ASB North Wharf building being sold

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Kiwi Property is selling ASB North Wharf building in Auckland’s Wynyard Quarter to Precinct Pacific Investment for $205 million.

The sale price represented a 3.3 percent discount to the September 2025 book value, and included Kiwi Property’s commitment to complete $2.2m of capital works to the property.

Precinct will be responsible for any additional expenses associated with the extension of the 15-year lease to ASB.

Precinct chief executive Scott Pritchard said the purchase of ASB North Wharf aligned with its strategy for investments in high quality, well located commercial property.

“This is a strong endorsement of the Wynyard Quarter precinct, and we look forward to working with ASB as they refresh their premises to reflect their workforce’s needs,” Pritchard said.

Kiwi Property chief executive Clive Mackenzie said last year’s extension of the ASB lease to 2040 helped to position the asset for sale.

“The sale of ASB North Wharf is a significant milestone for our capital recycling programme and is the third property transaction we have agreed in the last three months,” he said.

“Our balance sheet is now strongly positioned to support growth, aligning with a property market that is showing clear signs of recovery.”

He said the proceeds of would be reinvested into further growth initiatives, including potential acquisitions and development at Kiwi Property’s key mixed-use assets.

Completion of the sale of ASB North Wharf was subject to the consent of the Overseas Investment Office, with settlement expected in the first half of 2026.

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NZ Post to close more than 140 counters across the country

Source: Radio New Zealand

The post shop in Ponsonby (file image). Screenshot / Google Maps

NZ Post is closing more than 140 service counters inside urban convenience stores, pharmacies and libraries around the country.

It said the current network was bigger than it should be, with fewer people sending letters and more sending parcels.

Around 560 post shops would remain open.

NZ Post said it would upgrade some of the stores and open new hubs for parcel sending and collection.

It said 90 percent of people living in urban areas would still be within four kilometres of a post shop.

Rural post shops would not be affected.

To find out what’s happening in your area see the NZ Post website or its store finder.

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Will ‘free gift’ disappointment hurt cosmetics retailer Mecca?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Some Mecca customers have been left disappointed with its loyalty programme. (File photo) Unsplash / Allison Saeng

Cosmetics retailer Mecca is likely to be able to shake off any ill will created by customers disappointed with its loyalty programme and discounting, experts say.

Newsroom reported Mecca was apologising to customers after they were sold products up to a decade old during Boxing Day sales, and an “extra beauty treat” for people who reached a certain level of spending turned out to be a tote bag that transferred dye on to some people’s clothes.

Gemma Rasmussen, spokesperson for Consumer NZ, told RNZ’s The Panel she would not consider a tote bag to be a beauty treat.

“We think Mecca has potentially been a bit misleading and could have breached the Fair Trading Act as well,” she said.

She said Mecca shoppers tended to be “pretty dedicated”. “If you get an email saying spend more, a treat is coming, it’s hooking people in and pretty deceptive marketing.”

Bodo Lang, a marketing expert at Massey University, said reward schemes like Mecca’s could be a powerful driver of customer acquisition and long-term loyalty.

“Which is why so many major retailers invest heavily in them. Think Air New Zealand Airpoints, AA Smartfuel, or loyalty programmes from banks, credit card providers, New Zealand grocery retailers. Even local shops use them to secure a greater share of wallet.

“But when a rewards programme delivers a disappointing experience, especially one that violates basic consumer expectations, such as offering products manufactured more than a decade ago, it can harm brand trust and make shoppers think twice about returning. Trust is hard to build and easy to lose.”

But retail consultant Chris Wilkinson, of First Retail Group, said Mecca’s scheme was strong.

“Mecca’s scheme is a big draw for customers and the brand is well known and enjoyed for its rewards and giveaways – particularly younger consumers who are entering the world of cosmetics and fragrances.

“These schemes, like Farmers Beauty Club, are popular – especially as these products are expensive so any potential saving or ‘value add’ are sought after and often the tipping point in terms of making a purchase.

“Mecca’s scheme introduces new products and playfully encourages its customers to experiment with their beauty regimes – reflective of its predominantly younger audience.”

Wilkinson said its success was noticeable with an expansion of store numbers.

“In all other world markets category leader Sephora ‘owns’ this space, whereas in Australasia, Mecca dominates and Sephora has been retreating.”

He said the value of free gifts in the sector had been a contentious issue for a while.

“However the brand does have some pretty strong goodwill and a store experience that continues to evolve and engage – new stores, new products and ‘hot’ brands like Charlotte Tilbury, so I don’t think goodwill will too badly affected – maybe only till the next ‘freebie’ message arrives in customers inboxes.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/27/will-free-gift-disappointment-hurt-cosmetics-retailer-mecca/

‘Absolute disgrace’ to consider joining Trump’s ‘Board of Peace – Hipkins

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Labour Party leader Chris Hipkins. RNZ

Labour leader Chris Hipkins has labelled the government’s so-far refusal to rule out joining US President Donald Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ an “absolute disgrace”.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has been invited to join the new organisation, saying last week he would give it “due consideration” and on Tuesday confirming it was still a possibility.

Invites have gone out to dozens of world leaders, including those of Russia, its ally Belarus and Saudi Arabia. No invites went to any countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, Canada’s invite was withdrawn, and several Western nations – including France, Germany, Spain, the UK, Sweden, Ireland and Italy – have said ‘no thanks’, some fearing it was intended as a replacement for the United Nations.

The Board of Peace will be chaired by Trump, according to its founding charter. It claims to be “an international organisation that seeks to promote stability, restore dependable and lawful governance, and secure enduring peace in areas affected or threatened by conflict”.

Hipkins told Morning Report on Tuesday joining it would not be considered under a Labour-led government.

“It’s going to have people like [Russian President] Vladimir Putin on it. The idea that New Zealand would even consider being part of that would be an absolute embarrassment and an absolute disgrace on New Zealand.”

Putin – generally considered an autocrat – has led Russia through its war with neighbouring Ukraine, which began with the annexation of Crimea in 2014 and ramped up with the full-scale invasion of 2022.

Trump has threatened to impose tariffs on countries whose leaders decline to join the Board of Peace. Hipkins said any threat of tariffs on New Zealand for not joining would not sway him.

