Controversial high-rise development approved in Wellington

Source: Radio New Zealand

An artist’s impression of the seven-storey apartment building, Mayfair, that is proposed for Wellington’s Mt Victoria. Supplied / One to One Hundred Ltd

A controversial high-rise development has been approved in Mt Victoria in Wellington, despite strong opposition from neighbours.

The proposal for the seven-storey, 32-unit Mayfair apartment block was first lodged in late 2024, after the Wellington City Council relaxed rules about what could be built in character areas.

In his decision, Commissioner Alistair Aburn said the proposal’s effects on townscape were “acceptable and consistent with the outcomes anticipated under the recently revised and now operative District Plan (2024) provisions, which provide for residential buildings of at least six storeys in the High Density Residential Zone”.

He found that any adverse effects on the Elizabeth Street Heritage Area would be “less than minor and therefore be acceptable”.

Opponents to the development include filmmaker Dame Gaylene Preston and former Wellingtonian of the Year Ralph Highman.

Highman shares a private road with the development.

He said 25,000 truck movements were planned over two years in the construction of the apartment block, and neighbours had safety and access concerns.

“One of the developers’ main plans has been to rip up the pedestrian pathway to try and make it safer. I mean, on what kind of planet does ripping up a pedestrian pathway make a driveway safer? If you’ve got your kids walking up and that driveway to school each day, obviously, that’s a big concern.”

An artist’s impression of the seven-storey apartment building, Mayfair, that is proposed for Wellington’s Mt Victoria. Supplied / One to One Hundred Ltd

Dame Gaylene is a long-time Mt Victoria resident.

She said the development would require extensive geo-tech work, which was “crazy” given recent weather events.

“Particularly in light of what happened last weekend in Tauranga and other places in New Zealand… Hauling 5000 cubic metres of Mt Victoria out from the mountain, it’s on a slope, and carting it away down a shared driveway on 10-tonne trucks, with permission to do that over two years… I think that is a crazy sort of development to be putting there.”

In his decision, Commissioner Alistair Aburn acknowledged that there could be “no debate” the proposal would involve substantial earthworks over the majority of the site.

Council officials had noted that those earthworks had the “potential to result in adverse effects in terms of site stability, erosion and sediment control, dust emissions and visual effects.”

However, a council engineer had reviewed a Geotechnical Assessment provided by the applicant and concluded that the earthworks effects, “including site stability, erosion and sediment run-off”, and dust emissions could be appropriately managed during the construction phase.

Aburn said he was also satisfied that the visual effects of the proposal would be limited to the construction stage and would be “fully mitigated” once the building and site landscaping had been completed.

It was appropriate that the final shared driveway layout and detailed design plans were provided to affected residents and invited them to forward comments to the Council’s compliance monitoring officer, he said.

Ralph Highnam said opponents now had 15 days to decide whether to appeal the decision to the Environment Court.

The developer of the Mayfair apartment block, Forma Group, was approached for comment.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/controversial-high-rise-development-approved-in-wellington/

Wellington Water appoints Bill Bayfield as new chairperson

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied

Wellington Water has announced a new board chairperson after Nick Leggett stepped down amid the Moa Point plant failure.

Bill Bayfield was appointed into the leadership role after having served on the water company’s board since September 2023.

Leggett stepped down from the job following the sewage plant failure which occurred two weeks ago – and had been sending tens of millions of litres of raw sewage into Cook Strait each day.

He said leadership carried responsibility, and stepping aside would allow Wellington Water to focus on fixing the problems and restoring public trust.

Bayfield acknowledged Leggett’s work in the role.

“On behalf of the Wellington Water Board, I would like to thank Nick for his valuable contribution and leadership over the past few years during his time as chair.”

Bayfield had been chief executive of Canterbury and Bay of Plenty Regional Councils and was also the CEO of water regulator Taumata Arowai.

He would take on the role as board chair effective immediately.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/wellington-water-appoints-bill-bayfield-as-new-chairperson/

Parking fines more than double in Hamilton after changes

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Libby Kirkby-McLeod

Parking changes in Hamilton city have come with a hefty price tag for drivers, with infringements more than doubling.

The total value of tickets in the central business district was also nearly five times higher the year after the changes were introduced. But the council said Hamilton central is still cheaper than most other cities in the country.

In October 2024, Hamilton City Council reduced the previous two hours free parking on central city streets to one hour free parking and required all cars to be registered via a streetside kiosk or parking app to receive the free parking and pay for more if needed.

At the same time, the government increased penalties for people misusing mobility parking and also increased the parking infringement and towage fees (which are not set by local councils but by central government).

Data released to RNZ under the Official Information Act showed that the year after the city changed to zoned parking, 5434 drivers parking in the ‘green’ zone (closest to Garden Place and the heart of the city) were issued with fines valued at $316,414. This compares to less than half that number of infringements, 2528, in the 12 months before the change.

Those fines had a total value of $64,645 and were in a period before the government changes.

Zooming in on the city’s main road, Victoria Street, the cost of fines issued rose by nearly 400 percent.

In the 12 months before the changes were introduced, 876 parking tickets were handed out with a combined value of $22,643.

Those numbers soared in the 12 months after the changes when 1461 parking tickets were handed out with a combined value of $90,470.

Despite this substantial new cost for some drivers, the council’s head of transport, Gordon Naidoo, said parking in Hamilton’s central city was still inexpensive compared with other city centres in New Zealand.

“Hamilton’s first hour of free on street parking is uncommon among major cities, which positions our city as one of the more affordable places for short stay parking,” Naidoo said.

RNZ asked whether the large increase in fines represented the fact the public either did not understand the changes or didn’t find them workable.

However, Naidoo said the increases were an expected part of people adjusting to the changes.

“Some drivers fail to register their vehicle for the first hour of free parking, which results in an infringement. We believe the system is workable for the public, but like any parking system it requires ongoing monitoring and clear communication to ensure people understand what is expected of them,” Naidoo said.

What the system did not have was the support of the mayor.

Mayor Tim Macindoe campaigned to return the city to two hours free parking and told RNZ that continued to be his position.

“I continue to advocate for the return of two hours’ free parking to make the CBD more welcoming and accessible, which is better for retailers, businesses and Hamiltonians. Parking arrangements from 1 July 2026 will be considered as part of the 2026/27 Annual Plan, and I have asked the new CBD revitalisation sub‑committee to include this in their work.

“However, the final decision rests with the full council, and due process must be followed,” he said.

The data provided to RNZ shows that not all fines were collected as revenue for council.

“The ‘value of infringements’ figures represents the amount issued, not the amounts paid,” said the council.

This was because fines could be disputed, withdrawn, or referred to the courts.

In the 12 months since the parking changes, $2,235,906 of fines were issued in Hamilton central.

Just over 68 percent of that amount, $1,664,143.78 was actually collected by the council.

Generally, Naidoo felt the current set-up, while not perfect, helped encourage turnover in high demand areas while still providing longer stay options where appropriate.

“This supports retailers, hospitality, and visitors by reducing the time people spend searching for a park. A good parking system isn’t just about enforcing rules or issuing tickets. It’s a tool for shaping how people move, access, and experience a city. We want people to find a park when they need one and get on with their day,” Naidoo said.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/parking-fines-more-than-double-in-hamilton-after-changes/

Police disrupt organised crime run through business, Dunedin

Source: New Zealand Police

Police have arrested and charged three people following an operation targeting organised crime in Dunedin.

On Thursday 12 February, Police conducted a search warrant at a commercial address on Willis Street, Dunedin.

During the search Police located and recovered a stolen vehicle from the address, and three men were arrested.

The men, aged 28, 32, and 37, all appeared in Dunedin District Court today and are due to reappear on 12 March.

They face a range of charges relating to the supply of class C drugs, offering to supply class B drugs, and receiving stolen property.

“I am really pleased with this outcome, and it’s great for the community,” says Detective Jo McLaughlan of Dunedin’s Organised Crime Unit.

“The supply of drugs brings astronomical social harm to our community and will not be tolerated.

“This operation focused on disrupting illegal activity being run through commercial businesses and I am glad we are able to hold these three men to account.

“Police are committed to, and will, continue to work hard to disrupt organised crime,” Detective McLaughlan says.

Anyone with knowledge or concerns of organised crime, or any crime, in their area are urged to make a report through 105, either online or over the phone – or call 111 if the offending is happening now.

