Darts: Beau Greaves becomes first woman to throw a perfect leg

Source: Radio New Zealand

Beau Greaves, in action during the 2026 World Darts Championship at Alexandra Palace in London. SHANE HEALEY

There has been history made in the darts world on Wednesday (UK time), with English player Beau Greaves becoming the first woman to hit a nine-dart finish on the PDC ProTour.

The 22-year-old achieved the perfect leg in a Players Championship match against Austrian Mensur Suljovic, hitting back-to-back 180s, and finishing treble 20, treble 19 and double 12 in Leicester.

She celebrated the milestone with a quiet fist-pump, before accepting congratulations from Suljovic.

Reality then sunk in, as she shook her head in disbelief.

“I’ve narrowly missed hitting one a few times so it was nice to finally hit one. It’s nice to be the first woman to hit one on the PDC ProTour,” she said.

She went on to claim a 6-5 victory by clinching a final-leg decider, but was beaten in the next round by David Sharp.

Greaves, who is from Doncaster, has dominated the Women’s Series in recent years and beat Luke Littler on her way to the World Youth Championship final.

She also competed at this year’s World Championships, but lost a close first-round match against Daryl Gurney.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/26/darts-beau-greaves-becomes-first-woman-to-throw-a-perfect-leg/

Bike group praises government proposal to let under 12s cycle on footpaths

Source: Radio New Zealand

The proposal would let children under 12 ride on the footpath rather than the road. (File photo) 123RF

A cycling group is praising a government proposal to allow children under the age of 12 to ride their bikes on the footpath.

The idea was floated by Transport Minister Chris Bishop, along with others including allowing E-scooters in cycle lanes and requiring drivers to leave at least a one metre gap when passing cyclists.

Bike Auckland co-chairperson Karen Hormann told Morning Report, letting children ride their bikes on the footpath made sense.

“Having young kids in 50kph traffic is not the way forward. Ideally these younger kids won’t be travelling very fast and hopefully parents and caregivers are helping them to understand how to be considerate.”

Hormann acknowledged there were some concerns about pedestrian safety, but said there were already many shared paths around Auckland and cyclists and pedestrians would need to work together to make the change work.

Motorists would also need to take extra care when coming out of driveways, Hormann said.

“You’re going to have to look threes time, maybe more, just to make sure.”

Hormann also welcomed the proposed change to allow E-scooters in bike lanes, saying vehicles travelling a similar speed should be kept together.

A proposed change would allow e-scooters in bike lanes. (File photo) 123RF

The AA earlier said the plans to update some transport rules reflected the changing times.

Chief policy and advocacy officer Simon Douglas said the AA would consider the detail over the next month, but was supportive for the most part.

He said allowing scooters on cycleways was common sense.

The chief executive for Age Concern, Karen Billings-Hensen said while some of the proposals on rules were good, they key issue would be the impact on pedestrians.

She said there should be consideration around the speed children were cycling and whether they were riding two abreast.

It needed to be clear children need to give way to pedestrians, she said.

Consultation on the proposals would be open until March 15.

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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/2026/02/26/bike-group-praises-government-proposal-to-let-under-12s-cycle-on-footpaths/

Several people rescued from Waikato River after tour group gets stuck trying to help

Source: Radio New Zealand

People are brought ashore after their ordeal. Supplied / NZ police

Several people have been rescued from Waikato River while clinging onto a tree on Wednesday evening.

Police were alerted at 7.20pm that four men had entered the water to float from the control gates down to Hipapatua Reserve.

With only basic inflatables and no life jackets, the group lost buoyancy and called for help.

A nearby tour group jumped into the river to assist the men, but also had no flotation devices.

When police had arrived, all seven were in distress and, and contacted the coastguard and harbourmaster.

Supplied / NZ police

They were able to rescue them using a jetboat and a jetski by 8pm.

Senior Constable of Taupō Police Barry Shepherd said the incident could have had a far more serious outcome.

“We want people to have fun and enjoy the outdoors but there’s a safe way to do it.

“While its admirable that people tried to help, we don’t want any dead heroes.”

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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/2026/02/26/several-people-rescued-from-waikato-river-after-tour-group-gets-stuck-trying-to-help/

The Art of Noticing: what photography has taught me about nature

Source: NZ Department of Conservation

Olivia Wentzell was the winner of the Landscape Category in the 2025 New Zealand Geographic Photographer of the Year. She studied zoology and environmental science at the University of Auckland. 

Photography was an integral part of my childhood. Going outside with my dad and his camera is where it all started. Holding a clunky DSLR and snapping photos regardless of the camera’s settings sparked a love for photography that has never wavered.

As a university student, my time often involves a lot of studying, staying inside with my eyes glued to a screen. But as a nature-lover at heart and photographer by choice, much of my spare time is spent naturing. It is the raw beauty of the landscapes and wildlife that I experience which endlessly inspires me to capture it, and it is the same beauty that inspires me every day to advocate for it.

Recently winning the landscape category in New Zealand Geographic’s 2025 Photographer of the Year has instilled an even greater drive to inspire others to experience the outdoors. As someone who grew up spending a lot of their spare time outside, and who now combines that with photography, I have grown to have a profound appreciation and respect for nature that I think we should all have. This love for the outdoors has only grown throughout my photography journey, where I have learnt many lessons over the years. It has taught me to appreciate nature, not just for its material value, but in experiences it provides, its profound beauty, and the true calm it can bring us. So, here are the five things that I have learnt along my photography journey that I think are essential for appreciating all that nature has to offer:

1. Take Notice of the Small Things

Many of us are guilty of only staring in awe at the megafauna when out naturing, but what about the small bugs that help to decompose leaf litter, or the fungi that creates mass networks underground, connecting all the trees in a forest. I have always been one to take notice of the under-appreciated, but photography has forced me to do so even more, as focusing on each detail in a photograph is essential to creating powerful images.

A detail for me that not many people notice is the lighting in a particular moment. Photography is all about light, so naturally I pay attention to it when I have my camera, but I also notice it everywhere I go, no matter the context. This means that I appreciate the soft sun rays filtering through the forest canopy, or the sunlight that just peaks over the horizon before it dips below for the night. This is one of the biggest lessons photography has taught me: the purity of light and the beauty it casts on moments.

There is nothing overly special about these photographs—or to you there may not be—but the lighting in each creates something even more beautiful out of relatively common species.

Noticing the small details in nature deepens our appreciation for it, ultimately allowing us to connect more with the world around us and find meaning in even the simplest moments. Each time you go outside, I encourage you to focus on one more thing that is new to you so that your admiration for nature can grow.

2. Get Out Whenever You Can

In the past, I wouldn’t take photos unless I felt sure they would work compositionally. However, my mindset has recently shifted to wanting to take photos of everything. This has motivated me to get outside even on the days where I don’t feel inspired, or visit the places that don’t seem as interesting as a weekend mission to Rangitoto or Muriwai Gannet Colony. Getting outside whenever possible connects us with nature more and leads us to notice the small things.

Three photos I have taken recently, where the aim was not to create a strong composition, but rather to bring my camera out and photograph freely. As a result, I noticed details that I initially would have overlooked, and found beauty in the unexpected.

Some of my best moments in nature have either been those I wasn’t planning, or in places where the beauty far exceeded my expectations. My winning photograph in New Zealand Geographic’s 2025 Photographer of the Year is an example of this. I was on a road trip around the South Island and visited a canyon I had been wanting to go to for a while. I never imagined it would become one of my favourite places in New Zealand, and the location of where an award-winning photograph was taken. While wading through knee-deep water at its entrance, I soon realised the beauty that Wilson Creek Canyon held. With water trickling down from above, moss covered walls, and sunlight streaming through the forest at the top of the canyon, this was one of the most beautiful places I had ever been – yet it was just a small, unassuming canyon off the side of State Highway 1.

My winning photo in the Landscape Category of New Zealand Geographic’s 2025 Photographer of the Year. It shows a patch of vegetation on a canyon wall, with water droplets surrounding it.

Just a few months later, I found myself in a similar situation when visiting Limestone Creek Reserve near Palmerston North. I visited this location for the glowworms but ended up seeing a different kind of beauty. This reserve included a limestone archway of a grand scale, with the most pristine native forest and a seemingly endless trickle of water down the walls of a narrow gully.

Limestone Creek Reserve was truly an unexpected beauty that blew me away.

Through appreciating the small things in nature by getting out whenever I can, these two moments are some of the best that I have ever experienced – and neither were set out to be.

3. Slow Down

Photography requires a lot of patience to achieve the photos you want, often with more failure than success. This patience is what taught me to slow down when in nature.

