More Beehive advice: keep a weather eye out for tsunamis (and keep your EV charged for a hasty getaway)

Buzz from the Beehive

The buglers, trumpeters and others in the Beehive band charged with blaring news of what our ministers are up to seem to have packed up for the Christmas-New Year holidays.

Point of Order found no new posts when we checked earlier this morning.

But we did receive an email from the office of the Minister for Emergency Management, Kieran McAnulty, and when we made a second check, just before publishing this Buzz from the Beehive, it had been officially posted-

Planning on heading to the beach or bach this summer? Minister for Emergency Management Kieran McAnulty is reminding Aotearoa New Zealand to be prepared over the holiday break.

Be prepared?

That’s the motto of the Boy Scouts, and a jolly good motto, too.

Continue reading “More Beehive advice: keep a weather eye out for tsunamis (and keep your EV charged for a hasty getaway)”

Another Green MP to retire next year: but how will the achievements be measured (and will democracy be better off?)

    

Green MP and former Conservation Minister Eugenie Sage will not be standing at next year’s election.

By then she will have served 12 years as a Green MP. 

She is the second serving Green MP who has decided she has come to the end of the parliamentary road.

Colleague Jan Logie, who was also first elected in 2011, had previously announced she won’t be seeking re-election next year. 

Sage was Conservation Minister from 2017 – 2020 and Minister for Land Information. She is based in Christchurch.

She made her decision some time ago, well before the furore over the entrenchment clause in the Three Waters reform bill, according to Audrey Young in the NZ Herald. Continue reading “Another Green MP to retire next year: but how will the achievements be measured (and will democracy be better off?)”

Feds want more details about latest Govt proposals on farm emissions and how to levy them – but Greenpeace is quiet

Buzz from the Beehive

Federated Farmers quickly released its criticisms of the latest government announcement on emissions from the agricultural sector.  Oxfam did too.

Neither organisation welcomed the news from the PM, the Minister of Agriculture and the Minister for Climate Change.

But Point of Order  found nothing from Greenpeace on the Scoop website, where Greenpeace statements usually are posted.

Back on October 11, when the government announced its previous amendments to its proposals, Greenpeace said the Government’s farmgate emissions pricing system known as He Waka Eke Noa would fail to cut climate emissions from agriculture, New Zealand’s biggest polluter.

It is unlikely the latest announcement will have appeased them- but who knows? Continue reading “Feds want more details about latest Govt proposals on farm emissions and how to levy them – but Greenpeace is quiet”

Transport Minister names new Waka Kotahi chairman: but will the Agency get the funding needed for new motorways?

In one of the most significant appointments the government has  made, Transport Minister Michael Wood has named Dr Paul Reynolds as chairman of Waka Kotahi Transport Agency NZ. He takes  over from Sir Brian Roche at a  time  when – according to critics – NZ’s roading system has suffered  from a  lack of funding and, equally importantly, a lack of ministerial direction, particularly in the first term of the Ardern government.

Now the government is  playing catch-up  and Wood  says  the government’s commitment to infrastructure investment continues to play a critical part “in securing NZ’s economy”.

He adds  that Waka Kotahi is crucial to the delivery of many of these projects, such as the Transport Choices package, Penlink, the Northern Corridor, Eastern Busway, Takitimu North Link, Mt Messenger Bypass, Manawatū Tararua Highway, and Ngā Ūranga to Pito-One.

“Waka Kotahi requires a Chair that is a highly experienced governor who can navigate complex environments, drive the development of strategy, build consensus and effectively engage with a diverse range of stakeholders.

“Both Waka Kotahi and the wider transport system are facing challenges such as climate change, the transition to a focus on multiple modes of transport, the need for effective and modern regulation, and how to manage significant change equitably. “All of these require a collaborative working approach, and a solutions-focussed leader with a vision for the future.

“Dr Reynolds is an experienced Chair and public sector leader, as well as an excellent strategist. His appointment strengthens the Board’s regulatory and environmental capabilities, as well as offering an additional perspective of the specific transport challenges experienced in regional New Zealand. As Chair, he will work collaboratively with transport and Treaty partners to solve problems and explore new opportunities.

“I am confident Dr Reynolds has the right skills to lead the Board for the next three years and am excited to work with him”.

The big  issue, of course,  is  whether Wood  can secure  the funding  required for the major  new  motorways the country still needs.

Critics complain the government thought the priority should turn to make the existing  system “safer”, without understanding that  much of the system is obsolescent.

In his press  release  Wood acknowledged Sir Brian for his dedicated service as Chair for the past three and a half years.

“He entered the Board during a challenging period for the organisation, and was able to make key structural changes while also managing the impacts of the COVID pandemic and other significant challenges.

“Waka Kotahi has benefitted from his calm and collected approach, and I am grateful for the advice and support he has given me in my time as Transport Minister,”  Wood said.

Dr Reynolds will replace Sir Brian as Chair from  February 1.

He served as CEO of the Ministry for the Environment from 2008 until 2015. Before that he worked at the Ministry of Research, Science and Technology (1998–2002) as Chief Policy Adviser and from 2002–2008 he was Deputy Director General (Policy) at the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry.

He has a background in scientific research, holding a PhD in Biochemistry from the University of Otago.

Sir Brian  was a  partner in PriceWaterhouseCoopers for over 20 years before retiring in 2009 to take up the role of Group Chief Executive of NZ Post.  He left there in 2017 and has been involved since as both a director and or advisor across a range of entities and activities.

Sir Brian was involved in a defence policy review in 2015 and again in 2019.