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

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/police-disrupt-organised-crime-run-through-business-dunedin/

Black Foils begin physical, emotional repairs after horror SailGP crash with France

Source: Radio New Zealand

Salvage crew survey the wreckage of Black Foils’ Amokura boat at New Zealand SailGP. James Gourley for SailGP

The Black Foils are drawing heavily on the strength of injured grinder Louis Sinclair as they come to grips with the horror crash that all but destroyed their F50 boat during New Zealand SailGP last weekend.

As the 13-boat fleet sprinted off the startline of Saturday’s third race, NZ driver Peter Burling seemed to lose control of Amokura’s rudder and swerved sharply into the path of France, whose boat ploughed over the top of bow, slicing it in two and leaving Sinclair with compound fractures in both legs.

He underwent surgery on the weekend and was pictured on social media overnight, leaving hospital on his own two feet.

“I just want to really commend Louis for how he’s handled himself throughout this whole incident,” Black Foils wing trimmer Blair Tuke said. “He’s been amazing really in true Louis fashion, and holding true to the values and characteristics we hope all our team members instil.

“Amazingly calm right from the first incident out on the water to the surgery in Auckland Hospital and as he comes out now for what will now be quite a long recovery back to full health.

“With his calm demeanour and unique sense of humour, he’s really brought strength to all of us through this time.”

The New Zealand team have spoken publicly for the first time since the high-speed crash that shocked thousands of spectators watching from the massive grandstand on Wynyard Point.

In happier times, the Black Foils, with Louis Sinclair second left, celebrate their SailGP victory at Portsmouth 2025. Jason Ludlow for SailGP

Team bosses Tuke and driver Burling are still processing exactly what happened in those fateful seconds before, during and after impact.

“We started off with a great two races, and were really enjoying the conditions and feeling comfortable in the boat,” Burling recalled.

“We started off race three and were going down reach one to windward of the Italian boat. We ended up high on the foil and ended up sliding sideways.

“We hit a system limit, which drastically escalated that situation, and had to take quite drastic action to avoid the Italian boat to leeward, which resulted in us touching down. Obviously, the incident followed that.”

Burling said once the spray had cleared, he could see his four crewmates safe, knowing strategist Liv Mackay was on the other side of the boat out of harm’s way.

Louis Sinclair leaves hospital, after surgery to compound fractures of both legs. Facebook/NZ SailGP Team

“At that stage, you’re thankful everyone’s safe, but very quickly we realised Louis had his legs stuck in the bottom of the cockpit and we can only commend Louis on his demeanour through that time.

“It was incredible to see someone in a situation like that remain so calm, and be such an instrumental part of telling us what he was feeling and where the pressure was, and getting the two boats apart.

“I think we can all learn a lot from Louis through this time and it’s pretty incredible to see the way he responded in the situation, but we’re also incredibly proud of the rest of our team and the way everyone came together in a tough situation, and the French team as well.

“They were dealing with situations on board, but definitely came straight to our aid.”

French strategist Manon Audinet sustained several abdominal bruising, when she was catapulted forward on impact, breaking the steering wheel. She is also under medical observation and is recovering well,

Burling has replayed the incident over and over in his mind, but has also had the benefit of a myriad other perspectives on the incident.

“The thing with SailGP is there are so many camera angles, all the audio and all the different aspects,” he explained. “It’s really nice in some ways to know that your memory of the whole situation was pretty accurate.

“It’s also interesting some things you didn’t see or weren’t concentrating on at the time, how everything unfolded.

New Zealand and France collide during New Zealand SailGP off Auckland’s Wynyard Point. Felix Diemer for SailGP

“It’s all part of the wider review process from here.”

New Zealand SailGP represented the first occasion all 13 teams raced on the water together, and other drivers suggested jamming that many boats onto the compact Waitematā Harbour course in tricky wind conditions probably didn’t help the situation.

Organisers responded by splitting the fleet into smaller heats on Sunday, increasing safety, but possibly detracting from the spectacle.

SailGP is still investigating the incident, but has already ruled New Zealand and France out of the Sydney regatta next week.

Inspections have confirmed Amokura’s central pod and port hull emerged relatively unscathed, and can be used to repair the damage to the French boat. Because they did not cause the impact, returning France to the startline will take priority.

Given the extent of damage to their boat, the Kiwis are probably waiting for completion of the next new boat, which SailGP CEO Sir Russell Coutts indicated could be June.

“From here, we’re still working out that exact path forward,” Burling said. “We definitely won’t be in Sydney and SailGP is still undertaking that wider planning process around when the Black Foils will be back on the startline.

“We’re having to play a little bit of a waiting game now.”

In the meantime, the mending continues.

“For the wider team, mental and physical health is paramount through this time,” Tuke said. “We’re just taking it day by day to make sure everyone is supported in the way that they need as individuals.

“It was a really horrific incident and how we manage our path back from here is really important.”

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://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/19/black-foils-begin-physical-emotional-repairs-after-horror-sailgp-crash-with-france/

British dual nationals with NZ passports no longer need new UK passport

Source: Radio New Zealand

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

The British government is now allowing dual nationals to have a lifelong digital stamp in their New Zealand passport instead of buying a new UK one.

Thousands of people have already rushed to buy a British passport after being told an alternative certificate of entitlement – costing £589 ($1329) – would last only as long as their current foreign passport.

But, in a change quietly announced on the UK passport’s website eight days ago, it said that from 26 February certificates of entitlement will be linked to new passports for free.

“At the moment certificates of entitlement are stickers (vignettes) placed in a passport. We are going to change this to a digital record.”

RNZ asked the British High Commission in Wellington if it had sent out a media release about any of the changes. It pointed to a January 2025 media release that dealt only with the issue of introducing ETAs (Electronic Travel Authorisations) and not the new requirement for British passport holders, or certificates of entitlement.

It has been asked for further comment on the issue of digital certificates of entitlement.

In questions about whether staff will be at airports to assist its citizens when the new passport requirement comes in next Wednesday, it said consular assistance was provided for all citizens abroad who needed it.

Many British migrants had asked why the passport requirement was introduced, after the UK government said it was to make their borders more secure. When asked for more information, the High Commission told RNZ it had already provided that reasoning.

Travel agents are warning travellers about next week’s border changes in the UK. Jasmine Fair / RNZ

Counting aliens

UK law professor Elspeth Guild, who specialises in border controls, said the rationale behind the changes could be led by a drive for better statistics.

“A number of countries insist that where their nationals are entering their ‘home’ country they must use their ‘home’ passport. This requirement seems to have a basis in the entitlement of countries to know whether their citizens are at home or not.

“The new insistence on the use of the home passport when entering a state, I think it [is] linked to the entry-exit databases where a lot of modifications were required to deal with dual nationals, and now states want to know. There is a justification in that citizens arriving home cannot be subject to immigration rules (at least in the UK), but if the authorities do not know that the person is a citizen they will be classified as an alien, and then when they fail to leave at the end of their permitted stay they mess up the statistics on how many ‘illegal’ immigrants are floating around.”

She said while revenue generation was also a possible reason for the new policy, several countries which permit dual nationality had tightened up their processes.

For travellers embarking on a trip to the UK next week who had British parents but no visible link to the UK, she had some words of comfort.

“Unless the place of birth stated on the passport indicates that the person may have birthright citizenship somewhere else, it is virtually impossible without a detailed investigation to know whether someone is a dual national. This is particularly so where citizenship was acquired through ancestry rather than place of birth.”

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://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/19/british-dual-nationals-with-nz-passports-no-longer-need-new-uk-passport/

Ads are coming to AI. Does that really have to be such a bad thing?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ilayaraja Subramanian, Lecturer in Marketing, University of Canterbury

American artificial intelligence (AI) company Anthropic this month attracted applause – and a surge in users – for clever advertisements poking fun at its competition.

In the commercials, an AI assistant awkwardly breaks away mid-conversation to push products such as shoe insoles and dating services. “Ads are coming to AI”, the Super Bowl-tied spots warned, but not to Anthtropic’s own chatbot Claude.

The campaign quickly generated buzz because it played to peoples’ worries that inviting advertising into AI platforms which many of us now rely on – and confide in – risks blurring the line between helpful advice and paid influence.

But that anxiety, while understandable, overlooks how advertising already works across much of the digital world.

In many ways, ads based on our interactions with AI aren’t such a big leap from the kinds of targeted advertising that already dominate search engines, social media feeds and e-commerce platforms.

