Luxon’s invite to Trump’s Board of Peace for Gaza needs ‘measured look’ – Winston Peters

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Mark Papalii

The Foreign Affairs Minister says the US President’s invitation for Christopher Luxon to join the Board of Peace for Gaza is a “multi-faceted” issue and requires a “measured look”.

No decision has been made yet regarding the invite, but Winston Peters says advice from his ministry is being prepared “as we speak”.

A spokesperson for the Prime Minister said last week he welcomed the beginning of the next phase of the peace plan for Gaza and would give the invite “due consideration”.

Speaking to reporters on the first day of Parliament, Peters said there hadn’t been a chance yet for him to discuss the invite with Luxon.

But he said the government was going to sit down and “dispassionately discuss” the issue in its entirety and what it might mean.

“Because it’s not just a small issue, it’s a multi-faceted issue, and we need to take a quite measured look at it.”

Asked whether he’d requested advice from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Peters said “of course, they’re busy working on it as we speak”.

“I’ve asked them for a comprehensive paper covering all issues they can imagine.”

A draft charter for the organisation, which will be chaired by Trump, has been sent to a number of world leaders – including Canada’s Mark Carney, Australia’s Anthony Albanese, Saudi Arabia’s Mohammed bin Salman and Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

Opposition leaders have condemned the invite, with Labour leader Chris Hipkins labelling the government’s so-far refusal to rule out joining the Board an “absolute disgrace”.

He said the fact Luxon was leaving the possibility open was “embarrassing for New Zealand”.

Greens-co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick had written to the Prime Minister on Monday, urging Luxon to “publicly and unequivocally reject this invitation”.

“It is critical that New Zealand joins like-minded nations, such as France, in rejecting the Board and defending the United Nations framework,” the letter read.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/27/luxons-invite-to-trumps-board-of-peace-for-gaza-needs-measured-look-winston-peters/

More yellow-legged hornet queens found in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Yellow-legged hornets are an invasive species, and a danger to local honey and wild bees. Biosecurity NZ

The number of yellow-legged hornet queens found in Auckland has risen to 45 – 32 of them with nests.

Biosecurity New Zealand said it had an excellent response from the public, with 10,270 notifications of suspected sightings.

Even though only a small number of them were actually hornets, the organisation urged Aucklanders to stay on the lookout.

It expected to find more this summer and there were dozens of traps around the city, mostly on the North Shore.

Biosecurity teams were also attaching tiny trackers onto worker hornets to try to lead them to nests.

The hornets had only been found in Auckland.

Biosecurity NZ believed it was unlikely they were outside of the city.

The hornets were a risk to bee populations – they eat them but could also compete with them food if they became established.

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NZ Warriors coach Andrew Webster lays down simple recipe for NRL title quest

Source: Radio New Zealand

Coach Andrew Webster calls the shots at Warriors training. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

If this is to finally be the NZ Warriors’ year, the recipe for success seems simple enough.

“If you’re asking me what needs to happen, we need to do what we do better for longer,” coach Andrew Webster teased, as he addressed media for the first time in 2026.

“That’s a pretty similar response from me for a long time now. When we do it well, we do it really well – that’s why we’ve made the playoffs twice in the last three years – but we’re not here to do that.

“We’re here to win the whole thing.”

Last sighted, Webster painted a forlorn picture, reflecting on his team’s one-and-done exit from the NRL playoffs against four-time defending champions Penrith Panthers.

“I just feel we’ve built some great stuff, but that last piece is missing.” he lamented last September. “I feel like we’ve handled adversity and stayed really tight, but there’s a piece missing.

“We could launch, if we take those lessons and go to the next step, or we could stay exactly where we are, which is just a top-six team. I just think we can be better.”

With the benefit of four months to review last year’s effort, Webster isn’t making any bold predictions about the upcoming campaign, which begins with a pre-season trial against Manly Sea Eagles at Napier on 14 February.

Warriors co-captain Mitch Barnett in pre-season training. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

His response to the ‘how’ question acknowledges that his Warriors were one of the form teams early in the 2025 competition, when they came out of the blocks 8-2 and sat second on the table after Round 11.

Injuries and fatigue inevitably eroded their performance, as they lost co-captain Mitch Barnett and star half Luke Metcalf in quick succession mid-season, and never really recovered.

“We’ve got to improve what we do and do it for longer,” emphasises Webster. “We can’t have those periods where there are big momentum shifts and we give teams those opportunities.”

Barnett and Metcalf still aren’t up to full speed, as they continue to nurse their respective knee injuries, although they are back out on the training field. Both seem likely to miss the pre-season.

“Barney is expected around Rounds 0-4, anywhere in that range,” estimated Webster. “Luke would be Rounds 7-10.

“In the last month, they can start doing a lot, but they can’t give everything, so you have to see how they progress in that period. It looks like they’re flying up to this point, but this is the point where you actually see how they go.

Warriors halfback Luke Metcalf in pre-season training. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

“Luke definitely won’t be in pre-season trials or early rounds, that’s for sure.”

Centre Rocco Berry was another who could not stay on the field through a series of niggly injuries and he will again miss early rounds, after more off-season shoulder surgery.

Back-up fullback Taine Tuaupiki, whom many expect to press hard for the starting jersey this season, also suffered a leg injury during “an incident on his farm” and made a later start to training. He’ll be touch and go for the opening round.

Bolstering the squad are the additions of newcomers Morgan Gannon (second row/lock), Jye Linnane (half), Haizyn Mellars and Alofiano Khan-Pereira (wings), whom Webster expects to push for first-grade spots this season.

Meanwhile, the Warriors coach is not a fan of proposed rule changes designed to enhance the competitiveness of games.

One would give teams the option of either kicking off or receiving the ball, after conceding a try. The current format sees the conceding team kicking the ball back to their opponents.

“Whatever they give us, we’ll take it,” Webster said. “I thought it’s pretty good how it is, really.

“I think they’re trying to stop that big momentum, where someone can score three tries in a row, but if you’re conceding those, you’re probably not good enough.

“One of the most frustrating things, as a coach and player, is to be conceding off a kickoff, but if you’re getting scored against, the good teams make sure they stop the bleeding right there and then.

