Kelston Boys’ High School charter takeover bid abandoned

Source: Radio New Zealand

Screenshot / Google Maps

A controversial outside application to change an Auckland school to a charter school has been abandoned.

Bangerz Education and Wellbeing Trust and a former board member, Siaosi Gavet, were behind the bid.

They argued Kelston Boys’ High is violent, has low achievement and attendance rates and has lost community confidence.

But the school didn’t support the move and said becoming a charter school wouldn’t be in students’ best interests.

The Trust earlier ended its own consultation on its plans, and said the school had drawn battle lines in its public opposition.

Commenting on the battle last month, Labour said the charter school system is set up so “cowboy organisations” could pressure state schools.

The Charter Schools Agency said it was told last week the application would be withdrawn.

Kelston Boys’ High, on its social media, has called it a positive update.

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New Zealand receives ‘Dirty Ashtray’ award for poor progress in tobacco control

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand cited for sabotaging Indigenous tobacco-free aspirations and having alarming vaping rates among young people. 123rf.com

Researchers say New Zealand is attracting international attention for all the wrong reasons following it being awarded the ‘Dirty Ashtray’ award.

The ‘Dirty Ashtray’ was given to New Zealand at the biennial meeting of Parties to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in Geneva, Switzerland.

The ‘Dirty Ashtray’ is awarded each year at the Conference of the Parties meeting following a review of international progress and consideration of each country’s performance.

New Zealand’s citation is “for trying to portray their current tobacco control plan as a success when in reality since COP10 they’ve reversed world-leading reforms, sabotaged Indigenous tobacco-free aspirations, have alarming vaping rates among young people and have plummeted from 2nd to 53rd on the global index for tobacco industry interference.

New Zealand’s legislative reversal is being used by tobacco industry interests globally to push bad policy.”

Co-Director of the ASPIRE Aotearoa Research Centre Professor Janet Hoek said New Zealand was once a leader in global tobacco control policy.

“Now, our national shame is playing out on an international stage.”

Last week New Zealand also fell from second to 53rd in the global Tobacco Industry Interference Index.

“Last week the Cancer Society’s Tobacco Industry Interference Index marked a cataclysmic decline for Aotearoa New Zealand. The ‘Dirty Ashtray’ award reinforces the Cancer Society’s conclusions,” Hoek said.

Dr Mary Assunta, Head of Global Research and Advocacy at Global Centre for Good Governance in Tobacco Control (GGTC) and principal author of the Global Tobacco Industry Interference Index said if the country had implemented the measures the coalition Government repealed, “large, rapid and equitable declines in smoking prevalence were predicted.”

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Zero households in Contracted Emergency housing in Rotorua

Source: New Zealand Government

The Government has officially ended the use of Contracted Emergency Housing (CEH) motels in Rotorua, taking the number of households in CEH from its peak of over 240 households across 13 motels under the previous Government down to zero today, Associate Housing Minister Tama Potaka says.

“For years Rotorua became the poster child of a broken emergency housing system,” Mr Potaka says.

“At its worst, entire stretches of Fenton Street were lined with emergency accommodation motels. Crime surged, families were moved around like luggage, and Rotorua was left to carry the social, economic, and reputational damage of a system that had completely lost control.

“Our Government promised change. We set a clear target to shut down Rotorua’s CEH motels by 15 December 2025.”

Mr Potaka says the turnaround reflects deliberate, coordinated action across Rotorua.

“Rotorua whānau, businesses and mana whenua had been pleading for change for years. We listened and acted. We have restored safety, dignity and confidence to a city that was forced to absorb the consequences of a failed housing model.”

HUD and MSD partnered with Visions of a Helping Hand, WERA Aotearoa Charitable Trust, Emerge Aotearoa, Ngāti Whakaue, Te Arawa, Restore Rotorua and the Rotorua Lakes Council to move every household into stable, secure homes.

Referrals into CEH motels ceased on 15 June 2025, and agencies have since worked intensively to secure permanent placements.

“With the last families rehoused, the remaining CEH motels are now preparing to return to the commercial,” Mr Potaka says.

“Rotorua is finally back on the front foot, it is safer, stronger, and open for growth. Our Government will keep backing Rotorua to reclaim its reputation, grow its tourism economy, strengthen its housing supply, and unlock new opportunities for the city.