And if transparent and well-designed, the shift could help people complete tasks faster and keep these tools widely accessible.

AI’s access and equity headache

This month, OpenAI’s ChatGPT began testing adverts with users in the United States. The company assures us any ads will be clearly labelled, kept separate from answers and accompanied by privacy protections and user controls.

The stakes are high: ChatGPT now boasts 800 million weekly users and ranks as the internet’s fifth most visited website. It has operated largely ad-free since its launch three years ago and only about 5% of users pay a subscription.

With room to grow, OpenAI has strong incentives to find a sustainable model that protects trust without undermining what made the service so popular.

If indeed transparent and optional, its advertising could help solve a basic funding problem. In practice, a small paying group cannot carry the full burden forever.

[embedded content]
One of Anthropic’s new advertisements touting the “ad-free” status of its chatbot Claude.

A light, clearly labelled ad model is one way the wider user base could contribute indirectly – much as they already do via television, YouTube, search engines and many news websites.

That matters for access. Around one in six people worldwide already use generative AI, but adoption is uneven and a digital divide is widening between richer and poorer countries.

If wealthier nations move faster, sustainable business models can help spread access by keeping costs down for students, job seekers and small organisations in emerging economies.

The convenience of ‘contextual’ advertising

For everyday ChatGPT users, the main upside of ads is that they can reflect what is needed in the moment, rather than what a tracker infers from past browsing.

Traditional digital ads use cookies and cross-site tracking to guess people’s interests over time. Contextual advertising, by contrast, targets what is happening on the page or in the moment and is often seen as a more privacy-friendly alternative.

OpenAI says ads will be matched to the conversation and may use past chats and ad interactions. Users will be able to dismiss ads, see why they were shown one and delete ad data.

If those controls work as promised, relevance would come from the question being asked, not from tracking across other websites. Imagine asking: “I’m hosting friends. What are two easy Mexican dishes, and what ingredients do I need?”.

ChatGPT could give the recipe guidance first, then show a clearly labelled ad option, such as a local supermarket delivery link for the exact ingredients, or a sponsored meal kit that fits the budget and dietary needs. Instead of jumping between tabs, the user moves straight from decision to action.

For consumers, that is convenience. For advertisers, it is also efficiency, because the ad appears at the moment of genuine intent rather than being sprayed across the internet.

Another benefit is smoother communication. Conversational ads have the potential to function more like a shop assistant than a static banner. Instead of clicking away, opening tabs and filling in forms, follow-up questions can be asked in the same chat and personalised details returned quickly.

OpenAI suggests this could include sponsored listings that users can interact with in the chat. For instance, while planning a trip, a sponsored accommodation option might appear, allowing questions about availability, cancellation, location and total cost for specific dates and group size to be handled in one place.

Done well, this could reduce frustration and curb misleading advertising, because people can challenge vague claims and ask for specifics before spending money.

Trust, transparency and limits

None of this removes the risks. Advertisements should not be allowed to change what a trusted AI tool such as ChatGPT recommends. And because ads are currently being tested with only a small group of users, the full extent of those risks cannot yet be observed or properly assessed.

That is why transparency and separation are not cosmetic. They are safeguards.

For now, it may be tempting to treat “ad-free” as the only ethical position, as Anthropic’s new campaign implies. But the world is still early in this shift. These systems should be judged by what happens in practice – especially on transparency, user control and real protections against manipulation.

If those guardrails hold, it is worth considering the upside too: ads in AI tools could support access, reduce friction and help more people benefit from this powerful technology.

ref. Ads are coming to AI. Does that really have to be such a bad thing? – https://theconversation.com/ads-are-coming-to-ai-does-that-really-have-to-be-such-a-bad-thing-274955

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/19/ads-are-coming-to-ai-does-that-really-have-to-be-such-a-bad-thing-274955/

Majority of Fonterra shareholders vote in favour of Mainland payout scheme

Source: Radio New Zealand

More than 98 percent of the co-op’s 8000 shareholders voted in favour of the capital return scheme resulting from the divestment of Mainland Group. 123rf / Supplied images

The multi-billion-dollar sale of dairy co-operative Fonterra’s consumer brands business is one step closer, as shareholders overwhelmingly approve another regulatory hurdle to the international deal.

More than 98 percent of the co-op’s 8000 shareholders voted in favour of the capital return scheme resulting from the divestment of Mainland Group, at a special meeting this morning.

In October, shareholders approved the proposal to sell the consumer brands business – behind well-known brands like Anchor, Kāpiti, Perfect Italiano and Fresh’n Fruity – to French dairy giant Lactalis.

This week’s vote was one of the various approvals needed for the international transaction of $4.22 billion to be completed, with more to go.

Fonterra’s board recommended its shareholders vote in favour of the payment schedule for the Mainland Group sale. PHOTO/Screenshot

Shareholders would receive $3.2 billion once the sale was complete in one lump sum, while up to $1 billion would go back into the co-op.

Board chairman Peter McBride said in the meeting that the sale process was progressing, before an expected completion by the end of next month.

“Your co-op has been working to deliver the proposed capital return as quickly as possible,” he said.

“We are targeting a tax-free capital return of $2 per share to shareholders and unit holders, equivalent to around $3.2 billion, once the sale is complete.”

Fonterra chairman Peter McBride. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

McBride said shareholders did not have to do anything to prepare, as the co-op would ensure their shares ahead of the deal remained unchanged.

“Subject to approval by shareholders, settlement of the transaction and receipt of final court orders, the co-op continues to expect the transaction to be complete in the first quarter of this calendar year.

“That is, by 31 March 2026,” he said.

A co-op spokesperson said it planned to invest up to $1 billion it would get from the sale into value-add projects across ingredients and foodservice, including the butter factory expansion at Clandeboye.

Fonterra co-operative chair and Wairarapa cocky John Stevenson said farmers would likely bank their dividends and pay down debt with the cash injection.

He said farmers will also keep a close eye on how Fonterra executes its new strategy as a global dairy ingredients supplier.

“I’m not surprised, I think the original vote on whether to divest or not was certainly the one where farmers put significant effort into understanding the proposal in front of them,” he said.

“Whilst an important part of the process is essentially in farmers’ minds re-confirming that they’re happy with the outcome of that in terms of the capital return and happy for Fonterra to continue in that direction.”

The payment would result in a lump sum payment for shareholders after the subdivision.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/majority-of-fonterra-shareholders-vote-in-favour-of-mainland-payout-scheme/

Review: No Other Choice is impossible to predict

Source: Radio New Zealand

You aren’t in much danger of walking out of No Other Choice wondering what it was about.

But director Park Chan-wook’s idiosyncratic, dark-comedy thriller is a masterclass in how hilarious, anxiety-inducing and chilling being on-the-nose can be.

When protagonist and former “Pulp Man of the Year’” Yoo Man-su loses his paper factory job in a takeover, his idyllic, summer barbeque-filled life comes under threat. As bills mount up, Yoo, his devoted wife and their kids (a boy and a girl – the daughter is a cello prodigy, of course) face the prospect selling their beautiful mid-century mansion.

This video is hosted on Youtube.

It’s a very corny opening and laid on very, very thick. We even watch their two golden retrievers being driven away in the back of a car.

Struggling to get work amid fierce competition in a dwindling, increasingly automated industry, Yoo decides the only thing left to do is to find and kill the rivals that threaten to beat him to a new job.

What follows is an equally riotous and disturbing serial killer comedy of as many errors as you’d expect when a “paper man” tries to play assassin.

Park (Oldboy, Decision to Leave) is, perhaps, best known for films where people do violence to each other with things like hammers. But much of the tension of No Other Choice is the violence that doesn’t happen – the hesitation, the doubt and the incompetence that make any given moment feel like it could go any way. It’s impossible to predict.

Every scene feels as likely to end in slapstick comedy and humiliating failure as it is to turn truly grim. What’s most remarkable isn’t the seamless pivots from comedy to darkness, but how easily it manages at go both ways at simultaneously.

As Yoo holds a giant pot plant over the edge of a building, preparing to drop it on a competitor, plant water begins to trickle out and then runs slowly down his face.

These scenes are boldly wrapped in eye-catching and idiosyncratic cinematography, as Park deploys every playful technique in the kit, and a few new ones.

Be ready for Dutch angles galore.

Even the music gets in on the comedy – although it’s a joke better not spoilt.

