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The Team from Office for Seniors
Our February issue of our Seniors Newsletter is out now. In this issue we're keeping you in the know how on copper withdrawal and how that may affect you, plus lots more.
To celebrate Valentine’s Day, subscribe to NZ House & Garden, NZ Gardener, or TV Guide online at Mags4Gifts and receive an iconic box of Guylian Belgian seashells.
Simply enter the promo code ‘VALENTINES’ at the checkout to redeem this great offer. Valid until 11:59pm 14 February … View moreTo celebrate Valentine’s Day, subscribe to NZ House & Garden, NZ Gardener, or TV Guide online at Mags4Gifts and receive an iconic box of Guylian Belgian seashells.
Simply enter the promo code ‘VALENTINES’ at the checkout to redeem this great offer. Valid until 11:59pm 14 February 2023, white stocks last. For full terms and conditions click here.
The team at Mags4Gifts.
Find out more
All too often, our older community are found at home alone, suffering, physically hurt and unable to help themselves. If you’re living alone and would like some extra support, get to know your neighbours, reassure them that you're okay with them checking in on you, and together make a plan … View moreAll too often, our older community are found at home alone, suffering, physically hurt and unable to help themselves. If you’re living alone and would like some extra support, get to know your neighbours, reassure them that you're okay with them checking in on you, and together make a plan and talk through what warning signs to look out for should something be wrong. It could just save your life.
For more information, and tips to help you make a plan go to thehelloproject.nz
Learn more
Jean Neighbourly Lead from Hurunui District
With containers and book brand new
Price: $40
Jean Neighbourly Lead from Hurunui District
Size 4 worn once too big
Price: $60
Needless to say, it's been a horrible week for a lot of us with the scary weather and all it's brought with it. If you're doing it tough, here's something which might help.
Stuff's podcast Stuff Explained has been talking with Hummingly's Jolie Wills, a … View moreNeedless to say, it's been a horrible week for a lot of us with the scary weather and all it's brought with it. If you're doing it tough, here's something which might help.
Stuff's podcast Stuff Explained has been talking with Hummingly's Jolie Wills, a psycho-social expert in disaster and disruption. In this short podcast interview, Jolie shares her expert advice on what you, or the people you want to support, may need right now.
Whether you're currently involved, or you want to help others, it's worth a quick listen!
Listen now
The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz
The Canon Summer Snap competition has garnered some stunning photos from across Aotearoa. Once again, Neighbourly is the judge of their People and Communities photograph category so we need you!
There's a camera up for grabs for these talented photographers, and it's up to you to … View moreThe Canon Summer Snap competition has garnered some stunning photos from across Aotearoa. Once again, Neighbourly is the judge of their People and Communities photograph category so we need you!
There's a camera up for grabs for these talented photographers, and it's up to you to choose who takes the crown...and the Canon EOS!
Cast your vote in the poll below before 4pm, 14 February.
Nicole Mathewson Reporter from The Press
Motorists travelling between Greymouth and Stillwater on SH7 will have to take the Taylorville side of the Grey River on Friday, February 3 for four hours as work to remediate the highway surface and remove a manhole is completed.
Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency crews will close the highway … View moreMotorists travelling between Greymouth and Stillwater on SH7 will have to take the Taylorville side of the Grey River on Friday, February 3 for four hours as work to remediate the highway surface and remove a manhole is completed.
Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency crews will close the highway between 10am and 2pm (after the school bus runs and before the end of the school day) at Omoto that day, affecting the route between Greymouth and Stillwater.
A detour via Taylorville Rd would be in place for vehicles but HPMV and overweight vehicles/trucks must use SH7 so would need to plan their journeys around the four-hour closure, Waka Kotahi West Coast maintenance contract manager Moira Whinham said.
“Although the detour route is not much longer than the SH7 route, anyone travelling from Kaiata will need to backtrack to Stillwater, adding 20 minutes to their normal direct route to Greymouth."
The closure is weather dependent and may be rescheduled if it is wet. Check www.journeys.nzta.govt.nz... for updates.
Waka Kotahi thanked all regular users of this highway for their patience while the work was completed at Omoto.
The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz
With torrential rain and flooding caused by an 'atmospheric river', should this event convince us all that climate change is real and we need to be taking action?
*Add NFP if you don't wish for your comments to be used for We Say You Say in the local papers.*
175 replies (Members only)
Nicole Mathewson Reporter from The Press
From local democracy reporter Brendon McMahon:
A $600,000 spend on a Hokitika playground and a lack of realism are common concerns among the six candidates vying for election to the Westland District Council's Northern Ward.
Voting is now open in the byelection, which comes just months … View moreFrom local democracy reporter Brendon McMahon:
A $600,000 spend on a Hokitika playground and a lack of realism are common concerns among the six candidates vying for election to the Westland District Council's Northern Ward.
Voting is now open in the byelection, which comes just months after the three-yearly local body elections.
Asked what the issue of concern for voters was, most candidates preferred to talk more broadly about what the council should be focused on.
First timer Charley Cowie, of Stafford, noted the ward had about 50% of the rateable value for the whole district and it was clearly ''going ahead''.