“I’m happy with the current rule, but if they change it, we’ll come up with ways to use it tactically to our advantage.”

Another change could see the interchange bench expand from four to six players, although the number of substitutions would stay at eight each game. Most coaches wrestle with the composition of their four-man benches, either carrying a utility player or relocating forwards out of position to cover injuries among the backs.

This amendment would allow them to cater for all contingencies.

Roger Tuivasa-Sheck and Kurt Capewell lead the Warriors onto the training field. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

“Any of the 19 could play and that would give clarity to the fans early in the week,” said Webster, who is renowned for making late changes to his gameday squad. “You guys are laughing at me, I can tell.

“I’m frustrated by this rule – I think it’s going to be hard to give guys gametime in reserve grade, because you’re carrying an extra two players.

“The beauty of our game is resilience and the ability to adapt, so if you’ve got particular players on the bench and someone goes down, that changes quick.

“I think now you’re always going to carry two hookers and a half, and a fullback/outside back on the bench, plus your forward rotation, which won’t change.

“If you lose the halfback and put him on, someone else doesn’t get a game. Come 10-12-16 games into the season, you could find these guys aren’t getting gametime in reserve grade and aren’t getting any better.”

Webster argues, if the rule change is designed to cater for concussions, this could be covered by activating the ’18th man’ quicker.

Current rules require three players failing head injury assessments or a match-ending injury caused by foul play, before the extra reserve can take the field.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/27/nz-warriors-coach-andrew-webster-lays-down-simple-recipe-for-nrl-title-quest/

Woolworths Te Awamutu supermarket closed briefly due to diesel fumes

Source: Radio New Zealand

Woolworths in Te Awamutu was briefly closed on Tuesday afternoon. Google maps

Woolworths says its supermarket in Te Awamutu closed briefly on Tuesday afternoon after diesel fumes entered the rear storeroom while the sprinkler system and generator were being tested.

A spokesperson said staff working in the affected area were assessed by ambulance staff and no further treatment was required.

They said no customers were impacted and the store is now trading as usual.

“A full investigation will be conducted to prevent a recurrence of this type of incident. We apologise to customers for the inconvenience and any alarm caused,” the spokesperson said.

Fire and Emergency said two trucks attended the callout to the supermarket shortly after 2.30pm and cleared the store for re-opening by 3pm.

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Woman dies after Christchurch Hospital staff missed signs of sepsis, HDC report says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Christchurch hospital. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

A woman who arrived at Christchurch Hospital’s emergency department in acute pain died the next day after staff missed signs she had sepsis.

The 65-year-old patient died of urosepsis, a life-threatening complication of a urinary tract infection, in January 2022.

In a report released on Tuesday, deputy Health and Disability Commissioner Carolyn Cooper said the hospital failed to provide reasonable care, making “severe departures from standard practice”.

“I concur that there was a failure to recognise urosepsis in a timely way, which subsequently led to a lack of appropriate treatment being provided to [the woman],” she said.

Health NZ completed an adverse event review (AER) into the woman’s care and also found delays in the recognition and treatment of urosepsis.

The report said the woman had a history of high blood pressure and Crohn’s disease, with a previous bowel resection, small bowel obstructions and a kidney stone.

The woman was diagnosed with renal colic after being assessed in the ED and given pain relief.

She was then transferred to the hospital’s urology unit.

The report said the woman was experiencing prolonged hypotension by the next morning.

“Throughout the day, [the woman] received intravenous fluid boluses as the primary intervention for her hypotension. However, her [blood pressure] did not respond to this adequately,” the report said.

“The AER found that a lack of response or improvement from the fluid should have triggered a challenge of the diagnosis and consideration of other possible differential diagnoses or causes. However, this did not occur.”

Medical reviews at the time suggested the woman’s hypotension may have been due to the effects of the pain relief.

Clinicians noted the woman was “chirpy and chatty” throughout the day and that she did not have a fever but clinical notes also recorded instances of the woman shivering, a symptom of sepsis, the report said.

“The AER found that clinical staff exhibited anchoring bias – that is, there was an over-reliance on the absence of a fever, which normally is present in urosepsis, despite the lack of improvement over the day,” the report said.

“While the nurse in charge, the house officer, and the registrar were informed of [the woman’s] deterioration, there is no evidence of a senior medical officer consultation (after the initial ward round at 8am), consideration of involvement of the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) team, or a rapid response call being made when [the woman’s] observations were in the red and blue zone, as required by the mandatory escalation pathway.”

The deputy commissioner found an “early warning score” chart had several incomplete observations throughout the day, with the total score also not recorded, which was not in line with Health NZ policy.

Cooper criticised Health NZ’s failure to follow its mandatory escalation and urosepsis policies and the renal colic protocol.

“Had these policies been adhered to, the delay in the diagnosis of urosepsis may have been avoided,” she said.

Cooper recommended Health NZ Waitaha Canterbury apologise to the woman’s family.

She also recommended developing an education and training plan for staff around diagnosing urosepsis and the importance of medical documentation.

Health NZ told the commissioner it had changed its renal colic protocols to highlight the need to consider an alternative diagnosis, run an education refresher on sepsis and run an education session for urology nurses.

In a statement, Health New Zealand chief medical officer Te Waipounamu Alan Pithie said patient safety and quality of care was a top priority.

“On behalf of Health New Zealand, we would like to say how sorry we are for what happened and extend our sincerest condolences to the patient’s family and friends for the loss of their loved one. We are deeply sorry for the distress caused and recognise that the patient’s death in 2022 has had, and continues to have, a profound and long-lasting impact,” he said.

“We acknowledge the deputy commissioner’s findings and have provided the family with a written apology. We have also implemented changes to improve our services including amending the renal colic clinical pathway for care, rolling out a national sepsis action plan, and updating processes for recording clinical information on deteriorating patients.

“Work is also underway to implement refresher education for urology nursing staff on early warning scores (EWS) and adding more functionality to the digital adult EWS pathway.”

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Blues coach Vern Cotter ‘blindsided’ by Scott Robertson’s All Blacks sacking

Source: Radio New Zealand

Outgoing Blues coach Vern Cotter revealed today that his deal with the Queensland Reds was too far advanced for him to consider the now vacant All Blacks head coaching role. Cotter will leave the Blues for Brisbane at the end of the 2026 Super Rugby Pacific season and said he was as surprised as anyone when he heard the news of Scott Robertson’s sacking earlier this month.