No Other Choice feels like a test of the limits of sympathy for the very unsympathetic goals of a mostly unsympathetic antihero.

As Yoo, Lee Byung-hun (KPop Demon Hunters, Squid Game) mugs, grimaces, panics and transparently lies his way between job interviews, killings and family time. He plays it big, exactly where the film needs it to be.

It’s also a portrayal of cowardice disguised as desperation that’s as sleazy as they come.

And while No Other Choice devotes much of its energy looking into the strange ways we deform ourselves to compete in a capitalist system that turns us on each other, it refuses to let its protagonist off the hook.

It’s just as much concerned with the kind of toxic masculinity that drives men to obsessive, silly, madness, and what it means for those around them.

These are ideas both incredibly of our times and, of course, as true now as they were in fiction hundreds of years ago.

But No Other Choice delivers them in a heart-stopping, side-splitting vehicle that is a hard to compete with.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/review-no-other-choice-is-impossible-to-predict/

Dax Rodney Holland named as man found dead in Tauranga park

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

A man found dead in a Tauranga park, sparking a homicide investigation, has been named as Dax Rodney Holland.

He was 54.

Detective Senior Sergeant Natalie Flowerdew-Brown said police were called to the Wharepai Domain on Saturday around 2pm following Holland’s body being found.

A homicide investigation was launched following a post-mortem on Monday.

“Police continue to ask for anyone who may have seen any unusual or suspicious behaviour around the Wharepau Domain prior to 2pm on Saturday 14 February, to please get in touch,” Flowerdew-Brown said.

“Anyone with information is asked to contact Police online at 105.police.govt.nz, clicking “Update report”, or by calling 105.”

The reference number is 260214/8937.

People can also give information anonymously through Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/dax-rodney-holland-named-as-man-found-dead-in-tauranga-park/

Crayfishers in cut-off Wairarapa hope bridge reopens soon

Source: Radio New Zealand

The bridge over Hurupi Stream on Cape Palliser Road. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

It’s not “panic, panic” yet, but Ngawi crayfishers are keeping their fingers crossed that a failed bridge reopens soon on Wairarapa’s south coast.

While the bridge at the Turanganui River on Lake Ferry Road reopened on Wednesday, the bridge over Hurupi Stream on Cape Palliser Road remains shut.

The bridge, known as the ‘Banana Bridge’, has been deemed structurally unsafe after severe flooding earlier this week.

The road is the only route in and out for the more than 100 people trapped on the south coast, prompting food and medicine to be delivered by helicopter on Wednesday evening.

An update on the status of the bridge is expected on Thursday, following an urgent notice from the South Wairarapa District Council and subsequent assessment by a civil engineer.

“The bridge, often referred to as the Banana bridge, could pose a serious safety risk,” a council spokesperson said.

“The bridge must not be used under any circumstances until it has been inspected and formally cleared by a qualified engineer.”

Ngawi fisherman Andrew Sim told RNZ in his 40 years on the coast, the Banana Bridge had never gone down, and crayfishers and their stock were currently stuck.

“I think there’s nine of us here, six of us are finished [the season’s fishing], three still going to mop up the little bit they’ve got left,” Sim said.

“They’re probably a little bit left in the lurch to get their product out.”

He said the live lobsters were usually transported by truck out of the fishing settlement.

“I’ve got a big boat if worst comes to worst, I can transport it to Wellington.

“It’s not panic, panic at this stage, but it’d be nice to know where it’s heading.”

Crayfishers off the coast of Ngawi. Suppled/Andrew Sim

Crayfisher Lance Maindonald was also eagerly awaiting an update on the bridge.

Maindonald, who has been unable to get into Ngawi due to the bridge closures, said he was hoping to board a boat from Wellington to take him there.

Sim said his stepson was among those who needed to collect the last of his catch but was also trapped on the wrong side of the bridge.

“We’ll know a bit more later on.”

RNZ has contacted the council for an update.

A helicopter dropped supplies in Ngawi on Wednesday evening. Supplied/Kim Hayes

Sim said he was almost out of medication when the helicopter arrived on Wednesday with supplies.

“The chopper’s come in… and my goodness, what a haul of food that got delivered out to here.

“That went beyond all expectations, that was fantastic. Everything from fresh fruit, vegetables, meat, toilet paper, dog rolls, cat food. Basically, everything you needed to keep you alive for several days, that’s for sure.

“It was unbelievable.”

Sim didn’t expect there would be traffic “will-nilly” on the road any time soon, but hoped it would at least reopen to residents and those who needed to get in and out.

However, he said there were “certainly a lot worse places” to be stuck.

“We’re pretty blessed out here.”

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/crayfishers-in-cut-off-wairarapa-hope-bridge-reopens-soon/

OCR: Why no move was probably good news for home loans

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Reserve Bank kept the Official Cash Rate (OCR) at 2.25 percent. RNZ

Wholesale interest rates have softened a little since the Reserve Bank’s Wednesday update, but there is unlikely to be any relief for home loan borrowers.

The Reserve Bank kept the Official Cash Rate (OCR) at 2.25 percent but updated its forecast for the future path of interest rates. It now expects rates to lift a little higher and earlier than previously, but not as early as the market had been pricing in.

The five-year swap rate has now dropped from a high of 3.8 percent at the start of this month to 3.52 percent.

The three-year rate has dropped from 3.45 percent to 3.19 percent over the same period.

Two- and one-year swap rates have also fallen.

Simplicity chief economist Shamubeel Eaqub said it could mean a minor drop in home loan rates.

The main banks have all put up their longer-term rates in recent weeks.

But Brad Olsen, Infometrics chief executive, was not convinced that rates would fall.

He said it was notable that the Reserve Bank had tried to dampen down the market excitement at the end of last year, when attention quickly turned from how far the OCR would fall to when it would rise again, and many retail rates lifted.

“I don’t think any of the banks are going to come out and reverse the increase to interest rates that they’ve put through in the last couple of weeks. It probably just delays whenever the next changes might come through.

“The long-term rates have lifted. I don’t think you’re going to see much in the way of changed six-month rates. And even if you do, who’s going on a six-month rate at the moment? In the most recent lending data, there was a huge pivot away from floating and six-month rates and a much bigger increase in the number going longer. It’s still probably a question of when you see further increase in retail rates and what magnitude?”

He said the economy was in an uncomfortable position with a lot of changes happening at once.

“Interest rate changes last year that are still to fully hit the economy. You’ve got weaker recent economic trends through parts of last year, but then a bit more hot inflationary pressure, hopefully temporarily.

“The Reserve Bank’s still got a lot riding on expectations that spare capacity in the economy will limit how ready businesses feel to pass on costs and an expectation that with a weak housing market that consumer spending or growth will remain low. The challenge so far is that both of those trends are true and headline inflation is at 3.1 percent.”

Mike Jones, BNZ chief economist, said the Reserve Bank’s messaging set the stage for some consolidation in wholesale and retail interest rates.

“Just how long that pause might last will depend on how the economic numbers fall from here, particularly those around inflation.

“The next move in the OCR is up, and we think in September, so I think we can expect the uptrend to resume at some stage, but the Reserve Bank’s ‘time is on our side’ messaging does buy a bit of extra time on that.

Sign up for Money with Susan Edmunds, a weekly newsletter covering all the things that affect how we make, spend and invest money.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/ocr-why-no-move-was-probably-good-news-for-home-loans/

Government weakens housing intensification rules for Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Cabinet has agreed to lower the maximum number of houses in Auckland from 2 million to at least 1.6 million.

Housing Minister Chris Bishop announced the new figure to Auckland leaders at the International Convention Centre this afternoon.

Auckland Council had been progressing a new plan to accommodate up to 2 million homes in the coming decades.

The council opted out of medium-density rules that apply to most major cities on the proviso it set up zoning for 30 years of growth.

The council’s Plan Change 120 set out the process for doing this, but the government has since come under pressure from proponents of heritage homes who have raised concerns about further intensification in character areas that were already seeing major development.

Bishop has now confirmed Cabinet has signed off on legislating to “soften” the housing capacity equivalency requirement.

“Currently, that number equates to at least 2 million, and we are lowering it to at least 1.6 million,” he said.

Housing Minister Chris Bishop RNZ/Mark Papalii

The Minister told Auckland leaders PC120 had been “divisive” and fears the government had a target of building 2 million homes did not exist.

“The 2 million number was a red herring that transformed into a lightning rod….It’s clear a lot of Aucklanders are concerned about what growth means for them.

