Live NRL: NZ Māori Wahine Toa v Australian Indigenous Women’s All Stars

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the action as the Māori WahineToa take on the Australian Indigenous women at FMG Stadium, Waikato.

Six Warriors have been named for the Māori women: Payton Takimoana, Gayle Broughton, Shakira Baker, Harata Butler, Mya Hill-Moana and Matekino Gray.

Kick-off is at 3.30pm.

Team lists:

Māori All Stars: Shakira Baker, Corban Baxter, Gayle Broughton, Harata Butler, Rima Butler, Kennedy Cherrington, Rueben Cherrington, Laikha Clarke, Zali Fay, Fane Finau, Matekino Gray, Mya Hill-Moana, Raecene McGregor, Shanice Parker, Jasmin Strange, Payton Takimoana, Chante Temara, Zahara Temara, Tenika Willison. Coach: John Strange

Indigenous All Stars: Essay Banu, Shaylee Bent, Krystal Blackwell, Rhiannon Byers, Jaime Chapman, Bree Chester, Kirra Dibb, Quincy Dodd, Taliah Fuimaono, Tallisha Harden, Caitlan Johnston-Green, Keilee Joseph, Grace Kemp, Ella Koster, Lailani Montgomery, Mahalia Murphy, Jasmine Peters, Phoenix-Raine Hippi, Jada Taylor, Caitlin Turnbull. Coach: Jess Skinner

Liam Swiggs / RNZ

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/live-nrl-nz-maori-wahine-toa-v-australian-indigenous-womens-all-stars/

Imported snack bars recalled due to presence of rubber

Source: NZ Ministry for Primary Industries

New Zealand Food Safety is supporting Nestlé in its recall of specific batches of Milo Dipped Snack Bars as the product may contain foreign matter.

“The concern with this product is that rubber pieces could cause choking,” says acting New Zealand Food Safety deputy director-general Jenny Bishop.

“If you have any Nestlé  Dipped Snack Bars with batch numbers 5316, 5317, and 5318 TD15 and a best-before date of August 2026 don’t eat it. You can return it to the place of purchase for a refund. If that’s not possible, throw it out.”

The affected products are sold at supermarkets and retail stores nationwide.

The products have been removed from store shelves and have not been re-exported.

Visit New Zealand Food Safety’s recall page for up-to-date information and photographs of the affected product.

Nestlé Milo Dipped Snack Bars (160g)

New Zealand Food Safety has not received any notifications of associated injury.  

“As is our usual practice, New Zealand Food Safety will work with Nestlé to understand how this happened and prevent its recurrence,” says Ms Bishop.

The affected products were made in Australia and are also subject to recall there.

The vast majority of food sold in New Zealand is safe, but sometimes problems can occur.  Help keep yourself and your family safe by subscribing to our recall alerts. Information on how to subscribe is on the New Zealand Food Safety food recall page.  

For more information, email: NZFoodSafety_media@mpi.govt.nz

For further information and general enquiries, call MPI on 0800 008 333 or email info@mpi.govt.nz

For media enquiries, contact the media team on 029 894 0328.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/imported-snack-bars-recalled-due-to-presence-of-rubber/

Proposed changes to the kava food standard

Source: NZ Ministry for Primary Industries

Have your say

The Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) is inviting feedback on proposed changes to New Zealand’s kava food standard.

The proposed changes include:

  • clarifying the existing rule that processing aids and additives are not allowed in the preparation of kava.
  • prohibiting the use of non-noble varieties of kava.

This consultation opened on 9 February and runs until 11.59pm on 27 February 2026.

Why we are proposing these changes

Kava sourced from noble varieties has a history of safe use in New Zealand. 

Making the standard clearer about the prohibition of processing aids and food additives will make the rules easier to follow. This will help maintain the safety of kava use.

These changes align with the joint Food and Agriculture Organization and World Health Organisation Codex Alimentarius Commission ‘Regional Standard for Kava Products for use as a Beverage When Mixed with Water’ (CXS 336R-2020 ).

Full details about the changes are in the discussion document.

Discussion document

Proposed changes to the kava standard [PDF, 387 KB]

Discussion document in other languages

Fijian: Proposed changes to the kava standard [PDF, 249 KB]

Samoan: Proposed changes to the kava standard [PDF, 249 KB]

Tongan: Proposed changes to the kava standard [PDF, 252 KB]

Webinar

Between 12 noon and 1.30pm on Monday 23 February 2026 we are hosting a webinar on the proposed changes. This will be an opportunity to hear more about the proposals, provide feedback, and learn how to make a submission.

Register your interest in attending the webinar – Microsoft Teams

Background information about the kava standard

The current kava standard sets composition and labelling requirements for kava sold in New Zealand. 

Standard 2.6.3 Kava: Food Standards – Australia New Zealand Food Standards Code [PDF, 394 KB]

Kava products for sale must be either:

  • dried or raw kava root, or
  • beverages containing kava root mixed with cold water. The use of processing aids or food additives is not allowed.

Kava products in packaging must be labelled with 2 warning statements: ‘Use in moderation’ and ‘May cause drowsiness.’ Where products are sold without packaging, these statements must be displayed on signs during sale or in printed form that will go with the kava when it is sold.

Making a submission

Submissions will be accepted until 11.59pm on 27 February 2026.

Email and postal submissions

While we prefer online submissions, you can send us your feedback by email or post.

Email your submissions to kava@mpi.govt.nz

Submissions sent by post should be addressed to:

Food Policy team
Policy and Trade directorate
New Zealand Food Safety
Ministry for Primary Industries
PO Box 2526
Wellington 6140
New Zealand.

What to include in email or postal submissions

  • Your name and title (if applicable).
  • Your organisation’s name (if applicable).
  • Your address.

Submissions are public information

Note that all, part, or a summary of your submission may be published on this website. Most often this happens when we issue a document that reviews the submissions received.

People can also ask for copies of submissions under the Official Information Act 1982 (OIA). The OIA says we must make the content of submissions available unless we have good reason for withholding it. Those reasons are detailed in sections 6 and 9 of the OIA.

If you think there are grounds to withhold specific information from publication, make this clear in your submission or contact us. Reasons may include that it discloses commercially sensitive or personal information. However, any decision MPI makes to withhold details can be reviewed by the Ombudsman, who may direct us to release it.

