Kiwi pole vaulters scrapping for world championship spots

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand pole vaulter Imogen Ayris. Simon Stacpoole / www.photosport.nz

The Athletics New Zealand selectors have a dilemma on their hands as they try to finalise their squad for next month’s World Indoor Championships in Poland.

New Zealand’s three female pole vaulters are fighting for just two spots at the event.

On Monday morning, Imogen Ayris vaulted a personal best 4.76 metres at a meeting in France to gain the qualifying standard for the world indoors. Four athletes finished on 4.76m, with a Czech athlete Amalie Svabikova winning on a countback. Ayris finished third.

Olivia McTaggart also delivered a season’s best performance of 4.70m to finish in 5th at the same competition, while Eliza McCartney recorded 4.70m at the Auckland Champs on Friday.

The trio have now all met the entry standard for the championships, but nations are only able to enter two athletes per event.

Both Ayris and McTaggart are scheduled to compete again in Europe before the World Championship qualifying period closes.

McCartney, the 2016 Olympic bronze medallist, is scheduled to compete at the national championships in Auckland next week, but now may consider heading overseas to compete to help impress the selectors.

Ayris and McTaggart competed in last year’s World Indoor Championships, finishing ninth and eleventh respectively.

McCartney, who won the silver medal at the 2024 World Indoors in Glasgow, set the national record mark of 4.94m in 1998.

All three pole vaulters have also qualified for this year’s Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.

Sprinters Zoe Hobbs and Tiaan Whelpton have run world indoor qualifying times in recent weeks, while shot-putter Tom Walsh is also scheduled to compete in Poland.

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Tourism Holdings’ profits increase after strong half-year

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

Campervan operator Tourism Holdings (THL) says strong growth in its rental business has helped drive first-half net profit up 17 percent, with revenue growth of 4 percent.

“Our rentals business remains the engine of THL’s business model and continues to power our global revenue performance,” chief executive Grant Webster said.

“Globally, rental performance remained strong during H1 FY26, with 11 percent growth in sale of services revenue (primarily rentals) in the first half.

“As of today, we are seeing global forward rental revenue for future travel periods more than 15 percent higher than at the same point last year, despite the decline seen in the US market.”

Key numbers for the six months ended December compared with a year ago:

  • Net profit $29.6m vs $25.3m
  • Revenue $477.3m vs $458.4m
  • Underlying net profit $29.5m vs $26.5m
  • Interim 3 cents per share vs 2.5 CPS

“We remain confident in the outlook for global tourism. The industry is finally moving away from pre-Covid comparisons,” Webster said.

“Structural drivers, including growing global airline capacity and growing demand for our category of free independent travel, continue to support a positive outlook for RV rentals.

“Looking ahead, we expect continued momentum and growth through calendar year 2026 in New Zealand, Australia and Canada, with these markets seeing between 20 percent to 30 percent growth in forward rental revenue.

“The downside is that we are in an environment where the USA is ‘off the menu’ for many international travellers this year. While the 2025 high season still had the benefit of solid booking intakes before the Liberation Day tariffs were announced (subject to some cancellations), the entire 2026 booking window has been impacted.”

Progress on the strategic initiatives announced in August 2025

“We continue to view FY26 as a transition year as we implement transformational initiatives against a background of ongoing weakness in RV sales markets, broader macroeconomic challenges, and uncertainty regarding the timing of a recovery,” Webster said.

“Notwithstanding this, we are focused on our forecast for FY26.”

The company expected full-year underlying net profit to be in the range of $43m and $47m, including a $1m reduction associated with the timing of its UK divestment.

He said challenging vehicle sales conditions persisted, and the second half of FY26 was expected to largely reflect the trends seen in the first half, with any meaningful recovery unlikely within the current financial year.

Net debt was expected to be less than $400 million.

“Looking further ahead, the execution of our strategic initiatives, continued recovery in international tourism and rental demand, alongside ongoing cost-out actions, are expected to materially benefit FY27.

“We expect gross fleet capital expenditure in FY26 to be around $210 million, reflective of our fleet and capital management decisions.”

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Should you trust airlines to get you into the UK on an expired passport?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Gill Bonnett

Changes to the United Kingdom’s entry requirements for dual citizens come into force on Wednesday, but a last-minute update has added further confusion according to travel agents.

Late last year, the British government announced anyone classed as a British citizen would soon need a valid UK passport to enter the country, or have to get a $1300 certificate in their foreign passport.

But on Friday, the Home Office said it will now allow airlines to decide whether to accept an expired British passport alongside a valid foreign one.

Travel Agents’ Association chief executive Julie White told Morning Report leaving it to the airlines’ discretion was risky.

“You can’t rely on that and look, it’s expensive, it’s stressful and you’ve taken annual leave so our suggestion is, you really should be travelling with the right documentation.

“We’re inundated with people contacting our travel agents around clarity because it really is confusing.”

She said airlines could only deal with the information they’d been provided and would face fines if they got it wrong.

“So, if the person standing in front of them has got a New Zealand passport with an ETA [Electronic Travel Authorisation], they will go through a set of questions … the liability then sits on the person travelling, which may actually be denied entry into the UK and turned around.”

White said the British Embassy had not been forthcoming about how airlines would know whether a person required a new passport/ETA or not, but expected people to be questioned upon entry into the UK about whether they had a British parent.

She said the motivation behind the changes was driven by the UK’s desire to tighten its borders and also its move toward digital.

“As they move along to [become] more digitally enabled, I think they’d have greater clarity on who has what rights.”

She said a grace period to comply with the rules would be helpful, but with the changes coming into effect in only three days’ time, thought it was unlikely.

White said some people had chosen to cancel or defer their travel due to the stress, noting insurance wouldn’t cover the cost.

