I don’t like my kid’s friends – what should I do?

Source: Radio New Zealand

So you’ve got that ick feeling when it comes to one of your kid’s friends.

Maybe that friend is ever so slightly a bully during playdates. Maybe that person brings out the worst in your child. Or perhaps there is a clash of values between that family and yours. And then there is that age-old fear of peer pressure: when that kid is up to no good, and you’re worried your child might follow suit.

The influence of friends in your child’s life will grow over time. Good friendships can act as a guard against mental health issues, including anxiety and depression. However, bad friendships can have the opposite effect, especially as children develop into teenagers.

pixabay/befunky.com

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

$5.9 million fence to protect Wellington forest from pests

Source: Radio New Zealand

Greater Wellington Regional Council is spending a decade building a fence to protect thousands of hectares of native forest from pests.

RNZ was given a look at the area of Wainuiomata Regional Park which was normally roped off to the public due to its proximity to the capital’s water source.

Driving through the native bush, rātā trees estimated to be hundreds of years old were in full bloom – offering spots of bright red amongst shades of light and dark green.

But underneath the tree canopy was a problem that had been brewing for years.

RNZ / Mark Papalii

The forest floor’s undergrowth had been largely cleared of almost everything besides plants that tasted bad to pests or were difficult to eat for pigs, goats and deers.

The regional council’s delivery director Jack Mace told RNZ that prevented future plants and trees from being able to grow after older ones died.

“We are controlling possums in here and we are now increasingly controlling deer, pigs and goats.”

Mace said there was a “constant wave” of pests coming in from lands near the water catchment.

“So, what we are looking to do is to build a deer, pig and goat-proof fence around the whole valley so we can effectively eradicate them around that whole area.”

RNZ / Mark Papalii

The fence was set to cost $5.9 million over a 10-year period and would protect 7400 hectares of forest.

He said it was not a Zealandia-style fence but more a fence built specifically for larger pests.

“Our fence that we’ll build won’t be sufficient to keep predators like stoats and cats out.”

Mace noted there was a business case to fence off part of the area which would protect it from all pests but that would need central government funding.

RNZ / Mark Papalii

The forest has been home to the North Island brown kiwi for 20 years ago, a population that had been increasing due to predator controls.

He said the richness of the forest was incredible.

“Hundreds and hundreds of species down here. What’s special about this area is that we have got six or seven different forest types.”

Recently workers in the forest had found critically endangered species such as New Zealand’s only indigenous fully parasitic flowering plant Dactylanthus and short-tailed bats.

“Even where we have been in here for over a hundred years, we are still finding things.”

The project is due to be completed by 2034.

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

Get your finances sorted in 2026: Manage your mortgage

Source: Radio New Zealand

Want to pay off your home loan? Here are some changes you can make to get you closer to that goal. Unsplash/ Artful Homes

Is organising your money life on your New Year’s resolution list in 2026? In this five-part series, money correspondent Susan Edmunds guides you through the basics.

If you’ve got a mortgage, one of your priorities might be to try to get rid of it as soon as possible.

The past few years of higher interest rates have been tough going for lots of people.

As interest rates come down, many borrowers have more options.

There are a few changes you can make that could get you closer to that goal.

Increase your repayments

First up, the most obvious one.

If you make bigger repayments, you’ll be able to clear your home loan faster. What surprises some people is how much of a difference even a small increase in your home loan repayments can make, particularly if you haven’t had your home loan for a long time.

Interest rates have fallen over the past couple of years from more than 7 percent to less than 4.5 percent.

If you have a $500,000 loan at 4.5 percent, you’ll pay about $585 a week over a 30-year term including $411,413 of interest. If you can increase your payment to $600 a week, you’ll only pay $385,836 of interest and clear it about a year-and-a-half sooner.

You can increase your repayments by opting for a higher level when your loan comes up to refix. Sometimes you can ask your bank to increase them during the term, too, or make additional lump sum payments. There is generally a limit on how much extra you can pay back during a fixed term before you have to pay a fee.

When you loan rolls off its fixed term, you could also make an additional one-off payment before you refix again at whatever repayment rate suits.

Anything you can do to pay the balance off faster will save you a lot in the long run because it means the principal will be smaller and there won’t be so much to attract interest – which compounds – over the life of the loan.

Split your loan

You can split your loan into a number of smaller loans. This allows you to take advantage of different interest rates.

At the moment, longer fixes are more expensive than shorter ones but are still relatively low by historical standards.