Official Information Act 1982 – NZ Legislation

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/proposed-changes-to-the-kava-food-standard/

Amateur Fishing Charter company fined $60,000 for serving recreational catch to paying customers

Source: NZ Ministry for Primary Industries

An amateur fishing charter company that illegally caught crayfish for customers and served it as a meal has been fined $60,000.

Fiordland Cruises Limited was sentenced on one charge under the Fisheries Act in the Invercargill District Court, following a successful prosecution by the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI).

The Court granted relief from forfeiture of the company’s vessel, Southern Secret, upon payment of a redemption fee of $47,000.

Fisheries New Zealand compliance regional manager south, Garreth Jay, says MPI received several complaints about charter vessel operators working in the Fiordland Marine Area, which included Fiordland Cruises Limited’s vessel Southern Secret.

“Allegations suggested seafood meals were being used to encourage paying passengers to take part in charter trips. Other concerns included questions about who was gathering the seafood – the charter operators or the paying guests.

“We provided all charter operators, including Fiordland Cruises Limited, with clear information on the rules – including that only a passenger catching fish recreationally can have it served to them aboard a charter vessel, and we expect those rules to be followed.”

MPI’s investigation found that between January and October 2023, Fiordland Cruises Limited ran 162 amateur fishing charters, during which 1,630 crayfish were taken and served to paying guests onboard for lunch.

The 1,630 crayfish would have cost between $239,610 and $244,500 on the domestic market, based on a retail value of $147 to $150 per kilogram.

“When we find evidence of fish being taken and used outside of the quota management system (QMS) for commercial purposes – we take action. The QMS ensures the sustainability of fishing activity and economic prosperity of fishery resources and legitimate commercial operators,” says Mr Jay.

“During MPI’s investigation, fishery officers boarded the Southern Secret and found passengers who had not been fishing, were served crayfish for lunch. Guests reported that they did not take part in catching or taking the crayfish and that they saw the cray pots being cleared by the crew.

“Furthermore – the skipper told us that along with the chef, they would lift the craypots while passengers watched. This is illegal behaviour from a company that does not hold a commercial fishing licence and is not a Licensed Fish Receiver. A commercial business cannot catch fish recreationally and serve it to customers,” says Garreth Jay. 

We encourage people to report any suspected illegal activity through the Ministry for Primary Industries’ 0800 4 POACHER line (0800 476 224). 

For further information and general enquiries, call MPI on 0800 008 333 or email info@mpi.govt.nz

For media enquiries, contact the media team on 029 894 0328.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/amateur-fishing-charter-company-fined-60000-for-serving-recreational-catch-to-paying-customers/

As it happened: Fleet split for day two after big NZ-France crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

SailGP organisers have decided to split the fleet for day two of racing off Wynyard Point, after the huge high-speed crash between New Zealand and France on Saturday.

One sailor from each team was taken to hospital, with Kiwi grinder Louis Sinclair reported in stable condition with compound fractures to both legs.

Neither team will front for competition on Sunday, when stronger conditions are expected on the water.

Racing starts at 11.30am.

Follow all the live action here:

Black Foils’ boat Amokura lifted out of the water, after crashing with France. Felix Diemer for SailGP

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/15/as-it-happened-fleet-split-for-day-two-after-big-nz-france-crash/

Hamilton woman assaulted in her home after confronting intruders

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police say the incident happened at around 9pm on Saturday night. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

A Hamilton woman has been seriously assaulted in her own home after confronting two men trying to get inside.

Police said the assault happened on Clarkin Road in Fairfield at about 9pm on Saturday.

The woman was injured and needed hospital treatment.

Police said her attackers took off toward River Road.

Detective Senior Sergeant Neilson said police would be carrying out reassurance patrols in the area.

“Nobody should be unsafe in their own home and the victim is understandably shaken. We’re providing wrap around support for her.”

Police are appealing to the public for information, and say even the smallest detail could be crucial.

“If you know something about this abhorrent crime, please come forward as soon as possible.

“We’re still working to establish the full circumstances and ask anyone with CCTV or dashcam footage from the neighbourhood around Clarkin Road to review the video and contact us if it shows suspicious or unusual activity.”

Police were particularly interested in the period between 8.30pm and 9.30pm on Saturday.

The public can report information online at 105.police.govt.nz or call 105, using the reference number 260215/9344.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/15/hamilton-woman-assaulted-in-her-home-after-confronting-intruders/

On the run: Police recruitment run challenge at ‘Round the Bays

Source: New Zealand Police

Commissioner of Police Richard Chambers lead a team of 66 Police runners at the Southern Cross ‘Round the Bays event in Wellington this morning.

Staff from the Police executive, non-sworn employees, sergeants, constables and recruits took part, some running the 8.4km and others completing the 21km race.

New Zealand Police teamed with ‘Round the Bays to create a 2.4km recruitment activation as part of the ongoing recruitment drive which included an appearance by the Police Pipe Band and the Police Maritime Unit – Lady Elizabeth IV.

Commissioner Chambers entered the 8.4km run and made it home in under one hour, alongside fellow keen runner Assistant Commissioner Corrie Parnell.

Commissioner Chambers says, “In typical Wellington fashion, the wind was the winner on the day. It was excellent to see so many Police staff take part in the event, including our outstanding recruits. Fitness is an important part of the recruitment process and joining up with ‘Round the Bays allows us to reach future recruits who have got what it takes. Running is a big part of my daily routine – it helps keep me focused. I admit I had to eat Corrie Parnell’s dust in that race. However, I am pretty stoked I still hit the PAT time even if it was a little slower than the last time I did it about 30 years ago.”

Assistant Commissioner Parnell says, “I run daily as my primary form of exercise which also allows me time to decompress. On Saturday mornings I run the Parkrun 5K event which takes place at various locations across New Zealand and the world.  This is another great opportunity to network with like-minded people and gets you up and going at the weekend.”

Thanks to a timing mat at the 2.4km mark, runners could see if they have what it takes to train and complete the running portion of the police Physical Appraisal Test (PAT).

The run is part of the four components of the PAT and while the ‘Round the Bays time can’t be counted towards the PAT – it’s a great training tool to help with longer distance runs.