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Pedestrian hit by car outside Te Anau business

Source: Radio New Zealand

Emergency services were at the scene. (File photo) RNZ

A pedestrian has been hit by a car in Te Anau.

Police said the crash was reported at 8.45am on Monday on Town Centre, in Te Anau.

The road was closed between Te Anau Terrace and Miro St.

Police said the pedestrian had been taken to hospital with serious injuries.

Diversions were in place and motorists would need to avoid the area and expect delays.

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Person dies after car hits tree and flips in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police said the vehicle hit a tree and flipped onto its side in the middle of the road. RNZ / REECE BAKER

A person has died after they were injured in a crash where a vehicle hit a tree and flipped in Auckland.

Emergency services were called to the single-vehicle crash on Eugenia Rise, Totara Heights, at 1.23am on 17 February.

Police said the vehicle hit a tree and flipped onto its side in the middle of the road.

One person was taken to the hospital in a serious condition.

In an update on Monday, police said they died on Thursday evening.

Another person suffered moderate injuries in the crash.

The Serious Crash Unit attended the scene, with enquiries ongoing into the cause of the crash.

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Stars and royals on the Bafta red carpet

Source: Radio New Zealand

Catherine, Princess of Wales and Prince William, Prince of Wales, arrive at the BAFTA British Academy Film Awards in London, on 22 February, 2026.Jaimi Joy / POOL / AFP

‘One Battle After Another’ US singer-songwriter and actor Teyana Taylor.AFP / Adrian Dennis

‘Bugonia’ US actress Emma Stone.AFP / Adrian Dennis

‘Spider-Man: Brand New Day’ and ‘Stranger Things’ US actress Sadie Sink.AFP / Adrian Dennis

‘Sinners’ US actor Michael B. Jordan.AFP / Adrian Dennis

‘Marty Supreme’ French-US actor Timothée Chalamet.AFP / Adrian Dennis

‘Adolescence’ British actress Erin Doherty.AFP / Adrian Dennis

‘The Woman in Cabin 10’ and ‘Game of Thrones’ British actress Hannah Waddingham.AFP / Adrian Dennis

‘Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery’ US actress Glenn Close.AFP / Adrian Dennis

‘Bugonia’ US actor Jesse Plemons and ‘Roofman’ US actress Kirsten Dunst.AFP / Adrian Dennis

‘The Bride!’ US actress Maggie Gyllenhaal.AFP / Adrian Dennis

‘One Battle After Another’ US actor Leonardo DiCaprio.AFP / Adrian Dennis

Nigerian-British actress Wunmi Mosaku poses with the award for best supporting actress in the film ‘Sinners’.AFP / Justin Tallis

‘BOONG’ Indian film director Lakshmipriya Devi and Indian film producer Ritesh Sidhwani pose with Paddington The Bear and the award for best children and family film.AFP / Justin Tallis

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Health NZ’s redundancy payouts a ‘disgraceful waste of money’ – PSA

Source: Radio New Zealand

The redundancies were forced on Health NZ by government cuts, says the PSA. RNZ

Spending millions on redundancy payouts for non-clinical staff at Health NZ is a “disgraceful waste of money”, says the PSA union.

Te Whatu Ora made nearly $58 million in redundancy payouts between late 2023 and 2025.

In total, $57.91 million in payments for voluntary redundancies and early exits for non-clinical staff were made between 1 November 2023 and 31 December 2025, according to figures released under the Official Information Act to the PSA union.

PSA national secretary Fleur Fitzsimmons said the union estimated the agency let go about 2800 workers through cuts and voluntary redundancies during this time.

She said the non-clinical staff such as IT experts and administrators were still desperately needed in the public health system.

“We’ve lost administrators, we’ve lost IT experts, we’ve lost analysts, we’ve lost people that support training of health professionals – all people who played a critical role in our health system, who have more to give and who will be missed.”

Fitzsimmons said the $58 million in payouts was a “disgraceful waste of public money”, that will have “costs on our health system for years to come”.

She said the redundancies were forced on Health NZ by government cuts, citing major cuts in the agency’s IT department last year as one example.

“Everyday, we’ll see the cost of these departures in IT failures, in longer waiting lists, and in clinicians needing to do more of their own administrative and clerical work at the expense of seeing patients.”

Health Minister Simeon Brown said the government’s priority was ensuring more resources are directed to frontline care, rather than “back-office bureacracy”.

He said fewer New Zealanders were waiting for elective surgery or a first specialist assessment than at the start of last year, emergency department wait times are improving, along with childhood immunisation rates.

“This progress is being supported by significant workforce growth, including around 2000 additional nurses and hundreds more doctors employed by Health New Zealand since 2023.”

A Health NZ spokesperson said voluntary redundancy was a choice staff could make based on their own circumstances.

“Changes that have been made within Health NZ are part of an ongoing effort toward a more sustainable future for healthcare.

“We want to ensure our resources and people are organised to strengthen and support the front-line so more New Zealanders get the right healthcare when and where they need it.”

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Fisher & Paykel Healthcare seeing ‘good growth’ across hospital products

Source: Radio New Zealand

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare has upped its full year revenue and profit guidance on the back of “good growth” in its full range of hospital products.

“We have continued to see good growth across the full range of our hospital products so far during our second half,” managing director Lewis Gradon said.

“While relative seasonal respiratory hospitalisations in the northern hemisphere winter may continue to impact the second half result, our performance to date suggests pleasing progress in our efforts to change clinical practice.

“Continuous improvement activities and other efficiency gains are also contributing to improvements in our gross margin and operating margin.”