You might choose to fix part for a longer rate for some security and have some on a shorter term to save money in the short term.

It also means you can choose to make higher repayments on one of the loans, and maybe aim to clear that before switching your attention to the other.

Ask for low-equity margin to be removed, or for special rate access

If you bought your house a while ago with a small deposit, you might be paying a low-equity margin on your interest rate.

You might also be paying higher rates than the “specials” banks advertise for borrowers with more deposit.

You could ask your bank to reassess your situation – if your property has improved in value or you’ve paid off your loan a bit, you could have improved your equity position, or you might find the bank is willing to negotiate.

Shop around for a sharper rate

If you don’t think you’re getting a good deal from your lender, you could look at what else is available in the market. A mortgage broker could help with this.

Banks have also been competing hard with cash back offers that can be worth quite a significant amount of money if you’re willing to shift.

Consider off-set

If you have savings that you want to keep separate from your mortgage, you could set up an offset facility.

That means you forgo the interest on your savings but also reduce your mortgage interest bill. It’s sometimes possible to do this by linking with family members’ accounts, too.

Consider revolving credit

If you have the discipline, a revolving credit facility can work well. This means you section off part of your home loan into what is basically a large overdraft and usually becomes your main transaction account.

You then aim to put your spending on your credit card each month and have your income going into your new revolving credit account.

This means you reduce the interest you pay on that portion of the loan for the period that income is sitting there. Hopefully when you pay your credit cards at the end of the month, there’s a bit left over to reduce what you owe.

You need to be a bit careful with this, though, because over time the idea is that you’ll build up money in that account as you pay it down and you don’t want to be tempted to spend it again.

Advice from a mortgage adviser or a home loan specialist from your bank can really help you to set a strategy and stick with it.

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

Lawyers say privacy rules need more teeth, following Manage My Health hack

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Finn Blackwell

Privacy lawyers are calling for a review into what punishments companies can face for breaching privacy in the wake of the massive Manage My Health cyber hack.

The country’s largest online patient portal faces a new Friday deadline for a US$60,000 ransom after hundreds of thousands of sensitive files were taken.

Manage My Health said hackers came in through its front door, and that it dropped the ball.

Chief executive Vino Ramayah has not ruled out standing down from his post.

In its latest public update, Manage My Health said it would start notifying affected users by the end of Thursday.

About 127,000 patients were affected.

Speaking to RNZ this week, the Deputy Privacy Commissioner said the Privacy Commisioner’s Office was irked by widespread complacency around cyber security.

“The frustration for us at the Office of the Privacy Commissioner is that we continue to see complacency from, and this is across the board … a continuation of the ‘it’ll happen to somebody else, not to me’ type approach,” Liz MacPherson said.

“And you have to ask the question, is the lack of a penalty regime part of that?”

For a former Assistant Privacy Commissioner, it was.

Privacy lawyer Katrine Evans Supplied

Privacy lawyer Katrine Evans chairs the Privacy Foundation, which had a mission of protecting privacy rights through research and education.

“The Privacy Commissioner’s Office has been calling for a long time, not just the current Privacy Commissioner, but previous Privacy Commissioners have called for a proper fining regime, a civil penalty regime, so not a criminal prosecution, but an ability to fine companies that breach privacy when they should have been taking much greater care,” she said.

“And so far that hasn’t happened, it’s now 2026 and it’s about time we had those in place.”

MacPherson pointed to the penalties on offer in Australia which were significantly increased in late 2022.

For serious breach, a court could impose a maximum A$50 million, or three times the benefit derived from what happened, or 30 percent of a business’ annual turnover.

That was for each contravention.

In New Zealand there was no express penalty for a privacy breach.

Deputy Privacy Commissioner Liz MacPherson. RNZ / Dom Thomas

The Privacy Commission was able to issue fines of $10,000, but these were for set circumstances:

  • A business or organisation that failed to change its behaviour after being issued with a compliance notice
  • Misleading a business or organisation to access someone else’s personal information
  • A business or organisation destroying personal information after it had been requested to avoid handing it over
  • Failing to notify the Privacy Commissioner of a breach.

The Human Rights Review Tribunal, if a case went there, was able to issue a fine of up to $350,000.

“It’s a pretty long haul to get all the way through there to get compensation,” Evans said.

“A lot of things settle quite early so that’s one option where you’ve been harmed, you ask for compensation, but that’s not to do with punishing.”

Evans said some courts could make awards for damages to punish a business or organisation through exemplary damages.