Two members of recruit wing 393, who graduate in March, raced home ahead of the Director of Training at the Royal New Zealand Police College, Superintendent Sam Keats. “I was running alongside Lachlan and Flynn for most of the race, and then towards the end, they burst off to finish ahead – they ran a great race.”

Wellington Harriers member, 14-year-old student Harry says, “I did the 8.4km run in 36 minutes today, which was pretty good”. Harry also easily completed other parts of the PAT – acing the standing jump and the grip strength test, two of the PAT components which were available to try at the finish line.

As part of the recruiting drive, Chambers wore a blue bib with emergency number 111 on it and Parnell wore the Police non-emergency number 105. 

For a bit of fun, other officers and Police employees wore bibs marked with Police radio codes such as 103, 106 and 107.

The Honda Half Marathon 21km race was won by Toby Gualter, the son of a retired former Police officer.

The next ‘Round the Bays run with a Police recruitment activation will occur in Auckland in two weeks on 8 March.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/15/on-the-run-police-recruitment-run-challenge-at-round-the-bays/

ACT leader David Seymour delivers ‘State of the Nation’ speech

Source: Radio New Zealand

The ACT leader has distinguished his party from its coalition partners in a state of the nation speech, giving a blunt assessment of how tough things are at the moment, especially for young people.

ACT leader and Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour took a swipe at “bureaucratic” governments that aren’t balancing their books, turned an old call for a smaller government into a campaign promise, and rejected the “endless blame game” of scapegoating one group after another.

Seymour spoke to around 200 party supporters at a venue in Christchurch while around 30 Free Palestine protestors gathered outside, alongside a police presence.

Some protestors were also heard chanting inside the venue, with sirens being played during his introduction by deputy leader Brooke van Velden.

Seymour said the number of people leaving the country was a “flashing light on the dashboard of New Zealand”, and he used his speech to specify the “hard choices” needed to “turn down those lights.”

He spoke of five warning lights that needed to be “overcome.”

ACT leader David Seymour during his State of the Nation speech in Christchurch. RNZ/Delphine Herbert

ACT’s five warning lights

First, he mentioned the cost-of-living crisis, but called it a productivity slump instead, saying wages hadn’t kept up with inflation.

“People work their guts out only to find that they’re further behind, and it’s no wonder that people are getting jaded and angry.”

Related to this, he said, was the problem that the government wasn’t balancing it books, saying the country was on a collision course with bankruptcy unless “we find the courage to change our spending habits.”

“If there are no nasty surprises for the next five years, we’re on track as a government to post a small surplus by 2030, but after that, our aging population will put us back in the red for more decades of deficit spending, where the red ink carries on.”

Seymour highlighted the risk to democracy throughout the world, because people find governments “frustrating and unresponsive”.

While he didn’t think democracy was in serious danger in New Zealand, “we are subject to the same frustrations.”

“People lose faith and trust in our institutions. They see government is so damn bureaucratic and unresponsive.”

He said New Zealanders don’t have a “positive, inclusive sense of who we are”.

“This experiment of dividing ourselves into a treaty partnership between Tangata Whenua and Tangata Tiriti has been a disaster.”

Lastly, he said an entire generation felt let down by those problems, and young New Zealanders who look at their student loan, wages, taxes and the housing market, “they can’t make the numbers add up.”

“No one is saying that the boomers had it easy. Baby Boomers worked hard for what they have, but they worked hard because hard work was a rewarding strategy.

“That deal feels broken.”

He returned to those who were “voting with their feet”.

“It’s a great failing to fail at the expectations of your own citizens.”

ACT Party supporters wait to hear David Seymour’s ‘State of the Nation’ speech in Christchurch, 15 February 2026. Delphine Herbert / RNZ

He said ACT would be the party to “tell it like it is,” and take on hard issues and provide brave but constructive solutions in order to “set the country up for success”.

He drew a clear line between the current government and the “potential next government” of Labour, Greens and Te Pāti Māori, which he said frightened him.

“I listen to Chris Hipkins, and I hear Jacinda Ardern ‘light’ – a lilting voice that says all the right things, promises Nirvana, but never says how we’ll pay for it or tackle the key issues.

“He reminds me of what I imagine an anesthetist would sound like, just before he gives you the injection to knock you out and make you forget about the pain.

“I listen to the Greens, and I wake up quickly.

“They used to speak for the environment, but increasingly, they channel the young generation’s fear and frustrations, which are legitimate, by blaming others’ success and even bleeding into disgusting and unforgivable anti-semitism.”

He also mentioned Chlöe Swarbrick directly, calling her the “drag down merchant.”

“I listen to Te Pāti Māori and they sort of frighten me, but they also bewilder me,” said Seymour.

“If they want to be living as Māori, well, that’s ka pai.

“If they want everyone to live in a Māori society with themselves as tangata whenua, sitting atop a hierarchy of identity, that’s where we part company.”

He said ACT’s first mission was to keep them out of power. Seymour said if he’d had a dollar for every person who told him they’d leave New Zealand if Labour got back into power, ACT’s fundraising would be done for the year.

He explained he didn’t receive money each time he’d been told, so if people wanted to donate, there was a QR code on the table.

But he also drew a distinction between his own party and his partners in government, in which ACT is now polling lowest. In the latest Reid Research Poll, from January, National was on 31.9 percent, New Zealand First was on 9.8 percent while ACT was on 7.6 percent.

Seymour said on Sunday ACT had spent the past two years proving it was up to the job of “fixing what matters” and that it had an “outsized role” in making savings.

He cited the new school lunch scheme, pay equity changes and that the party had “knocked $200 million off” the cost of the Waikato Medical School.

“We calculate that if you gave your party vote to act last time, then you have saved the taxpayer $57,000.”

He highlighted work done by ACT ministers in government, “Brooke is fixing the Holidays Act, even as she fixes unfair employment laws and restores common sense to Health and Safety law by focusing it on critical risks”.

He highlighted the work done by ACT ministers in government as “competent managers.”

He also highlighted Act policy wins such as reinstating mortgage interest tax deductibility.

He mentioned the Treaty Principles Bill, which was defeated at its second reading, saying “we may have lost the vote, but we won the debate”, and that the first vote won’t be the final say on the legislation.