“This progress builds on the Whakaue-Government partnership delivering 80 new affordable rental homes at Manawa Gardens, alongside the earlier 80 completed in 2024. By increasing long-term supply and moving families into warm, secure homes, Rotorua finally has more sustainable housing pathways.”

Notes for Editors:

There is information about housing in Rotorua on HUD’s website here, noting that the Rotorua Temporary Housing Dashboard- September is superseded by the information provided above

https://www.hud.govt.nz/our-work/rotorua-housing-accord 

Ferry solution saves New Zealand $3.2b

Source: New Zealand Government

Good afternoon. Thank you, Lachie, for the introduction. 

And thanks to CentrePort for having us here.

We selected this site as it was the scene of the iReX pyramid scheme. This was one of two large spaces rented for Project iReX. By contrast, the new Ferry Holdings office is so small that there isn’t room to host you there. 

That is because we have shifted from ‘wasteful spending’ to ‘waste not, want not.’

It is good to see various leaders here today, including rail and maritime unions, iwi, and the chairs, chief executives and team members of CentrePort, Port Marlborough, and KiwiRail. These ferries are for all New Zealanders, and we appreciate the support for commonsense.

Marlborough Mayor Nadine Taylor, Wellington Mayor Andrew Little, Greater Wellington Chair Daran Ponter, welcome and thank you for being here.

Chris Mackenzie, Heather Simpson, Greg Lowe, Katherine Rich, Captain Iain McLeod and the entire Ferry Holdings team, thank you. New Zealand owes you a debt of gratitude.

And thanks extends to the pragmatists from CentrePort, Port Marlborough, and KiwiRail too. To the teams gathered today: a genuine, heartfelt thank you for your work. My reputation is the beneficiary of your work.

These teams picked up a clarion call for fiscal discipline, without compromising on the ships and infrastructure New Zealanders want and need.

At our behest, and then with Cabinet’s support, we safeguarded the long-term future of the Interislander, preserved rail on the Strait, and saved the taxpayer billions.

In fact, we have saved the taxpayer $2.3 billion.

Ferry Holdings, the ports and KiwiRail have agreed to the programme of work to be delivered by 2029. The programme will be less than $2 billion, but the taxpayer contribution is within the $1.7 billion Cabinet allocated when we started our no-nonsense ferry solution.

That is $2.3 billion less than the $4 billion cost explosion Treasury warned of in 2023, after project managers pushed egregious, wasteful and unnecessary scope into the infrastructure programme.

And before the apologists start saying the cancelled ferries would have been here in 2026. No major construction contracts were entered under iReX, but they still said they could complete work in 2026 within two years. They were in La La Land. 

It could not be done. We would have ended up, as they have in Tasmania, where ferries arrived long before the infrastructure was ready. The Tasmanian Devil was in the detail all along.

Instead, we have brought this back to the programme we agreed in 2020, before the Labour Party went away with the ‘ferries’, so to speak.

Two new ferries, replacing infrastructure where it is needed, but keeping infrastructure where it can be kept – with three years of build programme.

We will rebuild the marine infrastructure in Picton and Wellington but keep the assets that still have life left in them, and make use of the yards, buildings, and road and rail infrastructure. That saves billions.

We know this will work because the idea came from the ship masters’ union and has been assiduously tested by the ports; people in the practical business of ship and freight movement, not boffins and bean counters.

Ask yourself, who is more likely to deliver value for money, safe services, and a viable business: the people whose livelihoods are on the line, or the expensive contractors who hijacked the iReX project?

This is not a free-for-all either. Interislander is a commercial business operating in a competitive market. Funding put in by the ports and Ferry Holdings will be recovered over the 30-year life of the ferry and infrastructure assets, through port fees paid by Interislander revenue. Interislander revenue will also need to build sufficient reserves to buy new ferries in thirty years.

When this basic principle of business is taken into account, it brings into stark relief why a no-nonsense ferry solution is the only way forward. If we lumped in high costs, like they sought to do in iReX, then it will ultimately flow on to New Zealanders through higher Interislander fares.

By keeping costs low, we have saved the Interislander for road and rail and kept costs to an economic minimum for you, the consumer.

Oh and by the way, that is why we are staying in Picton and not going to Clifford Bay. Their own estimates say their project will cost $900 million, while works in Picton are a bit over $500 million. The higher the cost, the more expensive the Interislander ticket.