“I was a bit blindsided by the Razor thing,” said Cotter.

“Probably nobody thought that was coming. There was a review, and after two years and two years before the World Cup, that’s what happens.”

Cotter, who originally agreed to a two-year contract with the Blues and extended for this season, said that he had committed to the move to the Reds to replace Les Kiss by the time NZ Rugby (NZR) had made their decision regarding Robertson.

“We were so far down the track with the Reds, it would have been hard to make myself available for the All Blacks. It’s timing and it didn’t work out.”

The 64-year-old, who has had an extensive coaching career at both test and domestic level, admitted that things could’ve been different had they lined up better.

“I’d love to coach All Blacks – I applied in 2011. That’s a long time ago, but, but once again, I had given my word and I don’t want to go back on it. I’m not letting people down.”

Cotter said he hadn’t discussed the end of season player review, that proved so critical in Robertson’s fate, with any of his All Blacks squad members.

“What we can gather from it is that there’s a very clear idea of what they want to happen next. The (NZR) board, David Kirk and whatever. So we’re not privy to it the players aren’t really either… we certainly don’t like asking and that belongs to them and that (All Blacks) environment.

Cotter ruling himself out of contention seemingly narrows the field to Jamie Joseph and Dave Rennie as likely leading candidates for the All Blacks role.

New Blues CEO Karl Budge said the process to find a replacement for Cotter was already underway.

“This has been part of planning for quite some time,” said Budge.

“So we’ve had loads of chats with Vern. He’ll tell you that timing is always pretty important, and this is a club that’s well planned out. We wanted to look out to the future and I think the work with Vern has allowed us to do that.”

Blues captain Patrick Tuipulotu holds up the trophy as the Blues team celebrate winning the Super Rugby Pacific final. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Budge praised Cotter for “teaching us how to win” after guiding the Blues to the 2024 title, their first in a full Super Rugby format in 21 years.

Meanwhile, Cotter remains focused on the upcoming Super Rugby Pacific campaign, as they try and repeat that 2024 championship run. He confirmed today that All Blacks Beauden Barrett and Patrick Tuipulotu will be missing from the first few rounds, with Barrett on mandatory rest and scheduled to return in round four against the Crusaders.

Tuipulotu is still recovering from a shoulder injury and is expected back by round six.

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‘Avoid the area’: Armed police search for driver who fled stolen vehicle

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Angus Dreaver

A cordon is up and armed police are in the suburb of Awapuni in Palmerston North while armed officers search for person who fled police after their vehicle’s tyres were spiked.

The police said they were told about a stolen vehicle on Main Street, Roslyn, at about midday.

It was spotted on a nearby street and officers watched the vehicle before deploying road spikes.

The driver then fled on foot, and police are trying to find them.

A gun was found in the abandoned vehicle.

A cordon is up on Alexander Street, and the public is being asked to avoid the area.

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Elite working dogs fetch more than $300,000 in auction frenzy

Source: Radio New Zealand

Farmers came from far and wide for the the Parapara-Makirikiri Sheep Dog Trial Club auction. supplied

Organisers of a long-standing North Island working dog auction are in disbelief after $320,000 changed hands at their latest sale.

With sheep farming riding a wave of record lamb prices and strong international demand, buyers arrived at the auction near Whanganui last Saturday with extra money in their back pockets.

Hundreds attended the annual Parapara-Makirikiri Sheep Dog Trial Club auction held on a rural property near Whangaehu which featured more than 60 dogs up for sale.

Inclement weather on the day did little to slow the bidding.

Fierce competition pushed heading dog Trix to the top price of $12,200, bettering last year’s best by nearly $3000.

Jonathan Smailes shows his 11-month-old Wedge to the crowd at the Parapara-Makirikiri Sheep Dog Trial Club auction. She sold for $9800. supplied

The top huntaway Mufasa from Taihape’s Peter Wilson sold for $10,500 – with the young farmer selling three more prized working dogs Spud, Shaggy and Queen. This topped last year’s top huntaway of $9800.

And in a strong run of prices, seven huntaways and two heading dogs sold for at least $9000 on Saturday.

Club spokesperson Brenda O’Leary said the scale of the prices had taken organisers by surprise.

“People can’t believe how much money we have turned over at the sale,” she said.

“There’s a shortage of quality farm dogs.”

O’Leary attributed some of the success of the sale to farmers having less time to break dogs in.

And top-priced Twix certainly fitted the bill.

Taihape farmer Peter Wilson said it’s hard to let your best friends go to another home. supplied

She was described in the run down as “honest, good natured, easy to work and have around”.

Mufasa meanwhile was also fully broken in and “a nice powerful dog”.

Wilson conceded it could be hard to let dogs go to a new owner.

The sun came out only briefly on the day of the sale. supplied

“I’m pretty adamant that these dogs have to go to a good home. At the end of the day they’re good mates of mine,” Wilson said.

“They do a lot for you. But when someone’s paying top dollar like they have been, they’ve got to look after them.”

On average huntaways fetched higher prices with an average of $6500.

That pipped the heading dogs average of $4700.

The event is run as a fundraiser for the Parapara-Makirikiri Sheep Dog Trial Club. O’Leary said the auction entry fee of $150 per dog will now help with the club’s running costs. She said most of the funds will be used to host their annual hill country trial held at Parikino which includes the cost of getting sheep to the trial.

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KiwiSaver withdrawals surge in 2025

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

More than 10,000 more withdrawals were made from KiwiSaver for hardship reasons last year than in 2024, and providers say there’s no sign of the rate slowing.

Inland Revenue data shows there were 58,460 withdrawals for hardship reasons in 2025, 10,000 more than were made for a first home.

In total, $514.8 million was withdrawn from KiwiSaver because of hardship, and $2.1 billion for a first home.

In 2024, there were 47,390 hardship withdrawals to a total of $403.8m

Dean Anderson, founder of Kernel, said it showed the two-speed economic recovery that New Zealand was experiencing.

The level of first-home withdrawals up a third year-on-year for the month in December, while hardship withdrawals were up 12 percent.