“The Privacy Foundation definitely thinks it’s high time,” she said when asked if there should be a review of the punishments available.

“Where are the incentives for agencies to take privacy seriously, to invest in good systems, to support their staff, to do the right thing, to provide great training?

“If you compare that with something like health and safety, where there are really significant fines available for, say, workplace accidents, privacy is looking pretty weak.”

Evans said having a better regime of fines would mean “everybody has to take care”.

Privacy barrister Kathryn Dalziel was another who said there should be a review.

“My view is that the penalties regime is not a deterrent,” she said.

“So there needs to be a review of those penalties and the amounts that can be awarded but also what they can be awarded for, and for serious privacy breaches which should never have happened, these should be matters that the Privacy Commissioner’s got the ability to impose penalties.

“I can understand the sense of frustration when you don’t have a power to impose a penalty that will act as a deterrent … I just don’t think we have the deterrent factor in New Zealand.”

Privacy barrister Kathryn Dalziel. Pool / Iain McGregor / The Press

Dalziel said she was surprised New Zealand did not follow Australia when it massively boosted its penalties.

Commenting on the Manage My Health hack, she called it a major breach.

“And the reason I say that is that any attack on a health system or health database causes fear for people.”

Her advice for worried patients was to let Manage My Health know, and contact the Privacy Commissioner to discuss their rights.

“This is something New Zealanders hold dear, the sensitivity of our health information and so any attack on a health system of this significance, particularly given the clear criminal intent behind the attack, says to me there are New Zealanders out there that are concerned, fearful, worried and anxious about their health information.”

Government responds

Through a spokesperson, Duty Minister Casey Costello said she was “not going to make up policy on the fly”.

“Any changes to the Privacy Act would require the input of various agencies and Cabinet consideration,” she said.

“Of course the government wants to ensure that people’s private information is protected.

“However, it important to recognise that the current cyber security breach is criminal activity,” Costello said.

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

Why 2026 is going to be a great year for star-gazers

Source: Radio New Zealand

There’s “something really wonderful going on” in the night skies above Aotearoa this summer, says astronomer Dr Ian Griffin, with more dazzling cosmic events to come this year.

Griffin, who is head of Dunedin’s Tūhura Otago Museum, has been spending his summer holiday in Middlemarch, an hour from Dunedin, enjoying New Zealand’s crystal-clear night skies.

The planet Jupiter is currently about as close to Earth as it gets, he told RNZ’s Summer Times.

Dr Ian Griffin

Supplied

“About an hour or so after sunset, you’ll see this really stonkingly bright, yellowy thing rising in the northeastern sky and that is actually the planet Jupiter.

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

Record number of New Zealanders face visa troubles in United States

Source: Radio New Zealand

MFAT warns travellers may encounter greater scrutiny at the US border. RNZ

The number of New Zealanders held in US detention or having immigration difficulties in America rose to a new high of 39 last year, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT).

Latest available White House figures suggest more than 900 New Zealanders overstayed their US visa in 2024.

The US administration has stepped up border controls since Donald Trump came to power a year ago, including searches of electronic devices and social media accounts.

MFAT data shows 39 New Zealanders sought help after encountering border or visa issues in the US in the last financial year (2024-25).

In the last six months, there have been another 16. The figures reflect only those who contacted MFAT for help.

New Zealand woman Sarah Shaw and her six-year-old son were among them. They were released last year after three weeks in a Texan detention centre because of a problem with her paperwork when she arrived back from Canada.

And New Zealand-born reggae artist Lotima Nicholas Pome’e – aka General Fiyah – was detained and sent back to New Zealand before he could perform at Polyfest, a major Pacific cultural festival, in August.

MFAT’s Safe Travel website warned New Zealanders to exercise increased caution, due to safety and security issues.

It noted the US government had strict rules for entering and staying in the country and that travellers may encounter greater scrutiny at the border. There was also now a requirement for most visitors to register with US authorities if they were staying more than 30 days.

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Seaview wastewater treatment plant stench likely to return this weekend

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Seaview wastewater treatment plant has been notorious for causing a putrid smell. RNZ / Krystal Gibbens

An awful stench that has long plagued residents in a Lower Hutt suburb is likely to return this weekend.

Wellington Water has told Seaview locals it was carrying out some work at the wastewater treatment plant.

The facility has been notorious for causing a putrid smell likened to faeces and rotting eggs, making some locals dry retch and shut themselves indoors.

Wellington Water said on social media it was repairing a part in one of its sedimentation tanks on Monday 12 January, with preparations beginning this Friday.