“Donald Trump does not respect anybody who just simply sucks up to him. He doesn’t respect anybody else, regardless.

“New Zealand has to be principled, we have to be consistent. We have a very strong reputation around the world for being consistent and principled in our foreign policy – all of that is being thrown away by this government.”

Christopher Luxon with Donald Trump. Supplied / Christopher Luxon via X

Asked for an update on Tuesday, Luxon said New Zealand was still considering its invitation and the accompanying charter.

“There’s a whole range of things that we just need to work through and really understand what it’s actually there to achieve,” Luxon said. “Can we make a difference? What value can we add? That’s where our focus is. So we’ll have those conversations and consider everything.”

Hipkins said New Zealand needed to be “a bit more nimble and more fleet-footed” in its diplomacy “in an environment where those big international organisations are struggling to bring countries together”.

“So countries like Canada, Australia, the UK, many European countries, and many countries in our own neighbourhood that we can work with, and we should focus on the areas where we can work with them and really get some momentum behind that.”

Trump recently outraged allies and friends by suggesting their troops did not pull their weight in Afghanistan. Late last week, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the remarks “insulting and frankly appalling”.

Luxon called them “incredibly disrespectful and wrong”. Speaking to media, Luxon said New Zealand sent 3500 troops to Afghanistan and lost 10 lives.

“I thought it was incredibly disrespectful,” Luxon said. “It’s up to him to work out whether he wants to apologise. What I want the New Zealand Defence Force and veterans to know is that they are deeply cared for and deeply supported, and we are very grateful for their service to our country.”

Minneapolis protests and deaths

As for the Trump administration’s violent intervention in Minneapolis, during which agents have killed two civilians – one an ICU nurse, the other an unarmed mother-of-three – Hipkins said it was “absolutely disgraceful”.

No one has been charged over the killings, both of which were caught on camera, video evidence contradicting statements by federal government officials.

“Under Labour, New Zealand will be consistent in our foreign policy. So where we criticise other countries who we also have constructive working relationships with, when they violate human rights, we should criticise the United States when they violate people’s human rights,” Hipkins said.

He called immigration officers’ actions in Minneapolis a “violation of people’s human rights”.

Winston Peters ’embarrassing’ – Hipkins

Hipkins also said it was “embarrassing” to hear Winston Peters – former deputy prime minister and present foreign minister – question the usefulness of the World Health Organization and New Zealand’s funding of it.

“You’ve got the minister of foreign affairs out in the world saying that we’re going to pull out of the World Health Organization, constantly sending contradictory messages to what our prime minister is saying. That’s embarrassing for New Zealand,” he told Morning Report.

Hipkins said Labour would “absolutely not” pull New Zealand from the WHO. Former foreign minister Phil Goff on Monday said it cost New Zealand a little more than $2m a year to be a part of the WHO.

Foreign Minister Winston Peters. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Hipkins said Luxon was a “total pushover” in setting up the coalition with ACT and NZ First (Peters’ party).

“He signed National up to supporting things that only weeks earlier he had been very clear with the New Zealand public the National Party would not support. I think that’s a betrayal of the people who voted for him.”

Luxon said he would never consider pulling New Zealand out of the WHO because of the “great value” it provides.

“If you think about the work that we do together in the Pacific, particularly. If I think about the work that was done in measles around Samoa, there’s some really good value the World Health Organisation provides.

“We spend anywhere from $1.5 million to $4 million a year in partnership with them. They do some amazing work.

“But equally, as I’ve said, right from the beginning, there’s a need for our… global institutions, to continue to innovate, to overhaul, to make sure they are focused, they’re efficient and they’re effective.”

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People living at troubled Gore campground have until Friday to leave

Source: Radio New Zealand

The campground will close on Friday before the lease officially ends in late February. Supplied

People who live at a troubled campground in Gore have until the end of the working week to leave.

The Gore District Council said the lease for the Gore Motor Camp is being terminated and the campground will close on Friday.

The campground hit headlines last year, with the council saying it had received ongoing complaints about people’s safety and the condition of the site.

The campground was intended for stays of up to 50 days but people had been living there, the council said.

4 Trades Direct owner and lessee Nicholas Irons has previously said that he would not turn anyone away because they had nowhere else to go and the camp was providing a valuable community service.

Council chief executive Debbie Lascelles acknowledged that it was a challenging and uncertain time for the people staying at Gore Motor Camp.

“We want to thank occupants for the respect, patience and cooperation they have shown while these matters have been worked through. Our focus now is ensuring the transition is handled as smoothly as possible,” she said.

In September, Lascelles said that the issues had not improved despite working with the leaseholder for years and the council had advised residents they had 50 days to find different accommodation with support from government agencies.

Gore mayor Ben Bell said it had been a long-standing concern for many and he was pleased the situation was being resolved.

“We can now look forward to further community discussion about the best use for this site moving forward,” he said.

The lease will end in late February.

RNZ has contacted Irons for comment.

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Police employee allegedly stalked co-worker who rejected his advances

Source: Radio New Zealand

A police employee allegedly stalked a woman he regularly worked alongside after she rejected his advances.

The Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) released a summary of an investigation into the allegations on Tuesday.

The IPCA said it oversaw a police investigation into an allegation a police employee “crossed professional boundaries” and created a conflict of interest by “conducting an inappropriate relationship with a female member of the public he regularly worked alongside”.

Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

“The employee and the woman met through the employee’s work and developed a friendship, having similar interests and some life experiences in common.

“After some time, the employee incorrectly assumed that the woman was interested in more than a friendship and attempted to move the relationship onto a romantic footing. This was not something sought by the woman, who was married, and she ended the relationship. The woman alleged the employee then stalked her and his behaviour also made it difficult to work together when needed.”

The woman complained to police about the employee.

Police found the employee had engaged in serious misconduct.

“The authority agrees with police decision-making in this matter and the outcome reached.”

Police have been approached for comment.

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‘Very, very difficult’: Liam Lawson on his new car

Source: Radio New Zealand

Visa Cash App Racing Bulls unveil their 2026 Formula One liveries JOE GALL / AFP

New Zealand driver Liam Lawson admits to a cautious start to pre-season Formula One testing.