23 February 2026 guidance* versus 29 November 2025

  • Net profit $450m – $470m vs $410m – $460m
  • Revenue $2.30b vs $2.17b – $2.27b
  • Assumes US exchange rate of 60 US cents vs 57 US cents
  • Does not incorporate any potential refund of US tariffs paid to date during the 2026 financial year.

Update on US tariffs

The company updated its view on US tariffs following a US Supreme Court decision invalidating tariffs imposed by the US administration under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).

“There are still a number of uncertainties regarding the implications of the Supreme Court’s ruling for companies that import into the United States,” it said.

“The company continues to work through the complexities associated with the US court rulings, refund processes and application of free trade agreements and the Nairobi Protocol to its products, and will provide an update on tariff impacts with its full year results at the end of May.”

The company continued to view the current and proposed tariff structures in the context of cost increases that will be mitigated over time by the company’s long-standing continuous improvement activities.

“As such, the company does not currently believe these matters have any material impact on the company’s long-term direction, strategy or sustainable profitable growth.”

F&P declined to comment further.

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Mounjaro now available for weight loss – but it comes with hefty price tag

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mounjaro is now available by prescription in some New Zealand pharmacies. Christoph Reichwein / dpa Picture-Alliance via AFP

A newly approved weight loss drug could improve competition but will still be costly for patients, an obesity doctor says.

Mounjaro is a self-administered injection which received regulatory approval for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and chronic weight management in December last year.

It is now available by prescription in some New Zealand pharmacies.

Obesity doctor Dr Chaey Leem told Morning Report the drug targeted two hormones when Wegovy, a weight-loss medication already on the market, only targeted one.

“You can kind of think of the medication unlocking two doors instead of one in your body’s metabolism,” he said.

Leem said that increased the drug efficacy.

“At the maximum doses of Mounjaro, patients on average have lost 22 percent of the initial weight in the trail, compared to 15 percent on the maximum dose of Wegovy.”

The cost of the drug was a barrier for some patients, he said.

Mounjaro is pricier than Wegovy, ranging from $430 to nearly $900 a month.

“Competition will hopefully help improve the situation for many patients, however, in fact there still might be a long way to go,” Leem said.

“The drugs are very expensive, and I do feel for the patients who need it the most but aren’t able to afford a really great option that’s available.”

Leem said there was a lot of stigma against obesity, which he hoped could be reduced through treatment.

“Once we have the tools to fight them and treat patients, hopefully the stigma towards obesity goes down, and in turn we can look into other options like bariatric surgery, which is usually much more cost effective from a public health perspective,” he said.

Leem had patients he believed would benefit from the new medication, if price weren’t a factor.

“There’s risks and benefits to everything, but for the many, many patients, the benefits greatly outweigh the risks that the medications can impose.”

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More than 20 companies yet to report results in last week of corporate reporting season

Source: Radio New Zealand

The business outlook seems to be improving, Amova Asset Management’s head of equities said. (File photo) 123RF

The last week of the corporate reporting season is underway with more than 20 companies yet to report their results to the December 31 balance date.

The past week saw reports from some of the biggest companies including Auckland Airport, Spark, Fletcher Building, SkyCity and A2 Milk, which met or beat market expectations, with positive outlooks.

Amova Asset Management head of equities Michael Sherrock said the sentiment was helped by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand holding the official cash rate at current levels and indicating it would hold steady for the rest of the year.

“We are reassured in the fact that things aren’t getting worse. The outlook is improving,” he said.

“And so I think there’s no sort of lush lawn growing. It’s just starting to sprout. And all of the bits and pieces are in place for a recovery as we move through the year ahead.

“We’re starting to see that come through the likes of Freightways.”

Contact Energy kicked off the reporting season last week with a positive outlook, with plans to raise more than half a billion dollars to invest in three large scale renewable energy projects.

Sherrock said the rest of the three big power companies Meridian, Mercury and Genesis, were also expected to report strong results this week, in line with Contact’s.

He said the market was also expecting to see strong results from the agricultural sector, following a positive update from apple exporter Scales, which lifted its full year underlying profit to between $61m and $62m.

He said Sky TV would be watched to see if it delivered on plans to pay a 30 cents a share dividend this year.

Other companies yet to report included tourism firms, Tourism Holdings, Air New Zealand, industrial and infrastructure services sector companies, Port of Tauranga, Channel Infrastructure and Chorus.

In addition to Scales, agri-sector firms PGG Wrightson and T&G Global will be reporting, along with manufacturing firms Vulcan Steel and Steel & Tube,

The market would also see results from property firms Property for Industry, Precinct Properties and Summerset Retirement Villages, and others representing a number of sectors including banks Heartland and KiwiBank, healthcare and petfood firm EBOS, media firm NZME, tech firm Vista Group and many others.

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‘Very high’ demand sees 235 nurses begin advanced training through new scholarship

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

More than double the planned number of primary care nurses will begin advanced training this year, following strong demand for the government’s new scholarship.

Health Minister Simeon Brown said the government had originally committed to funding 120 primary care registered nurses each year for four years to undertake advanced education through its new Registered Nurse Primary Care scholarships, and become registered nurse prescribers – but this year, it would fund 235.

Brown said there had been a “very high level of demand”, and the extra places could be offered within existing funding.

Placements would begin from the week of 23 February.

Of those 235 – who were registered nurses already working in primary and community healthcare settings – 147 would work towards a postgraduate diploma in prescribing, and 88 would undertake a master of nursing.

Nurses who completed those qualifications could prescribe from an approved list of medicines for common and long-term conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes, respiratory conditions, and menopause symptoms.

Health Minister Simeon Brown. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The health minister said this additional training capacity came at an important time following the recent expansion of prescribing rights announced in December.

Te Whatu Ora national chief nurse Nadine Gray said it would improve access to prescriptions for New Zealanders, with more healthcare workers able to see patients and prescribe.