ACT’s solutions

He proposed the party’s solutions were based on three ideas to “break our country’s slump”:

  • 1. Equal rights for all citizens, “so we can all feel like we’re part of a country with a positive and inclusive identity”
  • 2. Positive-sum thinking, rather than “scapegoating some small group of New Zealanders,” before listing farmers, firearm owners, supermarket operators, landlords and bankers
  • 3. A smaller, more efficient Government “that you can trust to deliver services for taxes you can actually afford”

Seymour said the country needed an accurate and uplifting story, “we are not two peoples.”

“We are many peoples united by a common story,” he said, referencing a nation of settlers, “we don’t see wealth as something to divide, but something to create.”

He also rejected the “endless blame game”.

“Scapegoating one group after another hasn’t solved a single problem. We believe that most people, most of the time, are just trying to make the best of their time on earth, and we should start with that spirit.”

Beyond that, he said the books still needed to be balanced, wages raised, and faith restored in democracy.

He highlighted again a long-standing ACT party call for a smaller, more efficient government. In May last year, Seymour criticised the ministerial line-up as looking “bloated” and full of “meaningless titles”.

The pime mnister rejected the criticism at the time. However, late last year the government announced a mega ministry which will take on the work of housing, transport, and local government functions.

He said ACT would campaign this year on a smaller government, which would be made up of:

  • No more than 20 ministers, who all sit in Cabinet
  • No more than 30 departments, so most ministers have only one
  • No department answers to more than one minister
  • No minister has a portfolio; there are only departments with budgets to manage

He said it was an idea “whose time has come”, and the party would be campaigning to ensure it “happens completely.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/act-leader-david-seymour-delivers-state-of-the-nation-speech/

Serious assault, Police appeal for information

Source: New Zealand Police

Hamilton Police are investigating a disturbing incident, where a woman was assaulted in her home in Fairfield last night.

The woman was assaulted after confronting two men attempting to enter her address on Clarkin Road about 9pm.

The offenders fled the address towards River Road, leaving the victim with injuries requiring hospitalisation.

“We are urging anyone with any information on this appalling crime to come forward,” says Detective Senior Sergeant Scott Neilson.

“Nobody should be unsafe in their own home and the victim is understandably shaken. We’re providing wrap around support for her.”

“If you know something about this abhorrent crime, please come forward as soon as possible. Even the smallest detail could be crucial.”

Detective Senior Sergeant Neilson says Police will be carrying out reassurance patrols in the area.

“We’re still working to establish the full circumstances and ask anyone with CCTV or dashcam footage from the neighbourhood around Clarkin Road to review the video and contact us if it shows suspicious or unusual activity.”

Police were particularly interested in the period between 8.30pm and 9.30pm on Saturday.

How to contact Police

Information reported online at 105.police.govt.nz, clicking “update report”, or by calling 105. Please use the reference number 260215/9344.

Anonymous reports can be made through Crime Stoppers, by calling 0800 555 111.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/serious-assault-police-appeal-for-information/

Retail crime group rented expensive Symonds Street space against advice

Source: Radio New Zealand

110 Symonds Street RNZ / Marika Khabazi

The chairman of a controversial ministerial advisory group that will disband months earlier than planned rejected advice from officials about which office it should rent, preferring a more expensive option for privacy reasons.

The Ministerial Advisory Group for Victims of Retail Crime is renting space in a Symonds Street building in central Auckland, paying $119,000 for the 2025/26 year.

The group was created in mid-2024 and correspondence obtained from that time shows officials from the Ministry of Justice, which provides the group with administrative support, initially said that option wasn’t the most-effective.

Officials recommended a shared office with Kāinga Ora, but group chairman Sunny Kaushal said this wasn’t suitable for privacy reasons.

This week Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith announced the group would disband in May, four months earlier than planned.

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith RNZ / Nathan McKinnon

The announcement followed RNZ revealing that three of the group’s five members had resigned in recent weeks, leaving just Kaushal and Hamilton liquor retailer Ash Parmar.

One of the members who resigned, Retail NZ chief executive Carolyn Young, said her relationship with Kaushal became untenable.

The group has faced criticism for its spending and value for money, including over Kaushal’s fees as chairman.

But, Kaushal and Goldsmith have defended the group’s work, saying it had provided advice on a range of issues such as trespass law reform and self-defence.

Proposed office doesn’t meet chairman’s requirements – officials

Documents obtained by the New Zealand Taxpayers’ Union show a shortlist of three possible offices was developed, after Kaushal had reviewed 26 possible options.

The Symonds Street office was one of the three, but not the one officials initially favoured. That was a shared space with Kāinga Ora in Ellerslie.

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

However, in the documents, the Ellerslie office was described as “open plan… which isn’t appropriate for confidential conversations”.

“This option was originally our recommendation, however, the chairman has advised this doesn’t meet his requirements due to the privacy concerns.”

So instead the Symonds Street office was recommended.

“While this option is not the most cost-effective it is the recommended option due to the property being secure, minimal risk of individuals’ breach of privacy, and furniture is supplied, making the move in more seamless, as well as benefiting the environment.”

A third office, in Parnell, was considered, but the landlord there wouldn’t add a break clause to any rental agreement.

‘This isn’t the SIS’

This week the ministry confirmed the Symonds Street lease would now end in May, rather than September.

A spokesman for Goldsmith said questions about operational matters should be directed to the ministry.

Ministry deputy secretary, policy, Caroline Greaney said as at 31 December, the 389 sqm Symonds Street office was the usual place of work for three staff members and Kaushal.

“It also serves as the venue for group member meetings, and stakeholder meetings and functions.”

The ministry couldn’t immediately say how many stakeholder meetings and functions it had held.

Kaushal told RNZ he’d previously answered questions about the office.

The documents obtained by the Taxpayers’ Union show the total cost for the Symonds Street office in 2025/26 was $131,000, when other expenses such as power were factored in.

Union investigations co-ordinator Rhys Hurley said paying that much for an office of such a size was a farce.

“The original recommendation from the Ministry of Justice was to take the most cost-effective office,” he said.

“The chairman was concerned about privacy, but this isn’t the SIS. The next time a quango like this needs space, they can borrow some of ours.”