By learning to notice light as a photographer, watching sunsets has become one of my favourite things to do in nature. To me, this is a moment when everything is slowing down for the day. It is a moment where I can just sit, look, listen, and feel all that is around me. While watching a sunset, every moment seems to be better than the last, and I am forced to sit and watch until the painted sky slowly turns to stars.

Watching sunsets was one of the first ways I began to truly appreciate nature. Now it has taught me to slow down in other naturing activities as well. Whether I am looking at the trees in a forest on a day hike as they gently move with the breeze, or even just watching the lapping of waves on the coast, every moment in nature can be appreciated even more if we just slow down.

A photograph of a hummingbird I sat and watched for at least an hour—slowing down to understand its movements and admire its beauty.

4. Notice With More Than Just Your Eyes

During sunset, I can hear the quiet waves on the beach while the sun sets over the horizon. I can feel the slight breeze on my skin as a Tui flies over me. I don’t hear any cars on the highway or sounds of the city – just the quiet moment as the sun dips below the horizon. Through slowing down while watching sunsets, I have learnt to take in all that is around me. I have learnt to notice not just the beauty that I can see, but which I can hear, smell, and feel too.

Photography taught me to appreciate light, which in turn taught me to slow down and observe how lighting conditions change. This awareness has helped me pay closer attention to the small details in nature, using more than just my eyes. All these lessons are interconnected and essential for appreciating nature—not just for what it gives us, but for its profound beauty too.

Not only was the visual beauty of the red-crowned kākāriki so striking while visiting Tiritiri Matangi Island, but the calls of countless individuals within the flock were overwhelmingly beautiful.

5. Expand Your Knowledge On All Things Nature

As a zoology and environmental science graduate, I know a thing or two about taking on new knowledge about the natural world. As a photographer, I also want to learn as much as I can about the natural world to better understand my subjects. Before university, I thought I had a deep appreciation for the outdoors through learning in my own time, but studying all things nature throughout my degree allowed me to have a whole new appreciation for it. I now look at birds and know what makes each one of them special, and the role they play in maintaining ecosystem health. I look at the trees in a forest and know that each one took countless years to grow and sustains thousands of animals throughout its lifetime.

A kākā, whose beauty is made even more remarkable by knowing its conservation story and rarity of seeing one in the wild.

Developing my understanding of the natural world and how it works has been one of the most important shifts in how I now appreciate it. Now every time I go outside and see anything I have spent hours learning about, I can’t help but gawk at it like a fangirl, marvelling at its intricacies and unique beauty – unlike anything else in nature.

Final Thoughts

Nature is the one thing that connects us all. Despite our differences in passions, we all rely on nature and have access to it, so we need to learn to appreciate this unifying feature between us. So, when you next have the chance to get outside, take it—and remember to slow down, take notice of the small things, and learn more about the nature around you, because the best moments are often those that are unexpected.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/26/the-art-of-noticing-what-photography-has-taught-me-about-nature/

Seven rescued from Waikato River

Source: New Zealand Police

Seven people were successfully rescued from the Waikato River last night, after Police received reports of several people struggling in the water.

Around 7.20pm, Police were alerted to a group of four men who had decided to float from the control gates down to Hipapatua Reserve, otherwise known as Reids Farm.

The men only had basic inflatables and no life jackets.

Towards the end of the route, the group lost buoyancy, began to panic, and were heard calling for help.

Three people from a nearby tour group jumped into the river to assist the men, despite not having any flotation devices themselves.

Police arrived and were able to communicate with the now seven people in distress and contacted the Coastguard and Harbourmaster.

Using a jetboat and a jetski, Police, Coastguard and the Harbourmaster were able to rescue the seven people, who were hanging onto a tree.

Senior Constable of Taupō Police Barry Shepherd says the incident could have had a far more serious outcome.

“We want people to have fun and enjoy the outdoors but there’s a safe way to do it.

“While its admirable that people tried to help, we don’t want any dead heroes.”

The involved agencies responded quickly and were able to bring all seven people to safety by 8pm.

“I commend the Coastguard, Harbourmaster and my Police colleagues, whose quick thinking and coordinated response ensured these seven people were safely rescued.

This situation could have been drastically worse, and their actions prevented a potential tragedy.”

Police remind the public that for any water related emergency, always call 111 immediately.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/26/seven-rescued-from-waikato-river/

Serious crash, Rissington

Source: New Zealand Police

Puketitiri Road is closed following a serious two-vehicle crash.

Emergency services received reports of the crash about 6:30am.

One person is understood to be seriously injured.

Police are in attendance and motorists are asked to delay travel if possible.

The Serious Crash Unit has been advised.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/26/serious-crash-rissington/

Police probe death of rider found beside his motorbike at Auckland property

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police are making enquiries into a sudden death in Taupaki near Kumeū on Wednesday night.

At around 9pm, officers attended the incident on a shared driveway off Nixon Road.

Detective Senior Sergeant Megan Goldie, of Waitematā CIB, said a man in his 50s had been riding his motorbike before he was found dead lying beside his motorbike.

“While there are no suspicious circumstances, police will make further enquiries to establish how the man has died and whether he had been involved in a crash.”

A post mortem examination will be carried out as part of these enquiries.

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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/2026/02/26/police-probe-death-of-rider-found-beside-his-motorbike-at-auckland-property/

Is it time to abandon postal voting for local elections?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Several Auckland councillors think it’s time to abandon postal voting for local elections. RNZ / Eveline Harvey

Is it time to abandon postal voting for local elections?

Several Auckland councillors think so, with voter turnout in the region continuing to decline.

Less than a third of Aucklanders voted in the 2025 local elections. Twenty-nine percent or 345,004 registered electors voted, even fewer than in the previous two elections, where 35 percent voted.

This week, the Auckland Council released data on who is voting, and who is not.

The data reflects a lot of what we already know about local elections, including that young people are less likely to vote, and that voter turnout generally increases with age.

In Auckland, the number of 18 and 19-year-olds participating in local elections dropped from 31,691 in 2019 to 20,791 in 2025, a 34 percent decrease.

Voting had increased for most age groups over 25 in that time. But there was a decline in voter turnout for those aged 61 to 75 in 2025. In 2019, 54 percent of electors in that age group voted, compared to 44 percent in 2025.

As seen in previous elections, in 2025, voter turnout was the lowest in what the council identified as socio-economically deprived neighbourhoods, particularly in southern and western Auckland.

Whau ward councillor Sarah Paterson-Hamlin. Supplied

Whau ward councillor Sarah Paterson-Hamlin said the data was “depressing but not surprising”.

“It’s really upsetting, and what’s particularly gutting about it is that the trends are getting worse, and it shows around the local board tables and council table in terms of what lived experience is being represented and what’s being discussed.”

She supported a change to in-person voting for local elections.

“Postal voting isn’t helping. Central government elections have a turnout that’s really enviable, but our local elections don’t. One of the reasons for that has to be that one is postal and one isn’t.

“The fact that it’s all done by postal vote means it takes a lot of effort to change your electoral details when you move, and if you’re renting, you’re possibly moving quite frequently. It’s another thing that increases the lack of representation from people in lower socio-economic areas.”

She suspected postal voting was also a barrier for voters with disabilities, although the council did not collect data on that demographic.

Manukau councillor Alf Filipaina. RNZ / Felix Walton

Manukau councillor Alf Filipaina agreed more should be done to increase the number of people voting in his area.

“We need to change the system and hopefully engage more people, particularly the young.”

He said several years ago, Manukau City councillors and staff would visit local schools and talk to students about issues with roaming dogs, rubbish, and wastewater and stormwater.

“I know it was taken up by most of the high schools. When we explained what the council actually does it surprised quite a few of them.

“I think that’s one way to get rangatahi engaged.”

He believed there were a lot of issues with postal voting, and that it made sense to explore other options.

His fellow Manukau councillor Lotu Fuli said voting in Auckland had reached a new low.

Manukau councillor Lotu Fuli. Nick Monro

She described postal voting as “archaic” and she strongly supported moving away from it.

She said postal voting was also “vulnerable to tampering by those seeking to undermine democracy” as seen in Papatoetoe in the last elections.

Associate professor in politics at Victoria University of Wellington, Dr Lara Greaves, said: “It’s a concern that pretty much every local election we talk about voter turnout being a really big problem. There have been multiple reviews now saying this. But we are seeing government after government not doing very much to change anything.

“Hopefully, at some point central government does something to value local government and make it a bigger part of people’s lives, perhaps making it more efficient and investing in ways to make democracy better.

“A lot of people argue that if the Electoral Commission brought in their mandate and was funded to do so, they would run local government elections in a more efficient way than the private companies who are contracted by local councils. But there’s not a lot of information about how these companies operate in the public domain.”

Political scientist & Victoria University of Wellington Associate Professor Dr Lara Greaves RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

She said the government needed to seriously look at whether postal voting was still suitable.