The first day of the behind closed doors Barcelona Shakedown has been completed with a number of drivers having their first outings in their new 2026 cars.

Cars this year are smaller and lighter and no longer use the Drag Reduction System. Fifty percent of the power output will be from battery with the other half from the internal combustion engine.

Lawson got to drive the new Racing Bulls car today.

“I definitely haven’t got my head around it fully yet,” Lawson said afterwards.

Racing Bulls are using the new power unit developed by Red Bull along with Ford.

“It’s something that we’ll keep learning over the next few days and weeks when we go to Bahrain as well. But it’s very, very different,” the 23 year old said.

“It feels like there’s a lot more we can do as drivers potentially to make a difference, which is good.

“But right now, it’s very early days. So it’s very hard to know where we are. But for now, just trying to learn how to optimise the car. I’m enjoying it so far.”

Lawson’s former team-mate Isack Hadjar was quickest of the seven drivers which took part.

Lawson was fourth fastest and completed 42 laps.

McLaren and Ferrari did not take part today.

There is another day of testing at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya before the teams head to Bahrain for two testing sessions ahead of the season opening Grand Prix in Australia in early March.

“The main thing is reliability at the moment. We’ve done a good number of laps today, only a few little things. And honestly, the only issues we really had today were safety precautions, not really any actual issues,” Lawson said.

“So far, honestly, on the power unit side, it’s been very, very good. But again, it’s hard to know compared to everybody else where we’re at.”

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Vanuatu citizenship sales strong despite currency hassles and integrity issues

By Johnny Blades, RNZ Pacific bulletin editor

With all the setbacks of recent years, Vanuatu’s citizenship sale schemes should be dead in the water — instead they are thriving, and geopolitical chaos is playing a part.

The citizenship-by-investment sector is the biggest single revenue earner for Vanuatu’s government, but lingering issues of integrity cast a shadow over it.

In 2024, when Vanuatu became the first country to lose its European Union visa-free access over concerns about its golden passport scheme, there were fears it would be a huge blow to the sector.

But designated agents for Vanuatu’s citizenship programmes have told RNZ Pacific this has not necessarily hurt them much, as their product has other benefits and passport holders can still apply to access Europe.

However, Vanuatu’s continued inclusion on an EU anti-money laundering blacklist hurts more, Francesca Grillon of approved agent Yawha & Associates said.

Currency hassles
Grillon said the decision to stop visa-free entry was not a major downfall for the citizenship programme.

“I think the main issue we are having is the blacklisting from Europe, because that that is an obstacle for receiving funds in foreign currency,” she said.

This issue came to a head last September when the Commonwealth Bank of Australia — which served as the correspondent bank for the National Bank of Vanuatu — advised it would no longer facilitate transfers for certified agents in the citizenship programmes

Melten Menauke of Smart Citizenship Vanuatu explained that this left the government in a bind over how it collects the donations and fees that foreign applicants pay.

“The National Bank is still looking for a correspondent bank to accept US dollars. I don’t know what is happening with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

“US currency was the first one they blocked, and now they are no longer accepting [Australian dollars]. They’re only accepting Japanese yen,” he said, adding that this created costly hurdles for agents and applicants alike.

Vanuatu’s capital Port Vila . . . integrity issues are not just creating pressure on Vanuatu’s citizenship sector internationally. Image: RNZ Pacific

But integrity issues are not just creating pressure on Vanuatu’s citizenship sector internationally.

‘Nobody trusts anyone’
A Commission of Inquiry into the citizenship programmes was initiated by Vanuatu’s government in 2024 following concerns about corrupt practices involving the sale of citizenship and misuse of the programmes for personal and political gain.

But the inquiry report has still not been made public, eight months after it was officially handed to the government. As calls for its release continue, Jenny Ligo, the chairperson of Women Against Crime and Corruption in Vanuatu, said citizenship schemes had been misled by political interests.

“That programme needs to be taken out totally. Because most of the projects under programmes in Vanuatu, it always ties in with pollitics and politicians,” Ligo said.

“This is all wrong. We need neutral people to run these programmes. But at the moment nobody trusts anyone.”

Vanuatu’s government has had a lot to contend with in the last few years, including responding to major disasters — earthquakes and cyclones — and the challenge of creating much-needed political reform. However, addressing the integrity problems of the citizenship-by-investment schemes is high on its priotiy list

Grillon said the government had been taking the right steps to improve compliance with regulations and rules, including strengthening the Financial Intelligence Unit which screens applicants.

“There’s a lot of effort, both from the high level government and directorship and public servants, in trying to really follow the international advice, and the newly introduced laws and doing everything properly.”

In demand
Overall, the sector is doing well. According to the Vanuatu Daily Post, citizenship sale receipts made up the bulk of the US$31 million in revenue in the past year — 24.3 percent more than what was forecast, with around 2000 foreigners granted citizenship last year.

Interest remains strong in several foreign markets, Norman Joseph of JG Marketing, Consulting and Recruitment Agency said.

“We have Chinese, we have Indonesians, we have Russians. Most of them are from different countries but they also have passports from different countries,” Joseph said.

“So they come in, for example, some might be Chinese but they also have a Mexican passport, so they apply from a Mexican passport.”

Vanuatu flags . . . the passports are attractive for a variety of reasons. Image: RNZ Pacific

Ros Stanford of designated agent Stanford Knight said the Vanuatu passport was attractive for a variety of reasons.

“So, either for visa free travel — so global mobility is one option; for those that actually physically want to reside for tax benefits; and then we have a lot of clients currently who just want a safe like a Plan B, a safe alternative residence, in case things turn to custard globally.”

On the latter reason, Stanford said they had seen an uptick in the last couple of years, a reflection of ongoing ruptures in the global geopolitical order.

Even without visa-free access to Europe, and despite the concerns of ni-Vanuatu about its commodification, Vanuatu Citizenship is in demand — and agents tout it as one of the fastest citizenships to get any where in the world.

This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/01/27/vanuatu-citizenship-sales-strong-despite-currency-hassles-and-integrity-issues/

NZ could save billions just by changing when we use electricity, new report finds

Source: Radio New Zealand

Spreading the power load could help to defer or avoid increasing demand capacity. 123RF

A quarter of New Zealand’s peak electricity use could be shifted to times of lower demand, lowering household bills and saving up to $3 billion in infrastructure investment, a new report has found.

The Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority (EECA), which commissioned the analysis, said lower network costs from shifting demand should flow through to households and businesses.

Households had the most potential to shift their demand, but some industrial processes and manufacturing could also make changes with the right financial incentives, the report found.

New Zealand’s electricity demands will grow by 35 to 82 percent by 2050, the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment estimated last year.

Upgrades to accommodate growing demand could cost tens of billions of dollars, EECA chief executive Marco Pelenur said.

The electricity network is built to handle peak demand, which only occurs a few times a day for short intervals. Spreading the power load could help to defer or avoid increasing demand capacity.

“This [analysis] shows we could save billions as a country just by moving when we use power.”

Rooftop solar and batteries could help shift household demand, but much lower-cost measures – that would also save households money – were also available.

That included Wi-Fi-enabled devices that could be retrofitted to most hot water cylinders and heat pumps for a few hundred dollars.

The devices, which are being trialled by EECA in hundreds of households at the moment, allow users to control appliances remotely, such as switching on a heat pump in the late afternoon before peak demand kicks in, so a house could already be warm when people arrive home.

“The early results from the pilots show households are saving on their bills right now – and that doesn’t include the system benefits of deferring network upgrades,” Pelenur said.

Peak demand savings would be even bigger if flexible energy use were enabled at scale, and people were paid directly for shifting electricity use off-peak, EECA said.

University of Auckland professor Nirmal Nair said demand-side flexibility, as proposed in the report, had been “widely touted”, but if households and other retail customers were being encouraged to change their usage, then what they were charged should be revisited.

“Expecting [retail customers] to invest in more technologies to give value to other upstream agents like electricity retailers and distribution companies appears unreasonable, if not unfair.”

Major electricity users surveyed as part of the report said continued production was their top priority, but many were open to more flexible electricity use if it did not disrupt production, or cost more money than it saved.

The report identified food processing in Bay of Plenty, Waikato and North Canterbury, farming in Canterbury and Waikato, and offices in the main centres as having significant potential.

That could be achieved with similar technology to households, such as battery installation and ‘smart load controllers’ to defer electricity usage to lower-demand periods, when it was possible to do so.

The report suggested a “robust reward system” to compensate industries for their participation. That could include direct payments, along with long-term energy cost reductions, it said.

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Sky TV partners with US media giant Paramount

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied / Richard Parsonson

Pay-TV provider Sky has expanded its content partnership with US media giant Paramount.

Sky said the partnership would bring premium US drama, procedurals, kids and comedy content to Sky and its Neon streaming audiences.

“Paramount’s Yellowstone was a standout for Sky customers in FY25, and this partnership ensures we build on that success by securing the shows that matter most,” Sky chief executive Sophie Moloney said.

Moloney said the deal represented a “significant step” in its updated entertainment strategy, with data-driven focus on delivering content.

“We know what our customers watch and value, and we’re building on those insights to curate the content that resonates most with our audiences,” she said.

The deal came into effect immediately, and included exclusive access to shows from Showtime, Paramount + and CBS for New Zealand viewers.

Over the past year, Sky announced a number of major content deals, particularly in sports.

In October, it secured exclusive Olympic Games rights, and prior to that it extended its Formula 1 and NZ Rugby deals.

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Fruit fly controls in Auckland’s Mt Roskill to remain in place a little longer

Source: NZ Ministry for Primary Industries

Legal controls on the movement of fruit and vegetables in Mt Roskill will end on 21 February 2026 if no more Queensland fruit flies are found in the suburb, says Biosecurity New Zealand’s commissioner north, Mike Inglis.  

The controls have been in place since the discovery of a single male fruit fly in a surveillance trap in early January.  

“We’ve had fantastic support from locals and sector groups since our response began, and we’re asking for that to continue a little longer out of an abundance of caution.

“No other Queensland fruit flies have been found, which is really encouraging, but over the coming weeks, we’ll keep up our regular checking of fruit fly traps. 

“The extended timeframe helps us to be confident that we are not dealing with a breeding population. It is based on scientific advice about the life cycle of the Queensland fruit fly,” says Mr Inglis.

“We’re grateful for the actions people are taking to comply with the restrictions, which are vital to keeping fruit fly from establishing in New Zealand.”

There is no change to the current movement rules that are in place. The A and B zone areas in Mt Roskill will remain the same. More detail on these zones is on our website:

Queensland fruit fly detection in Mt Roskill, Auckland

“The restrictions prohibit the movement of fruit and vegetables out of the specified controlled area around where the fruit fly was found. This prevents possible spread of fruit fly or their larvae,” says Mr Inglis. 

“There have been 14 previous fruit fly incursions in New Zealand which we have successfully eradicated, so we know what it takes to get the job done”.  

To report suspected finds of fruit fly, call MPI’s pest and diseases hotline on 0800 809 966. 

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/27/fruit-fly-controls-in-aucklands-mt-roskill-to-remain-in-place-a-little-longer/

Name releases: Fatal crash, SH30, Tikitere

Source: New Zealand Police

Police can now share the names of the two people that died following a fatal crash in Tikitere on Thursday 15 January.

They were 42-year-old Gisborne man Saul Rerekura and 32-year-old Rotorua woman Taukirangi Hewitt.

Our thoughts are with the loved ones of Saul and Taukirangi at this difficult time.

Police are continuing to investigate the circumstances of the crash and would like to hear from anyone with CCTV or dashcam footage of a green Honda Spike registration HBS903, between the areas of Fenton Street, Rotorua and Curtis Road/SH30, Tikitere, between 2am and 4.20am on Thursday 15 January.

Anyone with information is asked to make a report online at 105.police.govt.nz, clicking “Update Report”, or by calling 105. Please use the reference number 260115/4480.

You can also provide information anonymously through Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

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Vern Cotter to leave Blues, rules himself out of All Black coaching contention

Source: Radio New Zealand

Blues coach Vern Cotter. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Vern Cotter will leave the Blues at the end of the 2026 Super Rugby Pacific season. He confirmed a move to the Queensland Reds from 2027, therefore ruling himself out of the current search for a new All Black coach.

