Getting through a natural disaster with a disability

Source: Radio New Zealand

For people with disabilities, even daily life can require some workarounds – let alone a natural disaster.

With this in mind, the Wellington Region Emergency Management Office (WREMO) has launched a new emergency preparedness guide developed by, and for, disabled people.

Renee Patete, who’s been blind since birth, said most things were easier at home, in the house she’d known for the past 24 years.

“In an emergency, it’s important to know where you are, and what you have around you, and who you have around you,” she said.

She told RNZ she knew where all the exits were and where to drop during an earthquake to avoid falling objects, and the house was well-stocked with food.

But that was not always the reality – a natural disaster could strike at any time.

“I suppose the best thing to do is to be able to clearly communicate your needs to anyone else,” she said. “Having in mind how you’re going to quickly and efficiently communicate what you need to strangers is really important.”

RNZ / Mark Papalii

This, and other advice designed with the input of people with all kinds of disabilities, was included in WREMO’s new guide.

Patete, who was an intern in the National Emergency Management Agency’s communications team through the Whaikaha/Ministry for Disabled People’s summer intern programme, had been a part of the creative process.

She said the result was a practical resource for planning ahead and preparing well for a disaster, “no matter the individual’s ability”.

“We talk a lot about what everyone should do, or what we should all do,” Patete said. “But that doesn’t necessarily always apply to everyone.”

She explained advice like drop-cover-hold was not very useful for someone in a wheelchair – instead, they might prefer to lock, cover, hold – locking their wheels and curling over.

PANCAKE PICTURES

It was the first step in a wider project responding to long-standing evidence that disabled people face disproportionate impacts in disasters, based on a framework designed at the University of Sydney which emphasised the input of people with disabilities themselves.

It recognised the expertise disabled people already used to manage daily life.

“Centering it on the person is a really big step forward,” Patete said. “We talk a lot about the people that help, the other people that can support you and what we need from other people, but actually this guide is about what can you do, what are your strengths, what can you do to solve these problems?”

Renee Santos. RNZ / Mark Papalii

WREMO’s project lead Renee Santos has an invisible disability.

“Controlled well by medication now, but when I started working on this guide, I was really struggling with mobility, so I came in and I was like, ‘What can I do to improve outcomes for my community?'”

WREMO’s adaptation of the Sydney guide was shaped by groups of disabled people at national, regional and local levels, who were paid for their time like any other contractor.

The work was backed by Whaikaha – Ministry of Disabled People, and the National Emergency Management Agency. They were now developing a national version, including in alternate formats like braille or audio.

Santos said the plan was to create peer-led workshops to go with the guide, and then, she hoped, forums to bring emergency services, emergency management, and disabled people together.

“I think that’s where the real change will come in the system.”

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

Ongoing strike action by paid firefighters ‘rolling the dice on people’s safety’ – FENZ

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland firefighters protest for better pay and work conditions. RNZ/Lucy Xia

Fire and Emergency (FENZ) says paid firefighters are “rolling the dice on people’s safety” with ongoing strike action.

But the union is hitting back and said its comments about pay offers are pedalling “rubbish” that will only galvanise their member’s resolve.

The New Zealand Professional FireFighters Union (NZPFU) had issued strike notices for one-hour strikes at 12pm on 19 and 26 December.

In a statement FENZ, said there were 22 calls for incidents during the hour that union affiliated staff walked off the job during earlier strike action on 12 December.

FENZ said 12 of the calls related to events in areas affected by strike action with half of those being alarms activated with no fire discovered.

It said a small backyard fire in Kawerau was extinguished by a volunteers crew and another call was a small gas leak.

It said St John’s ambulance responded to two medical emergencies – in accordance with strike contingency plans – while the remaining two calls were reports of smoke which did not result in a fire.

Deputy National Commander Megan Stiffler said she was disappointed by the announcement of further strikes before the end of the year.

“This is rolling the dice on people’s safety. We’ve urged the NZPFU repeatedly to call off their strikes because there is no good reason for continuing to put the community in harm’s way while both parties are in facilitation,” Stiffler said.

Stiffler thanked the country’s 11,800 volunteers for being available to respond to calls during the strike periods.

FENZ and the NZPFU have been in bargaining talks for a collective employment agreement for paid firefighters since July last year.

This week marked the first two bargaining sessions overseen by Employment Relations Authority appointed facilitators tasked with breaking the impasse between the two sides of the wage and conditions dispute.