“On one end, sustained economic pressures, both at the household level and business level – such as in the hospitality sector – have forced Kiwis who’ve exhausted other means to tap their retirement savings just to get by,” he said.

“On the other end, three years of falling house prices, plus price stabilisation through 2025, and falling interest rates have opened the door for first-home buyers – many now in their mid-to-late 30s with a decade-plus in the workforce and substantial KiwiSaver balances built up.

“Combined with government first-home support, KiwiSaver is proving a key deposit tool, and we should expect these withdrawals to keep rising as balances grow… The data underlines that KiwiSaver is serving a dual role – supporting home ownership and acting as a financial release valve for those under pressure – but that growth masks a deeper trade-off: every dollar withdrawn today is a dollar not compounding for retirement.”

Pie Funds’ chief executive Ana-Marie Lockyer said there had been no meaningful slowdown in hardship withdrawals.

“The number of approved applications has remained relatively static over the past year rather than trending down.

“That suggests financial pressure is still present for a consistent group of members, even as broader economic indicators begin to stabilise. While we’re not seeing an acceleration, we also aren’t seeing clear signs of easing yet.”

Koura founder Rupert Carlyon said he expected the rate of withdrawals to continue.

“I think there’s three things. There’s clearly the economic climate, which is making life difficult for people. I think you’ve got larger balances, which mean that people all of a sudden are starting to think about it a whole lot more.

“And then the third thing is there’s a greater awareness that you can actually make withdrawals.”

He said a big question would be whether, if there was a shift to make KiwiSaver compulsory or add incentives, the rules on withdrawals had to be tightened.

“At the moment it’s a voluntary saving scheme without any incentive, so you kind of go ‘it’s people’s money’. It’s kind of hard to argue that they can’t get it out for all this stuff. If we move into a different type of scheme, which I think is what a lot of people are starting to talk about, then yeah, what happens to all these withdrawals?”

Retirement Commissioner Jane Wrightson said the data showed that more New Zealanders were having to dip into KiwiSaver to deal with immediate financial pressure.

“Households are clearly under strain, but early withdrawals come at a real long-term cost because people lose the compounding investment gains that help fund a decent retirement. KiwiSaver is designed to support people later in life, so accessing it early should remain a last resort.

“Our 2025 Review of Retirement Income Policies highlighted that New Zealand still lacks consistent data on the range of reasons why these withdrawals are happening. Without better information, it’s difficult to design targeted solutions to try to reduce hardship withdrawals and improve financial resilience. Better data collection is essential if we’re to protect New Zealanders’ long-term retirement outcomes.”

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Poor staffing criticised for death of elderly woman in Ōamaru

Source: Radio New Zealand

Deputy Health and Disability Commissioner Carolyn Cooper. Supplied

The health watchdog has criticised inadequate staffing at Ōamaru Hospital’s emergency department after investigating the death of an elderly woman.

The 93-year-old was given the wrong amount of saline as a result of a prescribing error in November 2023.

Deputy Health and Disability Commissioner Carolyn Cooper said while she was concerned about the care provided to the woman after multiple errors by different staff, a postmortem found the prescribing error did not cause her death.

“While I acknowledge that individual staff were involved, I consider that the workload at the time meant that staff could not carry out their respective roles adequately,” she said.

Cooper found Waitaki District Health Services, which managed the hospital at the time, bore the responsibility of ensuring safe staffing and had breached the woman’s right to health care that minimised the potential harm and optimised her quality of life.

“I am critical that the ED (emergency department) did not have adequate staffing levels to manage high patient numbers and that this had an impact on the standard of care provided to Mrs A by multiple staff,” she said.

Cooper recommended Waitaki District Health Services apologise to the woman’s family and noted the organisation had continued to recruit and employ more staff and boosted training for nursing staff on the infusion of IV fluids.

She said Waitaki had guidelines in place relating to saline but steps had been taken to make the information more widely available.

A sole doctor on a busy emergency department night shift

The woman was seen by a hospital doctor who diagnosed her with pneumonia, urinary retention and severe hyponatraemia, or abnormally low sodium levels in her blood, in November 2023.

He prescribed her 100ml of three per cent saline at a rate of 200ml per hour before his shift finished and a different doctor took over her care.

Waitaki District Health Services acknowledged to the commissioner that the emergency department was busy.

“Dr C was the sole doctor covering Ōamaru Hospital on night shift and was responsible for all ED patients, the acute medical/ward patients, arranging transfers, speaking to consultants at Dunedin Hospital, and taking phone calls from nursing homes, as Ōamaru Hospital provides all urgent care to the region after hours,” the report said.

A registered nurse found a 1000ml bag and showed it to a nursing student, who told him the chart was wrong and it should read 1000ml not 100ml.

The night shift doctor prescribed a 1000ml bag to run over 10 hours because he believed it was a more cautious approach and asked for her levels to be checked in a few hours.

The doctor acknowledged he was not overly familiar with prescribing the saline solution and told the commissioner that there were no hospital guidelines and staff had not raised any concerns about his decision.

Staff noted there was an audible crackle while she was breathing but her condition did not appear to have deteriorated and she was alert.

It was not until the night shift doctor checked her sodium levels just before the morning handover that he realised the rise was too rapid, telling nurses to stop her fluids immediately.

When her original doctor arrived at work, he realised the error and started reversing the sodium correction but the woman soon became unresponsive and died.

A postmortem found she died from pneumonia and sepsis and the sodium correction had not been too rapid.

Cooper raised concerns about the night shift doctor’s actions because he prescribed the larger saline bag despite being unfamiliar with the solution and did not look up the hospital’s guidelines.

“Severe hyponatraemia in a severely ill elderly respiratory patient is such a red flag, and ultimately Mrs A’s care was the responsibility of Dr C despite his suggestion that staff did not raise concerns on reading his prescription,” she said.

Cooper said the woman’s treatment was a moderate departure for the accepted standard of care because the prescribing error was not responsible for her death and the workload was “at the limit of what can be considered safe”.

She also criticised the shift leader and nursing student who administered the dose despite concerns the prescription was incorrect, saying the shift leader did not adequately supervise the student.

Cooper found the woman’s deteriorating condition might have been noticed earlier if her vitals had been better assessed and documented.