He chairs Antarctica NZ  and City Rail Link as well as Waka Kotahi-NZTA, and was appointed by the government to panels tasked with scrutinising the handling of Covid-19 in both 2020 and 2021.

Sir Brian earlier in his career advised governments dating from the Bolger era and was chairman of the Transport Agency when the National government began its motorway programme, the Roads of National Significance.

Our PM features in Netflix series on “inspirational leaders” but distances herself from Harry and Megan’s role in the production

Buzz from the Beehive

Uh, oh.  It’s a prime ministerial statement we can’t find on the Beehive website.

But you can read it in full in Britain’s Daily Mail, which has posted it in an article headed Jacinda Ardern distances herself from Harry and Meghan: Office for New Zealand PM says her involvement in new Netflix show on ‘inspirational leaders’ was not to do with Sussexes.

The report begins:

Jacinda Ardern today issued a statement about her appearance in a new Netflix ‘docuseries’ presented by Meghan and Harry, with New Zealand’s PM insisting she was unaware of the couple’s involvement when she agreed to take part. 

Point of Order – in its check this morning on ministerial press statements on the Beehive website – found just two new releases:

Wage consistency for school bus drivers   

Additional funding will be available to make the wage rates of rural school bus drivers consistent with those who drive for comparable public transport services, Education Minister Chris Hipkins said today. 

Great Walks to see great numbers visiting this summer

The Department of Conservation expects a busy season this summer with the return of overseas visitors and high numbers of New Zealanders taking time out in nature. Continue reading “Our PM features in Netflix series on “inspirational leaders” but distances herself from Harry and Megan’s role in the production”

BRYCE EDWARDS’ Political Roundup: Threats to politicians and co-governance could be big themes in 2023 

DR BRYCE EDWARDS writes – 

It has been reported that Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern will not host her centrepiece Waitangi Day breakfast next year. According to reports by the Guardian and Australian Associated Press, the decision was due to increased fears for Ardern’s safety at the Upper Treaty Grounds.
 
Although the Waitangi National Trust announcement has not been confirmed by the Beehive, it does raise several important issues relating to the coming election year.
 
Threats of violence and nastiness against politicians
 
Government politicians have been reporting increased hostility, harassment, and threats of violence this year. And anyone who closely watches politics will be aware of rising levels of toxicity and nastiness in political debate. Of course, some of it comes from the politicians themselves. Continue reading “BRYCE EDWARDS’ Political Roundup: Threats to politicians and co-governance could be big themes in 2023 “

Hipkins enthuses about the Fourth National Action Plan – but who remembers the first three?

Buzz from the Beehive

Just two statements had been posted on the Beehive website, when we made our daily check this morning.  This suggested the PM and her ministers were easing up on their workloads as Christmas Day nears. 

But two more statements have been posted since then, one of them grandly headlined:

Open Government Fourth National Action Plan released

New Zealand’s Fourth National Action Plan under the Open Government Partnership was made public today.

This served to remind us of something we had forgotten, if ever we had taken much notice in the first place:  there must have been First, Second and Third National Action Plans under the Open Government Partnership. 

Whatever happened to them? 

We were cheered to learn Chris Hipkins  proclaim:  Continue reading “Hipkins enthuses about the Fourth National Action Plan – but who remembers the first three?”

Secrecy shrouds details of RNZAF planes being intercepted while flying on missions overseas

The disclosure  that 92 missions flown by  RNZAF P3 Orions have been intercepted  by the jets of foreign powers is sending  shock waves through the broader defence community.

Details  of the incidents, including the identity of the foreign powers and the exact locations of the interceptions, were withheld on national security grounds under the Official Information Act.

The NZ Herald broke the  story after  it had been withheld on national security grounds.

What is  alarming is that the public is  left unaware of the risks  which are routinely  carried by defence personnel  as they fly these missions.  It also points  to the need  for greater defence spending  to ensure the RNZAF, and other  defence services, have  the  resources  they  need  for the complex  tasks  they are expected to undertake.  

Defence chief of staff Air Commodore A. J. Woods  told the NZ Herald the 92 intercepts of the P-3K2 Orion maritime patrol planes happened across 234 missions since 2015. Continue reading “Secrecy shrouds details of RNZAF planes being intercepted while flying on missions overseas”

Govt serves good news by helping shoppers gauge whether this item – or that one – provides the better bang for our bucks

Buzz from the Beehive

Good Christmas news for shoppers came in the form of the Government announcing it is working on a set of rules intended to  help consumers compare the prices of grocery products at supermarkets.

They can do that now, of course, although the procedure is exhausting:  shoppers hoping to get the best bang for their bucks can visit every supermarket within a comfortable travelling distance, then walk down the aisles with their shopping lists and take copious notes of who is selling what for how much.

Shoppers furthermore can calculate whether a 150-gram tin of sardines (or whatever) is a better deal than the 150-gram tin of sardines on the same shelf. 

This is of limited benefit in communities with only one supermarket, fair to say, and it can require a great deal of calculating.  Continue reading “Govt serves good news by helping shoppers gauge whether this item – or that one – provides the better bang for our bucks”

LINDSAY MITCHELL: NZ’s rarely reported plummeting prison population

LINDSAY MITCHELL writes –

Appalling crime story after appalling crime story gets reported.

But media rarely report on the big decline in New Zealand’s prison population.

There are various possible explanations for the reduction including demographic change, policy changes in police and justice procedures, and/or less imprisonable crime being committed. Government politicians claim less crime is being committed, especially by youth, “according to the statistics”. Continue reading “LINDSAY MITCHELL: NZ’s rarely reported plummeting prison population”