“Attending independent facilitation with the Authority is the next logical step in coming to an agreement and we will participate in good faith with the NZPFU. We hope the facilitation process introduces some realism into discussions,” Stiffler said.

She said the union’s latest settlement proposal was three times higher than FENZ’s previous offer put forward before the facilitated bargaining process began.

Stiffler said FENZ had offered a 6.2 percent pay increase over the next three years.

She said the amount was “fair, sustainable and in line with other settlements across the public service”.

NZPFU national secretary Wattie Watson said that figure was “rubbish” as there had not been any pay rise in the nearly 18 months leading up to the current negotiations.

“In actual fact the period of time is four and a half years for our members because they haven’t had a pay increase,” Watson said.

Watson said FENZ claims of public endangerment during the hour long strike periods was ignoring the problems caused by understaffing and a lack of adequate resourcing of the service.

“Every day there is real risk to the community. FENZ gets a warning about this one hour,” Watson said.

“Every other hour of every other day they don’t know because they don’t have enough staff to keep the stations open and they don’t have enough truck.”

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Stars in town, movie buffs amped for Avatar 3 premiere

Source: Radio New Zealand

Anticipation is building ahead of the third instalment of director James Cameron’s alien epic, Avatar, with a crowd expected to attend Saturday’s star-studded red carpet event.

The Wellington premiere of Avatar 3: Fire and Ash could draw thousands, according to the council, with A-list stars due to hit the red carpet at the Embassy Theatre from 5pm Saturday.

James Cameron and actors Cliff Curtis and Sam Worthington are expected to be among the 750 guests making their way from Allen Street to the theatre’s doorstep.

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

Serious injuries after SH1 crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / REECE BAKER

A person is in a serious condition after a crash on State Highway 1 near Wellsford.

Police were called to the single vehicle crash at about 4pm.

Police say the road was not blocked after the crash.

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Three Auckland stores caught selling alcohol to minors

Source: Radio New Zealand

Thirty-three stores passed the test. 123RF

Auckland police are disappointed after three liquor stores sold alcohol to minors.

During the last three weeks, over 30 stores across Auckland were tested by inspectors to see they were complying with alcohol laws.

Sergeant Michael Haydon said three failed.

“We’re really disappointed to report below 100 percent compliance, in that three out of the thirty-six sites tested failed in their obligations,” Sergeant Haydon said.

“A very basic requirement for anyone selling alcohol is to ask for ID and then calculate the correct age from that identification.”

Police and Auckland Council will now refer the three stores to the Alcohol Regulatory Licensing Authority for further action.

Sergeant Haydon said there is no excuse for basic failings.

“It’s a privilege, and not a right, for licensees and duty managers to be granted the ability to sell alcohol,” he said.

He said 33 stores passed the test.

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Major Queenstown tourism operator sentenced over landslip that forced evacuations

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Niva Chittock

A major Queenstown tourism operator and two other contractors have been sentenced for contributing to a landslip that inundated a residential street, forcing dozens of evacuations during record rainfall.

Skyline Enterprises, along with contractors Naylor Love Central Otago Limited and Wilsons Contractors Limited, were charged for breaches of the Resource Management Act.

A major landslip inundated Reavers Lane during torrential rain in September 2023, leaving 10 homes red-stickered.

Cars buried by slip debris in Reavers Lane, Queenstown RNZ / Angus Dreaver

Judge John Hassan sentenced the companies in the Christchurch District Court on Friday afternoon.

Skyline Enterprises were fined $130,000, Naylor Love $154,000, and Wilsons Contractors $61,600.

As part of an enforcement order, the companies were ordered to cover repair costs incurred by the Queenstown-Lakes District Council of over $200,000, as well as emotional reparation payments amounting to $12,000.

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Parliament debates climate targets under urgency

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Farmers will be exposed to the uncertainty of the three-year political cycle by the government’s decision to walk away from the bipartisan consensus on climate change, the Greens say.

The government is pushing through all three stages of a bill to weaken the 2050 methane emissions target under urgency in Parliament on Friday.

If passed, a required 24 to 47 percent reduction in methane from 2017 levels will be halved, to a 14 to 24 percent reduction.

In setting the lower target, the government rejected Climate Change Commission advice, arguing it would lower GDP in 2050 by 2.2 percent from what it otherwise would have been.

Instead, it followed the advice of a methane science review it commissioned, which found the lower target was consistent with a controversial principle of ‘no additional warming’.

