‘Please hit pause’: Advocates and UK MP call for passport grace period

Source: Radio New Zealand

Dual citizens face having to get both passports and keep them up to date – and to get a UK passport soon if they want to travel from the end of February. Gill Bonnett

UK lobby groups are calling on the British government to urgently delay the deadline for dual nationals to get UK passports.

It comes as reports that the British Home Office is allowing airlines to decide whether they accept expired British passports when the border changes start on Wednesday.

Advocates have accused the government of failing to communicate the impending requirement for overseas dual citizens to use a UK passport, or certificate of entitlement, saying many only found out last month.

An opposition MP, Liberal Democrat Will Forster, has also asked for a grace period to allow travellers to catch up with the change.

Campaign groups British in Europe and ‘the3million’ wrote to the government this week along with immigration lawyers asking for the deadline to be postponed. They also want the cost of a certificate of entitlement, now a £589 (NZ$1330) digital addition to a foreign passport, to be significantly reduced.

“Please hit the pause button,” the3million’s head of advocacy Monique Hawkins told RNZ. “Think again, do more comms. Canada paused it twice before they began their enforcement. But from what we’ve heard, I think they’re digging in and they’re not prepared to move on this at all.”

Getting a certificate of entitlement could be a very complex, expensive process, she said, but for people with a recently expired passport it could be made a lot more straightforward.

“It should cost no more than the cost of a passport, I think, and they could just maintain one passport then,” she said. “We would like carriers to show flexibility for carriers to perhaps look at an expired British passport and think, yes, OK, we can accept that.

“If you look at what Canada did. Canada had exactly the same problem for its own dual nationals, but they came up with a pragmatic solution.”

Canada’s workaround, a special authorisation, was still open to its citizens 10 years after it required its nationals to use its passport, she said.

Using an expired UK passport

The UK Guardian is reporting that the Home Office said airline carriers could at their own discretion accept an expired British passport as alternative documentation, in addition to a valid foreign passport.

It would be a further frustration for dual nationals who had sent their expired UK passport away to get a new one to comply with the new rules, the newspaper noted.

Hawkins called on airlines who will implement the new regime to be sympathetic, but she feared many people would be turned away at international check-in desks. Carriers face a £2000 (NZ$4500) fine per passenger for allowing passengers with incorrect documentation to board.

A Carrier Support Hub was a 24/7 Home Office service airlines could contact to check that someone was British, she said.

The groups want the government to reconsider its overall position. “People are saying I’m just going to renounce my British citizenship. You know, it’s an expensive process to renounce it, but I’ve had it. Why should I still feel any loyalty towards the UK?

“And I think that’s tragic, really. I mean, that’s not how our country should treat its citizens. I really don’t understand what the mischief is that they’re trying to address. They want to know who’s coming to the country. It is just crazy that a New Zealand national coming as a tourist can get an ETA for £16 no problem and their dual British New Zealand partner is blocked from going to this country that they once belonged to. It doesn’t make sense.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/20/please-hit-pause-advocates-and-uk-mp-call-for-passport-grace-period/

‘Sort it out’: Minister’s frustration with flooded cycleway

Source: Radio New Zealand

A flooded cycleway at Petone. Phil Pennington / RNZ

Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop says Wellington Water needs to “sort it out” and fix a flooded cycleway.

The rail underpass tunnel on the $70 million cycleway at Petone was still thigh-deep in water on Friday morning, days on from Monday’s storm.

New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) has passed responsibility to Hutt City Council, which passed it to Wellington Water.

Bishop, who is also the local MP for Hutt South and transport minister, said it flooded because a pump station lost power during the weather bomb.

“It’s clear that Wellington Water are responsible for the pumps, sumps and drains,” he told RNZ on Friday. “Wellingtonians know all too well about the problems with that organisation. As infrastructure minister, I urge them to sort it out.”

Commuting cyclists were now choosing to avoid the tunnel and take their bikes instead through the railway station’s pedestrian underpass tunnel, which remains dry. While it was at the same depth as the cycleway tunnel, it was 200m to the north, further away from Korokoro Stream.

Wellington Water was grappling with its biggest ever disaster at the Moa Point treatment station, which had been spewing raw sewage onto the capital’s south coast.

The agency did not mention a pump when asked earlier about the underpass.

RNZ has asked Wellington Water about the pump.

It said instead on Wednesday the underpass was a “multi-agency dependency”.

“New Zealand Transport Agency is obviously responsible for the state highway. Wellington Water manages the stormwater culvert and Greater Wellington Regional Council [manages] the waterway – in this case, the Korokoro Stream.”

This was under a decades-old water courses agreement.

NZTA designed and built the cycleway that blew its budget by almost three times, working out at $25m per kilometre – about the same as some state highways cost – partly because it did not anticipate so much contamination of the strip under the path or how it had a lot of cables and pipes already running under it.

The agency was now a lead partner in the much more expensive harbour cycleway that will connect to the Petone one, and in the two huge state highway projects nearby, Riverlink and Petone-to-Grenada.

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Shallow, sharp quake jolts Canterbury

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied / Geonet

Cantabrians have been jolted by a short, sharp earthquake.

Geonet which monitors earthquakes says the “moderate” magnitude 2.8 quake was around 10 kilometres deep and centred south-east of Christchurch.

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Grown-ups, playing is good for you too

Source: Radio New Zealand

Somewhere along the way to adulthood, time to play fades away. We tend to trade silliness and imagination for seriousness and busyness.

Yet there is clear evidence that adults benefit from playfulness just as children do.

Play has long been treated as something separate from adult life.

Unsplash

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Waipā and Ōtorohanga states of emergency extended

Source: Radio New Zealand

Water rushing over a blown out culvert on Corcoran Rd, Te Pahu, Waipā. Supplied/Ryan Vickers

Both Waipā and Ōtorohanga Districts have extended their respective states of emergency for a further seven days.

Both districts experienced localised flooding after storms on Friday 13 February, which also washed away a water treatment plant supplying the township of Pirongia in Waipā.

Waipā Mayor Mike Pettit said the district still had a long way to go when it came to repairs.