She said these nurses would train at a number of universities across the country, undertaking a mixture of pharmacology post-graduate papers and completing clinical hours under supervision.

Gray said nurse prescribers could go on to become nurse practitioners, who through a masters degree, would have the ability to see, diagnose, prescribe, treat and manage patients as independent practitioners without the need for GP oversight.

“Some nurses probably applied for scholarships or funding through the old DHBs or their districts, but this is far greater than what we’ve had before,” she said.

The scholarship covered course fees and clinical supervision requirements, being released to be able to study – “it’s a real wrap-around supportive scholarship so the nurse is successful”.

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‘Calling for change for almost a year’; Hopes government will act after dog killing

Source: Radio New Zealand

An animal control officer communicates with a roaming dog (file image). RNZ / Felix Walton

Auckland Council is hoping recent tragic dog attacks, including a fatal attack, will make the government step in and make changes.

On Tuesday, 62-year-old Mihiata Te Rore was killed by dogs while visiting a home in the Northland town of Kaihu.

Then on Saturday, three people were injured after two dogs attacked people in the Christchurch suburb of Bryndwr.

The attacks have sparked calls for an overhaul of the Dog Control Act – with Te Rore being the fourth person killed by dogs in the past four years.

Speaking to Morning Report, Auckland Council general manager of licensing and compliance Robert Irvine said the council had been calling for change for almost a year.

The issue of roaming dogs – with a number of attacks on young kids – was “really, really bad and it just keeps on getting worse”, Irvine said.

In Auckland alone, Irvine said there were 17,000 reports of roaming dogs every year – putting the community at risk.

“We want people to be out and about, enjoying our parks, going for walks and having the fear of being attacked by a dog is not something that we want.”

Mihiata Te Rore, 62, was killed by three dogs after entering a property in the Northland town of Kaihu on 17 February 2026. Supplied

The Dog Control Act was nearly 30 years old and very outdated, Irvine said.

“We’ve been calling for change on this for almost a year and the key things we are looking at is changing it to be more proactive.

“We need greater powers for those that just aren’t actually listening to the current rules. So things like getting on top of the problem, more powers around desexing – we need more dogs desexed out there and we need the dog control act to give us that power to do that.”

Irvine said the council impounded about 10,000 dogs per annum – releasing most of them – and being able to desex them before release was a power the council wanted to help control the issue of breeding.

The council also wanted the power to cease dogs if necessary. He said in one case, more than 20 dogs were found on a residential property and it had no power to take them – having to go through a “lengthy” process before it could disqualify the owner for having too many.

“Up to now, we’ve been told the changes aren’t on the government’s agenda but we’re hoping after, sadly, these tragic events that the government will now actually step in and make some changes.”

Auckland Council had upped its dog control spend by about $10 million last year – needing extra animal management officers among other initiatives – meaning its spend was now about $25m per year.

But its initiatives were not enough – and changes were needed to the Act, Irvine said.

Local Government Minister Simon Watts previously said he was seeking advice on how central government could respond to the attacks and the Dog Control Act.

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‘It’s a little bit of wait and see’: Trade Minister Todd McClay on Donald Trump’s tariff hikes

Source: Radio New Zealand

Trade Minister Todd McClay. (File photo) RNZ / Mark Papalii

As the world grapples with US President Donald Trump’s latest move raising global duty on imports into the United States to 15 percent, Trade Minister Todd McClay says how it will impact New Zealand businesses remains to be seen.

Over the weekend, Trump said on his Truth Social platform that after a thorough review of the Supreme Court’s ruling that emergency tariffs were illegal, the administration was hiking the import levies “to the fully allowed, and legally tested, 15 percent level.”

But what will this mean for New Zealand businesses?

Trade Minister Todd McClay told Morning Report, exports to the US by value had increased recently, albeit not across the board.

He said now there would be a little bit of “wait and see” as to what would happen.

“Looking at other markets we’ve seen our exports to the EU going up.”

McClay said he was not presently speaking to the Trump administration about the tariff situation, but there had been ongoing conversations with them about the tariff rate.

“But ultimately, they haven’t come down below 15 percent for any country that has a surplus against them. There’s no evidence anywhere else in the world they’re dropping below that.”

So far for New Zealand exporters, the products that were sold to the US were still wanted and in demand despite tariffs, McClay said.

“What we’re doing is making sure they’ve got options elsewhere, which is part of why the India free trade agreement is so important for us.”

He said New Zealand also had agreements with other countries including the EU, Uk, China and Japan which were important.

“It’s not a plan B – you can sell to America and you can sell to the others if you want to.”

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Gore’s iconic giant trout has finally caught a name

Source: Radio New Zealand

The newly named Trevor the trout. Tess Brunton/RNZ

Gore’s iconic statue is no longer with-trout a name

The brown trout statue has been proudly leaping in the Southland town since 1989 after being locally designed, built and fundraised.

Trevor was officially announced at the On The Fly Festival on the banks of the Mataura River on Sunday afternoon.

The Gore District Council teamed up with Hokonui FM to name the famous fish, asking for name suggestions before public voting this month – yes, Trouty McTroutface was floated.

The five finalists were Trixie, Scout, Trevor, Gordon or Finn.

But council senior events coordinator Florine Potts said Trevor was a clear winner after receiving more than a third of votes.

“People from far and wide come to Gore, come and take a photo with the trout. We see it happen every single day. Buses full of tourists stop here and they come and grab a photo and people love it and now we can all embrace Trevor the trout,” she said.

Gore District Council senior events coordinator Florine Potts said Trevor was an icon. Tess Brunton/RNZ

The Gore Lion’s Club gifted the statue to the town to celebrate its 25th anniversary with lots of fundraising to make it happen, she said.