Hurley said the most cost-effective option for taxpayers should have been taken.

Labour police spokeswoman Ginny Andersen said the group had been a disaster since it began.

“[Prime Minister Chris] Luxon and Goldsmith have spent millions, a lot of which is going to Sunny Kaushal’s office space, overpriced events, and Kaushal’s lofty remuneration, only to rehash bad ideas like citizen’s arrest in return.

“Goldsmith needs to front up about why they allowed the group to spend on more expensive office options when more affordable options were available.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/retail-crime-group-rented-expensive-symonds-street-space-against-advice/

Two-year ban on taking shellfish and seaweed from rockpools north of Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Minister Shane Jones. RNZ/Samantha Gee

After a public outcry, the government is imposing a two-year ban on taking shellfish from rockpools north of Auckland.

The ban is for all of the Whangaparāoa Peninsula, and further north at Kawau Bay and Ōmaha Bay.

Locals have said more people are taking sea life and beaches were being stripped bare.

Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones said on Sunday most people did the right thing “and gather only what is appropriate and legal”, but others were exploiting and collapsing ecosystems.

The ban will take effect from 12 March and will be enforced by fishery officers.

Oceans and Fisheries Under-Secretary Jenny Marcroft said officials “have been directed to explore how community volunteers can be supported to encourage visitors to do the right thing”.

“Fisheries New Zealand will also develop multilingual educational material to support this closure and the ongoing management of intertidal fisheries.”

Last year, the Ngāti Manuhiri Settlement Trust applied for a two-year legal ban on harvesting all shellfish and seaweed from rock pools along Auckland’s eastern coastline, from the Rodney local board area through to the Hibiscus and Bays local board area, under section 186A of the Fisheries Act.

The government in January said it was seeking urgent advice on the matter.

Fisheries worked with the Ngāti Manuhiri Settlement Trust, Jones said, to enact a traditional rāhui.

“My decision excludes some of the species and areas requested by Ngāti Manuhiri where existing closures and restrictions apply.”

All seaweed, invertebrate and shellfish were covered, he said, as well as sponges, starfish, anemone and sea cucumbers.

Sea urchin (kina) were excluded from the ban. RNZ/Nick Monro

Spiny rock lobster and scallops were already covered by existing closures.

Sea urchin (kina) were excluded “and can still be taken within the current recreational fishing limits”.

“I decided to allow kina to continue to be taken as managing kina barrens is a priority for me. Officials will continue to actively monitor and manage kina population.”

The closure did not apply to any aquaculture activities such as marine farming or the collection of spat (small juvenile shellfish), Jones and Marcroft said.

“It’s important that these coastal management restrictions do not impact on marine farming and the aquaculture development so it can continue to support our economy and provide jobs in our communities,” Jones said.

The Hauraki Gulf Forum welcomed the closures.

More details were posted on the Ministry for Primary Industries website.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/two-year-ban-on-taking-shellfish-and-seaweed-from-rockpools-north-of-auckland/

Live: David Seymour delivers ‘State of the Nation’ speech

Source: Radio New Zealand

Deputy Prime Minister and ACT leader David Seymour will deliver his latest ‘State of the Nation’ speech in Christchurch on Sunday morning.

Last year, Seymour said the country was at a tipping point between “two invisible tribes” and what the country did in the next few years would decide “which way we go”.

He also urged New Zealanders to get past the “squeamishness about privatisation”.

Seymour is expected to speak at 10.45am. Afterwards, he will take questions from the media.

David Seymour. RNZ / MARIKA KHABAZI

The event will be livestreamed in the player above.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/live-david-seymour-delivers-state-of-the-nation-speech/

Adolescence writer Jack Thorne on his new TV adaptation of castaway novel Lord of the Flies

Source: Radio New Zealand

Adolescence writer Jack Thorne hopes the UK will follow Australia in introducing a social media ban for children under 16.

“I think it’s amazing that Australia is ahead of the world in terms of the social media ban,” Thorne says.

“It’s hopefully going to spread like wildfire through the world, because I think it’s an incredibly important thing.”

Lord of the Flies and Adolescence were written and filmed at the same time.

Stan

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/15/adolescence-writer-jack-thorne-on-his-new-tv-adaptation-of-castaway-novel-lord-of-the-flies/

SailGP live updates: Fleet split for day two after big NZ-France crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

SailGP organisers have decided to split the fleet for day two of racing off Wynyard Point, after the huge high-speed crash between New Zealand and France on Saturday.

One sailor from each team was taken to hospital, with Kiwi grinder Louis Sinclair reported in stable condition with compound fractures to both legs.

Neither team will front for competition on Sunday, when stronger conditions are expected on the water.

Racing starts at 11.30am.

Follow all the live action here:

Black Foils’ boat Amokura lifted out of the water, after crashing with France. Felix Diemer for SailGP

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/15/sailgp-live-updates-fleet-split-for-day-two-after-big-nz-france-crash/?doing_wp_cron=1771107070.6770188808441162109375

Is Wuthering Heights actually romantic? Heathcliff would say no

Source: Radio New Zealand

Emerald Fennell’s film of Wuthering Heights, starring Australian actors Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff and Margot Robbie as Catherine, bills itself as the “greatest love story of all time”. A poll of British readers agreed.

But what would Heathcliff think?

Heathcliff, if you’ve not read the book, seen one of the many adaptations, or heard Kate Bush’s iconic song, is the protagonist of Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë’s sole novel (published originally under the pseudonym Ellis Bell). He’s the ethnically ambiguous foster child of the Earnshaw family, who live in the titular Wuthering Heights on the windswept, desolate Yorkshire moors: the backdrop for his obsessive, doomed relationship with his foster-sister Catherine.

The new film poster evokes a romance ‘clinch cover’.

Supplied

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/is-wuthering-heights-actually-romantic-heathcliff-would-say-no/

New Zealand signs up to U=U commitment for HIV

Source: New Zealand Government

New Zealand has signed the global Call-to-Action on Undetectable = Untransmittable (U=U), sending a strong signal of our commitment to ending HIV transmission and ensuring people living with HIV can lead healthy lives free from stigma and discrimination, Associate Health Minister Matt Doocey says.