“This work needs to happen quickly to keep the treatment process working effectively. If it isn’t repaired, solids can build up, which would be bad for the plant’s process,” it said.

The company said there was an “increased risk of odour” from Friday to Monday, but the work would be fully enclosed to try and stop the smell escaping, and it would use deodorisers to mask the stench.

The work involved repairs to a scraper inside a sedimentation tank, Wellington Water said.

“Heavier particles settle at the bottom, where the scrapers literally scrape it out for sludge treatment. Scrapers also remove floating scum from the surface.

“This process is essential to prevent sludge from building up, decomposing or overflowing, which can cause odour and negatively affect the plant’s biological treatment process.”

At the root of ongoing problems with the smelly plant was its sludge dryer, which removed water from the solid material left over in treated sewage before it was disposed.

The dryer was near the end of its working life and needed constant maintenance before it was to be replaced by the end of 2027.

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FENZ says people ignoring fire season safety warnings, warns against complacency

Source: Radio New Zealand

A bushfire in Ngunguru, Northland, last February. Supplied/Ann Austin

Fire and Emergency says people are getting complacent and ignoring safety warnings this fire season.

Hot weather is expected across the country in the coming days, with temperatures rising into the 30s.

FENZ wildfire manager Tim Mitchell said humidity with forecast gusty winds along the east coast – including Canterbury, Wairarapa, Hawke’s Bay and Northland – created the “perfect conditions for elevated fire risk”.

He urged people to avoid activities that could spark a wildfire, including welding, grinding, using cookers and mowing lawns.

“We’re asking the public to accept that there are times when we aren’t able to do these things and actually follow the advice and don’t do those activities during high-risk periods.

“Obviously, it’s the weekend, which is when people mow their lawns. But we need your flexibility around not undertaking high-risk activities.”

Mowing was a particular problem in long, dry grass, such as ankle-height or higher grass in paddocks and on roadsides, Mitchell said.

However, mowing residential lawns could still be risky if there were hidden stones.

“People mowing their lifestyle blocks have had a stone or a piece of steel from a kid’s toy or something actually start a fire.”

He said even when the conditions were safe to light a fire, people still needed to be cautious.

“If you are able to undertake those activities at a safer time, you still must make sure that you watch that fire, and once you’re finished with the fire, you properly extinguish that fire and don’t leave it just to smoulder and burn out over the coming days. It’s a real common cause of wildfires.”

He said a number of areas had fire restrictions in place, where a permit would be required to light a fire.

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Surf Lifeguards expect hot weather to bring influx of beachgoers

Source: Radio New Zealand

Surf lifeguards at Bethells Beach. Nick Monro

Surf Lifesaving is preparing for a swarm of beachgoers with hot weather expected across the country this week.

Many areas, including Tauranga, Masterton, and Christchurch, were predicted to be more than 4 degrees Celsius hotter than normal over the next few days.

Temperatures in Blenheim were projected to reach 32C on Friday.

Surf Lifesaving’s Chris Emmet said it was expecting a busy weekend across its 90 patrolled locations around the country, with hot weather bringing big numbers of people to the beach.

“Lifeguards look forward to this time of year, when there is quite a bit of activity around the beach. We’re really well prepared across the country.”

Emmet said Auckland’s West Coast beaches often saw big crowds and also a high number of incidents.

“Over the next three to five days, conditions [on Auckland’s West Coast] are predicted to have moderate to small surf, a low tide in the afternoon or an outgoing tide all afternoon, with a low tide kind of early evening. That means people think it’s quite safe, and generally they underestimate the conditions. Low tide is generally more hazardous with rips.

“The biggest concern for us is people finding a location to swim that’s safe for them. If you’re really hot in Auckland over the next few days, the East Coast will generally be safer than the West Coast.”

He stressed the importance of swimming at patrolled beaches between the flags.

“Patrol hours are generally 10am to 6pm, but some patrols do run a bit later, and if there are big crowds, lifeguards will stay on for a bit longer.”

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Two flown to hospital after jetboat crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

Two people have been flown to hospital following a jetboat crash in Otago.

Emergency services were called to Makarora, in the Queenstown-Lakes district, shortly before 3.30pm.

The injured pair were flown to Dunedin Hospital in a moderate condition.

St John said another person was treated at the scene, but did not need transportation.

Maritime New Zealand said that it has asked the commercial jet boat operator to not repair the damaged boat until it has inspected it.

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