“Like a celebrity cocktail party with some big names coming to Gore, a fishing race with little fish going down the Mataura River.”

Fly fishing guide Shelen Boyes was showing people how to fly fish at the festival.

Fly fishing guide Shelen Boyes was delighted to see more women and younger people getting involved in the sport. Tess Brunton/RNZ

There were a lot of moving parts to make the magic happen, she said.

“You’re having to not only cast a rod with a really light fly on the end of it, have accuracy, deal with the wind, deal with the elements, and then also have to pretty much hook it yourself and reel it in yourself without losing it,” she said.

“So yeah, it’s quite a lot.”

It was a great way to bring people together, was quite meditative and encouraged people to think about river health, she said.

Fly fishing in the Mataura River at the On The Fly Festival. Tess Brunton/RNZ

The Mataura River was a wonderful place to take people, Boyes said.

She described the Mataura as a “gold medal, blue ribbon fishery”.

“It’s got 700 fish per kilometre. You can easily spot fish all over the river system.”

Fly fishing has been Mike Weddell’s career and passion – he has been flying fishing for more than 60 years.

He was been showing people how it was done at the festival.

Mike Weddell said fly fishing has been both his career and passion. Tess Brunton/RNZ

“It’s a fantastic sport. What you used to see in the village back home, all the kids that fished all the time never got into trouble, except for coming home too late at night, he said.

Trevor will have an official naming ceremony later this year.

Rainbow trout on show at the On the Fly Festival. They are not the same as what are in the Mataura River. Tess Brunton/RNZ

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/23/gores-iconic-giant-trout-has-finally-caught-a-name/

‘Bullying’, ‘draconian’ homeless move-on orders questioned

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Luke McPake

An Auckland councillor is calling them draconian and heartless, the advocacy group for retailers doubts they will work long term, and a man on the streets says it’s bullying.

But the government says its move-on orders announced on Sunday are part of reclaiming main streets and town centres.

The orders target people as young as 14 and give Police powers to move on rough sleepers, disorderly people or beggars for up to 24 hours.

Breach an order, and it risks a fine of up to $2000 or three month jail term.

“We understand that in certain cities around New Zealand it is a significant problem,” Retail NZ chief executive Carolyn Young said.

“There’s antisocial behaviour and a lot of drug taking and drinking, and it’s pretty unpleasant and it’s quite difficult for people to want to come into the city.”

She welcomes new tools for police, but doubts their long term usefulness.

“The problem we see with it is that if you move someone on, you’re moving them to just another area where they’ll be a problem for somebody else,” she said.

“The move-on orders are for 24 hours, they may just come back again the next day, the question is how many times will it take to move them on before we break the cycle and give relief to those businesses in that region and then it’ll be the same problem somewhere else.”

File photo. Retail NZ chief executive Carolyn Young. Supplied

Young said without wider social support, Retail NZ didn’t believe they would make a difference in the long run.

“And we know that the police do a really great job and they are already stretched, and so it’s hard to know how this is a solution,” she said.

“It’s probably a break in the circuit… it’s how often do you have to break the circuit before you’ll change behaviours.”

Some people on Auckland’s streets who spoke with RNZ after the announcement also had doubts.

“It’s a bully tactic,” Kenneth Dahl said.

He’s 50, and has been on and off the streets since he was 18.

“It’s pushing people into a corner… and as for them moving us into accommodation, they’re forcing us to live in places we do not want to live,” he said.

“It’s a bully tactic right there.”

Dahl currently has provided motel accommodation.

“But I choose not to be there because as soon as I look out the window all I see is grey and white, there’s no greenery whatsoever, nothing, no vegetation or anything around, it’s not a home, it’s a cell or a prison cell.”

The streets, he said, were where he felt most at home.

Benny Ngata was with him in the central city and expected the orders to lead to more crime.

“And they’re trying to move them out of the town to make themselves look better or something… but when it comes to it, how about help those people to advance themselves and give them a place, because the government’s housing is lacking, that’s why people are on the street,” he said.

“And not only that, people who live on the street, those who have mental illnesses or with addictions, so then how about help them… not by kicking them away.

“Because at the end of the day, that’s going to cause more trouble,” he said.

Ngata said it would just end up costing the government money to put people in jail.

“So at the end of the day, the government is going to lose,” he said.

“If you want to be a government, work with the people… how about get off your fat arse and help them.”

Ngata was asked if help was there at the moment.

“No, there’s nothing there, that’s why people are sleeping on the streets, that’s why people are homeless, because the government doesn’t care.”

Auckland councillor Richard Hills posted on Facebook it was earlier government changes that had dramatically increased homelessness.

File photo. Auckland councillor Richard Hills. Alexia Russell

“These heartless, draconian ‘move on orders will not deliver positive outcomes for people, but they will make the Govt look tough in an election year,” he wrote.

Community Housing Aotearoa said Police were not equipped to assess what health support rough sleepers need.

Chief executive Paul Gilberd said it shouldn’t be the job of officers.

“Often these people are very unwell both physically and in terms of mental health and sometimes substance abuse, so I feel for the police being put in a very awkward situation where they’re being required to make these judgements and I think there’s a strong argument for much better coordination between services,” he said.

Wellington’s City Missioner Murray Edridge said the government earlier signalled any laws to move on rough sleepers would come with support.

“And we heard the Prime Minister early in this conversation say we wouldn’t just move people on and not do anything to help them,” he said.

“Well, I’m still waiting to see what the help is going to look like.”

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith’s office said it’s been made very clear police are expected to connect people given move-on orders with the support they may need.

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Back in Auckland, Queen’s Arcade property manager Ian Wright said the orders put the icing on the cake after more security, policing and social support.