Cotter was an outside chance to replace Scott Robertson, as he fits all the criteria set out by NZ Rugby for the successful applicant. The news comes hard on the heels of Joe Schmidt and Tony Brown both reaffirming their commitments to the Wallabies and Springboks, respectively.

“Timing is always important in this game, and it feels like the right moment for both me and the club to plan for what comes next,” said Cotter.

New Blues CEO Karl Budge said the decision to announce Cotter’s future ahead of the season was important, with the coach finishing his original three year deal with the team. Cotter had immediate success with the Blues, guiding them to a landmark title win in 2024. The 2025 season was initially rocky, with the Blues struggling through the first half, before a massive resurgence saw them make the semi-finals.

New Blues CEO Karl Budge. Photosport

“This has been part of a long-term strategy, and both Vern and the club felt it was the right thing to be open and clear before the season begins,” said Budge.

“We hugely appreciate everything Vern has done and continues to do for the club. He has delivered exactly what he was brought in to do. The Blues have a strong performance environment, clear DNA of how we want to play and know what it takes to be champions.”

Budge said that the process to find Cotter’s replacement was well underway, while Cotter was proud that his initial goal was achieved at the Blues to establish a winning culture.

“Over the past few years we’ve had a lot of mature, honest conversations about where the club was and where it needed to go,” Cotter said.

Rieko Ioane with Blues head coach Vern Cotter. Brett Phibbs / www.photosport.nz

“The landscape has changed significantly since I came in, and it genuinely feels like the club is well set up for its next phase of evolution. There has been a lot of good during my time here, and I’m proud of what we’ve built together. This club has a proud history and a special connection with its people. Right now, my focus is firmly on the 2026 season and doing everything I can to help this team perform at its best and leave the club in a strong position.”

Cotter said he was focused on repeating the Blues’ 2024 success.

“People should expect my full commitment to the Blues this season,” he said.

“I’m 100 percent locked in for this season. My focus is on this group, this campaign, and making sure we finish strong. Other clubs should be watching closely.”

The Blues open their Super Rugby Pacific campaign against the Chiefs at Eden Park on Saturday 14 February.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/27/vern-cotter-to-leave-blues-rules-himself-out-of-all-black-coaching-contention/

Pessimistic voters look to Winston Peters to be the change candidate inside the coalition

Source: Radio New Zealand

Winston Peters now attracts 12.6 percent support as preferred prime minister, according to the latest RNZ-Reid Research poll. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Analysis: For a man who claims little regard for the polls, Winston Peters will surely be feeling more favourably toward their latest offerings.

For the second time in a matter of days, New Zealand First has been delivered a blinder.

The RNZ-Reid Research result – out Tuesday – puts the party in the number three spot and on the cusp of double-digits, its highest score in the series since July 2017.

And more fortune: the lift is also reflected in its leader’s personal standing.

Peters now attracts 12.6 percent support as preferred prime minister, putting him within seven points of Prime Minister Christopher Luxon.

The solid showing follows a similarly eye-catching Taxpayers’ Union-Curia poll last week, which had NZ First on a staggering 12 percent.

Everything seems to be coming up Winston Peters.

More remarkable, the surge is coming despite – or perhaps because of – a general backdrop of pessimism and disenchantment.

While sentiment has nudged up since the gloomy lows of September, it remains entrenched in negative territory.

Only 36.3 percent of voters believe the country is headed in the right direction.

And no wonder why. A convincing majority say they’re finding it harder to cope with the cost of living than a year ago.

A measly 6 percent say life is getting easier. And just 12 percent feel more flush.

Typically, those sort of results would indicate a classic change election, with frustrated voters looking for an alternative to those currently in power.

But no.

Despite the sour mood, the coalition has increased its overall support since the last RNZ-Reid Research poll and retains majority support, even if only just.

And that is largely thanks to NZ First.

The three coalition party leaders: From left – David Seymour, Christopher Luxon, Winston Peters. RNZ

Since last election, National and ACT have bled support and now appear to be stagnating. They are bearing the brunt of the blame for the persistent cost-of-living pressures.

If this was the result delivered on 7 November, National would lose eight MPs and ACT two.

NZ First, on the other hand, would grow its caucus from eight MPs to 12.

Despite being just as much a part of the government, NZ First is not receiving the same blame, nor punishment.

Why?

Scrape beneath the surface of the poll results and you can see that NZ First supporters are struggling far more than their National and ACT counterparts.

Six in 10 NZ First supporters say they’re finding the cost of living harder to manage than in January last year. More than half say they’re worse off financially.

Accordingly, they are also markedly more pessimistic about the country’s trajectory, with more saying it is on the wrong track than the right one.

Those voters want a change in direction – but they are not looking to the opposition parties. They are looking to NZ First.

This is new territory for a party with a bruising history in government. In both 1996 and 2017, NZ First saw its support fall away after entering Cabinet.

On each occasion, NZ First was subsequently ejected from Parliament altogether.

This time around seems different. Peters has been successful in differentiating NZ First both from its governing partners and the government as a whole.

That was demonstrated most clearly late last year in Peters’ strident opposition to the India free trade deal, Luxon’s pride and joy.

Winston Peters (L) and Christopher Luxon have butted heads over National’s flirtation with asset sales. RNZ

As well, Peters has come out against National’s flirtation with asset sales and the timeline for its tax cuts, as well as the ACT Party’s Regulatory Standards Act.

He is not shy about criticising his own government’s performance either, openly admitting the coalition had not turned the economy around as quickly as it should have.

Just last week, Peters told reporters the government had not done enough to adequately prepare some communities for extreme weather.

That sort of candour has proved great fodder for the opposition, but it has also reminded voters of Peters’ anti-establishment and populist instincts.

Similar dynamics are playing out abroad with Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party surging in the United Kingdom, and Pauline Hanson’s One Nation in Australia.

In both cases, disenchanted voters are searching for inspiration outside the mainstream parties.

Clearly there is an appetite for a more maverick approach, one sceptical of immigration, climate and so-called woke policies.

Peters has long-standing links to Farage and met with a Reform UK board member visiting New Zealand just last week.

“We take lessons from everybody that knows what they’re doing,” Peters told inquiring media. “Mind you, they take lessons from us as well.”

