We are told (but not officially) that airport shares have landed Michael Wood in a bit of bother

Buzz from the Beehive

At least one headline-grabbing ministerial announcement had not  been posted on the government’s official website, when Point of Order checked early this afternoon.

We learned from other sources that

  • Michael Wood has been stood down as Transport Minister over over failing to properly disclose shares owned in Auckland Airport; and
  • Rino Tirikatene, Minister of State for Trade and Export Growth, is travelling to Singapore today on a mission (unabashedly discriminatory) to “promote business investment for wāhine entrepreneurs, and explore investment opportunities for  Māori land-based aquaculture”.

Just one new announcement had been posted on the Beehive website when we  checked.  It advised that  Fiji’s Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka will be visiting  New Zealand this week.

Latest from the Beehive

Fiji Prime Minister Rabuka to visit New Zealand

Fiji Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka will visit New Zealand this week, Prime Minister Chris Hipkins announced today. Continue reading “We are told (but not officially) that airport shares have landed Michael Wood in a bit of bother”

Greens don’t shy from promoting a candidate’s queerness but are quiet about govt announcement on clean energy

There was a time when a political party’s publicity people would counsel against promoting a candidate as queer.

No matter which of two dictionary meanings the voting public might choose to apply – the old meaning of odd, strange, weird, or aberrant, or the more recent meaning of gay, homosexual or LGBT – “queer” would be regarded as a dubious attribute to promote for winning popular support.

Nowadays, clearly, the word is no longer shunned for vote-winning purposes and the Green Party today has injected an element of gay pride into its news that:

Green Party Announces Gina Dao-McLay As Candidate For Mana Electorate

The Green Party is proud to announce Gina Dao-McLay as their candidate for Mana. Gina is a queer young person living in Porirua, the Co-Convenor of the nationwide Young Greens network and the former Co-Director of  of Make It 16, the campaign to lower the voting age which won their case against the Government in the Supreme Court.

Mind you, geography probably plays a part in the extent to which queerness should be promoted on the hustings.

According to Time magazine, Republican lawmakers in Florida appear likely to expand provisions in the Parental Rights in Education Act, or so-called ‘Don’t Say Gay’ Law, with a host of new restrictions on what teachers can and cannot say in their classrooms about gender, sex, and sexual orientation. Continue reading “Greens don’t shy from promoting a candidate’s queerness but are quiet about govt announcement on clean energy”

More policies are stopped or slowed to help save $1bn for bread-and-butter spending – but RMA “reforms” escape the cull

Buzz from the Beehive

It was a big day for the stopping or slowing of a second tranche of government programmes, an exercise which  Beehive publicists are pitching as measures to allow the Government to focus more time, energy and resources on “the bread and butter issues” facing New Zealanders.

This affirms, of course, that since the 2020 general election, the bread- and-butter issues facing New Zealanders had been lowered (or forgotten?) in the Government’s priorities.

Hence the Government’s popularity had wilted, its poll support had shrunk and Jacinda Ardern – remember her ? – had bailed out as Prime Minister when it looked like the Nats and ACT were on course to win the election this year.

But her successor, Chris Hipkins, has not thrown all the rubbish overboard – or swept it under the carpet until after election day.  He is persisting with one programme which the state-subsidised mainstream media have not too well explained to the public – the legislation that will replace the Resource Management Act.

A strong hint that it deserves much more critical analysis can be found in an article by New Zealand Initiative chairman Roger Partridge headed Submissions expose horrors of David Parker’s RMS reform proposals. Continue reading “More policies are stopped or slowed to help save $1bn for bread-and-butter spending – but RMA “reforms” escape the cull”

Splish, splash – and Mahuta is back in the swim with a Bill to spare us from sinking in water-supply costs

Buzz from the Beehive

The government hadn’t done with legislating and regulating our water-supply systems, when we last reported on the flow of announcements from the Beehive.

Nanaia Mahuta (in tandem with Commerce and Communications Minister David Clark) had one more press statement to  issue – 

New legislation to provide affordable water services for New Zealanders

The Water Services Economic Efficiency and Consumer Protection Bill and Water Services Legislation Bill have been introduced to Parliament today, following the passage of the Water Services Entities Act.

