia Service following an investigation into the incident, where the Te Huia, carrying over 90 passengers, passed a red signal at Penrose train station, and in doing so potentially put its passengers and other rail users at risk, and caused significant disruption on the Auckland metro network.

    KiwiRail pleaded guilty to one charge alleging that it did not provide appropriate training of its personnel.

    “As the regulator for rail safety in New Zealand, NZTA’s prosecution was taken to address a specific, identified risk in order to protect public safety. NZTA will not hesitate to take action, including prosecution, in relation to breaches of the Railways Act 2005. We welcome the sentence handed down today as a reminder to all licensed rail operators of the importance of ensuring appropriate training for their staff as a critical part of managing safety risks on the network,” says Gini Welch, NZTA National Manager, Rail Safety Regulation.

  • Feedback sought on proposed improvements to Dunedin’s SH1 one-way system

    Source:

    NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA)’s plan to make the Dunedin SH1 one-way system easier to use, safer for everyone and more efficient takes its next step from today (Tuesday, 15 April). People’s feedback is welcome from Tuesday to Friday, 23 May.

    Running between The Oval and the Pine Hill Road/Great King St intersection, SH1 on Cumberland and Castle Streets, is a key freight and commuter route linking the north and south sides of the city.

    “In particular, NZTA wants to know what Dunedin people think of the preferred option for making the Pine Hill Road/SH1 and Great King St intersection safer and more functional for everyone,” says Ian Duncan, Acting Director of Regional Relationships for NZTA in Otago. 

    The intersection is a key part of the SH1 one-way system into and through Dunedin, close to the Botanic Gardens and the entrance to North East Valley.

    NZTA is now keen to hear what people think of its preferred option for this intersection, with several other proposed safety improvements to the SH1 one-way system, to help guide the next steps for this option.

    “The SH1 proposed improvements are part of a business case which identifies ways to improve accessibility, supports new developments like the new Dunedin Hospital, while maintaining efficient traffic flow, and reduces risk for road users and pedestrians,” says Mr Duncan. 

    He notes the long-standing safety concerns with increased risk of crashes because of limited visibility and heavy vehicles descending a steep hill at the SH1/ Pine Hill Road/Great King Street intersection.

    “Our preferred option is to realign the SH1 traffic lane,” he says. “This would improve visibility and safety at the intersection and make it safer and more efficient for people heading to North East Valley.”

    This would involve shifting the existing uphill traffic lane about ten metres into an area of Town Belt, requiring about 1000m² of this land.  (See map below). The existing bridge over the Water of Leith would be widened. NZTA will work with the Dunedin City Council on ways to compensate for the loss of public land.

    The Dunedin Town Belt

    SH1 Dunedin improvements: single stage business case map.

    What were the other options for that intersection?

    Several options for making the SH1/Pine Hill/Great King St intersection safer were investigated and discussed with key stakeholders including the Dunedin City Council and road freight operators.

    These included traffic signals and an overpass to separate SH1 traffic from vehicles using Great King Street. The overpass option was not progressed for several reasons: the cost, construction challenges, proximity to the Water of the Leith and environmental impacts, says Mr Duncan. The traffic signal option was not taken further given the significant safety concerns if a heavy vehicle lost traction or could not stop on the hill.

    “NZTA’s preferred option would also increase the safety of the nearby Duke Street/SH1 Cumberland Street intersection. There were nine crashes there between 2019 and 2023, two-thirds of them caused by drivers trying to cross two busy lanes of the highway to Duke Street’s western side. To make this intersection safer, we are proposing to remove the straight-through movement, and only allow left turns out of Duke Street on the eastern side to SH1 going south. We want to hear what people think of this idea also.”

    Proposed changes for Duke Street intersection.

    Full details on all the proposed improvements for this SH1 Dunedin corridor are available on the project website along with details on how to provide feedback:

    SH1 Dunedin safety improvements

    More information about NZTA’s proposed improvement plans for SH1 and SH88 St Andrew Street to support transport access to the new Dunedin Hospital, will be available in the second half of 2025. 