“That’s completely understandable. People want to know that their suburbs will continue to be liveable. That is what government wants too.

“This kind of angst in Auckland isn’t helpful for our housing goals. We need people to come with us on the journey of more capacity and more housing. We hear you and we are ready to act.”

Bishop said the government believed 1.6 million houses was the midpoint between the 1.2 million figure in the Auckland Unitary Plan (AUP) and the 2 million figure in PC120.

“This reduction is significant and strikes an appropriate balance between those Aucklanders concerned about densification, and those who wish to see more growth.”

He said Cabinet had asked for a summary of the provisional zoning changes the council would make once the government legislated for it.

“Once we legislate the lower housing capacity number, the rest is in Auckland Council’s hands.”

“The council will determine which parts of Auckland they wish to downzone in PC120. They can then formally withdraw parts of PC120 from the Plan Change, except for those parts needed to implement the NPS-UD or to upzone around key CRL stations.”

Legally complicated

Bishop said it was legally complicated to legislate in the middle of a process that was already underway but the coalition had found a workaround.

“We have devised a way through that will allow Aucklanders to see the areas that will be removed from PC 120 and provide another opportunity for Aucklanders to have their say – including those who have already submitted on PC120 and others who would like to join.

“I want to stress that I am determined to put this issue to bed once and for all. Auckland has been struggling with an update to the AUP since 2021. I accept Parliament hasn’t helped, but it’s now 2026. I think we’ve now got the balance right.”

He said the new plan would mean growth around the areas that made the most economic sense and where there was the most support – CRL stations, rapid transit stations and metropolitan centres while allowing more flexibility around suburban Auckland.

Existing provisions, such as setback requirements, tower dimension controls, and height limits, constrain development should be revisited, he said.

Bishop said “for largely unfathomable RMA legal reasons” the City Centre Zone was not included in PC120 and the council did not have a simple mechanism to unlock this potential.

“Cabinet has agreed that I will start an investigation into these planning provisions that are holding back Auckland’s city centre, with a view to making regulations under the RMA – similar to what we have just announced for Eden Park.

“My intention is that any additional housing capacity enabled in the city centre will count towards the new requirement to provide capacity for at least 1.6 million dwellings.

Together, these changes announced today will provide Auckland Council greater flexibility to respond to the feedback of Aucklanders and tackle our housing crisis.”

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/government-weakens-housing-intensification-rules-for-auckland/

How do you know when Ramadan begins? A night with the NZ moon sighters

Source: Radio New Zealand

Under a drizzly Auckland sky, clusters of people gather on hilltops across the city, eyes fixed on a narrow band of horizon on Wednesday night. They are waiting for a break in the cloud — a fleeting silver curve that will mark the start of Ramadan for Muslims across Aotearoa.

The window is brief. The new crescent, or hilal, might appear for only moments during sunset and can vanish just as quickly behind cloud or haze. No sightings mean the month completes 30 days instead of 29.

On this particular night, as Muslims anticipate the start of the holy month of fasting, the turnout is larger than usual for what is actually a monthly ritual.

Muslims point to the direction where they’re hoping to spot the hilal, or crescent moon.

RNZ / Isra’a Emhail

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/how-do-you-know-when-ramadan-begins-a-night-with-the-nz-moon-sighters/

Person seriously hurt in Northland crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

SH1 was closed between Kaiwaka Mangawhai Road and Mangawhai Road for a time. RNZ / Tim Brown

One person has been transported to hospital in a serious condition following a crash on State Highway 1, Kaiwaka.

The single vehicle crash was reported to the police at 7.35am on Thursday.

SH1 was closed between Kaiwaka Mangawhai Road and Mangawhai Road as a result of the crash. It has now reopened.

“Police would like to thank motorists for their patience while the scene was cleared,” a spokesperson said.

“Inquiries into the cause of the crash remain ongoing.”

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/person-seriously-hurt-in-northland-crash/

Speech to Committee For Auckland

Source: New Zealand Government

Good afternoon, everyone. 

I’d like to acknowledge Rupert Hodson and Sarah Sinclair for the warm welcome, NZICC for hosting, and the Committee for Auckland for putting on today’s event.

It’s good to be back. 

It’s been around a year since I spoke to you as the newly minted Minister of Transport. 

The thesis of that speech was straightforward:

To create a brighter, more prosperous future for all New Zealanders, we must allow Auckland to grow and become a world-class, international city. 

That means we, as a country, saying “yes” a lot more often and “no” a lot less. 

Yes, to infrastructure. Yes, to events. Yes, to transit-oriented development. Yes, to housing. And yes, to growth.

So, what does “yes” actually mean?

It’s not just a political slogan or some ideological posturing about progress.

It means real change. 

And that’s what this Government is about.

We are a reforming government.

We refuse to accept the idea that New Zealand is in a state perpetual managed decline.

We refuse to accept the idea that we can slip into the ranks of a relatively wealthy middle-income country where our best and brightest leave.

We refuse to accept the idea of managed mediocrity.

With bold and tough decisions, and by tackling tough issues, we can lift living standards for everyone and drive increased prosperity.

In education, we are reversing the 30-year experiment on our kids of pretending that basic knowledge and facts don’t matter. We’re restoring standards, teaching the basics, and focusing on achievement.

We’re reversing wealth destructive earthquake prone building legislation, opening up competition in building materials, and tackling joint and several liability.

We’re finally sorting the Holidays Act. Major reforms are underway to employment law and health and safety.

In short, we are fixing the basics of the economy and building the future.

I have the enormous privilege of driving change in a number of important areas, and I’m pleased to say we accomplished a lot last year.

The Planning Bill and the Natural Environment Bill are in the House to replace the failed Resource Management Act (RMA) once and for all. 

We know some changes are needed to reflect this Government’s policy ambitions and to get the Bills right. I look forward to going through submissions and taking on New Zealanders’ feedback.  

Ten projects were granted consent under our Fast-Track legislation representing thousands of jobs and billions in investment. Of those ten projects, six are Auckland-based and include the Port of Auckland Extension, two quarry expansions, and three mixed-residential developments.

And we started construction $7 billion of central-government-funded infrastructure in the second half of 2025, including level crossings here in Auckland.

As we begin this year, there’s a lot to look forward to.

The economy is undoubtedly turning a corner.

New Zealand has been through a long and difficult economic adjustment. The post-Covid period brought inflation that lingered too long, interest rates that hurt too many households, and a downturn that took time to unwind.

The most recent Treasury forecasts show the economy has begun to turn a corner. Growth strengthened through the second half of last year, unemployment is stabilising, and confidence is returning. Momentum is building – but sustaining it requires discipline and focus.

Here in Auckland, I sense a real sense of optimism.

This wonderful new convention centre has just opened.

We’re liberalising Eden Park’s planning rules so it can host more concerts and events.

The central interceptor project will be finished later this year.

Also, later this year, City Rail Link (CRL) will open, as will new rail stations at Drury and Paerata. Ngakoroa will follow in 2027.

The third main line is now open, separating freight from passenger rail, and the line to Pukekohe has been electrified. The Auckland Rail Network Rebuild is coming to an end.

Funding has just been confirmed to complete the Eastern Busway. Yesterday, NZTA applied for Fast Track approval for the Northwestern Busway.

Slowly but surely, the Auckland Rapid Transit network is being built. 

Government’s vision for housing 

In that context, today, I want to talk more about housing and its importance to New Zealand. For too long, our housing market has held us back socially and economically. 

Economically, housing eats up disposable income, meaning less can go toward goods, services, and investment. It ties up wealth; and displaces productive investment. 

A lack of housing in the right place also leaves productivity and agglomeration benefits on the table. 

Socially, housing plays a large factor in young kiwis deciding to leave New Zealand to find better opportunities. 

Unaffordable housing also tips more people into situations where they need support. Currently, there are around 19,500 families on the social housing wait list.

Various governments of all different colours have put housing in the too hard basket and failed to make the tough calls required. 

This government is different.

I am determined to fix housing for three reasons.

Boost the economy
Help get the books back in order
Moral case  

The first reason is to boost the economy.

Housing is fundamentally a productivity enabler, and for decades, New Zealand has suffered from a productivity disease. 

As Paul Krugman so famously observed, “Productivity isn’t everything, but in the long run, it’s almost everything.” 

Productivity drives our standard of living and our prosperity. 