“There has been a decline in New Zealand post services across the country, and certain groups, especially lower socio-economic groups and younger people, are more likely to move house.

“Perhaps it’s time to rethink postal voting. Having more in-person voting locations is one thing that has often been promoted.”

She said people not knowing enough about candidates or the role of local government was also known to deter voters.

“Many components of local government and democracy could do better to explain what local government is.

“But the public aren’t necessarily crying out for more stories or information about local government, and therefore journalists and local government people don’t provide that. It becomes a bit circular and quite impossible to solve.”

Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown has been contacted for comment.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/26/is-it-time-to-abandon-postal-voting-for-local-elections/

How to catch and move the country’s tiniest bird

Source: Radio New Zealand

If you want to catch a tiny bird and move it to a new home, you need expert help and your car’s aircon on.

Overheating is a threat to the rifleman.

And buzzing cicadas can get in the way of finding them in the first place as a group rounding up riflemen at the Wainuiomata water catchment area found out.

Behind four locked gates and among a gazillion buzzing cicadas, 30 volunteers intent on capturing up to 40 of the country’s tiniest birds unpacked on a bush road at the weekend.

They tested their radios, gathered together tent poles to spread out their so-called ‘mist’ nets – because they have such a fine mesh – and tested the half-a-dozen calls on the phone app they would play through speakers to lure the birds in.

The rifleman or tītitipounamu is New Zealand’s smallest bird. Steph Raille

Jim O’Malley laid out the high stakes to the three capture teams.

O’Malley helped set up the years-long Kotukutuku Ecological Restoration Project to move 40 or so birds north to a restored forest near Paraparaumu.

“The thing with riflemen is that they’re time critical,” he told them.

“After four hours, their mortality rate from stress goes up a lot. So we’re working in a window of three and a half hours from capture to release at Kāpiti.”

Volunteers at the banding station table. RNZ / Phil Pennington

Only trained people would get to handle the birds.

Greg Sherley would lead the banding team – he did his doctorate in the rifleman or tītitipounamu.

“Ornithologists will say there’s a ‘giz’ about a bird, a G-I-Z, which is talking about the essential nature of a bird,” Sherley said.

“And rifleman males are green mainly on the top, and in the light, they glow … they glow a green. If you get them in the right sunlight … [it’s] very very much like green pounamu.”

Morag Fordham with a rifleman. RNZ / Phil Pennington

Morag Fordham had this take on the birds.

“They look like wee squeaky brussel sprouts,” Fordham laughed.

They are the country’s smallest but do not rate in the world’s top 10 tiniest, dominated by humming-birds (the smallest bee hummingbird is a third of the weight of a rifleman).

It had taken years and a 150-plus-page report to get the permits for the project – that was “the most frustrating part,” said Sherley – but now they were here.

Fordham would lead one of the three capture teams.

Another team walked in with Simon Fordham – the Fordham pair from Auckland between them have caught over a thousand of the birds (though Morag is more a kōkako specialist).

However, it was evident from the word go there was going to be a problem. The crunch of our footfalls on the gravel road was muffled by another sound.

“We’re trying to find any birds, and so we do have a problem today with cicada noise,” Fordham said.

“That not only makes it harder for us to hear where birds are, but also birds need to be closer to hear the calls that we play.”

The keen ears of Victoria University ecology students proved crucial – Ryan and Harry, who studies the North Island robin, were both on their first bird hunt but seemed especially good at hearing the super-highpitched squeak of riflemen.

A rifleman is carefully extracted from the net. RNZ / Phil Pennington

A squeak heard, the team I am in set up the net, 4m high and 7m long, along the gravel road and hung the speakers in branches either side.

After an hour waiting we have had no luck and were about to move on.

“I haven’t heard any,” said Simon Fordham. “Emma has.”

Then suddenly, we spot a bird in a tree. It flies into the net, and Fordham and a trained volunteer hurry in, then quietly and calmly get it out.

We radio in the day’s first catch to the banding station.

“Woo-hoo, that’s awesome, great work … we’ll see your rifleman soon,” they radio back.

At this point the three-and-a-half hour countdown to get the bird to Kāpiti began, from the net, to a small soft drawstring bag, to a volunteer to walk it back to the banding station on a fold-out picnic table.

Then into a wee box with a takeaway meal.

“Sometimes you’re lucky if you’re standing by the boxes, you’ll hear this ‘tu, tu, tu, tu, tu’ – it’s the wee riflemen are picking up the mealworms,” said Morag Fordham.

Cicada noise on the first day made it difficult to hear any rifleman. Steph Raille

Paddy and Gill get the job of driving the first bird to Kāpiti, the aircon on full.

“No smoking, no talking, no stereo in the car, no phones, no slamming doors … no coffee stops,” they go through the rules.

“It was a silent, freezing trip for an hour,” Paddy said.

“It felt much longer,” Gill said.

It turns out to be the only bird caught on Saturday.

On Sunday morning, coordinator Jen Andrews updated the teams.

“I thought I would mention the bird that was caught yesterday, we heard from Peter the release went really well – he arrived safe and happy, shot out-of-the-box.

“So today we’re really hoping to catch some friends, so he’s not quite the loneliest rifleman in Kāpiti.”

As it turned out, the wee male won’t be.

Sunday was earlier, greyer and the cicadas were a little quieter. It paid off.

Nine birds were caught. I got to walk one out for banding.

Morag’s team ended up catching six of Sunday’s nine.

“Phew,” she said looking down at a juvenile female in her hands. “Hello sweetheart.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/26/how-to-catch-and-move-the-countrys-tiniest-bird/

Sudden death in Taupaki

Source: New Zealand Police

Police are making enquiries into a sudden death in Taupaki on Wednesday night.

At around 9pm, Police attended the incident on a shared driveway off Nixon Road.

Detective Senior Sergeant Megan Goldie, of Waitematā CIB, says: “A man aged in his 50s had been riding his motorbike prior to being located deceased.

“On arrival the man was located deceased next to his motorbike.

“While there are no suspicious circumstances, Police will make further enquiries to establish how the man has died and whether he had been involved in a crash.”

A post mortem examination will be carried out as part of these enquiries.

Our thoughts are with the man’s family at this time.

ENDS

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/26/sudden-death-in-taupaki/

Black Caps fight back to eliminate co-hosts Sri Lanka from T20 World Cup

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mitchell Santner top sored for the Black Caps in Colombo. (File pic) Chris Symes / www.photosport.nz

The Black Caps have knocked co-hosts Sri Lanka out of the T20 World Cup on Wednesday (local time) with a 61-run win in Colombo that boosted their semi-final hopes.

Sri Lanka needed an emphatic win to stay alive but instead exited with a whimper, limping to 107-8 chasing New Zealand’s 168-7.

A win for New Zealand against England on Friday at the same R. Premadasa stadium would see them top the Super Eights group and qualify for the semi-finals along with Harry Brook’s side.

A defeat would open the door for Pakistan, who would probably need a big win against Sri Lanka in Kandy on Saturday to sneak through on net run rate.

Sri Lanka were never in the chase as Matt Henry dismissed their leading batsman Pathum Nissanka with the first ball of the innings.

Henry also removed Chairth Asalanka with the first ball of his second over to leave Sri Lanka in trouble at 6-2.

Sri Lanka crawled to 20-2 at the end of the six-over power play, the lowest in the competition and Sri Lanka’s second lowest ever in T20 internationals.

Part-time spinner Rachin Ravindra found turn to put the game beyond Sri Lanka with a career-best 4-27.

Ravindra had a charging Kusal Mendis stumped and then removed Pavan Rathnayake in similar fashion in the same over as the sellout crowd was stunned into silence.

“It is very embarrassing to disappoint the home crowd,” said Sri Lanka captain Dasun Shanaka.

“We started really well, but to be honest, the Santner-McConchie and that partnership, it was a good one, which took the game away from us.”

New Zealand earlier recovered from a mini-collapse to reach 168-7.

“I think it was obviously a nice score there with the amount of spin on the ball. They squeezed us a lot,” said Black Caps captain Mitchell Santner.

Sri Lanka were right in the game as New Zealand slumped from 84-3 to 84-6 in the space of six deliveries.

But an 84-run stand off just 47 deliveries for the seventh wicket between Cole McConchie and Santner enabled them to set a tricky target on a turning pitch.

Skipper Santner top scored with 47 off 26 balls with two fours and four sixes.

McConchie, recalled to the side, posted an unbeaten 31 off 23 balls

New Zealand were struggling to read Maheesh Theekshana as the spinner claimed 3-9 in his first three overs.

New Zealand blasted 70 off the last four overs, including 21 off the final one from Theekshana.

Pace bowler Dushmantha Chameera finished with 3-38.

-AFP

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What can you do if you can’t afford a loan?