Labour let down by others on the left

Labour leader Chris Hipkins. Samuel Rillstone

It would be wrong to paint NZ First as the sole beneficiary of the general malaise.

Labour has lifted yet again in this poll, its fourth consecutive increase, securing its position as the country’s most popular party.

That’s quite a turnaround for a party trounced at the last election. This result would secure it an extra nine MPs.

Some in government had assumed, or hoped, that Labour’s momentum would stall once it began rolling out policy, but the arrival of its capital gains tax does not appear to have hurt it.

It is Labour’s friends on the left that have let it down.

Both the Green Party and Te Pāti Māori have endured terrible terms.

The Greens initially weathered a series of scandals, but their support now seems to be slipping away and a rapid staff turnover seems to have taken a toll on strategy and focus.

Te Pāti Māori, which had meteoric success early on, has since come crashing down in a blaze of infighting and turmoil.

Soon Labour leader Chris Hipkins will have to make a call about which parties he is prepared to work with in any future government.

Right now, he needs Te Pāti Māori’s numbers, but he will be mulling whether Labour could perhaps swallow them whole and take those votes for itself.

Watch for more results on that question later in the week.

All polls come with a caveat that they are only ever a snapshot of a single moment in time.

Much could yet change over the very long runway Luxon has set by opting for a November election.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon announces the general election will be held on 7 November as National’s caucus meets to start the 2026 political year. RNZ / Nathan Mckinnon

His hope is that improving economic forecasts will have come to fruition by then, and that voters will migrate back to National from either Labour or NZ First.

It’s worth noting that the polls are not shifting around dramatically. Every poll from every pollster is telling effectively the same story: a tight race, tipping marginally one way or the other.

That stasis may well represent a lack of engagement, meaning the numbers could shift around as November draws closer and voters start to pay more attention.

In 2023, Labour shed about 10 points between the first Reid Research poll and the eventual election, following a series of ministerial mishaps.

In 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic turned the election on its head and saw National plummet a whopping 17 points over the year.

And in 2017, party support lurched wildly as a string of leaders stepped aside – themselves influenced by the polls.

All of that is to say: these may be the starting positions, but there’s plenty of race still to be run.

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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/2026/01/27/pessimistic-voters-look-to-winston-peters-to-be-the-change-candidate-inside-the-coalition/

Government spends $1.35m on quantum and photonic research

Source: Radio New Zealand

Advanced Technology Institute board member Professor Cather Simpson. (File photo) supplied

The government is spending $1.35 million to see how New Zealand’s expertise in quantum and photonic research can be used to create jobs, attract investment and grow a high-tech, high-value economy.

“It’s huge for New Zealand’s economy and for New Zealand’s future and productivity,” Advanced Technology Institute board member Professor Cather Simpson said, who is also a professor of physics and chemical sciences at Auckland University.

“These things (quantum technology and photonics) are on the verge of allowing us to do everything from diagnose cancer earlier and better, to even being able to predict earthquakes two weeks ahead of time, instead of 30 minutes to an hour.

“And that all comes from being able to measure things like time more precisely — to be able to link things together.”

The funding would be used over the next six months by recently established Institute for Advanced Technology to identify the best way to use New Zealand’s expertise to develop products for the second generation of quantum mechanics, known as Quantum 2.0.

Quantum 2.0

Quantum mechanics has been around for more than a hundred years and used to develop such things as transistors, the Internet, cellular phones and other photonic devices like lasers and sensors.

“And so in the lingo, that’s all called Quantum 1.0. Quantum 2.0 is what we’re on the verge of right now,” she said, adding New Zealand had a lot of theoretical and experimental expertise in the Quantum 2.0 space,” Simpson said.

“And that’s the whole purpose of this public research organisation.

“Quantum is one of the areas that we think has a tonne of potential, because we have this research strength.”

She said the research will look at what it would take to accelerate and apply that expertise.

“I should emphasise that we don’t just have expertise in that laser space. We have expertise in the kinds of cold, single atom types of research that are used to make these next generation clocks and measurements of time and behaviour that will lead us to say better earthquake detection.

“We are starting to see our first patents emerge from this space. And I think we’re right on the cusp of moving into the world economy here.

“And that all comes from being able to measure things like time more precisely. To be able to link things together.”

Quantum 2.0 was expected to see advances in computing, communications and sensing, and offered opportunities to solve complex problems and create secure information systems, advanced materials and ultra-precise measurement tools.

For example, in Australia, quantum gravimeters were recently used to detect subtle variations in the Earth’s gravitational field, leading to mineral discoveries valued at nearly $7 billion (A$6b).

Quantum sensors also made medical imaging much more precise to allow for more accurate surgery and help with the early detection of diseases, such as Alzheimer’s.

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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/2026/01/27/government-spends-1-35m-on-quantum-and-photonic-research/

Spate of armed robberies in Hutt Valley may be linked

Source: Radio New Zealand

One offender was wearing a black beanie, a dark coloured sweatshirt, long pants, and a blue cloth covering their face. NZ Police

Police are investigating a spate of armed robberies in the Hutt Valley, including one where armed offenders threatened staff at a bar in the Hutt Valley before fleeing earlier this month.

The police said that since 10 December 2025, three Hutt Valley bars have been targeted in similar ways where offenders have used weapons, including a firearm, to demand money and other items.

Detective Senior Sergeant Todd said police believe these robberies may be linked.

On Saturday, 10 January, Police were notified of an incident at a bar in King Street in Upper Hutt at about 1.30am.

Todd said two people unlawfully entered the premises with weapons and threatened employees.

“Thankfully, the employees were uninjured, but this incident has understandably left them shaken.

“After making various demands, the offenders fled in a stolen vehicle later located abandoned on Sinclair Street.”

One person was wearing a black beanie, a dark coloured sweatshirt, long pants, and a blue cloth covering their face.

The second offender wore a beanie, a ‘Nike Academy’ sweatshirt with distinctive white stripes, dark coloured pants, distinctive coloured shoes, and wore a cloth over their face.

The second offender wore a ‘Nike Academy’ sweatshirt with distinctive white stripes. NZ Police

Police are seeking information in relation to the robbery, including CCTV or dashcam footage in the King Street and Sinclair Street areas.