She recommended Health New Zealand Southern, which took over operations at Ōamaru Hospital in July 2024, provide training for emergency department staff and rural hospitals on managing abnormally low sodium levels, update the commissioner on staffing levels, confirm different saline bags were kept in separate places and show it was improving its documentation.

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Endangered kākāpō lays eggs in anticipated livestream

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ten-year-old kākāpō Marian incubating three eggs in her nest on Anchor Island. Kākāpō Recovery Programme DOC

Conservation lovers glued to a black and white livestream from a remote island off the coast of New Zealand on Sunday can safely claim to be the only people to have seen a critically endangered kākāpō lay an egg in real time.

The images beamed to the world from a large cavity beneath a rātā tree on Whenua Hou/Codfish Island showed 23-year-old Rakiura laying her second egg of the season, the product of a dalliance with Kōmaru a week earlier.

Kākāpō Cam shows Rakiura just after she laid her first egg of 2026. SUPPLIED/DOC

The pair are among just 236 of the flightless parrots alive.

More than than 20,000 people have tuned in to watch Rakiura in her nest since the feed went live on 23 January.

Kākāpō only breed every two to four years and this year’s season could the best yet following a bumper mast, or mass fruiting of rimu berries.

They are predominately based on Whenua Hou, three kilometres west of Stewart Island/Rakiura, with two other breeding populations on Fiordland’s Pukenui/Anchor Island and Te Kākāhu/Chalky Island.

Department of Conservation (DOC) ranger Jake Osborne told RNZ’s Kākāpō Files podcast that monitoring technology allowed experts to keep an eye on the eggs and learn more about the elusive parrot’s nesting behaviour.

Kākāpō technology project lead Jake Osborne working on the Kākāpō Cam set‑up. SUPPLIED/DOC

While Rakiura has returned to the same nest in each of the past seven breeding seasons, the only way to confirm she would commit this year was to wait to see if she would lay her first egg there.

He said DOC staff and volunteers were able to watch that happen on 22 January.

“We’ve all been quite thrilled to be able sit and watch her in her natural nesting behaviour and for the first time we think for anyone alive today, [watch her] lay a couple of eggs. It’s pretty cool to see in full high definition,” he said.

Kākāpō technology project lead Matt Robertson working on the Kākāpō Cam set‑up. SUPPLIED/DOC

Rakiura’s livestream did not go live until the following day, though the footage of her first egg can be seen here.

She laid another egg on on 25 January.

Kākāpō have been known to lay five eggs but Rakiura has more commonly had two to four egg clutches, usually laid about three days apart.

After mating with Kōmaru on 15 January, she was artificially inseminated on 21 January.

Osborne said getting the monitoring and streaming equipment to the remote island sanctuary was no easy task and involved a lot of effort and trial and error.

“It’s one thing to get a camera to work, it’s another thing to keep the camera working in an environment like that, with a stable connection to get enough power to run it all night and all day requires a lot of solar power, some pretty big batteries, some computers, routers, all sorts of things that let us monitor it remotely,” he said.

Osborne said Rakiura’s nest is down a dark valley, making solar power impossible, so the equipment is powered from a hill top 300 metres away.

This year’s live stream set up involved four solar panels, 26kg of batteries, 300m of cable, satellite internet, routers, voltage converters and more.

Kākāpō have also been transferred to Pukenui/Anchor Island and Te Kākāhu/Chalky Island in southwest Fiordland, Sanctuary Mountain Maungatautari in Waikato, North Island, and Coal Island/Te Puka-Hereka. Once abundant, by the late 1800s the birds had come under attack from humans and pests.

An early bid to preserve the kākāpō saw several hundred relocated to predator-free Resolution Island in Fiordland, then wiped out when stoats arrived just years later.

By the mid-1900s, only a few birds survived in the most isolated parts of the country, according to a DOC history of efforts to save the world’s heaviest parrot.

By the late 1970s, multiple expeditions had turned up just two dozen of the birds in Fiordland, all male, but the discovery of a large population on Rakiura Stewart Island in 1977 has formed the basis of conservation efforts since.

The birds were initially evacuated to three offshore island sanctuaries, Codfish Island/Whenua Hou, Te Hoiere/Maud Island and Te Hauturu-o-Toi/Little Barrier Island to stem attacks from feral cats which were decimating the colony.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/27/endangered-kakapo-lays-eggs-in-anticipated-livestream-2/

Magnitude 4.5 earthquake shakes lower North Island

Source: Radio New Zealand

There has been a magnitude 4.5 earthquake which Geonet describes as light centred about 40 kilometres north-west of Levin.

It says it was at a depth of 4.5 kilometres.

Nearly 5000 people have reported feeling it.

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Woman dies after Christchurch ED staff missed signs of sepsis, HDC report says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Christchurch hospital. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

A woman who arrived at Christchurch Hospital’s emergency department in acute pain died the next day after staff missed signs she had sepsis.

The 65-year-old patient died of urosepsis, a life-threatening complication of a urinary tract infection, in January 2022.

In a report released on Tuesday, deputy Health and Disability Commissioner Carolyn Cooper said the hospital failed to provide reasonable care, making “severe departures from standard practice”.

“I concur that there was a failure to recognise urosepsis in a timely way, which subsequently led to a lack of appropriate treatment being provided to [the woman],” she said.

Health NZ completed an adverse event review (AER) into the woman’s care and also found delays in the recognition and treatment of urosepsis.

The report said the woman had a history of high blood pressure and Crohn’s disease, with a previous bowel resection, small bowel obstructions and a kidney stone.

The woman was diagnosed with renal colic after being assessed in the ED and given pain relief.

She was then transferred to the hospital’s urology unit.

The report said the woman was experiencing prolonged hypertension by the next morning.

“Throughout the day, [the woman] received intravenous fluid boluses as the primary intervention for her hypotension. However, her [high blood pressure] did not respond to this adequately,” the report said.

“The AER found that a lack of response or improvement from the fluid should have triggered a challenge of the diagnosis and consideration of other possible differential diagnoses or causes. However, this did not occur.”

Medical reviews at the time suggested the woman’s hypotension may have been due to the effects of the pain relief.