Instead, we thank the two ports for their willingness and straightforward approaches. We know that this attitude will be expected from the major construction contractors who will soon be joining this project: programme and cost efficiency will win those construction contracts, so put your best foot forward. 

And we are still buying what New Zealanders want: two new ferries.

We are buying exactly the type of ferries people want: big enough to carry freight and families for the next 30 years, designed for comfort and freight capacity, and meeting modern safety requirements.

We will enter a new era of ship quality on the Cook Strait with these new ferries.

They will have road and rail decks. We have never wavered in our support for rail. It is not an anti-truck position, is it simply commonsense. If rail cannot haul heavy industries, then thousands of trucks as heavy as a small house would. More of those means more trucks adding road costs, road works, and road cones.

We are about balance: road and rail. We are about commonsense: using what New Zealanders built to benefit New Zealanders, not leaving rail to waste on the side of the road.

And the fixed price for these two ferries is $596 million, just a fraction more than the cancelled ferries with its famously good price – not hundreds of millions more as the naysayers have been shouting for months and months.

We have also secured a ship builder of serious quality.

Guangzhou Shipyard International is the largest modern integrated ship building enterprise in Southern China. They received the highest overall rating through Ferry Holdings’ competitive tender process, impressing with their technical expertise and ability to deliver on time and on budget.

Next week, we will travel to Guangzhou with the Ferry Holdings Chair and Ships Programme Director to acknowledge this significant agreement, not just between the shipyard and Ferry Holdings but also as a significant contribution to economic relations with China.

Finally, we intend to move forward.

Despite the risible attempt to turn iReX into a pathway to prosperity for the consultant class, hijacking a project founded on prudency in 2020; we saw through them, we kicked them out, and we took control again.

We saved $2.3 billion in the process, retained rail ferries, and have now secured the ferry contract and the path to completion in 2029. We did what we said we would do.

Work has already started. KiwiRail retired the Aratere, making way for the demolition and rebuild work. CentrePort has already built the laydown area, and they have a barge on site. Port Marlborough is about to start demolition works on the Aratere linkspan to make way for the new infrastructure. 

This is a programme with real energy and excitement behind it. That focus will carry the day, because on this occasion: commonsense won.

We are, after all, charting the same course as those who came before us, albeit on new tides and with the pragmatists at the helm once again.

Thank you.

Gurjit Singh murder trial: Sister says murder-accused was not upset over love triangle

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rajinder has been accused of murdering Gurjit Singh in Dunedin in January last year. RNZ

The sister of a man accused of killing Dunedin’s Gurjit Singh says he was not upset when he discovered the woman who rejected him had married Singh instead, a court has heard.

A 35-year-old, known only as Rajinder, is on trial at the High Court for the murder of Gurjit Singh.

Singh was found dead on the lawn of his home in January last year after being stabbed more than 40 times.

The High Court has heard of a complicated love triangle involving Singh, his widow Kamaljeet Kaur and Rajinder.

Kaur told the court on Tuesday that she rejected Rajinder in 2022 before marrying Singh the following year.

Rajinder’s sister Harmeet Kaur said Kamaljeet Kaur’s family approached her family twice about marrying her brother in 2022 but they rejected the proposal.

She found out about Singh and Kamaljeet Kaur’s marriage in 2023 as a result of an Instagram post about the wedding when she was living with a mutual friend of Singh’s – Harjit Kaur – in Auckland.

Harmeet Kaur told the court that she was shocked and called her brother. She told the court he was surprised but not upset, saying it was a small world.

A marriage broker had pushed for them to accept Kamaljeet Kaur, saying she wanted to go abroad, only for the woman’s family to say she was not ready to leave India after a video call between Rajinder and the woman’s father, Kaur said.

She said Rajinder was not upset when Gurjit Singh rejected a plan for him to marry his sister, because he accepted that she was too young.

Stevens asked Harmeet Kaur about her time living with her brother, father and Rajinder’s wife in Dunedin from August 2023.

She said they enjoyed their time together and her brother’s marriage appeared to be happy.

His wife spent about six months staying at home adjusting to New Zealand culture but they then went on long car rides, watched movies and cooked together.

Kaur said Rajinder also gave his wife driving lessons, usually later at night after work and dinner.