“What we’re focused on at the moment is making sure people are safe and secure and trying to get people back into their homes, that’s our first mission.”

Across both districts 16 properties had been given a yellow sticker, restricting access, while eight properties still needed to be assessed.

He said there was some roading damage in Waipā, but the damage to water infrastructure was extensive, especially in Pirongia.

“And some of it simply isn’t there anymore.”

Pettit said the upcoming switchover of the Pirongia water supply would be a critical time.

In an update on Friday morning, the councils said the decision to extend the state of emergency followed ongoing response efforts by both councils, emergency services, iwi and partner agencies after severe weather events across the two districts.

The state of emergency would remain in place until Saturday, 28 February, enabling response agencies to continue accessing resources and act quickly to support affected communities.

Ōtorohanga District Mayor Rodney Dow said conditions in parts of the district remained challenging, with ongoing impacts to roads, farms and access routes.

“Our district has been significantly affected, and the state of emergency gives us the ability to keep supporting communities, coordinate response efforts and respond quickly as conditions continue to change.

“The extension is not a reason to panic. It enacts the right legal settings to continue managing the situations in the best way possible.”

Ōtorohanga District Mayor Rodney Dow. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Ten properties on Whatauri Rd, near Arapuni had lost road access after a bridge was destroyed. The council said a replacement bridge and road was due to be completed and, in the meantime, residents had quadbike arrangements to get in and out.

Another six properties were affected after a bridge was destroyed on Mangati Road, Ōtorohanga. The council said this would need a longer-term solution to fix but people had been given private access through a property.

A long-term detour would need to remain in place on State Highway 39.

Altogether, there were currently 34 displaced people, relating to Phillips Ave (Ōtorohanga) and Corcoran Rd (Waipā district).

Local iwi had suspended commemorations of the Battle at Rangiaowhia this weekend to allow the community to focus on recovery efforts. The Western Waikato Emergency Operating Centre paused on Friday morning to acknowledge the memorial.

Pettit said the council had some long-term decisions to make, but for now it was focused on bringing back normality.

The Waipā District Mayoral Disaster Relief Fund was now open for applications from people and groups across the district.

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How the British press reacted to Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest

Source: Radio New Zealand

British media are preparing their Friday morning newspapers in the wake of ex-prince Andrew’s arrest.

It will be no surprise that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, pictured soon after leaving a UK police station and looking stunned in the back of a car, is dominating front pages.

Meanwhile, reporters gathered en masse outside Buckingham Palace in London.

Supplied

Andrew was arrested on Thursday – his 66th birthday – over allegations he sent confidential government documents to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The younger brother of King Charles, Andrew was stripped of his titles and honours last October because of his connections to Epstein.

He has always denied any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein, and said he regrets their friendship.

On The Sun’s front page, Andrew’s face his plastered under the headline ‘Now he’s sweating’ – a reference to the former prince’s claim he doesn’t sweat.

The outlet also featured the blurb: ‘Royals in crisis, Andrew arrested’.

The Daily Express is running the same image, with a smaller image of King Charles with the headline ‘The law must take its course’ – a quote from the king.

The Daily Mail has ‘Downfall’ in large block letters with the same image of Andrew in the car.

Screenshot / BBC

“Looking haggard, shamed and haunted, Andrew is released from police custody 11 hours after his arrest plunged the modern monarchy into its gravest peril”, a blurb next to the picture reads.

The Times’ headline reads ‘The arrest of Andrew’, and The Guardian’s reads ‘King says ‘law must take its course’ after Andrew arrested’.

Metro’s front page features a different image of Andrew and a smaller one of the king. The headline reads ‘King: Law must take its course’.

Finally, the Financial Times has no image of the ex-prince, and just the beginning of a stort about the arrest under a larger story about US President Donald Trump.

The headline for the story about Andrew’s arrest reads: ‘Police arrest former prince Andrew in misconduct probe over Epstein links’.

The rest of the front pages are posted below.

Supplied

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Supplied

Supplied

Supplied

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Toy Story 5 trailer drops: Woody and Buzz are back to take on tech

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Toy Story franchise is back with its fifth instalment and this time – the toys are taking on technology.

By the time Toy Story 5 hits theatres in June, it will have been seven years since Toy Story 4 was released.

The trailer for the latest Disney and Pixar film has just been released today, with plenty of familiar characters.

Woody, Buzz Lightyear, Jessie and the rest of the gang are all back.

But the toys that remained with Bonnie after Andy gave them a new home at the end of Toy Story 4 have become second best to a new one – a Lilypad smart tablet.

The trailer shows Bonnie – now 8 years old – becoming obsessed with her tablet and Jessie growing angrier with its seemingly lack of interest in her concerns.

Jessie reaches out to Woody for help.

“Is it as bad out there for toys as they say it is?” she asks.

“We’re finding more abandoned toys each day,” he tells her.

“I don’t know, Jessie, toys are for play but tech if for everything.”

Understanding Jessie’s fears of “losing Bonnie to this device”, he finds his way back to the team to help.

As well as the much-loved characters from the previous films in the franchise, all new ones will be introduced in Toy Story 5.

According to a press release, Craig Robinson has joined the franchise as Atlas, a talking GPS hippo toy, Shelby Rabara voices a camera toy named Snappy, Scarlett Spears will voice now 8-year-old Bonnie, and Mykal-Michelle Harris voices Blaze, “an independent 8-year-old girl who loves animals”.

Tom Hanks and Tim Allen are both back voicing Woody and Buzz Lightyear with Greta Lee voicing Lilypad.

Toy Story 5 is directed by Andrew Stanton, also known for other animated hits like Finding Nemo, Finding Dory and Wall-E.

According to Variety, Stanton says the film is less of a traditional “good-versus-evil showdown” and more “an existential reckoning for toys facing obsolescence”.

According to The Numbers, the Toy Story franchise has grossed more than US$3.3 billion worldwide. Toy Story 4 and Toy Story 3 are its biggest earners so far, grossing more than $1b each.