Clinicians noted the woman was “chirpy and chatty” throughout the day and that she did not have a fever but clinical notes also recorded instances of the woman shivering, a symptom of sepsis, the report said.

“The AER found that clinical staff exhibited anchoring bias – that is, there was an over-reliance on the absence of a fever, which normally is present in urosepsis, despite the lack of improvement over the day,” the report said.

“While the nurse in charge, the house officer, and the registrar were informed of [the woman’s] deterioration, there is no evidence of a senior medical officer consultation (after the initial ward round at 8am), consideration of involvement of the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) team, or a rapid response call being made when [the woman’s] observations were in the red and blue zone, as required by the mandatory escalation pathway.”

The deputy commissioner found an “early warning score” chart had several incomplete observations throughout the day, with the total score also not recorded, which was not in line with Health NZ policy.

Cooper criticised Health NZ’s failure to follow its mandatory escalation and urosepsis policies and the renal colic protocol.

“Had these policies been adhered to, the delay in the diagnosis of urosepsis may have been avoided,” she said.

Cooper recommended Health NZ Waitaha Canterbury apologise to the woman’s family.

She also recommended developing an education and training plan for staff around diagnosing urosepsis and the importance of medical documentation.

Health NZ told the commissioner it had changed its renal colic protocols to highlight the need to consider an alternative diagnosis, run an education refresher on sepsis and run an education session for urology nurses.

Health NZ has been contacted for comment.

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Heavy suppressions over case of man who handed himself over to police

Source: Radio New Zealand

The man’s plea was made via his lawyer.

A man, who turned himself into to police on Christmas Day in relation to an ongoing double homicide investigation in Ruatiti, has pleaded not guilty to two unrelated charges.

The man, who’s identity is supressed for legal reasons, was not required to appear in the Whanganui District Court on Tuesday and made the plea via his lawyer.

The nature of the charges he faced was also suppressed.

It was the man’s second appearance in recent days.

On Friday, he appeared before a bail hearing.

All details of that hearing are also suppressed.

The man was due to reappear for a case review hearing in March.

The bodies of 56-year-old Brendon Leigh Cole and 54-year-old Trina Michelle Cole were found at a rural property in Ruatiti, west of Ruapehu, on 13 December.

No charges had been laid in relation to their deaths, and the homicide investigation is ongoing.

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Baby stillborn after mother’s concerns not properly acted on

Source: Radio New Zealand

The woman was sent to the maternity ward at Waitākere Hospital in West Auckland. RNZ / Dan Cook

A woman’s baby was stillborn after multiple errors were made and risk factors overlooked in a stretched Auckland health system.

The Health and Disability Commission said the baby’s parents were failed by Health NZ Waitematā, which runs Waitākere and North Shore hospitals.

The woman had repeatedly raised worries with health staff before she lost her baby at 38 weeks pregnant in 2021.

Deputy commissioner Rose Wall’s report outlined how, at various times in her pregnancy, risks were not properly acted on.

They included the woman’s large uterine fibroid, the baby’s small size, a small amount of amniotic fluid, and abnormal heartbeat at hospital.

The situation escalated when she went to hospital at about 38 weeks pregnant, worried about a lack of movement.

After monitoring, she was sent home but returned the next day. Her baby had died.

The woman told the commission the lack of attention, repeated mistakes and poor communication caused “irreparable harm”.

“These human errors ultimately led to the death of my baby,” the woman told the commission.

Deputy commissioner Rose Wall. LANCE LAWSON / SUPPLIED

“I did everything I could to raise concerns and advocate for my wellbeing and that of my baby, but I was not heard … This has not only been a clinical failure but a deeply personal tragedy that has left lasting emotional and psychological damage.”

The mistakes began early, shortly after the woman was found to have a large fibroid – a benign uterine growth that is often harmless but usually needs extra monitoring.

Her midwife referred her to an obstetrician – but not enough plans were made to monitor the baby’s growth in the weeks to come.

If that had happened, the baby’s small size may well have been identified early, Wall said in her report.

The woman told the commission she had repeatedly asked for an ultrasound from 28 weeks gestation but her midwife did not refer her until 37 weeks when the midwife became concerned about the baby’s growth.

It took 10 days to get an emergency ultrasound.

That scan showed the baby was small and had a low amount of amniotic fluid but the radiologist’s report contradicted itself, saying in one place that the fluid was normal and in others that it was low.

The next day, the woman told the midwife she had not felt her baby move since the scan.

What happened at hospital

The woman’s midwife rang the hospital to tell them the woman was on her way, having warned her she may need to be induced or have a caeserean.

She went to Waitākere Hospital where the baby’s heart was monitored.

It was found to be normal in general but there had been one instance of it dropping suddenly and recovering slowly.

After more monitoring, the heartbeat returned to normal and the woman was sent home. She was told to come back two days later for further monitoring unless she was concerned before that.

But the next day she returned because she could not feel her baby move.

The registrar did an ultrasound and could not find a heartbeat.

“Sadly, Baby A had died,” the report said.

Fault with Health NZ

Deputy commissioner Rose Wall said care provided to the mother by Health NZ Waitematā was inadequate.

“No action was taken in light of the large fibroid; information that was provided by the [woman’s midwife] was not passed on; there was a failure to recognise that a normal-sized baby was unlikely to have low amniotic fluid volume; and it was not recognised that Baby A was a small for gestational age baby because the estimated fetal weight was plotted … incorrectly,” she said.

“These errors were made by multiple staff, for which I hold Health NZ Waitematā responsible.”

An expert who reviewed the case found the woman’s midwife had repeatedly tried to communicate to hospital staff about the baby’s risk factors – including when the hospital sent her home.

There were multiple chances to identify that the baby was small, the expert said.

“He said that if it was known that Baby A was small, then the clinical management of the acute presentation would have been different, as an small for gestational age baby with reduced fetal movements, low amniotic fluid volume, and an abnormal [heart scan] would have led to admission, if not delivery,” the report said.

Wall also criticised the radiologist for including contradicting information about the amniotic fluid in her report.

A stretched hospital

The woman would ordinarily have been sent to North Shore Hospital but it was too full when her midwife called so she was sent to the smaller maternity unit at Waitākere.

The senior obstetrician at Waitākere that day told the commission they were not consulted or informed about the diversion order.