Earlier in the day Mahuta had issued this –

 Next steps in securing affordable water services for New Zealanders

The Government has laid foundations for safe and affordable water services with the Water Services Entities Bill passing its third reading in Parliament.

This was followed by Environment Minister David Parker announcing –

Updating freshwater regulations

The Government has updated the Essential Freshwater 2020 regulations to support their effective implementation, and in response to consultation feedback.  

The changes announced by Parker have been made to the:

Parker says this means a consenting pathway is now available for quarrying activities, landfills and clean-fill areas, mineral mining (with some additional controls on coal mining) and some urban development.

But wait – there’s more. Continue reading “Splish, splash – and Mahuta is back in the swim with a Bill to spare us from sinking in water-supply costs”

Guns and the gangs – Govt responds with a package of crackdown measures after ACT championed a taxing approach

Buzz from the Beehive

Voters are bound to wonder about the Government’s determination to crack down on gangs when official data show more than one firearm offence a day, on average, has been committed by gang members since 2019.

This has happened on the Ardern government’s watch, in other words (although it would be helpful to have figures going further back to cover the period of National-led governments).

But before Point of Order had digested the data and the implications for law-and-order policy, Police Minister Chris Hipkins and Justice Minister Kiri Allan had popped up  to announce a package of measures to help reduce the harm caused by gangs and make communities safer.

The crackdown on gangs was posted on the Beehive website along with news of

  • Two sustainable manufacturing businesses in the Manawatu dipping into a government trough – the Regional Strategic Partnership Fund – and being rewarded to the tune of $1.75 million in one case and up to $2 million in the other.
  • New Zealand and Australia investing a further NZ$1.1 million between them in a new desalination plant to support Kiribati to maintain drinking water supplies. This is in addition to $1.19 million in drought support initiatives already rolled out in Kiribati by New Zealand.
  • New Zealand making “a significant contribution” to support the implementation of the Fiji Gender Action Programme to advance women’s empowerment and social protection. A $12.6 million contribution, to be specific.
  • The Thompsons Creek projects, part of the wider Manuherekia catchment programme in Central Otago, being granted $2.9 million in Jobs for Nature funding to help improve water quality and restore freshwater habitats.

All this will be carefully considered and essential spending, of course, because Finance Minister Grant Robertson is keeping a tight rein on fiscal policy.  Continue reading “Guns and the gangs – Govt responds with a package of crackdown measures after ACT championed a taxing approach”

Buzz from the Beehive – it’s April 1 and billions more will flow in benefit boosts, superannuation rises, and so on…

Ministerial announcements are braying about April 1 triggering a great outflow of money, or the prospect of a great outflow, from the Government’s coffers.

It sounds like most of us will get a slice of the action, although in some cases this action perhaps will amount to no more than furnishing Inland Revenue with our annual returns and coughing up our dues.

Some ministerial announcements, true, concerned comparatively small sums.   

But two separate press statements – one from the PM – drew public attention to the transfers of huge sums of money from the Government  to families, welfare beneficiaries, superannuitants and so on.

The message, palpably, was that Jacinda and her team are aware of the squeeze on the cost of living, but they care deeply for our wellbeing and are determined to ease the burden.

The PM highlighted these effects: Continue reading “Buzz from the Beehive – it’s April 1 and billions more will flow in benefit boosts, superannuation rises, and so on…”

Buzz from the Beehive: Oh dear, Robertson dents the Nats in a sideswipe about Transmission Gully delays

Communication, in various forms, was a common factor in three of the latest statements from the Beehive.

One of these – released in the names of the PM and two other ministers – declared that Jacinda Ardern has officially opened the Transmission Gully motorway, in time for the Easter break, school holidays, “and the return of tourists to New Zealand”.

Two other statements, dealing with digital-age technologies, advised us of –

  • A new research project which aims to fast-track the delivery of a digital solution for farm environment plans.
  • The latest data which records progress in improving internet connectivity for rural areas across the country.

