Kerre Woodham Mornings Podcast

Newstalk ZB
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May 10, 2021 • 4min

Dave Laidlaw: Father wants better designation for nudist part of Pāpāmoa Beach

A concerned father has spoken out after his 8 -year-old daughter was confronted by the sight of a naked man sunbathing while she was collecting rubbish on Pāpāmoa Beach.Dave Laidlaw, 41, was walking along the beach towards the Mount from Pacific View Rd with his two young daughters and was shocked when they saw the naked man because there were no signs indicating it was a nudist area, the Bay of Plenty Times wrote."[She] spotted some plastic, and with the tide right up was walking along the base of the dunes looking for more rubbish to collect when she stumbled on to a fully nude man. It gave her a hell of a fright."Laidlaw did not lay a complaint with the police or council because he understood it was a designated nudist area.He told Kerre McIvor that he is not worried about nudity, but he has a problem with a naked man out on a public beach with an erection. "I'm just asking for clarification - is it a local nudist area, or is it just an unwritten rule that everyone knows it's a nude part of the beach."He says there are no signs to warn people whether they mind nudity or not. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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May 6, 2021 • 6min

Kerre McIvor: Public sector pay freeze rightly labelled 'bombshell'

The Police Association have slammed the government's public sector pay freeze as an unacceptable bombshell, and I couldn't have put it better myself. Bombshell is right. Had we been warned that New Zealand was facing a period of belt tightening in the wake of Covid, had we been advised that we must all be prepared for a time of austerity as we pay back the awful cost of lockdowns, had the government not been handing out money hand over fist including 25 dollars extra per week to beneficiaries, increasing paid parental leave by twenty dollars a week and extending the period of paid parental leave.Not to mention boosted the Families Package by 75 dollars a week, boosted the Best Start payment by 60 dollars a week for the first three years of a child's life, introduced a free period products scheme throughout our schools, if we hadn't been spending a million dollars a day on motels for the homeless, invested 700 million dollars into shovel ready projects which as it turns out aren't shovel ready.If as recently as yesterday, the Finance Minister hadn't announced that he'd found damn near a billion dollars down the back of the couch. If they hadn't been shaking the Wellington Money Tree until it’s damn near been stripped bare, then my loins would have been well and truly girded in preparation for a period of austerity. But, because this government has been so free and easy with the cash, because they have done what Labour government’s traditionally do, and that is spend, this pay freeze IS indeed a bombshell. Public sector workers earning more than 60 grand, those are your front line workers doing the toughest jobs, can only expect pay increases in exceptional circumstances; those earning more than 100 thousand won't get a cent more over the next three years. Talk about a kick in the guts.  There's money for everyone it seems, except the workers.Nope, they'll be off to Oz, as will any other public servant with transferrable skills.  Look, spending is what Labour governments do, they build up the state sector. In Ardern’s first government, the number of public servants increased 5.2 per cent to nearly 50 thousand.They look after workers and beneficiaries, and primarily that's because National governments run down public departments and reduce spending. But to be all kind and generous with taxpayers’ money, to give until it hurts, to bleed taxpayers until the pips squeak; and THEN to announce a pay freeze? Bloody hell. It's the stuff of the Muldoon days. Next thing, they'll mandate carless days when we'll all have to cycle to work one day a week to get some use out of the hundreds of millions of dollars they've spent on cycle ways.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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May 5, 2021 • 6min

Lockwood Smith: Former Speaker on the testy exchange between Trevor Mallard and National

Trevor Mallard is again facing pressure to stand down.The Speaker sparked a testy debate with National MPs last night after he said under Parliamentary Privilege a worker had committed sexual assault.Mallard has previously apologised to the worker for wrongly accusing him of rape.Leader of the House Chris Hipkins says the debate didn't reflect well on Parliament or the people involved, and Jacinda Ardern will release a statement on the matter today.Former Speaker Sir Lockwood Smith says members should be able to make personal statements.But he told Kerre McIvor as Speaker, he made sure that right was never abused.“That personal statement had to be explaining something with respect to the member themselves, not someone else, so there are meant to be important boundaries around these things.”LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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May 5, 2021 • 7min

Kerre McIvor: Trevor Mallard should make his accusations without the protection of privilege