Toy Story 5 will be released in New Zealand theatres on 18 June 2026.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/20/toy-story-5-trailer-drops-woody-and-buzz-are-back-to-take-on-tech/

Four hospitalised after chemical incident at Levin plant released

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

The four people who were hospitalised following a chemical incident at a meat processing plant in Levin have since been discharged.

Emergency services were called to the Alliance Group site on Hamaria Road at about 6.30pm on Thursday.

St John said four people were taken to Palmerston North Hospital following the incident – one in a serious condition and three in moderate condition.

An Alliance Group spokesperson said they had all now been discharged, but two were expected to return to hospital later on Friday for additional checks.

The spokesperson said processing at the plant resumed after Fire and Emergency (FENZ) handed back the site, and an internal investigation was underway.

WorkSafe said it had been notified of the incident, and that it would be conducting its own investigation.

“We are currently making initial enquiries to understand the circumstances of the event and will respond accordingly.”

Firefighters from Levin, Ōtaki and Palmerston North attended and carried out a precautionary decontamination.

Five ambulances, three rapid response units, two operations managers and a St John major incident support team initially responded to the incident.

A further 18 people were assessed and treated at the scene for a minor condition but did not need hospital transport, St John said.

A spokesperson for St John said the gas involved at the site was chlorine.

The Alliance group clarified that it was a “chemical incident” rather than a gas leak.

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Auckland Business Chamber optimistic govt’s surcharge ban efforts have stalled

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland Business Chamber chief executive Simon Bridges, who campaigned for an end to the policy, said he was hopeful this was a win for small and medium businesses.

The Auckland Business Chamber is cautiously optimistic that government promises to ban paywave and credit surcharges from card payments appear to have stalled.

In July last year, Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson moved to scrap the fees, declaring: “That pesky note or sticker on the payment machine will become a thing of the past.”

The ban was set to kick into effect no later than May 2026, and the move was heavily opposed by businesses.

Now, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said the government was taking “a breather” on the policy.

“[It’s] still under consideration. We just want to make sure we understand all of the implications before we push the final button on it,” Luxon said.

Auckland Business Chamber chief executive Simon Bridges, who campaigned for an end to the policy, told Morning Report he was hopeful this was a win for small and medium businesses.

“We’ve been stuck between the big banks and the payments providers, the visas and mastercards and consumers, and I suppose politics. I can tell you 29 chambers all over the country reacted viscerally to this, the submissions almost to a single one opposed this strongly,” he said.

“I’ve made and I know Retail NZ has made clear to any minister who will listen our opposition to this. So, look, we don’t know for sure but we’re hopeful this is a win.”

Bridges said the problem with the bill as it stood was a very serious unintended consequences from a blanket ban.

“It’s a slogan in a sense more than it is a policy. In Australia, I understand they walked away from a very similar policy after the unintended consequences and so were there,” he said.

“I hope Scott Simpson and his colleagues will go back and either ditch this or find something more nuanced for the issues that are there.”

The move to axe surcharges followed growing public frustration at the cost and transparency of the charges; the Commerce Commission estimated New Zealanders were paying up to $150 million in surcharges each year, including $45 to $65 million in what it considered excessive charges.

Businesses pushed back, Retail New Zealand arguing every one or two and a half percent made a difference in a tough economy.

The Retail Payment System (Ban on Merchant Surcharges) Amendment Bill is now languishing on the order paper, ready for be read a second time.

“It’s going nowhere,” New Zealand First leader Winston Peters told reporters on Thursday afternoon, after Luxon’s comments.

Asked if there was any disagreement between the coalition parties, Luxon said no.

“We want to take a breather and have a think and make sure that we fully understand the implications of that on all businesses,” he said.

ACT leader David Seymour said businesses could not afford it.

“The government said it would do it. We’ve listened to the very strong feedback. I’ve listened to small business people saying we get a million bucks through our card system, a 2 percent fee we have to eat would be $20,000, our small business can’t afford that, and that’s why the conversations carry on,” Seymour said.

“We are listening as a government to small business and we’ll get to a better place.”

Seymour said the surcharge ban bill had been through Select Committee, where his colleague Parmjeet Parmar suggested businesses should be able to keep surcharges if they offered a free alternative, like EFTPOS.

“Maybe that’s where we end up, who knows.”

Asked whether the ban would be in place by May as promised, Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson said he was “hopeful”.

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Major delays as crash blocks lane on SH2 in Wellington

Source: Radio New Zealand

X/NZTA

A crash on State Highway 2 between Wellington city and Petone is causing delays for motorists.

The Transport Agency said the northbound lane is blocked just before the Petone off-ramp.

There are reports of long queues.

A police spokesperson said a truck hit the median barrier just before 8am on Friday.

No one has been injured.

Police said people should avoid the area if possible.

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Wellington residents clean poo spray off houses after severe weather, failed Moa Point sewage spill

Source: Radio New Zealand

Faecal spray on a home on the Esplanade in Wellington. RNZ/Charlotte Cook

A film of toxic poo spray has coated homes around Wellington’s south coast after nearly a billion litres of raw sewerage have been dumped in the marine reserve.

Strong winds and severe weather have made an already feral problem worse, forcing locals to clean faecal spray off their homes, fearing a public health hazard.

“It’s been an absolute shit show,” resident Roger Young said.

“Sorry about the pun, but it’s been disgusting.”

Roger Young. RNZ/Charlotte Cook

Roger Young has lived in Houghton Bay for decades. His house is 100 metres back from the shore and was still tainted by Monday’s storm.

“The swell was seven metres rolling in on Monday morning, and the sea foam is carrying right across Houghton Bay, Princess Bay, Lyall Bay, probably Island Bay as well, and probably contaminated faeces all the way through it.”

He said his windows were filthy with what’s likely to be more than just salt and sand.

Island Bay resident Chris owns a house on the Esplanade. It was once cream, but despite three attempts with the hose, a brown smear remains.

“It’s slimy grime. When you run your finger along it, you get these brown marks of this residue that’s on there and that’s certainly not from salt.”

So what is it?

“Poo”, he said.