Oh – and there was some stuff about Covid-19 and how to combat it.

The Government has launched a new targeted rural service of rapid antigen tests for those who live in remote rural areas. And new guidance for businesses and organisations to help them deal with upcoming changes to vaccination requirements has been released.

Foreign Affairs Minister Nanaia Mahuta popped up, too, with news she has signed a partnership statement.

Not a treaty partnership statement.  This one strengthens this country’s relationship with  Fiji.  Continue reading “Buzz from the Beehive: Oh dear, Robertson dents the Nats in a sideswipe about Transmission Gully delays”

Buzz from the Beehive: Nanaia is bound for Fiji (where perhaps she might ask why NZ wasn’t invited to talks with US big-wig)

Fiji must be thrilled – one of our very busy ministers has visited that country in recent days, another is planning to visit, and a third has been involved in a webinar conference. of the New Zealand-Fiji Business Council.

The minister who has been and gone was Peeni Henare, whose mission was defence-focused.

The minister who engaged in the virtual conference was Rino Tirikatane, who delivered a speech at the Fiji Trade Recovery Roadshow Webinar.  We assume he spoke from the Beehive.

And the minister who will visit – the icing on the cake, so to speak – is Foreign Affairs Minister Nanaia Mahuta.  She departs for Fiji next week, her first trip to the Pacific since announcing New Zealand’s Pacific Resilience approach last year.

The announcement was posted on the Beehive website along with news that …

  • Rural Communities Minister Damien O’Connor has classified the storm that caused significant flood damage across the Tairāwhiti district and Hawke’s Bay region a medium-scale adverse event, “unlocking Government support for farmers and growers”.  The sum of $150,000 is being made available to help the region’s farmers and growers recover from the heavy rain across Tairāwhiti and Hawke’s Bay, bringing total Government support to $325,000;
  • The Minister for Diversity, Inclusion and Ethnic Communities, Priyanca Radhakrishnan, has launched a plan to boost employment outcomes for former refugees, recent migrants and ethnic communities.  This was her first press statement since October 28, when she announced a new Vaccine Uptake Fund to support COVID-19 vaccination among ethnic communities.   

Nanaia Mahuta announced her plans in the mix of English and te reo that has become the argot of Ardern ministers and (increasingly) mainstream news media:

“This visit is an important step in reconnecting Aotearoa New Zealand with our Pacific whanaunga, and an opportunity to engage on key issues facing our region,” Nanaia Mahuta said.

She did not provide a translation for the uninitiated, but Point of Order took time out to check out what she had said: 

whanaunga

      1. (noun) relative, relation, kin, blood relation.

Mahuta will meet with Fiji’s Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Josaia Voreqe Bainimarama; attend an event at the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat; participate in a Fijian women leaders’ roundtable; and visit development projects.

She departs on Monday subject to the Fijian Government’s COVID-19 protocols, and will return on 31 March.

During his visit, Peeni Henare met with his Fijian counterpart Minister of Defence, Inia Seruiratu, to, among other things, “secure the Pacific”.

According to RNZ, Henare said New Zealand was concerned about the region’s security, defence capabilities, as well as its post-pandemic economic resilience.

That’s great. But the Point of Order team became uneasy on learning that, on the issue of United States engagement in the Pacific, Henare said it wasn’t clear why the New Zealand government was not part of Pacific talks in Fiji, during the February visit of the US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

Our Minister of Defence doesn’t know why we weren’t part of those talks?

Did he try to find out?

He proceeded to say he welcomed US military support in the region.

Henare made it clear that NZ defence regional support would focus on maritime surveillance and humanitarian assistance.

So far, so good. But:

He also hinted that the United States was an important ally to have, when issues arose over Chinese interests in the Pacific Region.

Here’s hoping the reporter misinterpreted his remarks and that he did something more than just hint about our relationship with the US.

Fair to say, what followed was clear:

“We always welcome the US engagement in the Pacific because we can’t do it alone but we want to be very clear that it is our priority. They’ve made it clear their position on China,” Henare said.