Harmeet Kaur told prosecutor Richard Smith that she called Rajinder after seeing Singh’s wedding photo because he had received two proposals from Kamaljeet Kaur, only to be told she had changed her mind again about leaving India.

It had been a waste of time, Kaur said.

The trial is set down for three weeks.

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New safeguards for puberty blocker prescribing

Source: New Zealand Government

Cabinet has agreed to introduce new safeguards on the prescribing of gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogues, while ensuring patients with medical needs can continue to access appropriate care, Health Minister Simeon Brown says.

“We are putting in place stronger safeguards so families can have confidence that any treatment is clinically sound and in the best interests of the young person or child.

“Gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogues play an important role in treating a range of medical conditions. We are ensuring they remain available for patients who need them for conditions such as early-onset puberty, endometriosis, or prostate cancer, where there is strong clinical evidence of benefit.”

The Ministry of Health’s evidence brief found that there is a lack of high-quality evidence that demonstrates the benefits or risks of the use of gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogues for the treatment of gender dysphoria or incongruence. While this uncertainty persists, the Government is taking a precautionary approach.

Following public consultation, Cabinet has agreed to introduce new regulations under the Medicines Act to align New Zealand’s approach with the United Kingdom:

  • New patients seeking treatment for gender dysphoria or incongruence can no longer be prescribed gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogues, pending the completion of the United Kingdom’s clinical trial on their use in this context.
  • Ensure existing youth gender services are maintained for young people experiencing gender dysphoria or incongruence and bringing these services together through a central, accessible online resource.

“These changes will ensure a more consistent and carefully monitored approach. This mirrors steps taken in other countries, such as the United Kingdom, Finland, Norway, and Sweden, where additional safeguards have recently been implemented to ensure decisions are made in line with the best available evidence,” Mr Brown says.

The new approach will not impact patients currently receiving gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogues for the treatment of gender dysphoria or incongruence, with changes applying only to new cases going forward.

“The Government expects existing youth gender services to continue supporting young people and their families, connecting them with healthcare professionals who have specialised expertise and can provide evidence-based guidance.

“These changes are about ensuring treatments are safe and carefully managed, while maintaining access to care for those who need it.”

A two-storey classroom fire was promptly put out at Saint Kentigern College

Source: Radio New Zealand

Smoke seen from the field at St Kentigern College in Pakuranga. Supplied

A two-storey classroom block at Auckland’s St Kentigern College in Pakuranga caught fire on Wednesday afternoon, leading to a full school evacuation.

About 20 firefighters attended the incident after Fire and Emergency said they were called to the school on Pakuranga Road about 1.30pm.

A FENZ spokesperson said firefighters saw a “large plume of smoke” coming from the building when they arrived.

Students and staff were evacuated onto the sport fields as a precaution.

The school confirmed there were people inside the classroom when the fire started.

.

A spokesperson for the college said the fire was quickly put out, which allowed senior students to start their exams at 2pm despite the brief disruption.

The cause of the fire was unknown and the school was working with Fire and Emergency.

The school could not confirm the extent of damage done to the classroom block, but nobody was hurt injured.

Police have been approached for comment.

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Weather: Rockfall on highway near Coromandel township

Source: Radio New Zealand

A man who was travelling on State Highway 25 towards Coromandel town this morning said he saw rocks, small slips and “spontaneous waterfall” along the way.

Mieke Kregting took a video of what appeared to be a landslide along SH25.

The video showed rocks and debris spilling onto the highway, and water gushing down a muddy cliff-face onto the road.

Meanwhile, Bay of Plenty Regional Council activated its flood room protocols as it prepared for a downpour.

MetService has issued an orange heavy rain warning for Bay of Plenty until 11pm on Wednesday, with 80mm to 110mm of rain on top of what has already fallen expected.

The heavy rain warnings in place in Bay of Plenty as of Wednesday 3pm. MetService/Screenshot

The heavy rain warnings in place in Bay of Plenty as of Wednesday 3pm.

In a statement on social media the Bay of Plenty Regional Council said it was reacting as a result of the wet weather.

“This means our flood team is set up to monitor the situation 24/7 as it develops. We will be providing real-time river level information to supporting agencies (such as local councils and Waka Kotahi), to assist with planning and responding to local communities.