Despite three attempts with the hose, a brown smear remains on Chris’ house. RNZ/Charlotte Cook

“It’s residue from all that sewage that’s floating up and down the coast.

“I’m going to have to fully scaffold the house and wash it down. It’s now a health hazard to my tenants.

“It’s totally unacceptable that we’ve got to put up with this.”

Residents weren’t the only ones taking a hit. Popular Lyall Bay food stop Puku Pies was seeing the effects too.

Manager Rylee said most mornings, the windows are covered with a gritty, smelly sludge.

“The other day, when the Monday storm happened… we couldn’t even see out of the windows,” Rylee said.

“So we had to do that as soon as we got here in the morning and clean them off and yeah. We’re having to do it like at least every second day. It’s disgusting.”

Popular Lyall Bay food stop Puku Pies was seeing the effects too. RNZ/Charlotte Cook

Young is furious that in the midst of it all, Wellington Water chair Nick Leggett has legged it and resigned, leaving apologies unsaid.

“How can this happen in 2026? And how can we have the head of Wellington Water, Nick Leggett, just resign and think he’s just going to walk away from this?” Young said.

“People need to be held accountable and heads need to roll, seriously.”

Young said his son broke down crying because he couldn’t use the water for a couple of months.

“I just started crying, too. I’m going holy hell, this is our backyard and this has happened.”

Chris said he would be billing Wellington Water for his time washing the houses if the toxic seaspray continues to plague the coast.

The alternative was a $900 quote to have it professionally washed.

“Perhaps the chief executive might want to get out of his comfortable chair and come and have a look at what’s really happening around the district,” he said.

“I’m absolutely pissed off.”

A health warning sign on a beach in Wellington after the sewage spill. RNZ/Charlotte Cook

Wellington Water was still unsure what caused the Moa Point failure and how long the plant would be out of action.

It was not conducting sampling on private properties, but is instead conducting sampling in the sea around Wellington’s south coast to understand the impacts of the Moa Point discharge on the area. It was the National Public Health Service’s role to assess whether any public-health risks arise from environmental conditions and to provide health advice where required.

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Injury woes for Phoenix women and men

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lara Wall of Wellington Phoenix. www.photosport.nz

There are major injury concerns for both the women’s and men’s Wellington Phoenix sides.

They have lost two New Zealand internationals to serious injuries ahead of their respective round 18 A-League matches.

Football Ferns fullback Lara Wall and All Whites attacking midfielder Sarpreet Singh will both be sidelined for up to eight weeks.

The Phoenix women have had more than their fair share of injuries this season.

Wall tore her left calf in the defeat to Central Coast Mariners at Porirua Park on Sunday, while Singh injured the medial collateral ligament (MCL) in his left knee in his much-anticipated Phoenix return against Western Sydney last Friday night.

Sarpreet Singh waves to fans. www.photosport.nz

As well as potentially sidelining her for the remainder of the Ninja A-League regular season, the calf injury unfortunately rules Wall out of the Ferns’ upcoming FIFA Women’s World Cup 2027 qualifiers in the Solomon Islands.

Singh is likely to miss the All Whites matches against Finland and Chile at Eden Park at the end of next month, on top of the Phoenix men’s next five Isuzu UTE A-League matches.

All Whites fullback Tim Payne has also been ruled out of Saturday’s derby against Auckland FC with a hamstring injury.

The second-placed Phoenix women play at Melbourne Victory on Friday night.

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North Brave duo set to debut for White Ferns

Source: Radio New Zealand

Nensi Patel of the Northern Brave. www.photosport.nz

There are two new players in the White Ferns squad named to take on Zimbabwe later this month.

Northern Brave duo Nensi Patel and Kayley Knight have been included for the series, which will be the first between the two nations and includes three T20I’s and three ODI’s.

Off-spinning all-rounder Patel returns to the group after being centrally contracted for the 2022-23 season.

She was the Brave’s top run-scorer in the Super Smash this summer and second-equal wicket-taker alongside Knight.

Knight, a former New Zealand under-19 representative, is available for just the T20 series, with Molly Penfold to replace her in the ODI squad.

“We’ve prioritised players that could make the T20 World Cup squad in June, whilst also providing international exposure to high-potential talent whose skillsets align with long-term White Ferns planning,” said coach Ben Sawyer.

“Nensi and Kayley have both been solid performers over the last 12-18 months, so it’s really pleasing for them to get this opportunity.”

The squad will be captained by Melie Kerr in her first assignment as New Zealand’s permanent captain.

Suzie Bates (quadricep) and Eden Carson (elbow) were not considered for selection due to their respective injuries, and Lea Tahuhu was not considered for the T20I squad due to physical preparation planning for the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in June.

Sophie Devine, who is on a casual contract with NZC, was not available for this series.

Northern Brave Women’s Kayley Knight bowls. DJ Mills / PHOTOSPORT

WHITE FERNS Squad v Zimbabwe

Flora Devonshire Central Hinds

Izzy Gaze Auckland Hearts

Maddy Green Auckland Hearts

Brooke Halliday Auckland Hearts

Bree Illing Auckland Hearts

Polly Inglis Sparks (T20I only)

Jess Kerr Wellington Blaze

Melie Kerr Wellington Blaze

Kayley Knight* Northern Brave (T20I only)

Emma McLeod Central Hinds (ODI only)

Rosemary Mair Central Hinds

Nensi Patel* Northern Brave

Molly Penfold Auckland Hearts (ODI only)

Georgia Plimmer Wellington Blaze

Izzy Sharp** Canterbury Magicians

Series against Zimbabwe

Wed 25 Feb: 1st T20, 7:15pm, Hamilton

Fri 27 Feb: 2nd T20, 7:15pm, Hamilton

Sun 1 March: 3rd T20, 1:15pm, Hamilton

Thurs 5 March: 1st ODI, 11am, Dunedin

Sun 8 March: 2nd ODI, 11am, Dunedin

Wed 11 March, 3rd ODI, 11am, Dunedin

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/20/north-brave-duo-set-to-debut-for-white-ferns/

Live: Former prince Andrew arrested by UK police over Epstein ties

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow updates with RNZ’s live blog above.