“I’ve said to them as a defence minister, and as a country, that while we’re mindful of what’s happening in the South China Sea, in order for us to be a key part of security in this region, we must be able to secure the Pacific, we must be able to show with our limited capability that we can be responsible for our own backyard.

“For example, New Zealand only has two frigates, sending them to the South China Sea means that we leave a particular hole in the Pacific.”

“So we need to be quite smart about the way we engage but we welcome the US. I’ve spoken with Secretary Austin, their Defence Secretary on a number of occasions, and he’s committed to the Pacific too and I look forward to that relationship,” he said.

Latest from the Beehive

Government supports flood-affected Tairāwhiti and Hawke’s Bay farmers and growers

Rural Communities Minister Damien O’Connor has classified the storm that caused significant flood damage across the Tairāwhiti district and Hawke’s Bay region a medium-scale adverse event, unlocking

More fulfilling jobs for our Ethnic Communities

Minister for Diversity, Inclusion and Ethnic Communities Priyanca Radhakrishnan has today launched a plan to boost employment outcomes for former refugees, recent migrants and ethnic communities.

Foreign Minister to visit Fiji

Foreign Affairs Minister Nanaia Mahuta departs for Fiji next week, her first trip to the Pacific since announcing New Zealand’s Pacific Resilience approach last year.

Aucklanders will fund the expansion of the screen industry as ratepayers (via their city council) and taxpayers

Aucklanders will be chuffed to learn the film studios they own as ratepayers are to be given a share of the millions of dollars the government is eager to pour into the film industry.

Mind you, they mightn’t be so chuffed to learn they will be financing the expansion  of the studios as taxpayers and as ratepayers.

Auckland Film Studios, in West Auckland, has received funding for a major expansion through the Government’s Infrastructure Reference Group’s (IRG) COVID-19 Response Fund.

The Government is investing $30 million of a total $35 million project to construct two 2,000sqm sound stages and development of further workshops and offices, to expand capacity at the Auckland Council-owned studios in Henderson.

The project will be undertaken by Auckland Unlimited Limited, the region’s economic development agency, with co-funding provided by Auckland Council.

Social Development and Employment Minister had the privilege of joining Economic and Regional Development Minister Stuart Nash in making the announcement and providing the rationale:

“Our screen industry employs around 16,200 people and contributes $3.3b to GDP per year,” she said… 

And:

“This development will see a material increase in the number of purpose-built sound stages available in New Zealand and increase our capacity to produce more content for domestic and international audiences.

“It is also a significant investment for Henderson and the wider Auckland region, creating more employment opportunities in the area. This includes 100 initial construction jobs, as well as up to 300 new jobs in the screen sector when the stages are completed next year.

“It will also provide more creative opportunities for New Zealanders in the film and television industries which will help them realise their potential here at home,” Carmel Sepuloni said.

She thus joined the cast of government politicians of all stripes whose critical faculties perhaps become bedazzled by the floodlights when the question of propping up movie moguls as well as smaller film makers is examined.

The  government pays out millions of dollars in subsidies to the screen industry every year.  The question is whether this money should be spent elsewhere.

In February last year, Matt Nippert in the NZ Herald revealed that Sir Peter Jackson’s Wellington-based Weta Group was receiving more than $40 million of the annual sum.

The Government insists this spending is beneficial to New Zealand, especially for the country’s tourism industry.

New Zealand Initiative economist Eric Crampton challenged this:

“What we’re not seeing are the other industries that might be here employing people instead if we didn’t have massive subsidies going into the film sector and diverting people into those areas,” Mr Crampton told TVNZ 1’s Breakfast.

“It’s hard to imagine any industry in the country that wouldn’t argue that if they could just get a 20 per cent rebate on everything that they spend in the country with opportunity for another five per cent back if they can show that there is enough benefit to New Zealand – every industry would love to have that kind of arrangement,” he says.

“It just feels a bit odd that we’re giving, according to Nippert’s findings, as much money to Weta Workshop as were giving to Radio New Zealand a public broadcaster,” he says.