  • Thank you for Tokoroa Hospital staff

    Thank you for Tokoroa Hospital staff

    Source:

    Thank you for Tokoroa Hospital staff

    Health Waikato chief operating officer Jan Adams paid Tokoroa Hospital staff a visit on Friday to thank them for their patience during the South Waikato Health Centre construction and refurbishment.
    Mrs Adams and Waikato District Health Board’s Rural and Community Services group manager Jill Dibble, enjoyed the afternoon connecting with staff in the new and improved Courtyard Café at Tokoroa Hospital.
    “We just wanted to acknowledge that we know you have put up with a lot down here in terms of noise and comings and goings that have taken place over the last few months while GPs have been moving onsite,” said Mrs Adams.
    “And we wanted to thank you very much for your patience and contribution.”

    Waikato DHB’s vision is to improve the health, independence and quality of life for the communities it serves by addressing the needs of the population and reducing health disparities.

    Posted in General news, What’s Happening
  • New chaplain at Waikato Hospital

    New chaplain at Waikato Hospital

    Source:

    New chaplain at Waikato Hospital

    Rev. Daniel Sitaram

    Waikato Hospital’s newest hospital chaplain Daniel Sitaram has taken an interesting journey to end up here in the Waikato.

    Daniel, who has now been working with the hospital chaplains for about one month, is of Fijian Indian heritage and w…as ordained as an Anglican priest in Fiji, working in many parishes there before becoming a high school teacher.

    He worked in secondary schools in Fiji for eight years before moving to Christchurch with his wife. There, the Anglican Diocese of Christchurch awarded Daniel a scholarship to undertake a Bachelor of Theology at the University of Auckland.

    “I think I bring a cultural mix to the Waikato Hospital chaplaincy team and may be able to help with patients and visitors who speak other languages because as well as English, I speak Fijian Indian, most of the Indian dialects, and can also communicate in Tongan and Samoan as well,” he said.

    Auckland remained Daniel’s home for many years, and after he finished his degree in Theology, he completed one year of his Bachelor of Nursing at Manukau Institute of Technology, but then ended up joining the Pathology team and worked for five years as a lab technician with the Labtests.

    It was his most recent job that brought him back to pastoral care however, when he began work as a chaplain at the Mission to Seafarers in Auckland.

    Here he provided pastoral care to the crews of cruise ships and container ships etc. when they would return to the centre in Auckland between voyages.

    “It was like a home to them when they came back to land,” says Daniel.

    “The centre had a chapel, and we would provide counselling and general pastoral care for these staff.”

    But, it was a slower pace of life that attracted Daniel, his wife, seven-year-old daughter and 16-month-old son to the Waikato and he says he has been given a warm welcome to Waikato Hospital.

    “I look forward to working with these lovely people.”

    Waikato DHB’s vision is to improve the health, independence and quality of life for the communities it serves by addressing the needs of the population and reducing health disparities.

    Posted in What’s Happening
  • Blog from the Chair

    Blog from the Chair

    Source:

    Blog from the Chair

    Welcome to 2014.  Best wishes to everyone for a great year and thank you to all those who worked hard through the holiday season to keep our services running.

    As you are all aware our Chief Executive Craig Climo will be leaving us this year.

    Under Craig’s leadership our organisation has made great progress, and at the same time completed what has been New Zealand’s largest building programme.

    We now need to find a leader who can help us all to build on what has been achieved.

    The recruitment of a Chief Executive is the most important decision any Board (of Directors) gets to make and we will do everything we can to make sure we get it right.

    When choosing a new Chief Executive we need to understand the things that we do very well. But we also need to identify the opportunities that exist to be even better than we are.

    To assist with that I have asked the Ministry of Health to organise a team of experienced DHB leaders to carry out of review of our core services.  This will allow us to see where we stand through fresh eyes and clarify the task of the new Chief Executive.

    I have asked for the review to be carried out as soon as possible but exact timing will depend on the availability of appropriate team members.  The review should not disrupt your work in any way but if you are engaged by the review team please give them your full cooperation and provide any information they need.

    Once we have appointed a recruitment company to work with we expect the process of identifying our new Chief Executive to take at least three months.  The successful candidate will then need to organise their departure from their current employment so it is likely to be at least six months before they are in place here.  In the meantime it is business as usual.

    Thank you all for the great work you continue to do.

    Bob Simcock

    Chair

    10 February 2014
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    Waikato DHB’s vision is to improve the health, independence and quality of life for the communities it serves by addressing the needs of the population and reducing health disparities.