“They became aware of it only when patients started to arrive from North Shore Hospital,” the report said.

There was normally only one senior obstetrician on duty there, but she requested back up and Health NZ had sent a junior doctor to help.

Health NZ responds

Health NZ said it fully accepted the findings and recommendations in the report.

Its director of operations at Waitematā, Brad Healey, said it aimed to provide excellent healthcare and was deeply sorry it did not in this case.

“We have apologised to our patient for the failings identified in the report, the ongoing distress and acknowledged that this apology is likely to be of limited comfort after such a tragic loss,” he said.

Health NZ Waitematā had made process changes including to ensure abnormal findings or urgent issues are escalated as soon as possible, he said.

The commission’s report said the organisation also had contingency plans in place if maternity patients had to be diverted to other hospitals.

The mother told the commission she wanted to see change.

“I hope that this reaches the outcome it deserves so that no other mother or family has to experience the same preventable heartbreak,” she said.

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‘Overwhelming outpouring of grief’: Tauranga iwi respond to deadly Mt Maunganui landslide

Source: Radio New Zealand

The three chairpersons of the three Tauranga iwis Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Ranginui and Ngāti Pukenga. NICK MONRO / RNZ

The iwi of Tauranga say their first priority is to support emergency services before considering a longer rāhui at the site of the deadly Mt Maunganui landslide.

The chairpersons of Tauranga’s three iwi, Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Ranginui and Ngāti Pukenga held a joint media conference on Monday afternoon.

Ngāti Ranginui chairperson Charlie Rahiri said their thoughts and prayers remain with the families of the victims at Mauao and Pāpāmoa.

The slip at Mauao, Mount Maunganui as seen from the air. Screengrab / Amy Till

When asked about a longer term rāhui, Rahiri said for the moment they would align with the health and safety requirements at Mauao, but they intended to hold a hui to discuss the future of the mountain.

“We understand that there is some damage all around the mountain, so it could take some time to repair that damage. Outside of that we haven’t had a hui as iwi, we haven’t had a hui with our kaumātua to discuss what the long term plan for Mauao is.”

The current rāhui extended from the police cordon back to Mauao and included a rāhui on swimming on both sides of Mount Maunganui.

Updates were being shared by iwi radio station Moana Radio on behalf of Mauao Trust.

Ngāi Te Rangi chairperson Charlie Tawhiao said emergency services at the site were working under difficult conditions and he was proud of the iwi team who had been providing cultural and spiritual support.

Tributes at the cordon. RNZ / Lauren Crimp

There’d been an outpouring of grief from the community in the wake of the tragedy, he said.

“There are a lot of people here that feel very strongly about the loss of people that they don’t even know, but they are visitors to our place.

“There’s been an overwhelming outpouring of grief from Tauranga Moana not just from iwi but from all of the community,” he said.

“The affinity and passion for the maunga doesn’t only sit with iwi, the community of Tauranga Moana, whether we’re Māori or whether we’re non-Māori have a huge affinity to the mountain and those of us who climb and walk the mountain often feel its presence and the spiritual enticement that the maunga brings for all of us.”

Mauao was a part of their whakapapa, their history and would be part of the future, it would be here long after they were gone, he said.

Rahiri said the iwi team on site had been working in close proximity with the whānau of victims.

The recovery continues. RNZ/Nick Monro

“We see each other quite regularly, often we chat and often we share, often we share our experiences and they share theirs.”

Ngāti Pukenga chairperson Kylie Smallman said multiple marae across Tauranga opened their doors to both iwi members and the general public.

“That’s just inherent in what we do. We done the same in the Covid response we didn’t have any resources but we all opened up our doors to anyone who needed it… We had a huge response from the community and a lot of thanks for us for doing that because we’re it on the sniff of an oily rag but we’re doing it, and we’re not waiting around for support.”

Tawhiao said all three iwi supported the independent review into the events leading up to the landslide at the base of Mauao announced by Tauranga City Council.

Rahiri said the iwi intended to be actively involved in the review.

“Our expectation is that iwi are at the table as we move towards recovery in the wider Tauranga area, from Pāpāmoa to Otawhiwhi there has been significant damage to homes, to roads, to infrastructure and we look forward to being part of the conversations around that as well.”

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Kanye apologises for antisemitic remarks, says he was treated for bipolar disorder

Source: Radio New Zealand

American rapper and record producer Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, took out a full-page advertisement in the Wall Street Journal on Monday to apologise for antisemitic remarks that drew years of backlash.

“I lost touch with reality,” Ye wrote in the ad, attributing his behaviour to an undiagnosed brain injury and an untreated bipolar disorder.

“I regret and am deeply mortified by my actions in that state, and am committed to accountability, treatment and meaningful change. It does not excuse what I did, though. I am not a Nazi or an antisemite. I love Jewish people,” he added.

Ye also voiced regrets for past expressions of admiration for Adolf Hitler and the use of swastika imagery.

The Anti-Defamation League, which tracks antisemitism, issued a statement describing his apology as overdue and noting his prior antisemitic remarks.

“Ye’s apology to the Jewish people is long overdue and doesn’t automatically undo his long history of antisemitism – the antisemitic ‘Heil Hitler’ song he created, the hundreds of tweets, the swastikas and myriad Holocaust references – and all of the feelings of hurt and betrayal it caused,” an ADL spokesperson said in a statement to Reuters.

“The truest apology would be for him to not engage in antisemitic behaviour in the future. We wish him well on the road to recovery,” the statement added.

Ye’s next album, Bully, is due out on Friday, according to the Spotify website.

The rapper referred in the full-page ad to his struggles with his mood disorder over the years.

“Bipolar disorder comes with its own defense system. Denial. When you’re manic, you don’t think you’re sick. You think everyone else is overreacting. You feel like you’re seeing the world more clearly than ever, when in reality you’re losing your grip entirely,” he wrote.

Ye wrote that 25 years ago he was in a car accident that caused significant brain damage that he said wasn’t properly diagnosed until 2023. He added that the medical oversight caused mental health problems that led to his bipolar type-1 diagnosis.

The songwriter said that being in “a four-month-long manic episode of psychotic, paranoid and impulsive behaviour” in early 2025 destroyed his life.