Even though New Zealand is blessed with extraordinary competitive advantages like natural resources, an abundance of land, relatively cheap renewable energy, and a Number 8 Wire mentality – we have fallen behind. 

We used to make the most of our advantages. In 1900, we had the highest number of patent applications per capita in the world, and in the 1950s and ‘60s we built innovative and world-leading infrastructure. In the early ‘60s, our productivity was well above Australia’s, but somewhere in the ‘70s our productivity dropped, and the gap kept widening. 

Now, our productivity is closer to places like Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic than it is to Australia and other western European countries we like to compare ourselves to. 

In other words, our productivity rates are on par with countries that endured 40 years of communism.

The hope or assumption that our advantages will automatically confer prosperity is misguided. 

Complacency is a blight on progress. 

It will take a sustained effort and hard work across many years to really get productivity going again. It isn’t going to be easy. 

But a good starting point is housing. 

There is now a mountain of economic evidence that cities are engines of productivity, and the evidence shows bigger is better. 

In New Zealand, it is estimated that doubling a city’s population could increase output by 3.5%. And, on average, workers in cities earn one third more than their non-urban counterparts.

Throughout history, cities have also been the hub of innovation. Think 15th century Florence, 17th century Amsterdam, 18th century London, and San Francisco today.

A well-functioning housing market that delivers thriving cities, growing productivity, and super-charged industry will do more to create a brighter future for everyone in this room – and for everyone in New Zealand – than just about anything else Government can do.

Early economic modelling of our RMA reforms suggests that liberalising housing will lift GDP by at least 0.45% annually by 2050, with growth continuing thereafter.

New Zealand can simply raise our productivity by allowing our towns and cities to grow up and out. We need bigger, denser cities and, to facilitate that, we need more housing capacity.

The second reason to fix housing is to help get the government books back in order. 

Central government spent over $5 billion last year alone on housing assistance in many different forms. That includes the accommodation supplement, subsidies for income-related rents for people in social housing, emergency housing grants, transitional housing, and initiatives to address homelessness. 

Each new government programme has begat another government programme; and they have grown like mushrooms. 

The system is complicated, confusing, and often duplicative.

Most importantly, it is extremely expensive. 

If that $5 billion stays flat over the 4-year budget period, the Government will spend over $20 billion on helping people to be housed. 

That’s 15 Transmission Gully motorways, or around seven New Dunedin Hospitals – an astonishing amount of money to spend every four years. 

Every dollar spent on subsidising rents is money that can’t be spent improving our education system or on fixing the health system. 

I recognise there will always be some people who require housing support no matter how affordable the general market is – and that’s OK. But improving housing affordability will significantly reduce the demand on the government for housing support.

The third reason to fix housing is the moral case. 

Something has gone very wrong when home ownership is at record lows in a country that used to pride itself on being a property-owning democracy.

Something has gone very wrong when so many New Zealanders and their families look overseas in search of more affordable housing.

One of my staffers was at an Auckland bar last Saturday and overheard a young couple reacting to someone who said they owned two houses. 

It went something like: “Wow, you must be so rich”, and “It’s too hard to buy a home in New Zealand for us”.

Conversations like this happen every day across many bars.  

Then, suddenly, you have a generation of young people ready to leave a country that did not make room for them.

The simple truth is that young people today just don’t have the same opportunity to get into the housing market as their parents did, or their grandparents. 

In 2002, New Zealand’s housing market met the widely accepted international standard of housing affordability, with the ratio of house prices and wages at 3:1. 

Now, house prices outstrip wages by around 6:1. 

Fundamentally this is an issue of intergenerational equity.

So – economic, fiscal, and moral – that’s my case for changing housing in New Zealand. 

Fixing the housing crisis

This Government is committed to solving our decades-long housing crisis, and we are making good progress:

Rents are flat and more affordable, the social housing register is down by around 6,000 applicants, and the share of first home buyers in the market was at record levels at the end of last year. 

Our going for Housing Growth policy is about fixing the fundamentals and is focused on three pillars:

Pillar One: Freeing up land for urban development, including removing unnecessary planning barriers
Pillar Two: Improving infrastructure funding and financing to support urban growth
Pillar Three: Providing incentives for communities and councils to support growth.

 

I’ll quickly run through where we are at on each. 

In 2024, we made decisions on Pillar One which includes Housing Capacity Targets for Tier 1 and 2 councils to “live-zone” 30-years of housing demand, making it easier for cities to expand, strengthening intensification provisions in planning rules, requiring councils to enable mixed-used development, and abolishing minimum floor areas and balcony requirements.

Our RMA reforms are crucial for delivering this, as most of these changes will be operationalised through the National Instruments established by the Planning and Natural Environment Bills.    

My intention is for the Planning Act to enable competitive urban land markets – where development opportunities are abundant and land prices reflect underlying development costs and demand, instead of reflecting artificial scarcity. 

This means more greenfield development and more density – the up and out approach. 

I also know that land supply is only part of the solution. We also need better tools to fund the enabling infrastructure that makes new housing possible.

In 2025, we progressed two key improvements to Pillar Two:

We introduced the Infrastructure Funding and Financing Amendment Bill which will make it easier for developers, councils, and other infrastructure providers to use the Act to deliver projects free from local authority funding and financing constraints.

And we released an exposure draft of the Local Government (Infrastructure Funding) Amendment Bill, which will replace Development Contributions with a new Development Levies system. The new system will give councils greater flexibility to recover the costs of growth to match our new flexible planning system. 

To ensure this new flexibility is used appropriately, the Government has also agreed, in principle, to the Commerce Commission becoming the regulator for Development Levies.

PC120

That brings me to Plan Change 120 (PC120) – Auckland Council’s amendments to the Auckland Unitary Plan.

I know PC120 has been divisive. 

So today, I want to do three things:

Set the record straight on PC120.
Assure Aucklanders that we have listened to their feedback.
Recommit to growth together.

So, how did we get here? 

Let’s start at the beginning. 

Auckland Unitary Plan (2016)

Following the amalgamation of Auckland’s local councils in 2010, the John Key-led National Government passed special legislation requiring Auckland Council to develop a consistent set of planning rules for the whole region.

That’s where the Auckland Unitary Plan, or AUP comes in. 

After holding over 250 public meetings, receiving 21,000 pieces of written feedback, 13,000 submissions; and standing up an Independent Hearings Panel, which held 249 days of hearings across 60 topics and considered over 10,000 items of evidence – 

Auckland Council made decisions on the AUP, and it was made operative in November 2016. 

Overall, the Plan upzoned approximately 75% of Auckland’s urban land. This presented economic researchers with a rare opportunity to study the causal effects of major zoning reforms. 

Auckland is now home to one of the most well-studied examples of zoning reforms globally. Places like New York, London, and Ireland have been looking to Auckland for how to make their cities more affordable. 

Ryan Greenway McGrevy (2023) found that upzoning from the AUP led to an additional 43,500 consents within six years – precipitating a boom in housing construction. 

Further work from Ryan and Yun So in 2024 found that the AUP made housing more affordable. Aucklanders are paying around 30% less in rent than they otherwise would have if the city had not upzoned.

These studies were later peer-reviewed by Stuart Donovan and Matthew Maltman where they concluded that:

“There is remarkably robust evidence that zoning reforms increased housing supply and reduced rents in Auckland.” 

So, you don’t have to take my word for it – 

Thanks to these fantastic kiwi academics, and those who paved the way for them (like Edward Glaeser and Joseph Gyorko), there is now a mountain of empirical evidence that the AUP worked. 

National Policy Statement on Urban Development (2020)

Building on the AUP, the previous Labour Government introduced the National Policy Statement on Urban Development (NPS-UD). 

The NPS-UD is a key tool in our growth agenda and directs councils to remove overly restrictive planning rules and to allow for growth up and out – particularly in locations with good access to existing services, public transport, and infrastructure. 

I want to acknowledge Phil Twyford’s work on this.

The NPS-UD was a great starting point, but this Government is committed to going further to help create competitive urban land markets and abundant development opportunities.

We are doing this through RMA reform and our Going for Housing Growth programme, which I touched on earlier, and includes strengthening of the intensification provisions in the NPS-UD.

Medium Density Residential Standards (2021)

The previous Labour Government also introduced the Medium Density Residential Standards (MDRS), which enabled a “3×3 rule”, generally allowing three dwellings of three storeys on each section. 