Source: Radio New Zealand

A man who could no longer afford his car payments complained to an external dispute resolution provider. Caitlin Regan/Flickr

A man who took out a loan for a car but was unable to make the repayments when he lost his job has had the default interest and fees charged refunded.

The case may offer insights for other borrowers struggling with their loan commitments.

The man complained to Financial Services Complaints Ltd (FSCL), an external dispute resolution provider for some of the financial sector.

It does not identify people who complain or the organisations they complain about.

But it said in a case note that the man borrowed $9995 to buy a car in 2022.

He had to arrange insurance to qualify for the loan so he borrowed a total of $14,000 to cover mechanical breakdown insurance, payment protection insurance and guaranteed asset protection insurance, all through the car dealership.

In 2024, he lost his job and found it hard to keep up with the $107 a week loan payment. He contacted his insurer but was told his cover did not include any provision for redundancy. The car dealer was no longer in business.

He said he told the lender about his problems but default fees and interest were added every time he missed a payment.

The lender offered to his increase his weekly payment to $150 to get him back on track but he continued to fall behind.

He finally complained to FSCL, saying the lender had not done enough to help and it was unfair that he was being charged fees and default interest when he was in hardship.

FSCL investigated and said because he had not missed any loan payments before he lost his job it was likely that the loan was affordable when he borrowed the money.

Lenders have an obligation to ensure they do not give borrowers loans they cannot pay back.

“We considered that the lender had not done anything ‘wrong’. The lender had given [him] information about financial mentoring services and had restructured the loan once to avoid default interest and fees. Reviewing the lender’s diary notes, it appeared that [the borrower] was offering to increase his payment to get the loan back on track and avoid repossession of his car.”

The lender agreed to refund the default interest and fees, refinance one payment into the loan balance so he was not in arrears and reduce payments to $110 a week.

FSCL said lenders were required to consider whether they could do anything to alleviate financial hardship but they were entitled to charge default fees and interest.

“If you experience financial hardship and struggle to repay a loan, keep in contact with your lender, show a willingness to repay what you can, and seek help from a free financial mentor early.”

Commerce Commission general manager of competition, fair trading and credit Vanessa Horne said people who were facing financial difficulty and could not afford their repayments had two options.

Commerce Commission general manager of competition, fair trading and credit Vanessa Horne. Think Stills & Motion

“The first is to contact the lender as soon as possible to see if they can make changes to the credit contract.

“While lenders do not have to alter the contract, they are required to act reasonably and ethically when problems arise.

“The other option is making a hardship application, which [the] lender must consider by following a specific process.”

Horne said under the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act, a borrower could ask a lender for a change to their loan, mortgage or credit card or other consumer credit contract if they had suffered a hardship they could not have seen coming, and could not make their repayments as a result of that hardship. They also needed to believe they could make the repayments if the contract was changed in the ways specified under the Act, including extending the loan term or a payment holiday.

“A borrower must make a hardship application in writing. They need to state the reason, or reasons, for the unforeseen hardship. It can also be worthwhile including supporting information, such as a medical certificate or letter of redundancy.

“The letter must also include the specific changes the borrower wants to make such as extending the term of the contract and reducing the amount of the repayments or postponing repayments for a specified time and both the borrower and lender must agree to the changes before they are permitted.”

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Government deciding whether US should get access to New Zealanders’ biometric data

Source: Radio New Zealand

The government is deciding whether the United States should get access to New Zealanders’ biometric data. RNZ

New Zealanders’ biometric information and other sensitive data may be handed over to the United States government under a new border security agreement between the countries.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade has confirmed officials were in talks with the US on the requirements and scope of an Enhanced Border Security Partnership (EBSP).

The US has given the 42 countries in its Visa Waiver Program – a reciprocal agreement that allowed citizens to visit for up to 90 days without a visa – until the end of the year to conclude EBSP negotiations or risk losing visa-free travel status.

Any information handed over to the US may end up with the country’s controversial Immigration and Customs Enforcement border force – or ICE as it is commonly known – and concerns have been raised about the opaque process, data sovereignity and surveillance overreach.

New Zealand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) refused to clarify what safeguards were being considered to protect New Zealanders’ private information or if it was aware of any ICE personnel stationed in New Zealand at present.

Biometric sharing programmes already exist between Five Eyes countries (New Zealand, Australia, Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom) as part of Migration Five arrangements but typically operated on a ‘hit/no-hit’ basis where initial biometric checks provided minimal information, and further data requests were considered on a case by case basis.

But EBSPs could provide full automated access to other countries’ national databases, according to critics and minutes from European Union member state negotiations.

Protesters against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) march through the streets of downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, on January 25, 2026. ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP

The US Department of Homeland Security’s own privacy assessment noted biometric information could be used to vet any individual “encountered” during border inspections or immigration investigations.

European regulators warned this could extend to minors, victims or witnesses to crime.

The New Zealand government had not stated what information might be shared, what safeguards would apply, or whether parliament or the public would be consulted before any agreement was finalised.

MFAT offered RNZ a one-line statement regarding the negotiations: “New Zealand officials continue to discuss the requirements and scope of an Enhanced Border Security Partnership with the United States.”

However, the ministry refused to respond to follow up questions including when negotiations began, what privacy impact assessments had been undertaken, what safeguards were being considered, and what limitations would apply to collection and use of data.

Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters’ office also declined to respond.

Green Party foreign affairs spokesperson Teanau Tuiono criticised the lack of information on the negotiations.

He wanted to see parliamentary oversight and public scrutiny of the agreement.

The government should also disclose details of any privacy assessments it had carried out, he said.

Aotearoa needed to urgently reassess its relationship with the US, Tuiono said.

“We are seeing that alarm right across the world with the direction the US is going under the Trump administration. This is not a time for us to be seeking closer engagement and relationships with the US,” he said.

Green Party foreign affairs spokesperson Teanau Tuiono. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Council of Civil Liberties chair Thomas Beagle said the proposed scheme was much more invasive than existing data-sharing arrangements and officials should consider the Trump administration’s approach to immigration during negotiations.

“The US is obviously struggling at the moment with the rule of democracy and rights-based society. They have government-sponsored gangs of people wearing masks who refuse to identify themselves disappearing people off the streets,” Beagle said.

“This is seriously in the direction of heading towards fascism – the idea that we’re then going to give these people access to our private data and even the private data of people associated with travellers is very, very concerning.

“Some people are still locked in the past where the US was a reasonably benign ally of New Zealand, and that’s becoming less and less true.

“We wouldn’t give other countries like China or Russia full access into our police and biometrics databases, would we?”

New Zealand’s regulations included the right to have data held by public agencies corrected if it was wrong and the disposal of data after a certain time.

“Once this data passes out of our control, we don’t have that ability anymore. It’s going to be there for five or 10 years and could come back and bite you years later.”

The risk also applied to New Zealanders living in the US, who could get caught up in “trawling expeditions”.

Beagle urged the government to be more forthcoming about the agreement.

A report by the European Data Protection Supervisor – the European Union’s independent data protection watchdog – emphasised the unprecedented nature of such an agreement.

It would be first providing large-scale sharing of personal and biometric data with a non-EU country, and would have a significant impact on privacy rights and the protection of personal data, supervisor Wojciech Wiewiórowski said.

He called on European Union negotiators to narrow the agreement’s scope to just travellers and require clear justifications for every query, among other protections.

The report warned sharing sensitive data could lead to the detention or imprisonment of individuals.

Māori data sovereignty expert Dr Karaitiana Taiuru said there were specific concerns for Māori in relation to DNA, which is considered a taonga.

Karaitiana Taiuru from the Christchurch Heart Institute. Supplied/Heart Foundation

“For Maori and for many other indigenous peoples, our DNA is sacred to us. It’s not just this generation’s knowledge, it’s our previous generations and our future generations, so it’s very sacred,” he said.

Sharing police databases raised particular concerns given the overpolicing, profiling and surveillance Māori were subject to in Aotearoa, he said.

“We know from reports over decades there has been an institutional racism issue in the past with the New Zealand Police. So automatically, that data is going to be biased, it’s going to be racist,” he said.

“There’s going to be some very sensitive information in those police files. What happens if someone has been proven innocent by the police? Would that data show up if it’s shared overseas, for example. What about survivors and victims of abuse? They’re entitled to privacy as well.

“Some major questions need to be asked about people’s privacy and our own laws.”

A spokesperson for New Zealand’s Privacy Commission declined to answer questions on whether it had been consulted, what safeguards or limitations were or should be in place and whether a Privacy Impact Assessment had been carried out.

They said the Privacy Act and the new Biometric Processing Privacy Code contained rules around the collection, retention, sharing and security of personal information, including sending material overseas, however, other legislation could take precedence.