Crampton said around $170 million was spent in subsidies to international films.

He noted that other industries are affected because they can’t get the people they need in the right jobs.

He cited the video game industry, which had been complaining it couldn’t get workers “because they’re all being sucked in to video animation in the subsidised film industry,”

The PM – of course – disagreed.

But if the TV One report gave a full account of everything she told them on the subject, her support for the subsidies is rooted in belief and on hearsay:

She says she believes the flow on affect of the film sector is worth it for New Zealand. 

“You ask anyone who works in the industry whether or not it makes a difference… the flow on affect is huge,” the Prime Minister said today.

“The film industry is completely unique.”

A few months later, Stuff alerted its readers to a Treasury warning that New Zealand taxpayers must fork out $1 billion in subsidies to the film industry in the next five years  – money the Government will have to find by ratcheting down new spending in other departments.

Despite these eye-watering costs, Finance Minister Grant Robertson is happy with the scheme, saying it’s the cost of having a film industry.

A large portion of the subsidising would ease the cost of the Lord of the Rings TV adaptation, made by Amazon Studios, which is owned by Jeff Bezos, the world’s second richest person.

The author of the Stuff, report, Thomas Coughlan, noted:

This massive cost is because the subsidy scheme is uncapped, meaning there’s no limit on the amount of money the Government would have to hand over.

He referenced a repetition of Treasury’s warning in the Government’s December forecasts in 2020, although again no specific sum was mentioned.

And he mentioned the answer to a Written Parliamentary Question from ACT deputy leader Brooke van Velden from Economic Development Minister Stuart Nash, who acknowledged Treasury was forecasting the Government to be on the hook for $1 billion dollars from 2021 to 2025, “or an average of $200 million per annum”.

“This fiscal forecast includes an estimate of expenditure based on known productions including the Lord of the Rings television series and Avatar sequels,” Nash said.

It was also expected to attract an estimated $4.4b of international production spend into the New Zealand economy.

Coughlan reported that the subsidies have run massively over the budget envisaged just a few years earlier.

In 2017 the scheme was given $55m a year for the years 2017-2021. But by 2019, the scheme already required topping up. An extra $155m was approved for the rest of that year – and a further $206m was approved in the 2020 Budget.

Nash said the scheme had baseline funding of $50.6m a year going forward.

But every dollar above that must drain new budgets.

This means that each year Robertson will have to find about $150m extra for the scheme and each dollar will have to come at the cost of increasing spending somewhere else.

These trade-offs will be significant; In the 2020 Budget, all new spending in the Education portfolio totalled $165.2m.

Film subsidies, however, were given $185m for the same year – $140m for films from overseas companies, and $45m for local productions.

Robertson said he was comfortable with the pressures and trade-offs that the subsidy required him to make.

“Once you’re into the game of film subsidies you have to be in it – the rest of the world is in it and if you want a film industry this is part of the price you pay.”

Earlier this year, the public learned of the government sweetening its deal with  Amazon for filming the Lord of the Rings TV series in New Zealand.

Under a Memorandum of Understanding Amazon will get an extra 5 percent from the Screen Production Grant in addition to the 20 percent grant the production already qualifies for.

Amazon plans to spend about $650 million on season one of the show meaning it would be eligible for a rebate of over $160m.

 Auckland will soon be better able to bid for  a slice of the action.

Latest from the Beehive

The Economy

 Wages up, unemployment down

The Government’s efforts to secure the recovery has seen more Kiwis in jobs and higher wages, with unemployment falling to pre-COVID levels and more people in work.   
Stats NZ figures show unemployment rate fell to 4 percent in the June quarter from 4.6 percent in the March quarter, the lowest rate since December 2019. This compares with The Treasury’s Half year Economic and Fiscal Update forecast unemployment rate of 5.2 percent.

Employment rose by 28,000 in the quarter, and the total number of people in work is now 63,000 above where it was in the December 2019 quarter before COVID.

The average hourly wage rose 4 percent to $34.76 an hour, compared with a 3.3 percent rise in inflation, meaning more money in New Zealander’s back pockets.

