24 days ago

Neighbourly Q&A: Renting rights with CAB's Sacha Green

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

We are continuing our Q&A sessions on Neighbourly. This week we have the amazing Sacha Green from Citizens Advice Bureau New Zealand (CABNZ) who will be answering your questions about your renting rights.

A little bit about Sacha:
She has been working for CABNZ for 10 years and is passionate about empowering people with knowledge of their rights as well as ensuring access to justice.

She helps support the team of over 2,000 trained volunteers who deliver the CAB service in 80 neighbourhoods around Aotearoa by providing advice and support at a national level on a wide range of issues. One of Sacha’s work areas is leading the CAB’s social justice work on housing and tenancy issues.

Whether you're a flatmate, landlord, boarder or flatmate, you can leave a comment below and Sacha will share an answer on Wednesday from 9.30am. You may want to ask about notice periods, bond fulfillment, reasonable rent increases, or even whose responsibility it is to deal with mould in the home.

Join Sacha here on Wednesday at 9.30am. See you then!.

⇩ Share your question below ⇩

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More messages from your neighbours
6 hours ago

NBLY Conversations: What is the etiquette for bin day?

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

We think there are unspoken rules for bin day, but are we adhering to the same ones?

Do you think twice about dragging your bin to the pavement in the early hours? Do you mind if neighbours put excess rubbish in your bin? Share your bin day etiquette and let's compare notes!

Type 'Not For Print' if you wish your comments to be excluded from the Conversations column of your local paper.

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6 hours ago

Four 65” Panasonic 4K TVs up for grabs worth $3,999 each

TV Guide

This winter, we are celebrating the 2024 Olympics with our TV Guide readers with a chance to win 1 of 4 65” Panasonic 4K TVs worth $3,999 each.

Pick up a copy of the TV Guide each week starting from the June 1 - 7 issue, find the codeword, and follow the directions to be in to win! We’ve put a codeword in each of the following three issues, so find them all for more chances to win. You’ll have until July 3 to enter online or mail in your codeword. T&Cs apply.
Learn more

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15 hours ago

Stressed landowners on tenterhooks for Budget confirmation

Nicole Mathewson Reporter from The Press

By local democracy reporter Brendon McMahon:

Flood-stricken landowners and the West Coast Regional Council are on tenterhooks on the promise of new funding for Franz Josef under $400m of new protection money announced in the Budget.

The council's Waiho River south and north banks project has been named as "ready for" the first tranche of the Regional Infrastructure Fund initial allocation in 2024-25.

However, whether the council gets the $10m it has been seeking in the past year in ongoing discussions with Government officials is not yet clear.

Council chief executive Darryl Lew initially said on Friday a $6m allocation under the new fund was confirmed.

However, staff later contacted LDR and said they "might have jumped the gun".

Minister Shane Jones' office said they did not know the individual project details and were unable to confirm the West Coast project allocation beyond Thursday's sweeping budget statement.

Lew said he understood council was to get $6m from the fund, predicated on a 40% ($4m) contribution from the landowners across the Franz Josef Special Joint Rating District.

He said bolstering the existing protection on the Waiho River south side and installing a flood forecasting and warning system was the primary focus of their $10m scheme.

A portion would also add protection for the north bank Franz Josef sewage ponds site - pending a district council decision to move the ponds, Lew said.

The council assured Waiho River ratepayers in April it was still working to secure the release of $8.7m of money previously allocated for the area's flood protection.

The $8.7m was meant to be spent on fixing stop banks on the south side of the river at Waiho Flat after announcement of a broader $24m scheme for the area in 2020.

Subsequently the council announced its 10-year Waiho River Management Strategy in October last year after the previous Government asked for a more detailed case including retreat from the south bank.

Under the strategy, the council proposes better flood warning and protection initially before a retreat from the area in about 10 years.

Lew said the $8.7m had now "gone" and money under the Regional Infrastructure Fund was "new money".

"It is predicated on a 60/40 split," he said.

"The total budget will be $10m of which 40% has to be recovered locally."

He anticipated a special meeting of the joint committee being called first to test "their commitment" to co-funding.

Waiho Flat ratepayers spokesman Dale Straight said stressed landowners on the south bank were hanging for some good news - particularly in the wake of the October announcement.

"There's people there pretty bloody stressed and worried," he said.

If the new funding "comes to pass" then it would be a major boost.

"It's been a pigs ear in the way it's been handled," he said.

"It's got to be good news for the south side, and certainly some of the farms further down the valley that are not really covered by any protection at all."

However, Straight said ratepayers may not feel able to financially commit to co-funding given the drawn out process they had endured for years.

"We had that nearly $8.7m promised four years ago that then got 'unpromised'. This may go someway to replace that I suppose."

Straight said the promise of "money for nothing" still had a price which might be "a big noose around our necks".

"There's a bit of water to go under the bridge yet."

Lew said the new money was aligned with the first two prongs of the 10-year Waiho River Management Strategy.

That was to immediately bolster civil defence and flood warning for the people living there, and to bolster the existing protection banks.

It would still be to "buy time" before an eventual staged retreat from the river's south bank, as announced in October.