Saira Hussain, senior staff attorney at US digital civil rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation, said there had been a marked change under the Trump administration about how much and what type of data agencies were collecting at the border on “threadbare justifications”.

There was a “let’s grab everything first and ask questions later approach, which is really, really concerning about how that information may end up being used, where it’s being stored, the retention period”, she said.

It increased the possibility of infomation being breached, shared with other goverments or used for unintended purposes, Hussein said.

She was “exceedingly concerned” about what information was changing hands, how US officials would be able to query databases, for how long, and if it was restricted to people who were traveling to the US, “which in and of itself is a very large ask, but the fact that it may be open to others beyond those traveling is seriously alarming.”

Auckland University law professor Gehan Gunasekara questioned how the information would be used.

“If it’s retained for border protection and visa status, that’s fine, but if it’s been shared for other ulterior purposes, maybe with ICE so that they can go after relatives of the people that are traveling or … to build up profiles of people who have relatives in the United States who may be then imperiled that’s where we need to get safeguards,” he said.

Auckland University law professor Gehan Gunasekara. Jessie Chiang

While he would like to see more scruntiny of the agreement, New Zealand was not in a strong position to assert itself in negotiations.

“Unfortunately, that’s the reality when you’re dealing with powerful government agencies, especially foreign ones,” Gunasekara said.

“It’s only the very large, powerful trading blocs like the European Union that are in a position to negotiate some kinds of safeguards and we know there’s been perennial conflict between the United States and the European Union when it comes to personal data.”

New Zealand’s intelligence agencies had oversight in the form of the Inspector General of Intelligence and Security, Gunasekara said, referencing a highly critical 2018 report that criticised the agencies over a lack of transparency and possible breaches in the way information was collected.

“At that point, safeguards were adopted, and some checks put on that in terms of the intelligence agencies,” he said.

“So if the intelligence agencies can be made to have certain kinds of checks put in those kinds of situations, then one would expect other government agencies to be even more robust in the controls and checks they have – but it seems either that’s not happening or we haven’t been told what those safeguards are.”

The UK has neither confirmed nor denied finalising a deal, but in 2022 US Department of Homeland Security representatives told the European Union home affairs committee three EU member states and the UK had signed on.

Israel signed an agreement in March 2022, entering the programme in 2023.

A DHS press release touted the signing of an agreement with Bahrain in late 2025, which it said would allow for “the automated exchange of biometric data”.

In December, the European Union formally approved negotiations for an overall framework, which allowed member states to negotiate their own agreements beneath the overarching framework.

Australia has not publicly announced negotiations, but has not denied them when asked.

Late last year, the Trump administration announced plans to require visitors from visa waiver countriesdisclose five years of social media history, email addresses from the past decade, five years of phone numbers, personal details of family members, face, fingerprint, DNA, iris and other data when using the Electronic System for Travel Authorization process – an automated system visa-waiver members use instead of applying for a visa.

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Who can order a rescue chopper? Tensions rising on the front line

Source: Radio New Zealand

Front line rescue workers say delays in getting police to authorise a helicopter are dangerous. File photo.. SUPPLIED

Fire and Emergency (FENZ) has had to be reminded it is not allowed to order up search and rescue helicopters off its own bat.

Papers released under the Official Information Act show St John told FENZ in 2024 to stop trying to directly order an air ambulance chopper for search-and-rescue (SAR) operations, with Health NZ doing the same last year.

Internal e-mails have showed tensions on the front line about how the situation has been playing out.

RNZ has obtained five e-mails related to one rescue – and four dealing with another rescue – involving up to 15 people, from the FENZ front line up to the head office.

Lines rescue teams and their managers at FENZ complained to headquarters in Wellington last year about having to go through police to access the helicopters, and also sometimes having to wait to be called on to help.

“This is a further instance where we have been delayed,” said one in Waikato in January.

“This has become a recurring issue,” emailed another in Auckland in June.

Others who worked in other parts of search-and-rescue echoed those comments.

“This is taking far too long now,” one told RNZ about a delay in getting police to authorise a helicopter.

Another said a team could have got to a rescue in December “a lot sooner” but “the big cogs” had to turn. “The police are the ones that make those decisions.”

But police said they were the lead authority for local SAR operations and “well equipped to make informed decisions on the use of aviation assets”.

FENZ had not raised any concerns with police, and the agencies regularly discussed incidents, they said.

“Any systemic issues are raised through the appropriate governance forums.”

FENZ told RNZ: “There are no communication challenges between our agencies, and we work well together.”

‘Are we able to reach agreement with the police?’

The rescue side of search-and-rescue is facing greater demands, as big storms become more frequent.

The co-ordination required across multiple agencies and volunteers is key, and most of that responsibility sits with police.

But a lot of co-ordination is left to FENZ. On 13 February – when a man in a ute died in floodwaters near Otorohanga – a volunteer fire crew asked for either “a chopper or Hamilton lines rescue team”, and a FENZ swift water team was sent.

The team have to go by road, with their raft.

But some on the front line have now begun questioning if the system was fast and flexible enough.

They are asking if police should be in charge so much of most SAR operations, when police’s strength was in “search” while FENZ’s strength was in “rescue”, when a person’s location was known.

This has crystallised around who authorises the use of helicopters, in particular air ambulance helicopters (AAH) – the most useful and most expensive choppers.

After a mistake by police at a cliff rescue of a girl at Hahei in January 2025 – where police thought the girl was dead, so forced a lines team to drive by road instead of fly in – a senior FENZ manager wrote to his headquarters.

“The use of AAH resources is essential as most of the helicopters available through our air desk do not have the ability to fly at night or in bad weather.

“Are we able to reach agreement with the police that if we use an AAH for a rescue, then we will pay for it, as cost seems to be the reason our requests get declined?”

‘To try head off any further requests’

While Fire and Emergency has lines rescue teams ready to be deployed quickly – and recently added swift water rescue teams that travel by road – it has much less ability than police to get helicopters for them.

In the Hahei incident, fire-fighters knew the girl was alive, but had to pass their chopper request through St John to police, who admitted they failed to ask enough questions.

FENZ did not sign up to a 2022 agreement between police, ambulance and other SAR agencies, which made it clear that police were in charge of co-ordination.

“Previously, co-ordination agencies contacted providers directly,” Health NZ told RNZ.

The 2022 agreement talks about being flexible while heading off any “sub-optimal” responses or “duplication”.

“The agency receiving that [initial] notification should take initial action with the aim of preserving life, and then must immediately contact the agency with responsibility,” it said. That agency is usually the police.

Health NZ said the routing of all air asset requests through the SAR lead agency – usually police – ensured clear command, effective risk management, and oversight of personnel in “often high-risk operations”.

But two years later, fire-fighters were still trying to order up choppers themselves to carry lines rescue teams.

In April 2024, St John sent FENZ a memo “to try head off any further requests putting the [St John] team in an awkward position of having to decline the AAH to a fellow emergency agency”.

Health NZ followed this up at a May 2025 meeting with FENZ, the OIA showed.

“The issue of cost and scarcity of rotary wing air ambulances was raised [in May 2025] because there are alternative helicopter options for SAR,” HNZ told RNZ.

The ambulance choppers were “the most expensive helicopter option and should be reserved for when their capability is essential to the SAR operation”.

‘Delays of up to one hour or more’

There were two flurries of e-mails within FENZ either side of that May 2025 meeting, concerning the Hahei rescue and another in June 2025 at Musick Point, near Bucklands Beach in Auckland.

At the Musick Pt rescue, a badly injured woman who fell on to rocks was flown out by rescue chopper without lines rescue getting involved – but the FENZ crew were upset at being sidelined, according to e-mails. There was no evidence of the rescue being delayed.

A manager discussed with St John a procedure for getting an early heads-up in event their expertise came in handy.

They also raised it with local police, and said police had acknowledged that fire-fighters’ lines rescue was ready to go quickly, while police SAR were “usually on-call having to come from home or off the road, prepare and load gear, then respond to the incident which could have delays of up to one hour or more, depending on the location”.

In December, non-FENZ responders raised questions after police twice stood down air ambulance choppers already alerted by St John, at Lake Taupō and at Whangaparāoa.

In the Lake Taupō case, a teenager had leapt off a burning boat.

When the chopper was reactivated after a 20-minute stand-down, it spotted him in the water. The teen was not injured.

Meanwhile, police had been talking about helping with the rescue with a non-AAH chopper company, based alongside the AAH one at Taupō airport.

“Cost was not a factor,” they told RNZ. “Depending on the nature of a call and which emergency service receives it, police will also consider local aviation assets, which may be able to deploy faster, with operators who know the area, and any associated risks, well.”