Ye added that he “hit rock bottom a few months ago” and had thoughts of not wanting “to be here anymore”.

The ‘Gold Digger’ rapper also addressed the Black community with both appreciation and more apologies.

He said it was “unquestionably, the foundation of who I am. I am so sorry to have let you down. I love us”.

The ‘Stronger’ rapper previously said he was on the autism spectrum rather than having a bipolar disorder. However, looking through Reddit posts of other “manic” people helped him feel “not alone” and understand that he has a chronic mood disorder.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/27/kanye-apologises-for-antisemitic-remarks-says-he-was-treated-for-bipolar-disorder/

Police announce Jill Rogers as Deputy Police Commissioner

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jill Rogers been acting in the role since Jevon McSkimming stood down last March. RNZ/Mark Papalii

Acting Deputy Police Commissioner Jill Rogers has been provisionally appointed to the role on a full-time basis.

After the initial shock at Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming’s resignation in May one of the questions that emerged was who would replace him.

Then, in July Deputy Commissioner Tania Kura announced her retirement after 37 years in police, leaving both Deputy Commissioner roles vacant.

Mike Pannett was announced as the statutory deputy police commissioner in December.

Rogers, who was widely considered to be the frontrunner for the role, was announced as the other Deputy Commissioner on Tuesday.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers also announced the appointment of Cassandra Anderson as the Chief of Staff.

Chambers said Rogers was “an outstanding leader of people, is strongly connected to the communities she has worked in, and has dealt with some particularly challenging operational matters”.

He said Anderson had “extensive experience” working at Police since 2007, including as chief of staff to former Police Commissioner Mike Bush.

“She returned to Police last year after two years in a Tier 2 role as a deputy chief executive at Oranga Tamariki. She has a strong knowledge of the public sector environment and takes on a key role in the executive team.”

Chambers said the appointments meant police began 2026 with a “stable and strong executive”.

Superintendents Corrie Parnell, Jeanette Park and Tim Anderson will also begin as Assistant Commissioners from 9 February.

“I have full confidence in my refreshed leadership. They bring the experience, competence and integrity that is needed to deliver on the priorities of Police.

“I know they will serve the frontline and staff of New Zealand Police and the communities of New Zealand well.”

Chambers earlier announced the focus for 2026 was on the four priorities he outlined a year prior: core policing, supporting the frontline, leadership and accountability, and fiscal responsibility.

Specifically, he had set specific goals around service, safety and trust, including getting trust and confidence up from 69 percent to 80 percent.

The other benchmarks included getting satisfaction for services to 80 percent from its current 71 percent, a 15 percent rise in resolutions for retail crime, and a 15 percent reduction in violence in public places.

He also pointed to a 20 percent increase in Māori at police over the past five years.

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‘Really lovely road’: Neighbours stunned as elderly woman found dead, teen in court

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ/Nathan Mckinnon

Police found the body of an elderly woman at a Burnham property after being called out to reports a teenager had allegedly assaulted another person inside the home.

A 19-year-old has man been charged with murder and two charges of assault in a family relationship in relation to the incident. He will appear in the Christchurch District Court on Tuesday afternoon.

Emergency services were called to an address on Burnham School Road about 3.05am after a report of disorder.

RNZ understands a relative of the 19-year-old called police after she was allegedly assaulted and she barricaded herself in a room.

It’s understood that on arrival police tasered the 19-year-old.

They then found an elderly woman’s body at the property.

Detective Senior Sergeant Karen Simmons said in a statement that a 19-year-old had been charged with murder and two counts of assault in a family relationship.

RNZ/Nathan Mckinnon

The property is on a long rural road surrounded by farmland.

Neighbours told RNZ it was usually a quiet district and they did not hear anything overnight.

One woman, who did not wish to be named, said the death was “incredibly sad”.

“It’s actually a really lovely road to live on, neighbours all wave out to each other and I never heard a thing so it’s a real shock,” she said.

“There are properties scattered around this road and a busy preschool down the road.”

RNZ/Nathan Mckinnon

Another neighbour said she woke up early to flashing police lights but did not hear anything unusual.

One man believed a family lived at the property. He said he had met them a couple of times over the years and they were pleasant.

He found out about the death after checking the news on Tuesday morning.

A blue police tent has been set up and the property has been cordoned off as forensic officers examine the scene.

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Jobs market improving, bodes well for employment – BNZ

Source: Radio New Zealand

BNZ’s employment report with jobs platform SEEK showed job ads up around 7 percent from a year ago. 123RF

The jobs market is showing early signs of improvement, according to BNZ, which it said should lead to lower unemployment by the middle of the year.

The latest unemployment statistics are due next week, but the most recent data from the September quarter showed the jobless rate at 5.3 percent – the highest level since late 2016.

BNZ head of research Stephen Toplis said monthly employment indicators showed modest growth, and Stats NZ’s fourth-quarter household labour force survey was also expected to show slight growth.

BNZ’s own employment report with jobs platform SEEK showed job ads up around 7 percent from a year ago.

“It will take a while before the unemployment rate drops, because it’s one thing seeing growth and people being hired, but it’s got to catch up with growth in the supply in labour.”

He expected the catch-up to happen “in a quarter or two”.

“Certainly mid-year, but there’s a difference between better and good,” Toplis said. “For a lot of people who are currently facing unemployment, it’s not clear that the jobs that will be created are going to be consistent with the skillset that they’ve got.”

He also noted there were many households already in work, but looking for more.

“We know that the household sector is struggling, so if you can’t get pay increases you work more hours, so there’s an awful lot of people.”

Economic recovery and weak US currency help Kiwi dollar

The Kiwi dollar is often called the “flightless bird” in financial markets, but its recent performance has been anything but.

Since the start of the year the dollar has flexed its wings, becoming the best-performing major currency against the US dollar.

Westpac head of New Zealand strategy Imre Speizer said the weakness of the US dollar was only half the story behind the NZ dollar’s recent strength.

The recession dampened investor appetite for the NZ dollar, but he said the economy bottomed in October and has improved steadily since then.

“The market has changed its tune on this, and it’s recognised the economic recovery is well in motion, and is likely to persist for the rest of the year,” Speizer said.

“It’s now one of the choice destinations for going long in currencies.”

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