Most councils have changed their plans to include the MDRS. But for cities like Auckland that have significant variations in housing demand by location, the MDRS was a blunt, one-size-fits-all tool.

Housing capacity is not created equal. 

A section near amenities and close to Auckland CBD could have demand and be commercially viable for a hundred apartments, whereas a flood-prone section could have next to no demand.

Having both sections subject to the MDRS is a wasted opportunity. 

This Government’s approach to make room for growth is to:

Set minimum dwelling capacity targets based on population growth.
Mandate capacity where it makes sense and is more likely to turn into actual housing like around rapid transit nodes.
And to otherwise return local decision making to councils on where growth is enabled.

 

Although there has been some back and forward, the direction of travel is clear. Taken together, the AUP, NPS-UD, MDRS, and this Government’s Going for Housing Growth polices represent over a decade of progress in New Zealand’s housing policy.

PC120 is the next step. 

National’s policy in 2023 was to make the MDRS optional for councils. When I became Housing Minister, Auckland Council asked me to let them withdraw from Plan Change 78 (PC78) because it required the MDRS all over Auckland. 

They also wished to downzone areas where there are flooding and coastal inundation risks.

We then came to an agreement – Auckland could opt out of the MDRS, but they would keep overall housing capacity at the same level or more as it would have been if PC78 was “turned on”, but Council would rejig and improve where that capacity is located. 

To help with that, Parliament legislated to require large upzoning near five key stations benefiting from CRL, so that existing and new Aucklanders could make the most of our $5.5 billion public transport investment – alleviating congestion, reducing travel times, and boosting growth and productivity. 

Giving Auckland more flexibility was the right thing to do. 

This replacement plan change is PC120.

Many of you must be thinking – what about the Central Government target of building 2 million homes?

It doesn’t exist.

The 2 million figure is derived from Auckland Council’s own modelling in 2025, which concluded that PC78 would have enabled capacity of around 2 million dwellings.

So, based on the equivalency requirement I’ve just talked about, PC120 would also enable capacity for around 2 million homes.

It sounds like a lot, but capacity counts the number of theoretical homes if every site were developed to its permitted maximum – where in reality, only a fraction of capacity is ever built.

For instance, as at 2025, the AUP has capacity for 1.2 million dwellings. But 10 years on from the AUP going live, only around 100,000 homes have actually been built. 

Capacity simply means the ability to develop housing.

Capacity may or may not get taken up depending on a range of factors including commercial feasibility, and infrastructure availability and costs.

Zoning for more dwellings than is technically needed is the bedrock of achieving affordable housing because it reduces the artificial scarcity of urban land, supresses prices, and increases competition.

The idea is to give developers and builders lots of choice and, based on demand, the market works out where it is best to build.

So, to dispel the myth – 

PC120 wouldn’t mean two million more houses would get built. 

PC120 also won’t mean houses getting built without appropriate infrastructure. In fact, PC120 focuses development on areas best served by huge, city-shaping infrastructure investments like CRL, the Central Interceptor, and hundreds of millions being spent on three waters upgrades. 

To be frank, the 2 million number was a red herring that transformed into a lightning rod.

But there is a lesson in that, and one I’ve personally learned from. 

It’s clear a lot of Aucklanders are concerned about what growth means for them. That’s completely understandable. People want to know that their suburbs will continue to be liveable. That is what Government wants too.

This kind of angst in Auckland isn’t helpful for our housing goals. We need people to come with us on the journey of more capacity and more housing. 

We hear you and we are ready to act. 

Changes to PC120 

So, today I can announce Cabinet has agreed to legislate to soften the housing capacity equivalency requirement. 

Currently, that number equates to at least 2 million, and we are lowering it to at least 1.6 million. 

Right now, the AUP enables capacity of 1.2 million additional homes. 

The Government’s view is that 1.6 million is the midpoint between the 1.2 million housing capacity enabled by the AUP, and the 2 million that would have been enabled by PC120 (as currently notified). 

This reduction is significant and strikes an appropriate balance between those Aucklanders concerned about densification, and those who wish to see more growth. 

Early analysis from Auckland Council suggests that compared to PC78, PC120 would have seen up to 20% more development capacity being turned into actual houses. This is because PC120 targets capacity in places where people want to live, that are more commercially viable, and that have better infrastructure capacity – like in town centres and near transport hubs. 

Going from at least 2 million to at least 1.6 million does reduce minimum housing capacity by around 20%, but this is in the context of a stronger Plan Change that could see a 20% increase in planned housing turning into real housing. 

PC120 is a stronger Plan because of the Government’s and Auckland’s shared objective of upzoning around key CRL stations, and shared commitment to the NPS-UD. We are not backing away from these bottom lines. 

On the process from here – Cabinet has asked for a summary of the provisional zoning changes the Council would make once we legislate. And once we legislate the lower housing capacity number, the rest is in Auckland Council’s hands.

The Council will determine which parts of Auckland they wish to downzone in PC120. They can then formally withdraw parts of PC120 from the Plan Change, except for those parts needed to implement the NPS-UD or to upzone around key CRL stations.

We are legislating in the middle of a plan change process that is already underway, so it is quite legally complicated, but we have devised a way through that will allow Aucklanders to see the areas that will be removed from PC 120 and provide another opportunity for Aucklanders to have their say – including those who have already submitted on PC120 and others who would like to join. 

I want to stress that I am determined to put this issue to bed once and for all. Auckland has been struggling with an update to the AUP since 2021. I accept Parliament hasn’t helped, but it’s now 2026.

I think we’ve now got the balance right.

The new Plan will mean more growth around the areas that make the most economic sense and where there is the most support – CRL stations, rapid transit stations, metropolitan centres.

And it means more flexibility for Auckland around suburban Auckland.

I also want to talk about the CBD.

While PC78 increased capacity in the city centre, the Government believes there remains significant unrealised potential.

Existing provisions, such as setback requirements, tower dimension controls, and height limits, constrain development and should be revisited. 

Enabling more growth in the city centre will unlock productivity and increase the benefits of CRL even further. 

However, for largely unfathomable RMA legal reasons, the City Centre Zone is not included in PC120, and the Council does not have a simple mechanism to unlock this potential.

Therefore, Cabinet has agreed that I will start an investigation into these planning provisions that are holding back Auckland’s city centre, with a view to making regulations under the RMA – similar to what we have just announced for Eden Park.

My intention is that any additional housing capacity enabled in the city centre will count towards the new requirement to provide capacity for at least 1.6 million dwellings.

Together, these changes announced today will provide Auckland Council greater flexibility to respond to the feedback of Aucklanders and tackle our housing crisis.

I have no doubt we can do both. 

So, what does this look like in practice?

It will likely mean less growth enabled in suburbs while keeping capacity enabled around CRL stations, other train stations, busways, metro centres, and the CBD. 

The evidence is clear – well connected growth drives productivity.

I’m grateful to have an advocate of housing and urbanism in Mayor Wayne Brown who backs density like I do. 

And that’s important because ultimately, PC120 is Auckland’s Plan – not the Government’s. 

We set the guardrails, and – rightly – Auckland Council largely decides where and how growth occurs. 

What sort of Auckland are we trying to build?

Before I wrap up, I just want to take a step back and reflect on the Auckland we are trying to build. 

This Government’s ambition for Auckland is that it is allowed to grow and become an international, world-class city. 

This means:

a growing rapid transport network, so people can get where they need to go faster and have more transport choices,
growing housing capacity and supply, so people have more choice where and in what type of home they live in,
a growing events calendar, so people can play as hard as they work, and
a growing and more productive economy. 

That’s what we’re about as a Government: growth.

Conclusion 

Today’s announcement is a confident step forward on increasing housing capacity in Auckland. 

We heard Aucklanders’ feedback, and we have answered.

Softening the housing capacity requirement strikes an appropriate balance between those Aucklanders concerned about densification, and those who wish to see more growth.

Some people will think this doesn’t go far enough to protect their suburbs; others will think we have taken a step back on housing affordability. 

But I’m sure we can all agree that Auckland could debate this question – and this number – for a lifetime and get no closer to a remotely agreed-on decision.

At some point someone needs to make a call and move forward. 

We need people to come on the journey of more growth, and that’s what these changes help do.

Although New Zealand has gone back and forward on housing, the direction of travel is clear. 

Taken together, the AUP, NPS-UD, MDRS, upcoming Going for Housing Growth policies – and now – PC120 represent over a decade of progress in New Zealand’s housing policy.