“U=U is a clear, evidence-based principle that when someone living with HIV is on effective treatment and maintains an undetectable viral load, they cannot transmit HIV sexually,” Mr Doocey says.

“By signing this Call-to-Action, we are reinforcing U=U as a core part of New Zealand’s HIV response. Increasing awareness helps reduce stigma, encourages testing, supports earlier access to treatment, and strengthens prevention and long-term health outcomes.”

The Call-to-Action encourages countries to embed U=U within HIV guidelines and strategies, improve equitable access to testing and treatment, support community-led initiatives, and strengthen public understanding.

“Endorsing U=U aligns with New Zealand’s National HIV Action Plan, which sets out our goal of eliminating local HIV transmission by 2030 and addressing HIV-related stigma and discrimination.

“While treatment uptake and viral suppression rates are strong, it is clear stigma remains a significant barrier for many people. This commitment sends a clear message that discrimination has no place in New Zealand.”

Mr Doocey acknowledged the many advocates, community organisations and people with lived experience of HIV who have long called for New Zealand to formally endorse U=U.

“This milestone reflects years of dedicated advocacy and leadership from communities most affected by HIV. We thank those with lived experience who have shared their stories and challenged stigma. These voices have been instrumental in driving change.”

New Zealand is the fifth country to join the Call-to-Action. In addition, more than 1,100 organisations across 106 countries have signed on to share the U=U message with their communities.

This builds on the significant progress that has been made in recent years, including reductions in locally acquired HIV infections, increased uptake of combination prevention measures, and expanded testing options.

 Notes to editor:

  • New Zealand joins Canada, the United States, Vietnam and Australia in signing the Call‑to-Action.
  • The move is supported by findings from the latest HIV Monitoring Report, which highlighted ongoing progress in New Zealand’s HIV response. This included 98.5% of people diagnosed with HIV on treatment, and 91.7% achieving viral suppression.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/15/new-zealand-signs-up-to-uu-commitment-for-hiv/

Mediawatch: Solids, liquids and gas – infrastructure ills back in the frame

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

“With the wastewater catastrophe ongoing, the Moa Point treatment plant continues to be cleaned. But what was raw sewage pouring into the water is now screened wastewater,” Newstalk ZB’s Wellington newsreader Max Towle told listeners last Monday.

Better news? Only a little.

“Mayor Andrew Little said there’ll be a terrible stench in areas as crews try to rectify the situation,” said Towle.

“That solid waste has been lying around for a couple of three days, so the odour will be apparent,” Little warned.

And 30 minutes later, ZB News was back with news of a fresh sewage leak.

“Crews over the weekend had to respond to overflow from a manhole near Mana Esplanade after pumps backed off and went off-sequence,” Towle told weary Wellington listeners.

It never rains, but it pours… out into the sea and even out of manholes in Mana, further denting the mana of greater Wellington.

“We’ll see more of these sorts of things happening. All our pumps and our pipes need replacing – and it’s just more infrastructure spending,” Porirua Mayor Anita Baker told Newstalk ZB.

And she wasn’t the only one saying that lately.

Nationwide pipe problem

“These are long-run assets that last 50, 70 years,” Prime Minister Christopher said on RNZ’s Morning Report soon after, making the point that the soiled state of the nation’s capital is part of a national problem.

“Wellington Water in particular had a hybrid model that really hasn’t worked, where each council had to chip in cash to band-aid over solutions and problems as they’ve emerged rather than [have] a consistent long-term, strategic plan for managing what are strategic assets,” he said.

Noting that Canterbury swimming spots were also closed after wastewater was discharged into Canterbury Harbour, the Herald‘s editorial on Monday called it “a rude reminder.”

“It might be another town next month, but we will all need to cut the crap and invest in the future of this country.”

Cutting the crap out of the south coast outfall ASAP is the priority in the capital, but it also echoed what Sunday Star-Times editor Tracy Watkins had said in her paper last weekend. Under the headline Should we wait till we are down to our last pipe? she also pointed the finger at all of us on the electoral roll.

“We – the voters – are the real culprits. We are repeat hip-pocket offenders who keep getting sucked in by politicians who milk our prejudices while avoiding the hard choices,” Watkins said.

But another of her colleagues with a weekly column in the paper, Luke Malpass, pointed the finger at politicians.

He reckoned Labour squandered a chance to sort it out with Three Waters, and now rate-capping under National will lock in underinvestment.

“This is about political choices. Leadership matters. So does making the case and accepting that projects are expensive, unpopular during construction and guaranteed to attract critics – at least until they’re finished.”

But once they’re finished, they also need to keep working – unlike Moa Point right now.

Blame game

The focus of blame also narrowed to Wellington’s local politicians.

On the Breaking Views blog of the right-leaning think tank NZCPR, Peter Bassett – described as an “observer… writing on how narrative replaces scrutiny” claimed “the WCC voted for cycleways but not for sewage protection”.

He cited a single Long-Term Plan Committee meeting five years ago at which a $400m wastewater renewals proposal was not adopted, but a cycleways option was.

He described Green councillors as “zealous apostles for cycling” driven by “climate justice philosophy”, and said the media failed to question former Greens councillor and current Wellington Central MP Tamatha Paul.

His article was widely shared online this week and aired on Newstalk ZB by Kerre Woodham.

It also prompted Ryan Bridge on his Herald Now show to ask her: “What’s more important – flushing the toilet or riding a bike?”

Paul pointed out that no amendment was proposed at the time that would have boosted Moa Point, and that spending on water infrastructure during the two council terms from 2017 was substantially higher than in previous ones. That was true.

But is it also true that councillors with skewed priorities made a fateful choice in 2021 that exacerbated the current disaster?

In the Weekend Post on Saturday, Sean Rush – an energy and infrastructure lawyer – said funding was “not diverted from wastewater to cycleways” and was not the reason for the failure at Moa Point.

The proposed plan for wastewater in 2021 would have bumped rates up by almost 6 percent on its own – and Moa Point wasn’t the focus of it.

Accelerating the cycleways would only boost rates by just over half a percent more than the existing plan, he claimed.

On the front page of The Post this weekend, national affairs editor Andrea Vance detailed a startling series of faults and financial blowouts that really did contribute to the failure at Moa Point.