Methane – which is a short-lived gas but has a huge warming effect while it exists in the atmosphere – makes up roughly half of New Zealand’s emissions. Most of it comes from farms, especially the burps and breaths of ruminant animals like cows and sheep.

Climate Change Minister Simon Watts said the government was supporting farmers and economic growth.

“Farmers have been clear that they need a methane target that is realistic,” he told Parliament.

“This bill reflects our belief that a thriving climate and thriving economy go hand in hand.”

The government was supporting work on farms to reduce emissions, including investing in agricultrual methane-inhibiting technology via public-private partnership AgriZero.

New Zealand’s international targets – including halving net greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 – were not changing, he said.

Green Party MP Francisco Hernandez said the legislation was “a betrayal of the farming community [National] purport to represent”.

Farmers had been previously shielded by the bipartisanship forged when Parliament passed the Zero Carbon Act – which set New Zealand’s original targets – with near-unanimous support in 2019, Hernandez said.

That would end when the amended target was passed either today or tomorrow.

“Every three years, the agricultural community will now have to face the rollercoaster experience of the chopping and changing of targets.”

Green Party MP Francisco Hernandez said the legislation was “a betrayal of the farming community [National] purport to represent”. VNP / Phil Smith

He criticised the government’s decision to push through the change under urgency, with no public consultation or select committee scrutiny.

“They will not be able to complain when we use the same process.”

Labour Party climate change spokesperson Deborah Russell said the government had chosen “a very curious day” to be pushing through the bill under urgency.

“It is 10 years to the day since John Key’s National government signed up to the Paris Agreement, and here we are today, in this house, downgrading our methane target, valorising dubious science, and walking away from our commitments to reducing climate change.”

Setting a lower target might be cheaper in the short-term, Russell said.

“But the costs will be borne by our children and our children’s children.”

Previous MPs, including from National, had worked hard together to get a bipartisan consensus on the original targets, she said.

“There was genuine consensus… and that party has walked away from it.”

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How to set boundaries for teens over the summer break

Source: Radio New Zealand

Like everyone else, teenagers want to have fun and feel like they’re on holiday when summer comes. They can also push back on routine and expectations and argue that, because there’s no school, there should also be no rules.

Gaming all night then crashing until midday doesn’t make anyone feel good, says parenting coach and mum-of-three, Kristen Ward. To give some structure to the summer days, she recommends a family meeting when holidays begin, so some clear expectations can be agreed.

“Being on our screens all day and night is not the path to wellbeing or a really good summer,” Ward tells RNZ’s Nine to Noon.

Kristin Ward is a registered social worker and a parenting coach and presenter with the non-profit Parenting Place.

Parenting Place

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Logging truck and car crash blocks Dunedin’s Southern Motorway

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / REECE BAKER

Emergency services are responding to a crash on Dunedin’s Southern Motorway on Friday afternoon.

The crash involves a logging truck and car and has blocked the northbound lanes.

It was reported about 3.30pm, between Kaikorai Valley Rd turnoff and Caversham Valley Road on-ramp.

There are no reports of serious injuries.

Motorists are advised to expect delays while the scene is cleared, which could take some time.

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Hamilton Zoo announces ‘deeply tragic’ death of giraffe Masamba

Source: Radio New Zealand

Masamba had just celebrated his 23rd birthday two weeks ago. Facebook / Hamilton Zoo

Hamilton Zoo has announced the death of one of its giraffes.

Masamba had just celebrated his 23rd birthday, but had been in declining in health, the zoo said in a social media post on Friday.

“Unfortunately, no amount of love and care could have changed the inevitable outcome, but the outcome is still heartfelt and deeply tragic for us here at the zoo.

“Today we acted on the heartbreaking but humane decision to assist his passing.”

The zoo said they were deeply saddened by the event, having spent years caring for and loving him.

“Masamba was an incredible soul who taught us so much. Today, we say farewell, holding close every memory and every moment he shared with us,” the post said.

Just two weeks ago, the zoo celebrated his 23rd birthday, which is considered very elderly for a giraffe.

It said at the time he was slowing down and “every day was precious”.

Masamba’s death comes just a day after New Zealand’s last subantartic fur seal named Ōrua was euthanised.

Auckland Zoo announced its 20-year-old seal named Ōrua’s passing on Thursday.

Ōrua was the last remaining seal in New Zealand and was close to the maximum lifespan for his species and had health conditions, including “significant visual impairment”.

His habitat was also deteriorating and could no longer maintain the “quality environment” Ōrua needed for his health and welfare needs.

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