I am absolutely committed to continuing that progress step by step – it’s why I get up every morning.

It’s my strong view that if we can fix housing there is nothing, nothing that we can’t fix together as a country. 

Thank you.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/speech-to-committee-for-auckland/

SkyCity doubles half-year profit to $12.1m, has high hopes for convention centre

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Ziming Li

Casino operator Sky City’s first half profit is nearly double that of the year earlier, despite a drop in revenue associated with ongoing regulatory costs and operational changes.

Chief executive Jason Walbridge said the first half reflected a planned period of operational transition, with the second half of the year ending in June focused on ongoing work to support its long-term operating objectives.

He said strong revenue contributions from food and beverage were a highlight of the result.

The company was also looking to sell some assets, targeting proceeds of $200 million within the next 12 months, which will be used to pay down debt.

  • Net profit $12.1m vs $6m
  • Revenue $411.7m vs $421m
  • Underlying net profit $14.4m vs $38m
  • Interim dividend nil vs nil

“We are undertaking a disciplined review of our operating model to ensure our cost structures reflect the current environment, while maintaining our commitment to compliance and customer experience,” Walbridge said.

He said revenue dropped 2.4 percent reflecting the introduction of mandatory carded play and continued investment in anti-money laundering (AML) measures and host responsibility capability, as well as costs associated with the opening of the International Convention Centre (NZICC) on 11 February.

Still, he said the full year underlying profit was tracking to expectations, though no dividends were expected to be paid in the near-term. SkyCity reaffirmed its full year underlying profit guidance in a range of $190-$210m, which compared with $72m in the first half.

Remediation costs

Walbridge said total costs were higher over the first half period partly because of ongoing investment in AML host responsibility and technology, particularly in Adelaide.

“Those remediation costs will leave our business when we complete the programme in June next year.”

Walbridge said the opening of the NZICC was a major milestone for SkyCity, with a strong forward events pipeline supporting future visitors to the precinct, with more than 110,000 expected over the next few months.

He said civil legal action between construction firm Fletcher Building and SkyCity over cost over-runs will play out over the next couple of years, with no meaningful update in the near future.

Asset sales

SkyCity was also actively marketing its 99 Albert Street building in Auckland, as well as continuing to look for a buyer of its Auckland car park concession, which had so far failed to attract an acceptable offer.

While it was considering the sale of other assets, Walbridge said those had not been disclosed so far.

“Carded play was introduced to strengthen our host responsibility framework and support player welfare,” Walbridge said.

“Six months on, we are seeing some operational benefits from the additional customer data and visibility it provides.”

Walbridge said SkyCity intended to take part in the New Zealand licensing process for online gambling, with legislation expected to be put in place from 1 May 2026.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/19/skycity-doubles-half-year-profit-to-12-1m-has-high-hopes-for-convention-centre/

More flexibility for Auckland housing plan

Source: New Zealand Government

The Government will amend the Resource Management Act to reduce the minimum housing capacity required for Auckland Council’s Plan Change 120 from just over 2 million homes to 1.6 million homes, says Housing and RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop.

“Housing growth in Auckland is critical to fixing our housing crisis, driving growth and raising living standards, the central mission of this Government,” Mr Bishop says.

“The changes I’m announcing today will make sure Auckland grows in the areas that make the most economic sense and where there is strong support for growth – the city centre, around stations benefiting from investment in the City Rail Link, around rapid transit stops, and in and around town, local and metropolitan centres.

“Aucklanders have been clear that they want housing growth – in the right places and where infrastructure can support it. Today’s changes show the Government has listened to Aucklanders.

“The Auckland Unitary Plan allows development capacity of around 1.2 million homes, while Plan Change 120 currently allows capacity of around 2 million homes. The Government’s changes, to be made via legislation in the near future, reduce the minimum capacity required to the mid-point between 1.2 and 2 million.

“The journey of how we got to this point is a long and complicated one. 

“When the coalition Government came to office, Auckland Council asked the Government to let them withdraw Plan Change 78, which implemented the Medium Density Residential Standards (MDRS) across Auckland. The Council also wished to “downzone” various areas affected by flooding risk.

“The Government campaigned on allowing the Council to withdraw from using the MDRS, and so the law was changed in 2025 to allow the Council to develop a new plan (Plan Change 120). As part of allowing the Council to do that, the government required the new plan to allow large uplifts in development around stations benefitting from investment in the City Rail Link, and provide at least the equivalent amount of capacity as Plan Change 78 (around 2 million homes).

“The 2 million number was never a build target. It is technical capacity figure based on theoretical maximum development if every site is fully developed, which obviously never happens.

“It is clear from listening to Aucklanders that the legislative requirements on the Council meant they had very little room to respond to concerns raised through more than 10,000 submissions on Plan Change 120.

“Today’s announcement gives the Council much more flexibility about where density goes in Auckland. The Council will still be required to give effect to the National Policy Statement on Urban Development, including enabling greater development around rapid transit stations and the City Rail Link, but after meeting those requirements, they have real flexibility.

“In practical terms, this is likely to mean less blanket intensification in some suburbs and more growth focused around the city centre, town, local and metropolitan centres, as well as rapid transit and stations benefiting from investment in the City Rail Link.

What this means for Aucklanders

Legislation will be introduced and progressed quickly to minimise disruption to the existing process.

“Plan Change 120 has already received more than 10,000 submissions. Those submissions remain valid,” Mr Bishop says.

“Once the new capacity requirement is in place, Auckland Council will decide which parts of the plan change to withdraw or amend.

“If parts are withdrawn, the existing Auckland Unitary Plan zoning will remain in place.

“For parts that continue, updated provisions and maps will be provided to the hearings panel, and Aucklanders will have further opportunities to provide feedback.

“This process will be transparent and Aucklanders will be able to have their say.

I have also initiated an investigation into Auckland Unitary Plan provisions affecting the city centre.

“Auckland’s CBD is the economic heart of New Zealand. While previous reforms increased capacity there, we know there is still significant unrealised potential.

“If planning controls are unnecessarily constraining housing and business development in the city centre, I am prepared to act, using the same powers I used recently to change the Auckland Unitary Plan relating to Eden Park concert restrictions. Any additional housing enabled there will count toward the requirement to enable at least 1.6 million homes.

The legislation will also resolve a transitional issue affecting approximately 400 developers and property owners who were relying on the Medium Density Residential Standards when an earlier plan change was withdrawn in 2025.

“Auckland is New Zealand’s economic capital. We are not backing away from growth,” Mr Bishop says.

“We are ensuring growth happens in the right places, in a way that Aucklanders can support.

“We can increase housing supply, protect the liveability of our suburbs, and strengthen the city centre at the same time. This change allows us to do all three. It’s all part of our drive to fix the basics and build New Zealand’s future.”

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/19/more-flexibility-for-auckland-housing-plan/

Pirongia residents asked to conserve water a bit longer

Source: Radio New Zealand

Pirongia. Phillip Capper / Flickr / Creative Commons

Residents in the Waikato town of Pirongia will have to conserve water until Sunday.

The Western Waikato Emergency Centre said work was underway to install infrastructure to boost resilience in the network.

It said Pirongia’s water was being supplied from a bore-fed reservoir with limited capacity.

Pirongia residents had already been conserving water for six days following last weekend’s storm which badly damaged roads, storms and infrastructure.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/19/pirongia-residents-asked-to-conserve-water-a-bit-longer/

Home invader caught in stolen vehicle

Source: New Zealand Police

Please attribute the following to Senior Sergeant Craig Bates, Acting Waikato West Response Manager:

Waikato West Police have arrested a brazen burglar who broke into a home, stealing the victim’s car and belongings in the night. 

Shortly before 11pm last night, the victim was sleeping when they were woken to intruders searching the property for items.

The burglars then stole several belongings before fleeing in the victim’s vehicle.

Police responded immediately, assessing the scene and patrolling the area for the stolen vehicle. That vehicle was subsequently spotted by officers and was stopped near Te Awamutu.

The driver was arrested without incident.

A 40-year-old man has been charged with unlawfully taking a motor vehicle and will appear in the Hamilton District Court today.

Police urge homeowners to consider options to safeguard their property and belongings from potential burglaries.

Having CCTV, alarms, motion-activated lights, and securely locked windows and doors can help your home be less of a target.

Call 111 in an emergency.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/19/home-invader-caught-in-stolen-vehicle/