“This positive result shows the Government’s plan is delivering, giving households and businesses the confidence to spend and invest and accelerate the recovery. An extra 63,000 people are in jobs since September 2020, when unemployment peaked at 5.2 percent,” Grant Robertson said.

Obituary 

Poroporoaki: Dr Kihi Ngatai OSM

Ngāi Te Rangi, Ngāti Ranginui and Ngāti Pukenga mourn the loss of a Māori horticultural pioneer, with the passing of Dr Kihi Ngatai OSM.

Along with his late wife Maria, the couple planted the first kiwifruit vines in the Tauranga region more than 40 years ago.

“He was a true visionary and will be sadly missed by his whānau and the wider community,” said Minister for Māori Development Willie Jackson.

 Screen industry

Government support screen industry with funding for sound stages in West Auckland

Auckland Film Studios in West Auckland has received funding for a major expansion through the Government’s Infrastructure Reference Group’s (IRG) COVID-19 Response Fund.

The Government is investing $30 million of a total $35 million project to construct two 2,000sqm sound stages and development of further workshops and offices, to expand capacity at the Auckland Council-owned studios in Henderson.

The project will be undertaken by Auckland Unlimited Limited, the region’s economic development agency, with co-funding provided by Auckland Council.

Conservation

Protecting unique land for generation next

An $8 million investment over four years will result in Queen Elizabeth II National Trust work with government agencies, councils and others to provide legal protection of Jobs for Nature-funded projects through Open Space Covenants.

That will ensure the biodiversity gains from the Crown’s investment in Jobs for Nature are protected and sustained on private land and allows QEII to legally protect hundreds of hectares of private land with high biodiversity value, Sonservation Minister Kiri Allan said.

An Open Space Covenant is an agreement between QEII and a landowner to protect an area forever. The landowner continues to own and manage the protected land, and the covenant and protection stays on the land, even when the property is sold to a new owner. QEII drafts the legal documents, pays for survey costs and shares the cost of fencing with the landowner, often alongside a contribution from another agency like the regional council.

A new form of legal protection, at this stage called a restoration agreement, will also be developed for Jobs for Nature projects that do not have strong enough existing biodiversity values to meet the Open Space Covenant criteria. Such an agreement may be more suitable for native revegetation or wetland restoration projects.

Fiji 

New Zealand’s support for Fiji’s COVID-19 response continues with vaccine delivery, operational support

Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta has announced further support for Fiji, including funding support for nursing staff and 100,000 doses of vaccines due to arrive in country yesterday.

New Zealand has funded 100,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine directly from the Spanish government in order to meet Fiji’s immediate vaccine requirements.

Earlier this year New Zealand committed to providing up to 500,000 doses of vaccine to support Fiji’s rollout. Fiji’s vaccination programme is progressing well with 25% now fully vaccinated, and first doses provided to 82% of the population

New Zealand is also funding the recruitment of 190 Fiji graduate nurses, for a three month period, to provide surge capacity across the health system including at Fiji’s isolation facilities.

Rio Tinto strikes a deal with the Ardern govt on cleaning up its mess – and it brings Ngai Tahu into an array of commitments

Should we really be cheering news of a giant global company picking up the tab for cleaning up its own mess?  Surely that’s what it should be doing.

But hey, we are talking about Rio Tinto, a company widely criticised by environmental groups around the world and at least one national government for the environmental impacts of its mining activities. Or so we are told by Wikipedia.

And it has been a dab hand at persuading governments in this country to help power its aluminium smelter operations near Bluff at a modest cost.

But the PM, helped by some of her ministerial team., has urged the company to do something about its toxic waste and – hurrah – the company  has obliged.

The company has made a raft of commitments, including recognising Ngai Tahu (at least by the looks of things) as an organisation akin to a co-governor.

In fact, in the press statement from the Beehive Ngai Tahu is listed ahead of the central and local government bodies involved in the agreement. Continue reading “Rio Tinto strikes a deal with the Ardern govt on cleaning up its mess – and it brings Ngai Tahu into an array of commitments”