“I don’t see it as displacement of the problem, that’s not a solution, it’s very much about holding people to account, drawing a line in the sand and saying we’ve actually got a right to be here too, the people, our visitors, and we want it to be safe and secure and I don’t think that’s too much to ask.”

But Aaron Hendry, who works with at-risk young people, is worried about the orders applying to people as young as 14.

“The support structures are not in place to adequately respond to these children’s needs and so, look, it’s concerning to us, we are concerned around what is looking like a really clear streets to prison pipeline with the lack of resources invested in to ensure that people are looked after,” he said.

The orders will be part of an amendment to the Summary Offences Act, meaning it still has to go through the legislative process.

Paul Goldsmith said there would be a chance for the orders to be scrutinised, but the government also wanted to get them in place as soon as possible.

The National Homelessness Data Project last showed homelessness had more than doubled in Auckland in the year to September.

What the orders do

  • The government will amend the Summary Offences Act to give police the power to issue move-on orders to people who are displaying disorderly, disruptive, threatening, or intimidating behaviour.
  • They will also apply to people who are obstructing or impeding someone entering a business, breaching the peace, begging, rough sleeping, or displaying behaviour indicating an attempt to inhabit a public place.
  • The orders will require someone to leave for a specified time – up to 24 hours – and distance determined by the officer.
  • When the order is issued, the person will be warned it is an offence to breach it, unless they have a reasonable excuse for being there.
  • The penalty for a breach would be a maximum fine of $2,000 or up to three months imprisonment.

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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/2026/02/23/bullying-draconian-homeless-move-on-orders-questioned/

Hundreds of Wellington homes still without power a week after storm

Source: Radio New Zealand

Trees fell on power lines (file image). Supplied / Caleb Gordon

More than 300 homes in Wellington are still without power a week after being hit by a southerly storm.

Wellington Electricity said the extremely gusty nature of last week’s storm appeared to have made it extra damaging, and it was taking longer than expected to restore power.

The lines company apologised to the 260 customers across Wellington and Porirua, and 70 in the Hutt Valley, who have now gone without electricity for a week.

The number was down from the approximate 700 homes on Friday that still had no power, when Wellington Electricity said it would donate $10 to KidsCan Charitable Trust for every customer who wouldn’t be reconnected that day.

Have you been affected? Get in touch at: hamish.cardwell@rnz.co.nz

Wellington Electricity chief executive Greg Skelton said the sheer scale of the damage that fallen trees and windblown branches have caused meant they were behind schedule.

“From initial assessments we thought we were going to get power restored in the Hutt Valley on Saturday evening.

“However, in many jobs we discovered greater damage than we could initially see after trees were cleared and sites made safe to work at. It’s been very frustrating. As of this morning there are about 70 customers still without power in the Hutt Valley. We expect to get power restored to them today.”

He said power should be restored to the 260 homes across Wellington and Porirua by Tuesday night.

Some repairs would be temporary, requiring further work.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/23/hundreds-of-wellington-homes-still-without-power-a-week-after-storm/

Barker’s of Geraldine in a jam over waste

Source: Radio New Zealand

An aerial view of the reserve, the water ponds, and the Barker’s blocks and factory. Supplied

The Barkers jam maker is already in trouble with its neighbours over stinky wastewater ponds, and now it wants to dump the waste onto DOC land.

With the backdrop of the Southern Alps and a pristine river running by the famous jam-maker, Barker’s factory tells the ideal story of a successful New Zealand business.

What’s not captured in that idyllic image is the stench of its wastewater ponds and the company’s solution, that involves spraying five olympic-sized pools of liquid onto nearby conservation land.

“This is a lovely New Zealand story,” says Newsroom’s David Williams of the food-making business, started by the Barker family in Geraldine in 1969.

“Everybody wants something to be started in a cowshed, don’t they? And to be innovative and to try something on the side. It’s this iconic story associated with this iconic brand.”

The business flourished, its jams, pickles and sauces are a Kiwi favourite. French food giant Andros bought a majority stake in 2015 and took complete ownership two years ago. Recently it opened a $60 million expanded factory on the outskirts of Geraldine, employing 300 locals.

But not a month goes by without a story about the South Canterbury factory’s wastewater woes.

A screenshot from Barker’s website shows the idyllic location of the factory, as well the company’s ethos about the land. Supplied

“There’s been a bit of a shift in recent years and people around the factory haven’t been entirely happy with the way that Barker’s is behaving,” says Williams, who’s been investigating the company and its clashes with the environment regulator ECan and the Department of Conservation.

In the latest development, Barker’s has applied to the Department of Conservation (DOC) to spray 12,000 cubic metres of wastewater from its two ponds onto the neighbouring Hae Hae Te Moana River Conservation Reserve. DOC will decide by 5 March.

Williams says the story is about more than one company trying to come up with a solution for its industrial waste.

“This is about how regulators act when they have information and what they do in the face of companies pushing back. You know, this is one case but you would argue, is this the case of regulators up and down the country?”

The Timaru Herald’s Federico Magrin has also been digging into Barker’s wastewater practises and found it has been in tense discussions with ECan and DOC over it for months.

He reported in December that hundreds of emails, released under the Official Information Act, reveal exchanges between ECan, DOC and Barker’s over 18 months, “in a battle of cease-and-desist orders, claims and counter-claims”.

Magrin has looked into Andros, also a family company, famous for its Bonne Maman preserve. He compared its wastewater practices in France with New Zealand and found stark differences.

At its industrial site in France, its waste goes into a bioenergy plant next door and the highly treated wastewater is discharged into the neighbouring river.

“That is industrial France, whereas New Zealand this company is using the land as a treatment station, kind of. There is a very striking difference between how they treat wastewater in France and New Zealand even though one is in an industrial area and one is sitting next to a reserve with people living around the factory,” Magrin says.