The Speaker of the House needs to go. He has continued a vendetta against a former staffer, a man he labelled as a rapist - a claim that cost taxpayers more than $330,000. We paid Mallard's $175,000 legal fees, this is a man who earns $296,000 per year plus expenses and who has been paid by the taxpayer since he was MP for Hamilton West since 1984. You'd think he'd have enough stashed away to cover his own legal bills, but there we go. We also paid a $158,000 ex-gratia payment to the former staffer to settle the defamation claim. Now he's re-litigated the affair all over again, trying to paint himself as a champion for women and victims and using Parliamentary Privilege to denigrate the staffer all over again. He told the house he did not agree that he'd destroyed the former staffer's life; he did that when according to Mallard, he sexually assaulted a woman. According to Barry Soper, Newstalk ZB's political editor, what the staffer did was hug the woman, which might have been unwelcome, but does not constitute serious sexual assault.  Barry says we should all care about what Mallard said and where he said it because it's a gross abuse of power and privilege.  So, I think we do need to care. You may think it’s knocking the government, what’s $330,000 when we are paying a million a day to hoteliers? As National MP Chris Bishop says, come out and say it without the protection of privilege.He won’t, because then he’ll be personally liable.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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May 4, 2021 • 9min

Bruce McGechan: Selling your business without any regrets

There's a very interesting piece in the Business Herald written by Tamsyn Parker.Bruce McGechan is an entrepreneur and business exit planning expert, who has written a book about selling your business without any regrets.He warns that many business owners who plan to cash up to fund their retirement are setting themselves up for disaster, if owners count on selling a business to fund their retirement and it doesn't sell, it can leave them without the retirement they want or had planned for.Bruce McGechan joined Kerre McIvor to talk all about it.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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May 2, 2021 • 10min

Louise Hutchinson: Waikato Mongrel Mob Kingdom adviser defends Marama Davidson's appearance at hui

Politicians criticising a Government Minister for attending a Mongrel Mob event are being told to come and visit for themselves. The Green Party co-leader Marama Davidson and Human Rights Commissioner Paul Hunt attended a gathering at the Hamilton gang HQ on Saturday.They discussed human rights, justice and racism in front of a room of patched members.It's sparked criticism from National and ACT Party MPs, but Waikato Mongrel Mob Kingdom adviser Louise Hutchinson says the media attention is unfair.She told Kerre McIvor critics don't know what was said at the event."We are an organisation that's working bloody hard in the community to turn around the wrongs of the past." Hutchinson denied that the gang is still dealing meth or engaged in criminal activity, asking McIvor: "Why do you keep referring back to criminal activity?" She says that other Ministers have come to visit, but do it "under the radar" due to concern about criticism. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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May 2, 2021 • 4min

Louise Hutchinson: Waikato Mongrel Mob Kingdom adviser defends Marama Davidson's appearance at hui

Politicians criticising a Government Minister for attending a Mongrel Mob event are being told to come and visit for themselves. The Green Party co-leader Marama Davidson and Human Rights Commissioner Paul Hunt attended a gathering at the Hamilton gang HQ on Saturday.They discussed human rights, justice and racism in front of a room of patched members.It's sparked criticism from National and ACT Party MPs, but Waikato Mongrel Mob Kingdom adviser Louise Hutchinson says the media attention is unfair.She told Kerre McIvor critics don't know what was said at the event."We are an organisation that's working bloody hard in the community to turn around the wrongs of the past." Hutchinson denied that the gang is still dealing meth or engaged in criminal activity, asking McIvor: "Why do you keep referring back to criminal activity?" She says that other Ministers have come to visit, but do it "under the radar" due to concern about criticism. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Apr 29, 2021 • 9min

Carmel Sepuloni: Reports suggest moteliers being paid unknown amounts of money for damage

Carmel Sepuloni says her ministry could keep better track of how much its paying out for damaged motel rooms.The Social Development Minister fronted to Kerre McIvor after reports from RNZ that unknown sums of money has been paid to moteliers over damage caused by emergency housing tenants.McIvor described it as "wanton disregard for taxpayer dollars"."I really, really don't mind paying higher taxes when I know the money is going to people who need it, and that it is being valued and prudently managed by the government department that receives it."This is not happening and the Ministry owes it to all of us who are carrying the weight of paying for the rest of the country to show us where and how our money is being spent. It simply isn't good enough."Sepuloni admitted here's no record of reimbursements to moteliers for breakages caused by beneficiaries in emergency housing.She says it's difficult to collate such data because the system's clunky."This is what MSD has said to me, and I've gone back to them and they've said let's look at whether or not we can do that better."Sepuloni says beneficiaries will have to pay for any damage to motel rooms, but when families stay in motels for longer periods, there will inevitably be some damage.She says sometimes there is ill-intent - but that's in complex cases."People with mental health issues in some instances, people with drug and addiction issues, but the alternative to them not being in accommodation is them being on the street." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Apr 28, 2021 • 8min

Kerre McIvor: I support funding GP visits - but who will pay for it?