‘The AAH was stood down’

At Whangaparāoa after Christmas, St John’s national airdesk was ready to send out an air ambulance on behalf of police for a man trapped on rocks as big waves came in, but police stood it down.

“Police advised via phone call that they did not need an AAH response, therefore the AAH was stood down by the national air desk and returned to base.”

When RNZ asked why, police said: “Given the information was that there was a person in immediate distress, a Category 1 rescue was initiated, with Auckland Maritime assuming incident control.

“Staff in the Police Eagle helicopter, which was responding, observed that the person was stuck on rocks, not otherwise in further distress. A surf lifesaving jetski assisted in bringing the man to shore.”

The Eagle is usually a surveillance helicopter, not a rescue chopper.

‘Prioritises preservation of life’

When police approve a chopper for a search and rescue operation, they pay for it.

Police told RNZ their response to all emergency calls “prioritises preservation of life above all else”.

They routinely debriefed after rescues and regularly discussed operational matters in a leadership group that included FENZ, St John and NZDF. Maritime NZ’s Rescue Co-ordination Centre (RCC) – which co-ordinates the bigger rescues – was also part of that.

But a source with experience of air ambulances and SAR told RNZ the system was “a bit of a mess” and “fragmented”.

In the Musick Pt e-mails – which circulated among 15 FENZ lines rescuers and managers in June 2025 – they talked about “recurring” problems swiftly getting the right chopper when they needed it.

After Hahei, a group manager asked headquarters “that our process is promptly reviewed, clearly clarified and cemented for all involved so when we are called upon to rescue and save lives, it isn’t delayed and declined by others out of our organisation due what is perceived to be cost”.

FENZ national manager of response capability Ken Cooper – in a 2025 e-mail – said he would meet partner agencies “with the intent on resolving the matter”.

‘No patch protection’

Cooper told RNZ this month FENZ’s standard procedure for a technical rescue was to pass all information to police to co-ordinate.

It had “reaffirmed” that police were responsible for “requesting our assistance” in a SAR operation, he added.

After Musick Pt, a FENZ assistant commander’s e-mail said there was “no patch protection, no animosity, everyone pitching in together for the best result of the customer”.

Two front-liners expressed alarm that their bosses seemed happy for police to have more say over lines rescue.

“If police were to wrestle the [lines rescue] capability from Fire’s hands ultimately there will be poor outcomes for the public,” one wrote.

RNZ approached most of the people in the FENZ e-mail chain. While the majority did not respond four did – two said they were not aware of wider problems like this, while two said it was very much an ongoing, wider problem.

Health NZ is another gatekeeper in its role commissioning air ambulance choppers, including for ACC.

Because the country had no dedicated search-and-rescue fleet, AAH choppers spent about four percent of their time on SAR operations, it said.

The constraint on who can order one for a rescue was a legal one reinforced by the 2022 agreement to ensure “all assets attending SAR incidents are under the oversight of the SAR co-ordinator”.

The rising cost of air ambulance choppers and how to co-ordinate them efficiently has been an issue for years.

“These aircraft are scarce and high-cost resources, so their deployment is carefully managed to ensure they are used where the greatest clinical benefit can be achieved,” Health NZ said.

Maritime NZ, which runs the RCC, said it was not involved in the rescues that sparked concerns. “Questions on processes and systems relating to specific SARs should be directed to the agency that co-ordinated the response,” it said.

The NZ Search and Rescue Council said it had no mandate over operational matters or co-ordinating operations.

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EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert isn’t just one for the fans

Source: Radio New Zealand

Don’t care much about Elvis? It barely matters, because the awkwardly named EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert is a mesmerising and singular object worth admiring in its own right.

Maximalist director Baz Luhrmann (Moulin Rouge!, Romeo+Juliet) here has assembled unseen concert, rehearsal, film and press conference footage into a kind of documentary-concert film hybrid, tracking Elvis Presley’s return to live music after the disappointment of his 1960s movie career.

What comes out is a haunting collage that not only captures the frenetic energy of a gifted and intuitive showman going back to what he knows best, but also a compelling portrait of an awkward figure who is often the only person laughing at his own jokes.

This video is hosted on Youtube.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/26/epic-elvis-presley-in-concert-isnt-just-one-for-the-fans/

Young women being left behind in property market

Source: Radio New Zealand

Women – and particularly younger women – are being left behind in the property market, a situation that could exacerbate wealth gaps over time. RNZ

Whangārei woman Kate recently became a solo homeowner, after her relationship ended.

While being able to keep her family home has given her some stability, it’s come at a financial cost.

“I honestly don’t know how I would do it without a decent job,” she said. “If I had career breaks I would have had to sell up.

“Now I have to work harder … I think it would be hard for lots of females.”

She said she had been lucky that she made extra repayments on the mortgage earlier on, which means she can structure her loan in a way that makes it more manageable now.

“Just means less clothes for me. And being more conscious. But lucky I am financially literate.”

Data shows that as a millennial, she’s in a minority.

Women – and particularly younger women – are being left behind in the property market, a situation that could exacerbate wealth gaps over time.

Cotality has released its latest Women and Property report that shows, while both men and women value home ownership, there is a gender gap when it comes to ownership rates.

More than half of Gen Z males (those born from 1997-2012) and 66 percent of Millennial males (those born from 1981-1996) own the home they live in.

But only 33 percent of Gen Z females and 37 percent of Millennial females can say the same.

There is also a disparity among investors. Twenty percent of Gen Z men own investment properties and 15 percent of Millennial men, compared to 13 percent and 9 percent for women, respectively.

That is despite 62 percent of women saying property ownership was very important, compared to 54 percent of men.

Cotality chief property economist Kelvin Davidson said respondents pointed out various reasons for the different outcomes. “Certainly, look at incomes. We know there’s a wage gap in New Zealand. When you look at the proportion of women earning over $100,000… it’s quite a bit lower than males.”

A quarter of men told the survey they earned at least $100,000 a year, compared to 12 percent of women.

That would affect women’s ability to save deposits as well as pay mortgages, Davidson said.

Her said there also seemed to be a gap in the understanding of the home buying process. “In some cases that actually put females off even bothering.”

In total, 16 percent of New Zealand women said they had not bought a property yet because they did not know where to start. Only 6 percent of males said the same.

“There’s some potential policy implications here in terms of trying to fix the wage gap, and also looking at education initiatives perhaps pushing accounting or economics or finance in terms of education pathways,” Davidson said. “Earlier ownership is going to be associated with more stability, more security and greater options later in life.”

He said the figures showed systemic barriers rather than a lack of aspiration from women.

“Women clearly want to own property – in fact, more women than men rate property ownership as highly important.

“The challenge isn’t motivation, it’s knowledge, equity and support.

“The system often assumes a level of confidence, capital and experience that many women simply haven’t had equal opportunity to build.”

He said the most common method of ownership overall was co-ownership.

“Property is still a priority but it comes down to other factors, monetary and non-monetary.”

Cotality chief commercial officer Lisa Jennings said early entry to the property market gave people more time for their wealth to accumulate.

“And a gateway to more options later, as well as the tenure benefits from owning a property. This is a concern for younger females, who don’t own property as frequently as males.

“Building a deep understanding and specific gender knowledge of tomorrow’s property buyer is critical in addressing these disparities between males and females. It’s about strengthening communities and the resilience of New Zealand’s property market.”

Nearly two thirds of respondents to the survey said they had made changes to improve the energy efficiency or sustainability of their homes.

Of those who have made changes, just over half have made minor or low-cost updates such as LED lighting or draught-proofing, while just under half had made significant upgrades like solar panels/batteries, double glazing, or insulation.

Women were more likely to prioritise stability, security and long term liveability in property decisions.

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Is it fair that prices rise as power companies bank profits?

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Consumer survey found that almost half of respondents said the price of their latest power bill was not fair and 46 percent of New Zealanders thought gentailers’ profit levels were not justified. RNZ / Lauren Baker

Consumer NZ is asking how it is fair that power prices are rising at the same time as power companies are reporting large profits.

Meridian Energy on Wednesday reported a $226 million half-year profit. Earlier, Mercury had recorded a net profit of $20m in the year six months to December, and Genesis said its half year profit was $95m.

But at the same time, many customers have been receiving emails in recent weeks telling them that the cost of their power is set to rise this year.

After an increase of 12 percent last year, Consumer NZ has estimated that it is likely power prices will rise about 5 percent this year, largely driven by increases in lines charges.

A Consumer survey found that almost half of respondents said the price of their latest power bill was not fair and 46 percent of New Zealanders through gentailers’ profit levels were not justified.

An earlier survey found that almost one in five people cut back on food or other essentials to pay their power bills last winter and 21 percent went to bed earlier to keep warm.

Chief executive Jon Duffy said it appeared the gentailers’ social licence was starting to fade.