His investigations also found that the rules for Andros in France are “extremely different” to Environment Canterbury’s regulations for Barker’s here.

“For the French factory there’s a limit for the amount of organic pollution it can discharge that ends up going into the water and what Barker’s is allowed to do is 32 times more than their French counterpart,” he says.

Williams says it is not the first time that Barker’s has sprayed wastewater onto the DOC reserve. Previously, DOC did not renew its license after the spray damaged the land.

“I don’t know why they let them discharge onto the reserve in the first place but when they’re faced with an application from anyone they have to consider it and they have to make sure there’s enough information for them to make a decision. I guess the public may judge them by whatever they decide goes on here.”

Listen to The Detail to hear how Barker’s has responded to the stories, why neighbours are nervous about the factory’s discharge plans for the DOC reserve and future plans to spray the wastewater on a pine forest block the company bought recently.

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

You can also stay up-to-date by liking us on Facebook or following us on Twitter.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/23/barkers-of-geraldine-in-a-jam-over-waste/

Hundreds of Wellinton homes still without power a week after storm

Source: Radio New Zealand

Trees fell on power lines (file image). Supplied / Caleb Gordon

More than 300 homes in Wellington are still without power a week after being hit by a southerly storm.

Wellington Electricity said the extremely gusty nature of last week’s storm appeared to have made it extra damaging, and it was taking longer than expected to restore power.

The lines company apologised to the 260 customers across Wellington and Porirua, and 70 in the Hutt Valley, who have now gone without electricity for a week.

The number was down from the approximate 700 homes on Friday that still had no power, when Wellington Electricity said it would donate $10 to KidsCan Charitable Trust for every customer who wouldn’t be reconnected that day.

Have you been affected? Get in touch at: hamish.cardwell@rnz.co.nz

Wellington Electricity chief executive Greg Skelton said the sheer scale of the damage that fallen trees and windblown branches have caused meant they were behind schedule.

“From initial assessments we thought we were going to get power restored in the Hutt Valley on Saturday evening.

“However, in many jobs we discovered greater damage than we could initially see after trees were cleared and sites made safe to work at. It’s been very frustrating. As of this morning there are about 70 customers still without power in the Hutt Valley. We expect to get power restored to them today.”

He said power should be restored to the 260 homes across Wellington and Porirua by Tuesday night.

Some repairs would be temporary, requiring further work.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/23/hundreds-of-wellinton-homes-still-without-power-a-week-after-storm/

Scheme paying for counselling within 24hrs making a difference

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington East Girls College associate principal Anna Wilson. John Gerritsen/RNZ

Schools say a Rotary Club-funded scheme that pays for counselling within 24 hours is making a huge difference for their students.

The programme called Lifting the Lid runs in several parts of the country and started in Wellington in 2022.

Schools say it helps them cope with a rising tide of mental health problems among young people.

David Shackleton, chair of the Wellington Lifting the Lid committee, said the programme originated in Australia and was introduced to the city by the Port Nicholson Rotary Club.

Since then Rotary clubs in areas including Hutt Valley and Kapiti had adopted the programme for their local schools, he said.

Shackleton said the Wellington scheme allocated funding to 14 participating schools – 10 secondary schools and four intermediate schools – to use as they wished.

He said the schools decided what was best for each child and sent a form to Lifting the Lid requesting approval, which was granted within 24 hours.

Shackleton said the Wellington programme had supported more than 1700 sessions for about 160 students since it began.

He said demand was growing at an alarming rate.

“We meet three times a year with the principals and the school counsellors and during that time we get their feedback on how the programme is going and what kind of demand they are seeing in their schools – consistently we hear that demand is increasing almost term by term,” he said.

Shackleton said it appeared social media including cyber-bullying was a major driver of mental health problems among young people.

He said the club and donors raised $100,000 for the Wellington programme for this year’s work – enough to put some aside for next year.

Rongotai College deputy principal Geoff Hall said the school was one of the first to join the scheme.

“It was a no-brainer for us. The well-being of kids is really, really important and one of the issues is just getting the funds to support those kids,” he said.

Rongotai College deputy principal Geoff Hall. John Gerritsen/RNZ

Hall said prior to joining the scheme the school used in-house expertise, sometimes including teachers who did not have counselling backgrounds, or waiting for appointments with external providers because the school did not have the money to pay for private sessions.

“This has allowed us to access external providers quickly and efficiently without that added burden of ‘where are we going to find the cash’. We can go to the ministry and in most cases the ministry actually do provide you with the money, but there’s a process and a long process to actually be able to access that,” he said.

Hall said the scheme helped the school be proactive and arrange sessions that equipped groups of boys with skills to improve their mental health.

“We’re giving the boys the tools to deal with their own wellbeing,” he said.

“Life as a teenager is a lot harder now than what it was when I first started teaching in 1990. These kids need a lot more explicit teaching of the skills to be able to deal with their own wellbeing.”

Hall said schools involved in the scheme met regularly to share their experiences and it was clear demand for counselling was increasing.

Wellington East Girls College associate principal Anna Wilson said Lifting the Lid ensured help for students was not delayed by lengthy waiting lists.

“Last year, we were able to have some students have educational psychologist assessments, which give us a really good understanding of why they’re not able to engage in their lessons and what’s going on for them,” she said.

“The families themselves couldn’t afford that and through the public system they would take a long time to get a referral from their GP to see a paediatrician or psychologist.”

Wilson said demand for mental services was high.

“This funding pool could be grown for us five to 10 times and we could still use it,” she said.

“The wait lists are extreme outside of school. We’ve got a team of two-and-a-half counsellors here at our school and we still have a wait list for the kids that want to see them.”