“We’ll also have our flood monitoring team out in the field. It’s their job to be the eyes and ears on the ground, checking flood defences (such as stopbanks and floodwalls), monitoring river levels, flows and rainfall and reporting back to the Flood Room.”

The council said members of its operations team were also out in the community, checking the condition of the flood infrastructure, assessing the weather conditions in key areas and pumping out flood waters from any drainage canals where needed.

“Your local council is also monitoring the situation and will be providing updates via their websites and social media channels around roading, blocked culverts/drains, and water/stormwater/wastewater.”

Heaviest rain in Auckland CBD

Earlier on Wednesday central Auckland bore the brunt of the rain, MetService said.

Orange heavy rain warnings were in place for Northland, Auckland and Great Barrier Island (until 2pm), Waitomo, Waikato and Taupō (until 6pm), Bay of Plenty (until 11pm) and Tongariro National Park (until 10pm).

MetService meteorologist Samkelo Magwala said all those areas had received a “decent amount” of rain overnight.

It was heaviest in Auckland, particularly in the central city, he said.

Have you been caught up in the weather? Share your stories and pictures with us at iwitness@rnz.co.nz

“Some stations in Auckland have recorded about 15.5mm of rain in the period of an hour, some even as high as 21mm of rain,” he said.

The band of rain would move eastwards throughout the day, easing before another band was due to ramp up again in the afternoon.

Gisborne was not under a weather warning, but the rain was heading that way later this afternoon, he said.

After Wednesday, high pressure would begin to build, Magwala said, “giving us some more settled weather for a couple of days”.

Taumarunui and Taihape north of Ohakune, as well as Taranaki are also under heavy rain watches until Wednesday.

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New Cook Strait ferries won’t cost more than $2b, Rail Minister vows

Source: Radio New Zealand

The government’s Cook Strait ferry project will cost less than $2 billion, says the Rail Minister.

Winston Peters announced in March the government would buy two new Interislander ferries to replace the current ageing fleet.

The new ships, which are 200 metres long and 28 metres wide, have 11 decks. Supplied/ Ferry Holdings

The new ferries are expected to come into service in 2029.

It was revealed today the total budget for the project was currently estimated to be $1.86 billion – with taxpayers paying less than $1.7 billion of that.

Briefing documents said the cost would not surpass $2 billion.

Plans for the berths in Wellington and Picton for the new Cook Strait ferries. Supplied/Ferry Holdings

Peters said the contract for the ferries were a fixed price $596 million between Ferry Holdings and shipbuilder Guangzhou Shipyard International.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis pulled the plug on iReX, the previous government’s Cook Strait mega ferry plan, in 2023.

Peters said the public had benefited as a result of the new plan.

“Spending less than $1.7 billion means the taxpayer has saved $2.3 billion while still getting the ferries and infrastructure they want, because we have done away with the expensive consultants who hijacked the project by adding more and more infrastructure until Treasury warned the project would cost $4 billion.”

He said funding spent on infrastructure would be recovered over the life of the new Interislander ferries and infrastructure, through port fees paid from Interislander revenue.

Interislander would also be expected to build sufficient money reserves to buy new ferries again in 30 years, Peters said.

The new ships would be 200 metres long and rail-enabled, which meant rail freight could be rolled on and off them.

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Passengers stuck on Bluebridge ferry due to ramp issue

Source: Radio New Zealand

The ramp on the Connemara is stuck and preventing passengers from disembarking.  Supplied/Nick Simcock

The Bluebridge ferry, Connemara, is stuck in Picton after an issue with the ramp has left passengers unable to disembark.

The ferry left Wellington shortly after 8am and arrived in Picton just before midday.

Passenger Nick Simcock said those onboard had been told the ramp was stuck and staff had been working for the last 2.5 hours to free it.

“We boarded in Wellington about 8am and it was a great sailing across the channel but we arrived about midday and no-one has been able to get on or off the ferry, the back door ramp is firmly stuck,” Simcock said.

“It’s something to do with the mechanism, the pins are stuck that lock the door into position.”

The ramp on the Connemara is stuck and preventing passengers from disembarking.  Supplied/Nick Simcock

Simcock is heading to the Marlborough Sounds for a fishing and diving trip with friends and he said they were keen to get off the ferry so they could get on with that.

“Everyone is resigned to the fact I think, we have been down this road before with the ferries here.”

Bluebridge has been approached for comment.

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