He said consumers saw companies talking “year after year” about needing profits to be able to invest in generation but had not seen that generation happen in a meaningful way for households.

“We don’t see that new generation come online or at least in the quantities that we need to lower prices. Consumer patience is running out with that.”

He said much of the new generation was tied to commercial contracts so households did not benefit.

The price of generation had come down on the back of a good year for hydro power, he said, but retail prices did not change. “That’s just printing money.

“The wholesale market is pricing in the potential dry year risk of there not being enough water in the lakes and there not being enough gas in the gas fields and that means they have to price in their risk which pushes prices up… I think people would have more patience if you saw a flood of renewable generation coming on to the market but we’re just not seeing that we’ve seen piecemeal incremental projects.”

He said in an advanced and industrialised economy the ability to pay for power should not be the issue it is in New Zealand.

Contact chief executive Mike Fuge said it had invested $2.4 billion in building energy infrastructure in the past five years.

“That is 2.4 terawatt hours of new generation, this is enough to power the equivalent of 320,000 Kiwi households…Contact remains focused on minimising price increases; however our input costs are increasing.”

He said lines and transmission charges made up 40 percent of an energy bill and continued to rise.

“New Zealand is in the middle of a renewable energy transition which requires significant investment in lines and distribution infrastructure, alongside the development of more renewable electricity generation.”

Mike Roan, chief executive of Meridian Energy, said he knew people wanted to lower prices.

“So do we, and we’re doing everything we can to achieve that – increasing generation supply and investing in new technology so we can offer even better offers to our customers. This result is going to help us deliver all that and more. When we do well, New Zealand gets the benefits. Around 80 cents of every dollar we pay in dividends goes to the government – 54 cents – or directly to Kiwis through their KiwiSaver and investment funds – 25 cents. We’re also one of New Zealand’s largest taxpayers – 27 percent of everything we earn is paid back as tax for the benefit of New Zealanders.

“Any suggestions that there’s not enough generation being built is just wrong. It’s in our best interests – and everyone’s interests – to make sure New Zealand has all the power it needs and at prices that are as affordable as possible. We’re continuing to build as much as we can, as fast as we can. And we’re not alone.

“The industry is currently building at a rate that is 25 percent higher than at the peak of Think Big and our development pipeline is big enough to double Meridian’s generation. We now hold 8.0 TWh of secured development options and a further 7.3 TWh of advanced prospects – more than a third of New Zealand’s current electricity demand.”

Bridget Abernethy, chief executive of the Electricity Retailers and Generators Association, said the organisation understood it was a challenging time for many households.

“New Zealand is in the midst of a renewable building boom.

“ERGANZ members have added more than $4.3 billion of investment in new wind, solar and geothermal to the renewables pipeline in the past year alone.”

She said MBIE data in the September quarter last year showed the lines component of a power bill up 16.7 percent and energy 6.6 percent.

“This reflects significant capital investment in transmission and local network infrastructure required to meet growing electricity demand across New Zealand.

“Anyone struggling to pay their power bill should contact their retailer as soon as possible, as there is a range of support options available.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/26/is-it-fair-that-prices-rise-as-power-companies-bank-profits/

Lyall Bay residents fear neglected Queen’s Drive property is a danger to passersby

Source: Radio New Zealand

Residents of Wellington’s Lyall Bay fear a neglected property in the seaside suburb‘s Queens Drive is in such a bad state it is a danger to people passing in front of the building.

Those fears had heightened since a severe storm struck the city more than a week ago, tearing roofing iron from the two-storey building and breaking windows and weatherboards.

Residents said the house had been the subject of multiple complaints over many years and now looked like it was just one wind-gust away from collapse.

Residents of Wellington’s Lyall Bay fear a neglected property is a danger to people passing in front of the building. RNZ / Mark Papalii

At ground level the more than 100-year-old house is boarded up – with windows and what may have been shop frontage covered in painted plywood.

On the second level glass-less windows left the building open to elements and extensive graffiti could be seen across the internal walls.

On the building’s frontage a veranda – blackened with dirt – hung above the pavement. Beneath it a supporting pillar bulged outward at its base.

A pillar supporting the building’s veranda bulges towards the pavement. RNZ / Bill Hickman

Emma Dee said the sight of the dilapidated structure made her “hands shake” because her Rongotai home was struck by roofing iron from a different house during the recent storms.

“We had a neighbour – who lived five houses down from us – lose their roof and it took out part of our house while we were in there with with our kids. It’s so amazing to me that nobody was injured by shrapnel or killed or worse.

“I’m shaking. There’s a little bit of PTSD there,” Dee said.

Emma Dee says the sight of the recent damage to the Queens Drive building made her “hands shake” after her own home was struck by airborne roofing iron during recent storms. RNZ / Bill Hickman

‘One gust of wind away from falling down’

Michelle, a Lyall Bay resident for the last 20 years, said she was surprised the building survived the recent gales.

“There was previous storms where the fire brigade had been called and they had commented on how rickety the roof was when they went up to secure the tiles.

“I was kinda surprised to see it still standing though because over the last six to 12 months the centre beam in the shop window has started to bow quite badly. So surprised that the veranda’s still there but it’s quite dangerous. I really think that council should be looking at stopping people walking underneath it in case an accident happens.

“It’s not somewhere you’d dawdle around under now. It’s one gust of wind away from falling down I’d say,” she said.

Lyall Bay resident Michelle is surprised the building survived the recent gales. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Neighbour Jo Maunder said the structure’s deterioration over the last two years had heightened concerns about hazards on the property.

“It’s a safety thing for the community that worries me. There’s so many people going past that building everyday to get their coffee or go to the beach and lately there’s been young people using it as a bit of a club house I think – coming and going – and the police have been involved in trying to secure it better.

“We keep an eye out. We’re just worried about their safety and the safety of anyone else ’cause sooner or later that [beam’s] going to go,” Maunder said.

Several times a year people knocked on her door keen to contact the owners with a mind to purchasing the property but, as of yet, nothing had changed.

“Doesn’t it seem mad that a property like that would sit empty? The building’s gone to rack and ruin but what a great place to live. It upsets me because we need more housing and, you know, it just seems mad,” Maunder said.

Neighbour Jo Maunder said the structure’s deterioration over the last two years had heightened concerns. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Beside the building rope and hastily-nailed planks held together a sagging fence in front of a small garden swamped with six-foot-high weeds.

Maunder said the garden had become so overgrown someone had started stashing stolen items in the overgrowth.

“We just thought ‘what’s all that noise?’ one day and there were all these police cars outside. [They] were going into the property and pulling out brand new bicycles and tyres and kegs of beer,” Maunder said.

Wellington police confirmed they had been called to the house at least five times in the last two years over problems with people entering and damaging the building.

They said they had been in contact with a relative of the owners and had provided “routine prevention advice”.

Wellington Police confirmed they had been called to the house at least five times in the last two years. RNZ / Bill Hickman

The home is listed as being owned by Eva Shue and Jan Meng Shue.

RNZ had attempted to contact the Shue family but had not received a response.

Property records showed the Shues were also listed as the owners of a property in Newtown’s Millward Street which burnt down in suspicious circumstances in 2013.

At the time of the fire that house had also been unoccupied for some time – although Detective Sergeant Glenn Barnett said there was evidence of people “dossing down” in the building illegally.

Complaints date back nearly three decades

In a statement Wellington City Council said it had been receiving complaints about the condition of the Lyall Bay building since 1997.

Wellington City Council said it had been receiving complaints about the condition of the Lyall Bay building since 1997. RNZ / Mark Papalii

It said – following complaints about the building’s veranda between 2002 and 2006 – an engineer advised that the structure was not dangerous.

The council made further attempts to contact the owners and their son in 2017 and, following additional complaints, between 2022 and 2025.

“The Building Compliance and Building Resilience teams have continued to attempt to engage with the owner with no response. A requirement to undertake maintenance work under the veranda bylaw has been requested with a due date of May 2026. It is important to note that on no occasion has council received any response or communication from the owner,” the council said.

The Building Act 2004 defined a building as dangerous if it was likely to cause damage to other buildings or injury or death to any persons in it or on another property – whether by collapse, in the event of fire or otherwise.

“Council has access to very few powers until a building has reached this high threshold. Once it has reached the threshold of Dangerous or Insanitary there are a number of provisions under the Building Act that council could consider – noting that no matter which path council pursues all we can require of the owner is to address the dangerous or insanitary elements of the building. We cannot require a building owner to renovate the building, or even get it to a habitable state again,” the council said.

The council said compliance officers made regular monitoring visits. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The council said compliance officers made regular monitoring visits and said “the building remains secure”.

Another resident in the area – who did not want to be named – said he had made multiple complaints to the council about the building over the last six or seven years.