A vote for him would help him ''represent everyone'' in the district and he was reluctant to pin down a common concern.
He cited the collective effort to restore the historic Stafford Cemetery as an example of what could be achieved by ''getting the community working better together''.
''At the end of the day, I'm not there to represent [only] the Northern Ward. At the end of the day, I don't need this job - if people think I will make a good councillor, good on them.''
Another first time candidate Patrick Phelps, a former journalist and now champion of the West Coast mineral industry, said council management and governance had got out of step with ratepayer expectations, while the rating burden burgeoned.
With a shortage of housing stock in Westland, relative to population size, the council seemed to be inhibiting supply rather than being an enabler.
Freeing up the council to get back to its core business would be his focus, including the council ''exiting a lot of the commercial enterprises it is involved in''.
''How long are you waiting for council to process a consent or whatever?'' Phelps asked.
While direct accountability for northern concerns was needed, ''I'm not a particularly parochial person''.
''I do think there is a case for wards - you could easily be forgiven if you are in Otira to think the council does not take account,'' he said.
Flow Ir Inn said they were looking at the macro picture and how the council operated for everyone, including the rates strike.
''To be honest, my main focus is to get costs down . . . We can't really spend more money until we get costs down.
''Anyone who lives on the Coast knows our council is spending lots of money on things that they don't need to be spending on.''
The $600,000 playground was a case in point, Flow Ir Inn said.
New Kaniere resident and first time candidate Euan Mackenzie said voter feedback suggested widespread worry about the council accessing funds for projects which were then ''frittered away''.
He preferred to see the council act as a positive facilitator of the local economy.
Its key responsibility was for citizens to access employment and the basic need for housing, education, health and youth services so they could get on with life, Mackenzie said.
Perennial candidate Jacquie Grant said a lot was at stake for the Northern Ward.
''As I've said on my election stuff, I'm there to represent the ward first and foremost,'' Grant said.
She cited community issues at both Ross and Kumara which had been festering and neglected by the council - and''Hokitika-centric'' spending.
Again, the $600,000 proposed spending on a new playground in Hokitika when the town was already rich with accessible facilities needed to be brought into line.
''We've got to get real,'' Grant said.
She also claimed some Northern Ward voters were ''incensed'' at a system where the next highest polling candidate last October - herself -was not brought up the list when the seat was vacated.
Nelson Lakes resident and Money Free Party advocate Richard Osmaston said after running for six mayoralties inthe South Island in October, as well as in the Hamilton West byelection, he did not have much in reserve this time.
However, the cost of living was probably the main issue in the Northern Ward ''keeping most people awake at night - the fact they are going backwards''.
Ernest Rutherford Retirement Village
Sir Ashley Bloomfield was New Zealand’s Director-General of Health from June 2018 to July 2022 and became a familiar figure as the public face of the health response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
His vast career experiences over the last 25 years in public policy and health leadership include … View moreSir Ashley Bloomfield was New Zealand’s Director-General of Health from June 2018 to July 2022 and became a familiar figure as the public face of the health response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
His vast career experiences over the last 25 years in public policy and health leadership include being based at the World Health Organization in Geneva, working on non-communicable disease prevention and control with a global focus.
Join us for a morning with Sir Ashley Bloomfield as he shares insight into his career and the challenges he faced during uncertain times.
Time: Wednesday 8 February, 10.30am
Location: Online.
Nicole Mathewson Reporter from The Press
From local democracy reporter Brendon McMahon:
A stop-gap suggestion by the West Coast Regional Council five months ago to donate stockpiled rock to plug the Domett Esplanade seawall at Cobden is moving at a snail's pace.
With the storm season looming, plugging low points in the … View moreFrom local democracy reporter Brendon McMahon:
A stop-gap suggestion by the West Coast Regional Council five months ago to donate stockpiled rock to plug the Domett Esplanade seawall at Cobden is moving at a snail's pace.
With the storm season looming, plugging low points in the seawall, built in 1969, has lagged since a storm last June 13 sent seawater through several homes.
Residents had to flee and some are still fixing the damage.
"It's been a difficult hard year for us," one of the affected residents, Vern Goodall, said.
After the storm damage, fingers were pointed about how the seawall had been compromised, including criticism of the salvage operation of the fishing boat Kutare, which sank off Cobden beach in 2017.
Goodall noted 10 to 15 low spots or flattened areas currently on the wall.
"Some of it is caused by four-wheel drives going on to the beach."
Regional councillor Peter Ewen suggested rock be made available from the closed Cobden quarry to plug gaps until a permanent solution.
But he said it needed to be addressed urgently in light of the risk.
"The ball's in (Grey District Council's) court if they want to pick up the rock."
This followed a field visit by both councils in September immediately after a joint meeting between them stalled before it even got started.
By then the district council was emphatic the regional council should fix the problem, and address future protection options in the area.
Regional council acting chairman Peter Haddock now says they are prepared to find a solution together with the district council.
While it would be "embarrassing" if another storm event hit meantime, the solution was not clear-cut.