Britain’s former prince Andrew has been arrested overnight over allegations he sent confidential government documents to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

King Charles’ younger brother – now known as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor after he wasstripped by his older brother of his titles and honours last October – was arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office on Thursday, his 66th birthday.

The second son of the late Queen Elizabeth is now in police custody. He has always denied any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein, and said he regrets their friendship.

Follow updates with RNZ’s live blog at the top of this page.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/20/live-former-prince-andrew-arrested-by-uk-police-over-epstein-ties/

Northland farmer has hundreds of sheep killed by roaming dogs

Source: Radio New Zealand

Farmer Finn Cook is thinking of quitting sheep farming if the killing can’t be stopped. RNZ/Sally Round

Warning: The following story contains an image that may disturb some viewers.

A Northland farmer says more than 250 of his family’s sheep have been killed by roaming dogs, and he’s thinking of quitting sheep farming if the killing can’t be stopped.

His call for action comes in the same week a woman was mauled to death by a pack of dogs in Kaihu.

Finn Cook is the fourth generation of his family to farm near Kaeo in the Far North.

He said roaming dogs had always been a bit of a nuisance for their stock, but towards the end of last year, the problem got out of hand as hundreds of their sheep were attacked and killed.

“It’s pretty disgusting to walk out there and see sheep half chewed on, still alive, can’t move on the ground. Especially in the heat with the flies and stuff.”

Cook said his uncle had already had to give up on sheep farming because of wild dogs, and if Cook couldn’t find a solution, his family would have to do the same.

“We’re at a dead end. We don’t know what to do. We don’t know what support there is for us as farmers because the laws aren’t in anyone’s favour here.”

He has tried taking matters into his own hands and shooting the dogs but he said it didn’t make a difference.

“They just keep coming. The dog owners need to hold themselves accountable, they don’t post up that they’ve got missing dogs either. Because I’m sure they know their dog’s been up to no good.”

A photo of one of the sheep that has been killed by roaming dogs. Supplied/Finn Cook

He also tried contacting dog control at the council, but said it was hard to get any action from them.

“You’ve basically got to visually sight the dog all the way home, prove where it’s living and then also prove that it’s been killing your sheep… for them to actually do anything about it.”

But Far North District Council’s delivery and operations manager Hillary Sumpter said in a statement that the council only had records of one complaint from Cook.

“If we gave Mr Cook the impression that the council would only act when it had video evidence, then I apologise – that is not the case,” Sumpter said.

The council needed good eyewitness accounts or other evidence linking a dog to an attack which would stand up in court, she said.

“Setting dog traps and focusing our patrols on problem areas are methods we use to gather evidence. It is not possible to monitor a property 24 hours a day.”

Whangarei woman Tracy Clarke also knows about the problems roaming dogs can cause – she has been afraid to even walk down her street since she narrowly escaped a pitbull coming after her.

“It’s only just a few metres away, and I knew that I was in bloody big strife to be fair. Within a split second, I just heard a woman scream at me to get in and she parked up beside me – it was actually a local courier.”

After that ordeal, Clarke delivered a petition to parliament, calling for the rules around dog control to be changed.

“The current legislation governing dog ownership and control came into force in 1996. I know that sounds just like yesterday but in actual fact, it was all written 30 years ago. Clearly, it’s no longer befitting.”

Cook agreed there needed to be law changes, but said the owners needed to take some responsibility.

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Neurology patient sees specialist faster as a tourist in France than back home

Source: Radio New Zealand

It can take months to see a specialist in New Zealand. (File photo) PEAKSTOCK / SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY / AFP

Neurology patients are facing long wait times to see a specialist, with one woman getting a same day appointment as a tourist in France, then facing a four-month wait back home.

It comes as a new study from the University of Otago in Wellington shows neurologists would struggle to keep up with the increase in demand for the diagnosis and treatment of conditions such as multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease and stroke.

One Southland woman, who didn’t want to be identified, was told it would be four months before she could see a neurologist in New Zealand, after she began having seizures on holiday in France.

Over there, even as a tourist, she said she was able to see a neurologist that same day, after her husband noticed something was amiss.

“I had a funny incident that he noted, and he wondered if I’d had a stroke or something, so he ended up taking me to the hospital there,” she said.

“They did MRIs and CTs and things, and they thought it was a TIA – a Transient Ischemic Attack, so they put me on medication for that.”

A TIA was also known as a mini-stroke.

But back home, the episodes continued – she said she would zone out for a few minutes, and then be left very confused for the next half hour.

She made an appointment with her GP, who referred her to a neurologist privately through health inurance, but the earliest appointment was January 2026 – four months away.

“I was really surprised, because I’d seen a neurologist in France much quicker. We did have to pay, but I don’t think it was too much – I think it was like a thousand dollars or something. It wasn’t astronomical.”

Her seizures were getting worse – up from one a week, to one every two days – and her GP redirected her through the public system.

She finally saw a local neurologist in November, who diagnosed her with epilepsy.

“They got me on medication, and I haven’t had a seizure since,” she said.

The University of Otago study found New Zealand ranked well below other high-income countries when it came to numbers, with 83 neurologists, public and private, as of the report’s time of writing in 2024.

That was one per 74,000 people – just over half that of Australia – and far below the recommended best practice level found by one Australian workforce model of one per 28,000 people.

David Ross, who lives in Huntly, said he was surprised by those numbers, he was referred to a neurologist in late January, and the first thing he received was a letter apologising for the wait time, which was seven weeks.

“And the idea, of course, of going private is that you might go through a bit quicker, but it looks like it’s not going to be.”

Nearly $600 to see someone privately, and a seven week wait – David nearly picked up the phone and said, “forget it”.

But he didn’t want to lose his place on the waitlist – and luckily, he wasn’t waiting in pain.

“It’s okay, I just need to get an opinion on what they recommend for my condition. It looks like Parkinson’s because I shake a bit sometimes, but other times, I’m fine.”

But it wasn’t getting any better, and he and his family would like some answers.

“It doesn’t give you a lot of confidence in the overall system.”