He said his partner had spoken to a man who regularly accessed a nearby building on Rua Street understood to be owned by the same family, but he had reacted defensively and told her the structure was safe – a statement he took with a grain of salt.

“I don’t feel safe walking under the veranda and I purposely avoid it. Because I just don’t know how long it’s going to hold out.

“It’s very windy in the area and I can just imagine in a hot summer day – if a fire was to go on – it would definitely catch the neighbouring houses,” he said.

The house on Queens Drive. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Council’s interpretation of Buildings Act may be impeding action – property lawyer

Property lawyer Kristine King said it could be a challenge to balance owner’s property rights against health and safety issues and neighbourhood concerns.

She said it was up to local councils to determine how they interpreted the definitions of an Insanitary or Dangerous structure under the Buildings Act.

“We’ve got these definitions – which are fairly broad – [but] it’s the policies, their own internal policies of how they’re interpreting that and then how they’re applying it in practice.

“It’s interesting that council is saying that’s a ‘high’ threshold when the definition of ‘dangerous’ just includes ‘injury’. It says ‘injury or death’. I understand entirely if their definition required ‘death’, that’s a very, very high standard, but ‘injury’ in of itself is a far lower bar so I think it comes back to council’s interpretation and their own policies and whether we need to be looking at some measure to get them to revisit their approach,” King said.

The owners/occupants of the buildings have been approached for comment.

Wellington City Council said it would respond to a request for comment about recent storm damage to the building under the terms of the Official Information Act.

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Is FAFO the demise of gentle parenting?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Parenting experts, parenting studies, influencers, courses, and books – being a parent today can feel like drinking from a fire hydrant of information.

​Not to mention, this generation of parents’ hyper-fixation on their own childhood, creating a micro-focus on how decisions and reactions towards their children might determine the success and issues kids will face as adults.

It can be exhausting.

Gentle parenting taught parents to co-regulate their child’s emotions by remaining calm.

Getty Images

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/26/is-fafo-the-demise-of-gentle-parenting/

Volunteer firefighters renew calls for ACC mental health cover

Source: Radio New Zealand

Emergency volunteer Peter Ottley. Supplied

Volunteer firefighter Peter Ottley still remembers his world turning upside down.

Two weeks after a call out to a fatal bus crash, he said he lost the plot.

He has PTSD, but like all emergency volunteers, he is not eligible for ACC cover for mental injury.

Ottley was frustrated, because all they got were apologies.

“‘We’ll do our best’, but there is no best, because money is more important than life.”

Volunteers have been lobbying the government to change the legislation for years, in 2025 a petition with 36,549 signatures was unsuccessful.

Now Land Search and Rescue are pushing the government to reconsider saying January’s Mt Maunganui tragedy showed the level of trauma they were repeatedly exposed to with no long term protection.

Long time emergency volunteers Jarrad Scott and Peter Ottley were desperate for change.

“The fact that you can go out and be drunk and wrap a car around a power pole and be covered by ACC, but if you’re volunteering to save lives, you’re not covered.

“It’s ridiculous,” Scott said.

Under current legislation ACC could provide broad physical injury cover to volunteers – the same available to all New Zealanders. If a physical injury resulted in a mental injury that was also covered by ACC. But unlike employees, volunteers did not get any support for mental injury caused by what they saw on the job.

Or in other words, if you have not broken your leg or you were not being paid, ACC could not do anything to help mentally unwell volunteer emergency responders.

Crews work on the Mt Maunganui slip site, where six people were killed by a landslide in January. Nick Monro/RNZ

The cumulative load

“I was the guy that always thought I was strong and could deal with any situation. And then everything sort of accumulated where it sort of built up.”

Scott had 20 years with Land Search and Rescue (LandSAR). Two years ago that all stopped.

He was called out to a report of a missing person. At the briefing, he realised he knew the missing person quite well.

Scott said he was advised not to attend, but he insisted.

“I wasn’t forced to go, I wasn’t asked to go, I was told not to, and I still went against that.”

Why? The reason he volunteered in the first place.

“On the hope that he was okay and, you know, we could help him.”

The team could not help him, and Scott assisted in body recovery.

Emergency volunteer Jarrad Scott. Supplied

It was after this that Scott began to struggle. He admits some of this was his responsibility because he ignored LandSAR advice and went to the scene anyway.

LandSAR provided Employee Assistance Program (EAP) assistance, in person counselling and debriefs, before he was told to go to a GP.

The doctor tried to arrange psychologist treatment and filed an ACC claim – only for it to be turned down.

“I got a phone call from ACC and the lady said, really sorry to tell you, we know you’ve been through a horrible thing, but you’re not covered and your claim’s going to be declined … because I am a volunteer.

“I asked them … what about the guy standing next to me in the blue uniform doing the same job at the same time, same scene. Is he covered?

“And she said yes, because he’s being paid.”

At this point, Scott said his mental health was getting worse by the day.

“The constant flashbacks and daymares, I call them, it’s like a nightmare, but during the day, it’s just … insane.”

Because of his volunteer status, not only was he declined ACC care, but also salary compensation.

Eventually Scott was diagnosed with PTSD and LandSAR was able to fund specialist treatment EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing) which helped dramatically.

He said LandSAR had done everything it could to support him, but the legislation continued to hurt.

“It’s too late really to help me, but I want people going forward to be covered.

“The system’s so flawed that you’ve got a whole nation that runs on volunteers, and none of us are covered. St John’s and Fire, Coast Guard, but none of them are covered, and they all see horrific stuff.”

Rescuing their own

LandSAR chief executive Wendy Wright agreed the legislation fell short.

LandSAR chief executive Wendy Wright. Supplied

“When we look at the reliance we have as a country on volunteers across emergency services and search and rescue, 95 percent search and rescue workforce are actually volunteers.

“They do it because they want to serve their community.”

And that was part of the pressure.

“When you have in a situation like you do at Mount Manganui, that is the local Tauranga volunteers and they’re … supporting their own community.”

She said sometimes it was the cumulative effect that created a mental injury. Other times, just one event like the Mauau landslide would be enough.

The cost of volunteering

Peter Ottley was also familiar with this battle. He did not know if he would ever be able to return to work again.

His wife worked two jobs to keep them afloat.

Ottley was a volunteer fire fighter in Kingston for 13 years, but in December 2024 his life changed after attending a bus crash.

“I turned the world a little bit upside down and lost the plot.”

It was PTSD. He became incredibly angry, irritable, and anxious.

“Didn’t want to be around people … my anxiety was going through the roof.”

Like Scott, Ottley’s PTSD was not from one event but built from 13 years serving the community.

Fire and Emergency New Zealand (FENZ) said crew safety was a top priority and it provided comprehensive support, including free counselling and psychological support.

He said FENZ was doing what it could and funding EMDR sessions, but it did not have a system for people like him.

Government sympathetic, but doesn’t want change

Parliament has shown little interest in making changes to the system, despite the fact volunteers made up 86 percent of the front-line workforce of Fire and Emergency.

In late 2025 Parliament agreed volunteer firefighters offered vital services to New Zealand, but it did not want to change the legislation over fears of setting a precedent.

“We do not consider it practical for all types of volunteers to be provided with ACC workplace coverage.”

It said the estimated cost of providing equitable cover for FENZ volunteers at $244,533 per year, or roughly $20 per volunteer firefighter annually.

The Minister for ACC, Scott Simpson, said his focus was on ensuring the scheme was sustainable for future generations, not expanding.

Labour’s ACC spokesperson Camilla Belich. ©VNP / Phil Smith

Labour’s ACC spokesperson Camilla Belich had a different view.

The party was so compelled by the examples in last year’s petition it created a Members Bill asking for volunteer firefighters to have the same cover as their paid counterparts.

“We haven’t been approached by other occupations to date, but we’ll be happy to consider those alongside this change if necessary.”

She said Labour would have a full ACC policy going into the election.

Volunteers a ticking time bomb

Both Scott and Ottley knew they were not the only ones.

“I’ve got no doubt that there’s volunteers out there that have been suffering through PTSD, potentially taking their own lives, but there’s just no need for it,” Scott said.

Around 25 Fire and Emergency volunteer firefighters responded to the Mount Maunganui landslide.

“You don’t get a choice of where you go or what you’ve got to do. We [volunteers] go and do what we have to do, we’re more often than not there well before the full [paid] people … sometimes it’s at least an hour to two hours before anyone else comes to help or support us … and the volleys pretty much are out straight away, bang,” said Ottley.

Ottley said it was unbelievable volunteers could get paid time off for a broken leg, but their minds were not valued the same.

“It should be automatic that, if someone needs help or whatever it is that, it’s done … but money is more important than life.”

He said emergency volunteers were a ticking time bomb, seeing trauma after trauma, waiting to go off.

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