    Posted in General news
  • Midwifery and obstetric care provided during labour

    Midwifery and obstetric care provided during labour

    Source:

    Midwifery and obstetric care provided during labour

     (12HDC00876, 17 December 2013)

    Health and Disability Commissioner Anthony Hill today released a report finding a midwife in breach of the Code of Patient Rights for severe departures from the accepted standard of care.

    The newly graduated midwife assessed a 31-year-old woman at a birthing centre at 4am, after the woman’s waters broke spontaneously at home and contractions started several hours earlier. It was known to the midwife that the baby was in the posterior position, the woman had experienced difficulties with the birth of her first son, and the woman was anxious and in pain.

    Over the following ten and a half hours, the midwife did not adequately assess and monitor the woman and the fetal heart rate, support the woman, or document the care and treatment she provided. Following her assessment at 4am, the midwife administered pethidine to the woman and sent her home against her wishes and when it was not clinically appropriate to do so. When she reassessed the woman at home four hours later, she found the woman to be fully dilated and pushing involuntarily with her contractions. The midwife transferred the woman back to the birthing centre via ambulance. After an hour and a half of active pushing at the birthing centre with no progress, the midwife transferred the woman to the public hospital via ambulance at approximately 1pm.

    Mr Hill found that the midwife did not consult a specialist and/or transfer the woman to secondary care in a timely manner, provide adequate handover information to the public hospital staff, or clarify who was responsible for the woman’s ongoing care when the woman was transferred to the public hospital.

    The woman’s baby was born at the public hospital at 3pm that afternoon by emergency Caesarean section following a prolonged second stage of labour. Sadly, the baby could not be resuscitated and died shortly after birth. The woman suffered a spontaneous uterine rupture and required emergency surgery, including an abdominal hysterectomy.

    In addition to referring the midwife to the Director of Proceedings to determine whether any proceedings should be taken, the Commissioner recommended that the midwife establish a three-year mentoring and continuing education plan with the Midwifery Council of New Zealand and the New Zealand College of Midwives. Mr Hill recommended that the midwife complete that plan before returning to work as a self-employed community-based midwife.

    Mr Hill also found the hospital’s obstetric registrar in breach of the Code for failing to adequately assess the woman and for instigating an inappropriate treatment plan. Furthermore, Mr Hill concluded that the woman received poor midwifery care from the public hospital midwives, for which the DHB was found in breach of the Code.

    http://www.hdc.org.nz/decisions–case-notes/commissioner’s-decisions/2014/12hdc00876

    http://www.hdc.org.nz/decisions–case-notes/case-notes/midwifery-and-obstetric-care-provided-during-labour-(12hdc00876)

    Waikato DHB’s vision is to improve the health, independence and quality of life for the communities it serves by addressing the needs of the population and reducing health disparities.

    Posted in General news
  • Barlow family response to HDC findings

    Barlow family response to HDC findings

    Source:

    Barlow family response to HDC findings

    Our family, including our little boy Adam, experienced and suffered through a frightening and torturous labour on October 25, 2009 that left Linda on life support and resulted in the preventable and devastating death of our much loved baby boy.

    Since that harrowing experience we have continued to seek answers for Adam’s untimely death, and Linda’s injuries, in the hope of preventing similar outcomes for future parents and their babies.

    We would like to thank Health & Disability Commissioner Anthony Hill for his investigation and findings into Adam’s death, following on from a report by Coroner Gordon Matenga, who found Adam and Linda’s midwifery care was severely lacking. Mr Hill’s investigation has been thorough and professional and provides encouraging and insightful comments.

    We believe those findings are fair and the outcomes are proportionate to the areas of the maternity system that let us down the most. We suffered a shocking lack of basic midwifery care with a lack of humanity on October 25, 2009 by a self-employed new graduate LMC Midwife in the community.

    A ruptured Uterus is a rare event in a developed country but it was a fully predictable outcome given the substandard level of   midwifery   care   that   we   endured.   Despite the devastating outcomes in our situation it is rare for the mother to survive – this was only made possible by the highly skilled medical teams that worked together on Linda to save her life.

    It is our express wish that our four year fight for answers does not end in vain. We now challenge health minister Tony Ryall and all health professionals – particularly the midwifery sector – to accept these findings, to learn from them, and put into place a far safer environment for all future mothers, fathers, babies and midwives in New Zealand.

    Linda and Robert Barlow

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    Waikato DHB’s vision is to improve the health, independence and quality of life for the communities it serves by addressing the needs of the population and reducing health disparities.

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