Wilson said it was clear from meetings with participating schools that anxiety and problems arising from social media were common.

She said Lifting the Lid relieved pressure on the school’s finances.

“A full educational psychological report for us would be around $1700, the equine therapy course was a similar cost… so that’s really awesome to have that funding to use,” she said.

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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/2026/02/23/scheme-paying-for-counselling-within-24hrs-making-a-difference/

Memorial unveiled for victims of Lake Alice child and adolescent unit

Source: Radio New Zealand

The memorial pays tribute to Lake Alice survivors, and those who have died. RNZ/Jimmy Ellinghm

In the 1970s the Lake Alice child and adolescent unit near Marton was a place of horror for the children tortured there.

But farmland has replaced the psychiatric hospital, whose buildings have gone, and all that remains from the time is a water tower.

On Saturday a memorial was unveiled at the site paying tribute to those who never left Lake Alice and those whose lives were scarred forever.

‘It’s about the children of Lake Alice’

Unit survivor Robyn Dandy came up with the idea for the memorial.

“It’s important to remember all those who have gone before us, way way too soon. They should have lived long and happy lives, and never did.

“It’s about the returned servicemen who were dumped in here. It’s about the children of Lake Alice who are still with us today.”

Lake Alice survivor Robyn Dandy organised the memorial and intended to pay for it herself. RNZ/Jimmy Ellinghm

She was going to fund the memorial herself until the local council took on that responsibility and with and iwi, Ngāti Apa, made sure it happened.

More than 400 children – including many with no psychiatric illnesses – went through the unit, where they were given electric shocks and paralysing drugs under the watch of Dr Selwyn Leeks, and raped.

“It’s not about anybody in particular,” Dandy said. “It’s about everybody that was involved in Lake Alice and sadly a lot, like my own brother, went very young in life.

“It’s about remembering them. They couldn’t be here for this, but I’m sure they’re watching down today.”

The current government has apologised to victims of state abuse and introduced a compensation scheme for Lake Alice survivors.

But for many, life remains tough.

The house Dandy was renting was badly damaged in last week’s storm and she urgently needs to find another home.

“The water’s only just come on today. The electricity is half on. I need somewhere safe for me and my animals now. I’m getting a bit long in the tooth for running around looking for properties.

“If anybody out there’s got a nice little country cottage around the Manawatū-Rangitīkei district, preferably – I’m a good tenant.”

Affinity with fellow survivors

Lake Alice unit survivor Sherab Palmo was among those who delivered moving speeches to the roadside gathering of about 40 people.

She said she was a clever child, who wanted to be a vet, only for Lake Alice to rip that away. Now though, aged 63, she’s qualified as a midwife.

“I really wanted to meet some people that I’ve been here with, more than anything. It’s like having this whānau that you didn’t see for a long time.

“I’ve connected with a few over the years. And then also just meeting the ones who I have met here today – it’s like having an affinity with someone that you know has survived something that you have.”

Before unveiling the memorial, Dandy paid tribute to Hake Halo, who died last year.

Halo raised the alarm about what was happening at Lake Alice by writing notes in Niuean to his family on drawings sent home. He made sure the figures in those drawings were smiling, so not to raise suspicion among Lake Alice staff.

Journalist Aaron Smale, who has for a decade exposed state malfeasance to do with the Lake Alice unit, also paid tribute to a recently deceased survivor – Rangi Wickliffe.

Decades of cover up

The minister in charge of the response to the Royal Commission into state abuse, Erica Stanford, spoke about the wrongs not only of the unit, but of the state covering up what happened for decades.

“I have been meeting with Lake Alice survivors since almost day one. Being here was extremely important to acknowledge what happened here,” she told RNZ.

“[I’m here] to say the words that I’ve said to them privately, that I’ve said in public – but to say them here at this place, in the shadow of the tower, to acknowledge that the state over 50 years has actively worked against them.”

Many of the horrors of the Lake Alice unit were exposed during royal commission hearings overseen by retired judge Dame Coral Shaw, who travelled from her Waikato home for the unveiling.

Dame Coral Shaw says it was important that she attend the memorial unveiling. RNZ/Jimmy Ellinghm

“I felt here’s an opportunity to remember and to mark, and to do something tangible for the memory of those who’ve passed and the survivors of Lake Alice, who continue to live with their trauma.

“For me it’s a very important part of this long journey.”

She heard weeks of harrowing evidence from survivors and the commission produced the Beautiful Children report into abuse at the Lake Alice unit.

“Before I came I sat down and just went through it again because I wanted to make sure that I had it alive in my mind, and it hurt.

“It hurt to read again and to relive that, but it’s important that we do, that we keep the memories alive, because it we don’t we can’t promise that it won’t happen again.”

Rangitīkei mayor Andy Watson said he had no hesitation in deciding the council should pay for the memorial.

Rangitīkei mayor And Watson says Lake Alice is a stain on the community. RNZ/Jimmy Ellinghm

He described what happened at Lake Alice as a stain on the community.

When he was growing up, he remembers going there to play sport and having no idea what patients were going through.

“Lake Alice was groomed, it had many groundsmen, and we thought as kids that everything was okay. We didn’t know.

“Maybe that’s part of the tragedy. There should have been people who raised the flag earlier and said, ‘Things are not okay.’”

Survivor Karilyn Wildbore said she applauded Dandy for making the memorial happen.

“We all knew driving down this road when we were kids it was going to be horrific.

“Now, we can come back here and we can actually see that it’s not there any more.”

The Lake Alice unit closed in 1978 and the wider facility 20 years later.

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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/2026/02/23/memorial-unveiled-for-victims-of-lake-alice-child-and-adolescent-unit/