Neurologist Dr David Gow, a regional chief medical officer at Te Whatu Ora, said the national health agency was committed to giving New Zealanders timely access to healthcare and strengthening the workforce.

“We know that, as part of this, we need to grow our healthcare workforce, and this is not exclusive to neurology.”

Health targets like shorter wait times applied to neurology, as for all specialities.

“We value research papers like this one as they can be considered alongside our own workforce planning,” he said.

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Bill to make English an official language of NZ introduced to Parliament

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ First’s Winston Peters fiercely defended a bill to make English an official language. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Parliament’s last order of the week was to debate something the minister in charge of the bill has admitted is not really a priority.

The government has introduced a bill to make English an official language, to ridicule from the opposition, and a fierce defence from Winston Peters.

The legislation would see English be recognised as an official language alongside Te Reo Māori and New Zealand Sign Language.

It would not affect the status or use of Te Reo Māori and New Zealand Sign Language as official languages.

Just two pages long, the legislation states that English has long been a de facto official language, but not set out in legislation.

The bill is in the name of the Justice Minister, Paul Goldsmith, who was reluctant to sing its praises.

“It’s something that was in the coalition. It wouldn’t be the top priority for us, absolutely not. But it’s something in the coalition and it’s getting done.”

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Goldsmith did not speak at the first reading.

Instead, Winston Peters led the speeches on Thursday.

Peters said other jurisdictions such as Canada, Ireland, and Wales had English language legislation of their own, which indicated the “importance” of putting it into legislation.

“This bill won’t solve the push of this virtue signalling narrative completely. But it is the first step towards ensuring logic and common sense prevails when the vast majority of New Zealanders communicate in English, and understand English, in a country that should use English as its primary and official language,” he said.

The New Zealand First leader, who was made to wait nearly an hour and a half to deliver his speech, argued the proliferation of te reo Māori in health and transport services meant people were getting confused.

In other cases, they were being put in danger, claiming first responders did not know where they were going, and boaties were unable to interpret charts.

“With the increase in recent years of te reo to be used in place of English, even when less than five percent of the New Zealand population can read, write, or speak it, it has created situations that encourage misunderstand and confusion for all. And all for the purpose to push a narrative.”

Peters’ speech drifted into a lengthy historical anecdote, with an example of “out of touch bureaucrats” in the Soviet Union building, costing, and installing chandeliers based on weight “for production bonuses, rather than shape and design”, which was leading to ceilings being ripped out.

“And the then-President Khrushchev, upon finding this out, asked this question: For whom is this illuminating? As for whom, are the circumstances we now finding ourselves in with the use of te reo as a means of important communication now, illuminating what?”

Opposition MPs ridicule bill

Labour MP Duncan Webb said only the “wandering mind” of Peters could explain what Russian chandeliers had to do with the English language. VNP / Phil Smith

Opposition MPs questioned the government’s priorities, expressing ridicule, exasperation and concern at the bill.

Beginning his contribution with, “Ngā mihi, great to be here in Aotearoa today,” Labour MP Duncan Webb said only the “wandering mind” of Peters could explain what Russian chandeliers had to do with the English language.

Webb said language was a “moving thing”, with New Zealand English containing words from across the Pacific.

“A silly piece of legislation, that Winston Peters, in his jurassic thinking, wants to put before his sub-sub-sub-section of voters, because they get a little bit anxious because the library in Christchurch is called Tūranga. A big building full of books, with big signs to it, but because it doesn’t say ‘library’ they don’t know it’s the library if they’re New Zealand First voters.”

Webb said when the Treaty of Waitangi was signed, all the laws of England applied, of which an English language law was not one.

“What’s the official language of the United Kingdom? Well, it doesn’t say, it is not set out there in legislation. There is no English Act or United Kingdom Act which sets out English as an official language, but I’m pretty sure they’re comfortable with the fact that it’s an official language of England and the United Kingdom.”

Green Party co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick. RNZ

Green Party co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick said the government “wants us distracted” while the country experienced severe weather events, and unemployment was as high as it had been in a decade.

“They want us divided, and they want regular people exhausted, fighting amongst themselves. Some out there say that this government is stupid. Unfortunately, Madam Speaker, I think that they know exactly what they are doing,” she said.

“The English language is not under threat. We are literally speaking it and debating in it right now. This is a bill which is an answer to a problem that does not exist, a problem which this government is trying to create in the minds of people across this country, in place of the very real problems of the climate crisis, record homelessness, inequality and infrastructural decay.”

Swarbrick said Te Reo Māori and New Zealand Sign Language had been “fought for”, while English was “literally beaten” into people.

“In plain English, for all members of this government, this bill is bullshit, and you know it.”

Te Pāti Māori MP Oriini Kaipara delivered her contribution entirely in te reo Māori.

“This bill is a waste of time, and a waste of breath,” she said.

Labour MP Dr Ayesha Verrall. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Labour MP Dr Ayesha Verrall spoke of her mother’s upbringing in the Maldives, where she worked hard to learn English, arrived in New Zealand on a Colombo Plan scholarship, and went on to become an English teacher.

“That’s pretty special, kind of ironic, to think that someone who, for whom English wasn’t their first language, gave so much in terms of enjoyment of English and English literature to her students.”

She said she sat in her mother’s classes in the 1990s when politicians were “race baiting”, warning of an ‘Asian invasion’, and using English in a “very powerful and destructive” way.

“When we speak in the English language, we have impact beyond our words. As politicians, we create permission for people to do things outside this House. So that’s what happens when politicians indulge in racism. The English language can be used as a weapon, and that can lead to people having violent acts committed against them,” she said.

Verall then referred to the 1990s politician directly – Peters.

First reading on hold

Peters had promoted his contribution, set to begin at 4pm, on social media.

But an opposition filibuster on the previous bill on the order paper meant his speech did not begin until 5:25pm.

With Parliament needing to break for the week at 6pm, government MPs did their best to hurry the bill along, with ACT’s Simon Court, and National MPs Tom Rutherford and Carl Bates rising for very short contributions to commend the bill to the House.