Haddock, who retired from the district council to stand for the regional council, pointed to informal assurances to fix a problem in Cobden in 2018 had been based on "a wink and a nod".
He cited the assurance to the district council that the Government would help fund protection of the old Cobden dump, buried just above the foreshore, after tonnes of rubbish was washed out to sea during Cyclone Fehi.
"The problem is, we've got to be so careful undertaking work on a promise or a wink and a nod, as the Grey District Council found when mayor Tony (Kokshoorn) got a bit of verbal approval on the (rubbish dump) wall at Cobden, that the Government would fund it -- then it didn't," Haddock said.
As a result, the district council had to empty almost its entire $2.2 million infrastructure contingency fund to subsidise the new rockwall in front of the old rubbish dump.
After 15 months of negotiation the Government only chipped in $235,934.
Haddock said that meant he was now wary of funding "promises".
"All these projects need co-funding or funding from rating districts. What we've got to firstly identify is whose problem it really is - and both councils believe it's the other council's problem - and it's not as if the regional council has a big pot of money."
Current Greymouth mayor Tania Gibson said her council's position was clear: "We are still pretty much of the view that it is their delegation".
"We don't rate for it... That's why we pushed the issue in the first place and asked for the meeting."
It rankled that the stalled 'urgent' meeting of the Greymouth Floodwall Committee from last September had still not been reconvened, she said.
"It was (the regional council's) turn to host the meeting and it was adjourned - and we've been asking since the last meeting: it needs to be reconvened and discussed," Gibson said.
The joint meeting stalled when the Grey District Council members arrived without having received the relevant papers.
Regional council chief executive Heather Mabin said reconvening that meeting was on the "to do list" as well as clarifying an arrangement for the rock.
"We want to make it formal and official... we really need to have an agreement about what rock and who does what."
*Public interest journalism funded through NZ On Air
Nicole Mathewson Reporter from The Press
From local democracy reporter Brendon McMahon:
Water levels for irrigation in the drought-hit upper Grey Valley have held steady but are still declining, the West Coast Regional Council says.
At this stage no irrigation consent holders in the district - which has a dozen or so farming … View moreFrom local democracy reporter Brendon McMahon:
Water levels for irrigation in the drought-hit upper Grey Valley have held steady but are still declining, the West Coast Regional Council says.
At this stage no irrigation consent holders in the district - which has a dozen or so farming operations with spray pivot irrigators - have been found to be operating outside their consent conditions, acting consents and compliance manager Rachel Clark said.
"It has held pretty steady - certainly it has been slowly declining but it has been at a great rate of knots.
"We haven't seen drastic drops that would cause us concern."
The council announced three weeks ago it was closely watching river levels in the Grey River catchment when at that stage there had been no substantial rain since early in December.
By January 10, with the extended fine weather, the council was looking to protect waterway health while enabling water consent holders to keep utilising their consents "as much as practicable".
And the picture has not really improved apart from some spasmodic local showers and a downpour in the lower Grey Valley-Greymouth area mid-morning today.
In the past seven days council rain data shows minimal rain across the valley catchment: Atarau had 23mm (15mm in the 24 hours to 10am today), Waipuna 17.5mm (6.5mm), Ngahere: 19mm (12mm), Arnold River at Moana: 22.5mm (10.5mm) and Ahaura River at the gorge: 6.5mm (3.5mm).
Clark said the council have been monitoring irrigation bores in spot checks plus monitoring water takes over a certain litre per second.
The council also has water monitoring stations on the Grey River catchment which provides automatic data to give a comparative picture.
The consent and conditions set what individual farmers were allowed to take although older existing consents were more liberal.
"Some do have a specific cut off level ... 35 years are the maximum. It does vary."
The water take cut-off in a consent was based on data from nearby or downstream monitoring sites.
Clark said it could only be hoped that the water table would be replenished with "gentle, regular" rain in the near future, in contrast to the current conditions being experienced in the North Island.
The regional council also needed to ensure water takes meet Resource Management Act amendment regulations which came into effect last September for water takes over 20 litres/second or more, she said.
*Public interest journalism funded through NZ On Air
The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz
Many schools allow female students to wear earrings but male students aren't allowed to have an ear stud. Is it time to get rid of gender-based rules in regards to jewellery?
Share your thoughts below - write NFP if you don't wish your comments to be shared in the community … View moreMany schools allow female students to wear earrings but male students aren't allowed to have an ear stud. Is it time to get rid of gender-based rules in regards to jewellery?
Share your thoughts below - write NFP if you don't wish your comments to be shared in the community paper's We Say You Say column.
379 replies (Members only)
Get back-to-school sorted in one shop at The Warehouse. Start smart and inspired with statement stationery, gear up with the best in tech and set them up for the future with options made with recycled materials. With a wide range of smart school essentials at even smarter prices, we’ve got … View moreGet back-to-school sorted in one shop at The Warehouse. Start smart and inspired with statement stationery, gear up with the best in tech and set them up for the future with options made with recycled materials. With a wide range of smart school essentials at even smarter prices, we’ve got everything you need to set up for an epic comeback.
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