“We would also like to hear from anyone who may know someone who wears or has worn a Nike brand Men’s Dry Academy Soccer Track Jacket with black and white colouring, similar to the one pictured.”

Todd said one offender’s shoes were quite distinctive and appeared to be a silver/metallic/chrome coloured sports shoe with a reflective logo or marking on the back of the heel. The brand is unknown.

“If you know someone who has worn these shoes previously, please contact us,” Todd said.

The shoes one of the offenders wore. NZ Police

“There are some similarities in aspects of these incidents, which indicate they are likely linked.

“We are always concerned with any offending where firearms are involved and the investigation team is determined to hold these offenders to account.”

Police have contacted a number of bar owners in the Hutt Valley and wider Wellington District to offer support and talk to them around staff safety procedures.

Anyone with information, or who recognises the clothing in these images, should contact Police online at 105.police.govt.nz or call 105.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/27/spate-of-armed-robberies-in-hutt-valley-may-be-linked/

Paid parking at Aoraki-Mount Cook raises $214k in first month

Source: Radio New Zealand

The peak of Mt Cook. (File photo) FLORIAN BRILL

A $5 per-hour parking fee at some popular tourist spots including Aoraki-Mount Cook raised $214,000 in its first month.

The Department of Conservation (Doc), began charging at Punakaiki, Franz Josef and Aoraki-Mount Cook in December, as part of a trial.

DoC’s operations manager at Aoraki-Mt Cook Sally Jones, told Morning Report, said at this stage the parking fee was working and $214,000 in a month had been a “great result”.

Jones said free parking was still available in the area on Hooker Valley Rd if people did still want to choose to park somewhere unpaid.

“We anticipated that it may become more of an issue with the introduction of the paid parking pilot so we brought in more staff who are trained on traffic management to manage that road throughout the day.”

Jones said parts of the road could also be closed off it was too dangerous due to being too narrow.

Along with the parking fee, Jones said speed limits had been lowered and an electronic board helped people find if there were any carparks free.

International visitors and locals alike did not seem to be phased by the charge, Jones claimed.

“In fact, some have asked us if that was all. I think they accept the fact that paying to reinvest in a site like a national park seems reasonable.”

Recently, there had been issues with tourists on the Hooker Valley Track ignoring warning signs and closures, but Jones said this too had lessened over Summer.

“I think people don’t want to be seen on camera,” Jones said.

“Also, I think because of the challenging Summer we’ve had people have not been able to see Aoraki so they haven’t been inclined to want to get a better view of it.”

Jones believed this Summer had been one of the worst they’d had in a long time and there hadn’t been many days when Aoraki-Mount Cook was visible.

“So your time on the track would be less than it normally would, so you’re less inclined to want to get around that fence or over the river to get that beautiful Instagram shot… it’s just not there.”

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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/2026/01/27/paid-parking-at-aoraki-mount-cook-raises-214k-in-first-month/

The year of travel: Surging demand in Kiwis booking international holidays

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

New Zealanders are booking more international trips than ever, with House of Travel reporting surging demand, shifting destination trends, and a rebound in corporate travel.

The agency said demand for 2026 is its strongest on record, with early bookings rising sharply as travellers lock in trips well ahead of time.

It said forward bookings for the year were at record levels – both in dollars spent and in the total number of travellers.

Chief operating officer Brent Thomas stressed that these trips were “two‑way,” meaning those travellers would return home afterwards.

Australia was the top destination, accounting for half of all bookings.

But Thomas said travel patterns were changing, with more people opting for Asia – where the weaker New Zealand dollar went further – and Europe.

Bookings to the United States had dropped, which he said was “mostly” due to the strong US dollar, making it more expensive to travel there.

Thomas said New Zealanders’ appetite for international travel remained remarkably resilient.

“They have a budget, so when the dollar is down slightly, they may say instead of going for 14 days, they’ll go for 11 – or, as we’re seeing, more are choosing Asia where the dollar goes a little bit further.”

Airlines continued to add flights into New Zealand, giving travellers more choice, which supported booking numbers, he noted.

Thomas said travellers were also booking more than just airfares – they were purchasing “everything” through the agency, including hotels, sightseeing, and cruises, which had grown strongly over the past decade.

Corporate travel rebounds ahead of 2026

Alongside growing holiday demand, House of Travel also saw a rebound in corporate travel – something Thomas described as an “economic canary in the coal mine”.

“Corporate travel is easy to switch off when things are down, but what we’re seeing going into 2026 is that corporates are definitely spending more,” he said.

Thomas said more business travellers were heading overseas, signalling increasing confidence in the economy as companies restarted face‑to‑face visits to reconnect with suppliers and customers.

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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/2026/01/27/the-year-of-travel-surging-demand-in-kiwis-booking-international-holidays/

Retired Salvation Army pastor walks length of country to raise funds

Source: Radio New Zealand

Gavin Baxter walking the length of New Zealand to raise money for foodbanks. SUPPLIED

A retired Salvation Army pastor is battling blisters and hunger as he walks the length of New Zealand to raise money for foodbanks.

It comes as food charities [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/580728/foodbanks-warn-of-closures-if-government-fails-to-give-ongoing-funding

call for urgent ongoing government funding] as they face unprecedented demand during the cost of living crisis.

Gavin Baxter is a ‘nobo’ – north bound – tramper, he doned his boots at Bluff on the first day of the year and expects to spend six months on the Te Araroa Trail.

“There are times when I’ve been walking that I’ve been hungry but it just helps me relate to the real need that there is even in New Zealand.”

Half a million people in New Zealand are turning up at food charities needing help every month.

“It’s staggering, it’s deeply moving to think that these are the people who have actually got the courage to turn up. How many more are out there that are in deep need of assistance and perhaps don’t have that courage.”

Baxter has a sponsorship website up and running and aims to raise $10 for every kilometre he walks – so far he’s on track.

Blisters on his feet and a heavy pack are no deterrent, he recently made it to Queenstown.

“There’s a whole thing in the hiking industry about ultra-light, I think I’ve gone into ultra-heavy.”

Gavin Baxter at Lake Hawea as he walks the length of a country to raise funds for foodbanks. SUPPLIED

Top of his mind are those who are hungry because they cannot afford food after paying their household bills.