Why is it that children only ever seem to need a doctor after hours? When my daughter was little, it was ear infections.  She didn't get them all that often - about twice a year - but it was always at night time and I would have to head along and pay through the nose for an after hours medical service. It can cost nearly $100 to visit an after hours practice and that's money a lot of people simply do not have.  And that's why they present at their local A&E, putting strain on the hospital system. Now with the announcement of a shakeup of the entire health system, the question is being asked should we pay to visit the GP.  Critics of the current system of funding GPs say its outdated and absolutely flawed and Health Minister Andrew Little agrees – but talking to Mike Hosking this morning, he doesn't appear to know what the answer is or how to fix it.  There has been criticism too of the lack of information sharing between health agencies and that urgently needs to be rectified – Andrew Little says a single database for all health services including GPs and other community health services is the goal.  Let's hope the public service has learned lessons from the Novopay debacle.I wholeheartedly support a transformation of our healthcare system - I just wish it had included dental services, but I shudder at the talk of billions here and billions there. Surely the money tree in Wellington has been shaken almost bare.  Who on earth is going to be paying for all of this?  Have you seen the number of for lease signs around the country? Still, money's cheap right now, the government hasn't had to spend as much as it thought it might have to in terms of Covid recovery and the government - any government - shouldn't be afraid to spend on essential infrastructure. The government says it wants a health care system that treats people before they need to present to hospital - ultimately that will be better for the patient and more cost effective to boot.  But when GP visits can be up to $100 a trip, that's not going to happen. Should there be an incentive - an extension of the Green prescription perhaps?  People who are within a healthy weight range and whose bloods are fine receive a free gym membership – rewarding people for doing the right thing rather than constantly spending on those who don't.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Apr 21, 2021 • 4min

Nick Bryant: BBC correspondent on Derek Chauvin's guilty verdict

There was quiet, just for a moment, as hundreds of people standing in the intersection at 38th Street and Chicago Avenue crowded in to listen to the news.“They’re announcing the verdict!” someone shouted, calling for silence.Then thunderous cheering filled the place where George Floyd was pinned beneath a police officer's knee nearly a year ago, begging for air and his mother. Many people wept. Some sobbed.They were cheering the first guilty verdict for the fired officer, Derek Chauvin, who was charged with murder and manslaughter. Moments later, another wave of cheers swept the crowd as the other two verdicts — both guilty — were announced. Moments after that, Chauvin put his hands behind his back and was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs.In the place now known as George Floyd Square, a spot that millions around the world have seen in videos shot by bystanders during Floyd's arrest, there was relief.Venisha Johnson jumped for joy when she heard the verdicts. Minutes later she could barely speak, she was weeping so hard.“It means so much to me,” said Johnson, who was wearing a mask that memorialized some of Floyd’s final words: “I can’t breathe.”“I’ve been praying for George every day, every morning at 6 a.m. I’m just so happy. The way he was murdered was terrible, but thank you, Jesus,” she said.Some 300 people gathered in the intersection, home to Cup Foods, the corner convenience store where employees had called police on the evening of May 25, saying Floyd had paid for cigarettes with a counterfeit $20 bill. It was Memorial Day.Since then, thousands have come to lay flowers, poems, photos and letters at the site where Floyd had the air choked out of him. They came to stand beside the sculpture that now fills the middle of the street, a huge metal fist raised as a cry for justice. They came to look at the now-closed gas station, where the sign had been covered long ago with a demand: “Justice for George Floyd.”On Tuesday, a protester climbed onto the sign to add two more words: “Justice Served?”For those gathered on Tuesday, they had seen at least the beginning of justice.“Let the healing work begin,” said Jennifer Starr Dodd, a Minneapolis woman, speaking through her tears. “Repentance, accountability, respect. You can’t have healing without repentance.”By early evening, the square was a scene of celebration, prayer and community relief. More and more people streamed in. Someone played a tuba. There were occasional chants of “Say his name! George Floyd!” People danced to “We Gon’ Be Alright” by Tye Tribbet and DMX's “Party Up.” Parents brought children, showing them that, at least sometimes, a Black man could get justice.Chris Gober, 17, brought his younger brother to talk about how Black men can face dangers from the police.“Watch your back. Watch everything you do,” he told the 7-year-old. But Gober also said the verdict was “a start to a change” for a movement to racial justice.Criminal convictions of police officers are exceedingly rare. There have been thousands of police shootings in the U.S. since 2005, but fewer than 140 officers have been charged with murder or manslaughter, according to criminologist Phil Stinson. Before Tuesday, only seven were convicted of murder.Toni Hamilton, who brought her daughters to the intersection to hear the verdict, was deeply relieved at the news.“I feel like for this whole time we’ve all been breathing with half of our breath,” she said. “Now there’s opportunity for the future. ... There’s power when we all come together.”It remains unclear what will happen to the square, which sprang up organically in the days after Floyd’s death, when community members put up homemade barricades to close it off. The city later replaced them with concrete barriers. It has been a place of pilgrimage and picnics, with people painting slogans and portraits on walls and the...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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