“It’s simply practical, constructive common sense,” Court said.

National’s Rima Nakhle accused the opposition of theatrics. VNP / Phil Smith

National’s Rima Nakhle took issue with Swarbrick’s use of the word “bullshit”, and accused the opposition of theatrics.

“How about we just calm it down a little, and stop the theatrics, and talk about what this is. And it’s OK. We’re only making English official. It’s not the end of the world.”

The House adjourned with two speeches still to go.

With Parliament in recess next week, it meant MPs would have to wait until 3 March for the debate to pick up again.

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A state of emergency, again and again and again

Source: Radio New Zealand

A ute submerged at Robert Prescott’s home on Phillips Road in Ōtorohanga on February 14. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

Once-in-a-hundred-year storms are coming thick and fast, and the number of states of emergency declared across the country has skyrocketed.

New Zealand isn’t just bracing for emergencies – it’s declaring them at a pace never seen before.

In 2002, across the country, only four days of local states of emergency were declared. In the first two months of this year alone, there have been at least 70.

That stark comparison comes as councils around the country deal with the devastating impact of a powerful, lasting and deadly storm that first hit Ōtorohanga and Waipa districts hard and carried on down the country.

Today, The Detail looks at what it means to be under a local state of emergency, and what goes on behind the scenes at MetService when it issues a weather warning.

Lakes District councillor and Joint Centre for Disaster Research capability development manager Jon Mitchell, who has been involved with emergency management both here and overseas for 30 years, puts the spike in states of emergency down, in part, to climate change. But he also says it’s due to weather services getting better at forecasting, and a culture change which has encouraged authorities to declare early.

“If you wait until the events occur, you lose much of the benefit of being able to declare a state of emergency,” Mitchell tells The Detail.

A graphic provided by National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) showing the state of emergencies in New Zealand since 2017. Image: NEMA NEMA

“When [a declaration] is made at the local level, it automatically has a seven-day period, which can be extended – we have seen that happen with major events recently – and it does several things. It enables those appointed as regional or group controllers … to have special powers to intervene in the emergency.

“It also enables police officers to have those powers where there is a need to act even faster, perhaps, in particular if there isn’t communication and there may only be police with a degree of authority on the ground,” Mitchell says.

“So that’s the ability to require people to evacuate, to enter buildings, to remove vehicles that might be damaged and blocking streets, to clear roads, to close roads, to acquire resources through requisition, a whole range of things.

“But it also provides protection, too, to those involved in the response … sometimes to manage risks, you have to be prepared to take risks, so it enables people to have more confidence, who are responding, to do things they might need to do that they normally wouldn’t be able to do, outside of an emergency situation.”

He says legally, the bar for declaring a state of emergency is “quite low” – it can simply be “any incident that has occurred or may occur that threatens the safety of individuals or property”.

However, with the increasing number of emergencies being declared, does Mitchell worry that emergency fatigue will set in, causing the declarations to lose their urgency and public compliance to drop off?

“There has been quite a bit of research into this. And the impact of not declaring and leaving communities entirely to their own devices, or organisations to not act together in a coordinated way, communities tire of that much more quickly than they do of having an organised response supporting them.

“What we can’t do is hesitate, and hope that things are going to get better.”

He says people should have a plan to escape a dangerous situation as soon as possible. And have a pack ready, with water, food, a torch, and a radio, to listen to alerts and warnings.

“We need the public to be ready,” he says. “Being ready to move is essential, and having a plan about where you are going to go is critical too.”

Floo waters at Little River in Banks Peninsula this week. Cameron Gordon/Supplied

Eyes on the weather everywhere

While the wild weather has been bombarding many towns and cities outside, inside MetService’s Wellington headquarters forecasters have been inundated with all kinds of data that feeds into their predictions. Information sent in by the 200-odd weather stations from Cape Reinga to the Sub-Antarctic Islands can change by the minute, says meteorologist John Law.

“We’ve got computers, monitors everywhere with maps, webcam views of various bits and bobs around the country and these giant screens which are our situational awareness screens with the latest radar, the latest satellite images and some of the observations as well,” says Law.

“So [it’s] trying to keep us up to date with what’s happening now so we get a nice, firm idea of what’s going to happen in the future.”

When there’s severe weather the pressure steps up from journalists, airports, shipping companies and government agencies for latest information.

But unlike the external mayhem of the last week, Law says inside the national weather hub in Wellington it’s just the opposite. The office is “very quiet and very hardworking”.

Teams of weather specialists are working on aviation, marine and website information, and the lead forecaster is running the show like an orchestra conductor. Three times a day the group gathers for a ‘nod in’.

“This dates back to when the chief forecaster used to stand up and tell everyone what the forecast was going to be and the rest of the meteorologists would sit round and nod in agreement,” says Law.

The name has stuck, but he says the meetings are now more collaborative, with expert forecasters and other meteorologists having a say .

Some of the world’s biggest, most sophisticated computers enable meteorologists to see what’s going on as early as six weeks out but at that stage there are many uncertainties.

“That’s often one of the biggest challenges, is when we look at the forecast, particularly for three, four, five, six weeks away is there can be a lot of uncertainty. And as we’ve seen with just this big system of low pressure, where that exact path goes can have a real big impact on which areas see the most rainfall or which areas see the strongest winds.

“We want to make sure that when we issue severe weather warnings or alerts, we have high certainty they’ll come through. We want to make sure that we’re not crying wolf, as it were.”

Check out how to listen to and follow The Detail here.

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Many tenants of social housing agency Te Toi Mahana unable to access rent subsidy

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Wellington social housing agency has a cap of 380 Income Related Rent Subsidy places. (File photo) RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

More than three-quarters of tenants at Wellington’s biggest social housing agency will not be able to access the cheap rent it was set up to provide.

Te Toi Mahana, a Wellington City Council organisation, took over the council’s housing portfolio in 2023, managing more than 1600 properties.

It was formed so tenants could access the government’s Income Related Rent Subsidy (IRRS) which capped rent at a quarter of their income – because by law, council housing tenants were not eligible.