She and her Post colleagues – include long-serving Wellington reporter Tom Hunt – have reported daily since the disaster, as well as documenting wastewater problems before it.

Post readers have learned a lot more from their paper than from media recycling retrospective opinion pieces that seem to have an axe to grind about the Greens and narratives in the media.

Bring on the gas

While Wellington struggled with its sewage solids and liquids, the government made a bold move on gas this week – a terminal for LNG to take the edge off future power shortages.

Vital or bonkers? asked an RNZ headline, reflecting the views of supporters and opponents.

Bridge offered the not-so-helpful opinion that “depending on who you ask, this is either brilliant or batshit.” (Partial success or failure was apparently not an option.)

Other hosts on the opinion-heavy radio network – including Woodham, Mike Hosking and John McDonald – all fell in behind the idea, insisting that sustainable sources of energy were too unreliable. But the estimated billion-dollar-plus bill for it quickly became the focus too, and whether it was a “tax”, a “levy” or a “charge”.

“By the end of the day, the only sort of clarity that we have is it’s very, very clear the government totally botched the comms on this big time,” Stuff’s Jenna Lynch told ThreeNews viewers, after reporting on the political semantics.

Other reporters focused on whether it would be popular with the public.

“Auckland Central has more than 55,000 votes for grabs – and voters we spoke to today shared a common concern – the rising cost of living,” said ThreeNews reporter Zane Small, opening his report on Tuesday.

“Campaigning on energy security for tomorrow may be a tough sell to voters today,” he concluded.

But whether the plan can deliver more and cheaper power in future was the key point.

The Herald‘s veteran correspondent Audrey Young said the promise that power bills will be lower was “wild” – and fine print in the Cabinet paper had warnings.

“The costings provided by respondents through the procurement process all include significant caveats, so should be considered indicative only,” the paper said.

Several pundits noted that when the previous government called things a “levy”. National in Opposition had condemned them as “taxes”, and now the boot’s on the other foot.

“Time will tell if it’s just a divisionary tactic to keep the government on its toes or a sign that Labour has a properly different energy policy to bring to the table. Until then, I guess we’ll just argue about whether it’s a tax or not,” Henry Cooke concluded in The Post.

Been here before

Three years ago, Chris Hipkins was the prime minister when Cyclone Gabrielle showed that our transport, telecoms and emergency systems were not resilient enough.

“We can’t continue the way that we have been going. We’re going to have to look very closely at how we make sure we’ve got as resilient an infrastructure as possible,” he said in 2023.

“These storms are reminding everybody that governments actually have big problems to deal with. And we are back talking about infrastructure, for god’s sake,” an exasperated Kathryn Ryan told Nine to Noon listeners in February 2023.

The Cook Strait ferries had been conking out over that summer, too, and the government was backing away from Three Waters, and the Infrastructure Commission claimed $78b had been committed to infrastructure projects already underway.

Three years on, infrastructure anxiety is back in the headlines – in the year of an election to be fought by the same political leaders.

Are media focusing too heavily on the political debates again, rather than the big picture of infrastructure deficit?

“Yes, but this is an old chestnut which has come up every election for decades. We now have a positive chance of success through the National Infrastructure Commission,” Mike Bishara – publisher of the magazine, Infrastructure Asia Pacific, and the website InfrastructureNews.co.nz – told Mediawatch.

“It’s almost as if a mandated infrastructure pipeline for the next 30 years is too important to leave in the hands of partisan politicians. In fairness, our ridiculous three-year election cycle gives them little chance of being anything else,” said Bishara, whose article in the recently published 2026 Infrastructure Yearbook asks: ‘Can the infrastructure pipeline survive politics?’

“Daily news reporters are doing their job pretty well. They don’t have a lot of time for questions to evasive ministers when they’ve got a deadline looming in an hour or so. As long as the issue is clearly out there in the public domain, we can feel that we’ve done our job.”

Bishara is frustrated by some media reporting that is preoccupied with the total cost of projects and who might bear the cost.

His 2026 yearbook points to the Draft National Infrastructure Plan, finding that our infrastructure spending per capita is high by world standards, but the returns are among the lowest in the OECD.

“Productivity is the key. That’s the root cause of all our problems. There’s not a great deal of urgency put on that. [Politicians] are far more comfortable dealing with sound bites about problems and hoping that the media just concentrate on that.”

When the election rolls around, will these issues be put forward in the media? Or drowned out by the general cost-of-living issues the media focus on a lot?

“I think the issues will be well aired. The daily reporting that we see on TV is well-balanced and researched. We have excellent publications around, like NBR. We’ve got commentators who do address these issues directly.”

“What we have to have is… a commitment across all political parties to hold sacrosanct mandated infrastructure necessities.”

“Media can help with that, but it requires cooperation from politicians themselves. No matter how good a journalist is, if you keep asking the same question and getting the same answer, it’s very hard. That leaves people who have the time and capacity to investigate the statements.”

“The media remain pivotal in its reportage of the election.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/mediawatch-solids-liquids-and-gas-infrastructure-ills-back-in-the-frame/

Person dies after being thrown from vehicle in Northland crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

St John

One person has died after being thrown from a vehicle in a late-night crash west of Whangārei.

Emergency services were called to a single-vehicle crash on Knight Road in Ruatangata West about 10.50pm on Saturday.

Police said one person was ejected from the vehicle and died at the scene.

Three other people were taken to hospital with minor injuries.

Knight Road was closed for several hours while the Serious Crash Unit examined the scene. The road has since reopened.

The death will be referred to the Coroner.

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Reviving the art of Niuean barkcloth: ‘I’ll hustle for my people’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Just over a decade ago, Cora-Allan was living in Canada when she was invited to make burial garments for her grandparents from traditional Niuean barkcloth.

Although the Auckland artist “didn’t think too deeply” about it, returning to New Zealand with her partner and first baby in 2016, she threw herself into a “whirlwind” of researching and teaching herself the art form.

Now, as one of the only practitioners making large-scale hiapo in Aotearoa, Cora-Allan is at the forefront of reviving the art form. She chats to Culture 101 about finding her cultural identity as a Māori and Niuean woman and her new exhibition Recording Mauri: Moments of Light and Earth – on at Wellington’s City Gallery till May.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/reviving-the-art-of-niuean-barkcloth-ill-hustle-for-my-people/

Employment relations and speedy, lopsided debates

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

The Employment Relations Bill could override the Uber court decision. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Over the past two years, the government has broken legislative records – helped by more frequent use of Parliamentary urgency and additional sittings.