Baxter was the pastor at Greymouth’s Salvation Army and has recently had surgery to overcome prostate cancer.

The Salvation Army has 60 foodbanks across the country, its food security manager Sonya Cameron said there has been continued high demand for food parcels so far this year.

“Our centres are saying that they’re seeing a lot of new whanau needing support. I spoke to Cameron Miller who’s the core officer at Hutt City Salvation Army, he said that they’ve worked all the way through Christmas and the new year and that demand has been very high,” Cameron said.

“He said that they’ve got the basics but nothing more.”

It’s a similar story elsewhere.

“Whakatane were saying that they’d seen 24 whanau in just three hours the other day. They said that they’d never experienced that before at this time of year.”

The Salvation Army, Auckland City Mission and Food Network are among the organisations that received one-off grants till mid-2026, through the Food Secure Communities programme.

Late last year they warned of substantial closures if the government does not provide ongoing funding this year.

“For us, stable long term funding would allow us to plan with confidence, retain our staff, invest in infrastructure and respond to community need,” Cameron said.

The Ministry of Social Development (MSD) is evaluating the effectiveness off its one-off funding, including which households benefit from the programme.

A report is due to be provided to the Minister of Social Development and Employment next month.

MSD group general manager of insights, Fleur McLaren, said the evaluation has been done through interviews and a survey of organisations that have received the funding.

“It will examine how FSC infrastructure investment has made a difference to sector capacity and capability to support households experiencing food insecurity,” she said.

“It is also looking at which households benefit from FSC, in what ways and in what circumstances.”

Tracey Watene chairs the Aotearoa Food Rescue Alliance, which has been interviewed as part of the evaluation.

“We’re hopeful that this will inform decisions about how crucial this funding is and the value it gives to communities across Aotearoa,” she said.

“Budget 2026 will be a key decider. We’re preparing to engage fully as that process unfolds.”

Meanwhile, Gavin Baxter is sticking to his quest to raise money for foodbanks, his wife Bev is his support along the way, driving a campervan so they can stay together when the trail meets a town.

Baxter’s view as he walked from Arrowtown to Macetown. SUPPLIED

“Because Bev’s with me every day, she’s my trail angel.”

He aims to raise $30,000 dollars during his six-month tramp.

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/2026/01/27/retired-salvation-army-pastor-walks-length-of-country-to-raise-funds/

Retired Salvation Army pastor walking the country to raise funds

Source: Radio New Zealand

Gavin Baxter walking the length of New Zealand to raise money for foodbanks. SUPPLIED

A retired Salvation Army pastor is battling blisters and hunger as he walks the length of New Zealand to raise money for foodbanks.

It comes as food charities [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/580728/foodbanks-warn-of-closures-if-government-fails-to-give-ongoing-funding

call for urgent ongoing government funding] as they face unprecedented demand during the cost of living crisis.

Gavin Baxter is a ‘nobo’ – north bound – tramper, he doned his boots at Bluff on the first day of the year and expects to spend six months on the Te Araroa Trail.

“There are times when I’ve been walking that I’ve been hungry but it just helps me relate to the real need that there is even in New Zealand.”

Half a million people in New Zealand are turning up at food charities needing help every month.

“It’s staggering, it’s deeply moving to think that these are the people who have actually got the courage to turn up. How many more are out there that are in deep need of assistance and perhaps don’t have that courage.”

Baxter has a sponsorship website up and running and aims to raise $10 for every kilometre he walks – so far he’s on track.

Blisters on his feet and a heavy pack are no deterrent, he recently made it to Queenstown.

“There’s a whole thing in the hiking industry about ultra-light, I think I’ve gone into ultra-heavy.”

Gavin Baxter at Lake Hawea as he walks the length of a country to raise funds for foodbanks. SUPPLIED

Top of his mind are those who are hungry because they cannot afford food after paying their household bills.

Baxter was the pastor at Greymouth’s Salvation Army and has recently had surgery to overcome prostate cancer.

The Salvation Army has 60 foodbanks across the country, its food security manager Sonya Cameron said there has been continued high demand for food parcels so far this year.

“Our centres are saying that they’re seeing a lot of new whanau needing support. I spoke to Cameron Miller who’s the core officer at Hutt City Salvation Army, he said that they’ve worked all the way through Christmas and the new year and that demand has been very high,” Cameron said.

“He said that they’ve got the basics but nothing more.”

It’s a similar story elsewhere.

“Whakatane were saying that they’d seen 24 whanau in just three hours the other day. They said that they’d never experienced that before at this time of year.”

The Salvation Army, Auckland City Mission and Food Network are among the organisations that received one-off grants till mid-2026, through the Food Secure Communities programme.

Late last year they warned of substantial closures if the government does not provide ongoing funding this year.

“For us, stable long term funding would allow us to plan with confidence, retain our staff, invest in infrastructure and respond to community need,” Cameron said.

The Ministry of Social Development (MSD) is evaluating the effectiveness off its one-off funding, including which households benefit from the programme.

A report is due to be provided to the Minister of Social Development and Employment next month.

MSD group general manager of insights, Fleur McLaren, said the evaluation has been done through interviews and a survey of organisations that have received the funding.

“It will examine how FSC infrastructure investment has made a difference to sector capacity and capability to support households experiencing food insecurity,” she said.

“It is also looking at which households benefit from FSC, in what ways and in what circumstances.”

Tracey Watene chairs the Aotearoa Food Rescue Alliance, which has been interviewed as part of the evaluation.

“We’re hopeful that this will inform decisions about how crucial this funding is and the value it gives to communities across Aotearoa,” she said.

“Budget 2026 will be a key decider. We’re preparing to engage fully as that process unfolds.”

Meanwhile, Gavin Baxter is sticking to his quest to raise money for foodbanks, his wife Bev is his support along the way, driving a campervan so they can stay together when the trail meets a town.

Baxter’s view as he walked from Arrowtown to Macetown. SUPPLIED

“Because Bev’s with me every day, she’s my trail angel.”

He aims to raise $30,000 dollars during his six-month tramp.

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/2026/01/27/retired-salvation-army-pastor-walking-the-country-to-raise-funds/