Over time, as existing council housing tenants leave, new tenants get the subsidy.

However, the government allocated community housing providers a certain number of IRRS “places”.

Te Toi Mahana only had 380, a cap that was agreed between the council and housing ministry in 2022.

It expected those would be filled by June, which means only 23 percent of its households would get the subsidy.

Te Toi Mahana would continue to take on new tenants, but they wouldn’t be eligible for the subsidy, partnerships and community manager Seb Bishop said.

“Once our current IRRS places are filled, there is an open question as to the exact type, tenure and funding for future developments and tenancies.”

Wellington mayor Andrew Little said he intended to advocate for Te Toi Mahana being allocated more IRRS places.

Wellington mayor Andrew Little. (File photo) RNZ / Mark Papalii

“My understanding is MHUD [the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development] sort of wanted Te Toi Mahana to prove itself, to attract new tenants and conduct itself as a CHP [community housing provider].

“We have to stand in the queue, or at least argue for the allocation of new spots, and that’s what Te Toi Mahana is required to do.”

When new places became available in Wellington, Te Toi Mahana would make a case for them, he said.

MHUD said it was in regular contact with Te Toi Mahana about their provision of places.

But since July 2024, the ministry had not been accepting any new social housing tenancies for existing housing stock, unless by exception.

“This is to encourage delivery of newly built social housing places, rather than existing houses, to increase housing supply,” it said.

“Any additional social housing places that are allocated to Wellington will be provided by community housing providers (CHPs) in accordance with the Government’s Housing Investment Plan.”

Under the plan, at the end of February community housing providers across the country will be able to apply for a ‘flexible fund’ which will pay for up to 770 new homes (via funding IRRS places).

Wellington has been allocated 40 to 50 homes, which can be either new builds, or leasing or buying existing stock from the market.

Meanwhile, Te Toi Mahana was planning two new developments in Tawa and Crofton Downs which would deliver 59 affordable homes – a mixture of two bedroom townhouses and one bedroom apartments.

It expected to begin building them in “early 2026”.

Councillor calls for wider access to rent subsidy

Wellington City councillor Diane Calvert, who’s also on Te Toi Mahana board of trustees, urged the government to change the regulation which makes council housing tenants ineligible for the IRRS.

Wellington City councillor Diane Calvert. (File photo) RNZ / Dom Thomas

“If they meet the income criteria, it should be no difference whether you’re in a council social housing or a Kāinga Ora social housing or any other community housing provider,” she said.

“If you meet the income criteria, you should have access. It’s as simple as that.”

Successive governments were at fault, she said.

Housing Minister Chris Bishop would not commit to any changes.

He previously told RNZ social housing funding was limited, and best targeted at adding to the overall stock of subsidised housing.

Previous governments said extending the subsidy to council housing tenants would be too expensive.

It’s effectively created a two-tier rent system for Te Toi Mahana tenants, with tenant A paying significantly more than tenant B in an identical flat next door.

The landlord agreed it was inequitable.

The IRRS was introduced in 2000.

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‘Very strange’: Auckland councillors’ mixed reaction to government’s housing backdown

Source: Radio New Zealand

Housing Minister Chris Bishop at the announcement about the government’s revised plans yesterday. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

Auckland councillors are split on what to make of the government’s sudden change of heart on intensification.

Housing Minister Chris Bishop announced on Thursday the number of homes Auckland Council must plan for would be reduced from 2 million to 1.6m, but only if it submitted a plan that was approved by the central government.

The need for approval from Wellington outraged Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown.

“We’re not doing this in order to go to the government and to the Cabinet and ask for their approval,” he said after the announcement.

“I mean, the Cabinet mostly don’t even live in Auckland, so that’s not going to happen.”

Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

North Shore ward councillor and chairperson of the Policy, Planning and Development Committee, Richard Hills, agreed with Brown that the need to seek approval from the government was “very strange”.

“That was a bit of a surprise, we knew the number was being dropped but we were surprised this week that there would be some sort of intermediate phase where we would have to take the potential changes to Cabinet to sign off before they give us the legislation,” he told RNZ.

“The mayor’s been very clear that Auckland should not be going back to Cabinet, we are responsible to the people of Auckland, not Cabinet, so I’m not sure exactly how we’ll negotiate that out.

“It is a strange precedent, it’s normally left up to the different parts of the country to work out their own plans … I’m not exactly sure what the expectation is, I mean, what happens if the Cabinet don’t exactly agree with the direction of change? Will we have to go back and forward?”

North Shore ward councillor Richard Hills. Alexia Russell

The council also had little time to come up with the new plan, as Hills explained it had not been given an extension to its mid-2027 deadline.

“The end date for the plan being complete is still the same, so there’s going to be no extension on the other end, so whatever we do has to be quick, and it has to be quite focused on reducing some of the density in the outer areas of Auckland,” he said.

Another councillor, Albert-Eden-Puketāpapa’s Christine Fletcher, felt the government’s request was fair.

“I’m comfortable with the guardrails that the government are putting in place,” she said.

“We should have to justify where we’re looking to downzone, we should have to justify where we’re wanting the intensification, and so I’m quite comfortable with the process going forward.”

Albert-Eden-Puketāpapa councillor Christine Fletcher. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

Anne Moore, an east Auckland resident neighbouring a controversial three-storey development in Farm Cove, was pleased to hear the target for intensification had been lowered.

She said recent intensification in the suburbs had damaged National’s reputation, and wondered if Thursday’s U-turn was a reaction to that sentiment.

“I talk to people every day out here, residents are saying they’re worried ACT and Winston [Peters] are going to get their votes. It’s really been a big issue out here in east Auckland particularly, and they’ve been voicing how they feel,” she said.

“They don’t want [intensification], or they want it done in a measured way and they want it done so we’re aware of what’s going on in our suburbs. [Ministers] don’t live where these things are happening and yet they won’t listen to the people that live there.”

Moore hoped the lower target would push the council to take a more considered approach.

“That was always the hope, that if they reduced the number that would mean the focus would be on central city and transport hub development, rather than turning every suburb into a three-storied townhouse situation,” she said.

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