As a result, it would not be surprising if the prime minister’s to-do list had been whittled down to a toothpick. But Parliament shows no sign of slowing its legislative pace.

The government added an extra morning sitting again this week, pushing aside Thursday’s Select Committees to focus on passing bills in the House. Extra mornings have become the norm, rather than the exception.

The government hoped to progress ten different bills this week, with three moving through multiple stages. Two of those bills were strongly contested, while the third was unanimously supported.

We have already discussed the Public Service Amendment Bill, which, among other things, removes the obligation that the public service reflect the community it serves.

You can also hear audio relating to that bill (and others), at the green and gold podcast link above.

The unanimously supported bill widens the definition of who Anzac Day remembers, to include all Kiwis who have served, rather than just specific veterans and specific conflicts. No party is against this idea.

The third bill, the Employment Relations Amendment Bill, was more acrimonious. Labour’s Jan Tinetti began bluntly:

“Here we are again: another week and another government bill that’s putting a wrecking ball to the rights of workers in this country. …This bill is an absolute disgrace. It is an outright ideological attack on the rights of working New Zealanders, on the dignity of work, and on the very values that keep our community strong in this country. This Employment Relations Amendment Bill doesn’t amend the law, it amputates it.”

The bill finished its second reading debate on Tuesday, and then wrestled its way through a long Committee of the Whole House stage on Wednesday evening and into Thursday morning.

Lopsided debating

The debate was highly contentious, but not really contested. For example, here is National MP Rima Nakhle’s entire speech from the second reading.

“Speaker, thank you. While the Employment Relations Act has indeed provided important protections, over time, some of these settings have created unintended costs and risks for employers.

“What this bill and the changes proposed in this bill do is rebalance the system so that it works fairly for both employees and employers. I commend this bill to the House.”

MPs get 10 minutes to speak per “call”. Nakhle’s speech lasted barely 30 seconds. That is not unusual. The government wants speed, so coalition backbenchers say almost nothing on most bills.

This gives junior governing-side MPs scant debating experience, and it doesn’t help get the government’s arguments across in the House either.

Much of the time, Parliament’s debating is an oddly lopsided affair. The opposition does most of the debating, and the government wins all the votes.

On many bills, the only government speech that makes substantive arguments for passing a bill is the initial speech given by the minister whose bill it is.

ACT MP Brooke van Velden, Minister for Workplace Relations and Safety. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The Employment Relations Amendment Bill

To find a speech that solidly outlines the government’s position on the Employment Relations Amendment Bill, we must reach back two weeks to when ACT’s Brooke van Velden, the Minister for Workplace Relations and Safety, opened the second reading debate.

“This bill is a key part of the government’s commitment to providing greater certainty for businesses and workers; supporting economic growth; and ensuring our employment relations framework is fit for a modern, dynamic economy.”

Van Velden described the bill’s foci as: “providing greater certainty for contracting parties; strengthening the consideration of accountability for the employee’s behaviour in the personal grievance process; providing an income threshold for ineligibility for unjustified dismissal personal grievances [now $200,000 p/a]; and removing the 30-day rule to improve freedom of choice and cut red tape at the beginning of employment. Together, these changes will improve labour market flexibility across the spectrum.”

The minister also outlined some adjustments to the bill.

“The bill introduces a new gateway test that provides a clearer and more efficient legal test for clear-cut, genuine contracting arrangements, which gives weight to the intention of contracting parties.

“The gateway test now explicitly covers situations where a business facilitates work for a third party… For the intention criterion, the test now clarifies that a business can specify in the written agreement that the worker is either an ‘independent contractor’ or ‘not an employee’. This means businesses that don’t classify workers as independent contractors can still use the gateway test.”

“For the restriction criterion, the test makes clear that contracting a worker for full-time work will not, in and of itself, constitute a restriction on working for others.

“This addresses a risk that the Employment Relations Authority or the Employment Court might interpret full-time work as a restriction on being able to do other work.”

Camilla Belich chairing the Education and Workforce Select Committee. VNP / Phil Smith

Among the opposition speakers, putting a varying point of view, was Labour’s Camilla Bellich.

“[The bill], effectively, rewinds and takes away the victory that some of our most vulnerable workers in New Zealand, Uber workers, gig workers, won in the Supreme Court only in November last year… What is this government doing?

“It is reversing their win through this terrible piece of legislation that will take those hard-won gains that those Uber workers made in the Supreme Court and, effectively, turn those around through the introduction of this gateway test.

“The test for who is an employee is something that is common throughout Commonwealth jurisdictions. It looks to the real nature of the work, which should be the test that we use.

“The test in this bill reverses that and makes it much easier for employers to say, ‘You are not an employee. You don’t get holiday pay. You don’t get parental leave. You don’t get sick leave. You don’t get the minimum wage. You don’t get anything, because you’re not an employee.’ That is what this bill does.”

Belich said the 30-day rule would be abolished, and that had implications for new workers.

“It essentially means that when you start in a job, instead of being covered by the collective employment agreement, …you’ll most likely be covered by an individual employment agreement unless you decide independently to join a trade union.

“The reason that that is really important is because what a lot of individual employment contracts have in them is a trial period-essentially a 90-day period where, similar to what will be introduced here, you have absolutely no rights at all, and you can be sacked for any reason at all.”

There had been plans to get the Employment Relations Amendment bill finalised in this week’s final hour of Parliament, on Thursday afternoon, but the government opted instead to begin the third reading of the Anzac Day Amendment Bill.

The Anzac Day bill seemed especially appropriate within a debating chamber that is, quite literally, a giant war memorial, with plaques for all of the many conflicts and actions New Zealand has been involved in.

And despite powerful speeches of painful history and personal grief, it was still a more convivial discussion than a third reading of the Employment Relations Amendment Bill.

*RNZ’s The House, with insights into Parliament, legislation and issues, is made with funding from Parliament’s Office of the Clerk. Enjoy our articles or podcast at RNZ.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/15/employment-relations-and-speedy-lopsided-debates/