

Kerre Woodham Mornings Podcast
Newstalk ZB
Join Kerre Woodham one of New Zealand’s best loved personalities as she dishes up a bold, sharp and energetic show Monday to Friday 9am-12md on Newstalk ZB. News, opinion, analysis, lifestyle and entertainment – we’ve got your morning listening covered.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Aug 24, 2023 • 5min
Kerre Woodham: We'd better start taking heed of the things that work - as well as those that don't
The Government and councils affected by this year's floods are slowly working their way towards a resolution of the buyout of residents of the most affected properties in Hawkes Bay, Auckland, Coromandel and the Far North. The Auckland relief package has just been announced, well, in excess of a billion dollars in terms of costs, however, the Government and council contributions will be net of any insurance proceeds. So once the insurance comes in, then Government and council, or taxpayer and ratepayer, will meet the rest. The Council's been desperate to reach a deal with the Government, or the councils collectively have been anxious to reach a deal with the Government as early as possible, so that people who are in dire straits can make a decision and start to pick up the pieces and get on with their lives. The Hawkes Bay region has received $203 million towards flood protection and $260 million for roading and bridge repairs. The Council may cap some of the voluntary buyouts and you can understand why - some of those cliff top homes in Auckland that were affected were valued at more than $10 million each. One billion is not going to get you far once you start looking at those homes. But the weird thing about, in particular the Auckland floods, was how random it was. You got the $10 million homes affected and you got half million dollar homes affected. It certainly was egalitarian in terms of the houses that were impacted. It's likely no one is going to be satisfied. Not the people who've lost their homes and their livelihoods and certainly not the ratepayers and taxpayers who will be stumping up the bill through taxes and rates. But what else can we do? Insurance will only cover so much. And if the insurers decide not to reinsure a home and you still have a mortgage, you are stuffed. I know that there are people who are very grumpy indeed about any money going to a family whose home has been devastated. But in many cases, it's not the fault of the owner for not doing due diligence. Some of these people will have been living in properties that were built years ago, late 30s, 40’s, 50s. They've been sitting there perfectly happily, never having been flooded, never had an issue until the Council did too much, approving subdivisions that altered the landscape. Failed to require the necessary infrastructure that would mitigate the flooding or doing too little, as in the case of Hawkes Bay, where the people said if you'd dredged the rivers of silt, if you’d dealt with the problem of slash, if you'd built the stock banks, none of this would have happened. It's a mess. And that's for people who have insurance. What about those that don't? I read of a number of cases in Hawkes Bay where people had paid off their homes, and then they'd stopped paying insurance. Where does that leave them? Are there any lessons to be learned from Christchurch? One thing is for sure, we had better start taking heed of the things that do work, and the things that don't in this process. Because we're going to be repeating it in the years ahead. This is our future. But it's also been our past. This is not new to the world, it's not new to built up communities. Our ancestors, dating back to the day dot have had to deal with precisely this. The floods, the pestilence, the fire, the natural disasters. As communities, we've learned to live with nature and those that survive have evolved with nature. The danger is thinking that things can stay the same.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aug 23, 2023 • 7min
Sandra Hazelhurst: Hastings Mayor updates on where they are in property buyout process
With the news that Auckland Council are expected to approve a buyout package for about 700 properties damaged in extreme weather events - Hastings Mayor Sandra Hazelhurst joined Kerre Woodham Mornings to provide an update on where the process sits currently for residents following Cyclone Gabrielle. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aug 23, 2023 • 8min
John Goddard: Insurance barrister talks Auckland Council buyout package for properties damaged in extreme weather events
Auckland Council is expected to approve a buyout package for about 700 properties damaged in extreme weather events. Our newsroom understands the measure will cost well in excess of $1 billion and could be paid for by extra borrowing and rates rises. Mayor Wayne Brown and Finance Minister Grant Robertson sealed the deal on Tuesday and its understood the deal will have a 50/50 cost sharing approach like the Hawke's Bay deal. It's unclear how the council will value properties, whether it will apply a discount and how it will treat insured and uninsured properties. The council may also cap the voluntary buy outs, which could affect clifftop Auckland homes, some of which are worth more than $10m. John Goddard is an Insurance Barrister who was part of the claims resolution service after the Canterbury earthquakes, he joined Kerre Woodham. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aug 23, 2023 • 7min
Kerre Woodham: Parents concerned about vaping - what can you do about it?
We were rather overtaken by events yesterday, but it didn't really matter because Labour kept changing its views on the best policy to combat youth vaping. In June, Prime Minister Chris Hipkins and Health Minister Ayesha Verrall announced the Government would be stopping new vape shops from being allowed to open within 300 metres of schools or marae, cutting down on disposable vapes and restricting the descriptions on product flavours. Potentially enticing names like ‘cotton candy’ and ‘strawberry Jelly doughnut ‘which accompany products will be prohibited and only generic names describing the flavour, such as ‘berry’, to be allowed. All vaping devices sold will soon need to have removable or replaceable batteries. So far, so good, but not good enough for a party that sees itself facing a political spanking. They thought there might be more votes in coming down tough on vapes, so yesterday the Government announced it would cap vape shops at 600. Currently there are more than 1300 specialist vape shops and as you'll know, just about every corner dairy, service station sells the product too. The Government says it will also set up a licensing system for vape shops if they're elected, a process that will take about six months. National has indicated it's broadly supportive of the direction the Government’s travelling, so they too will be looking at restrictions on sale to try and prohibit kids getting their digits on them. Possibly cutting the number of outlets is too little, too late - and at the same time that Ayesha Verrell and Chris Hipkins were announcing that you couldn't open a vape store within 300 metres of school or marae, dozens have gained approval from the Ministry of Health to open near schools. So they all madly got in before September 21 and the damage is done, so I would really like to hear from those of you who are concerned about your kids vaping. Is there anything you can do about it? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aug 22, 2023 • 6min
Kerre Woodham: I'd rather pay $100 on prescriptions than have to sell the house to keep a loved one alive
National pledges $280 million to fund 13 cancer treatments, not available in New Zealand. They argue it's a better use of taxpayers' money than providing free prescriptions. The impact of drug funding on patients is discussed, highlighting the politicization of funding decisions.

Aug 21, 2023 • 6min
Kerre Woodham: Should a Government be run like a widget factory?
First up, and this is something that I know is near and dear to all our hearts: ACT has vowed to crack down on the public services. As they pointed out yesterday, Government spending has grown from $80.6 billion a year in 2017 to $137 billion in 2023. New Zealanders, including Labour voters, according to ACT’s polling, believe that public services are far worse now than they were a few years ago, and I think we’d agree with that, wouldn't we? ACT says there's a growing disconnect between what the Government considers priorities and good performance, and the quality of services the public experiences. So, looking at the expensive and poorly thought out pet projects like restructuring the health or polytech systems, or the light rail, they are treated as goals in and of themselves. Ministers are so focused on getting their pet projects through that they lose sight of whether it's actually going to improve New Zealander’s lives. And ACT says that the problem is that performance reporting of public services is haphazard. Measures can be cherry picked. Results can be reported in a way that isn't coherent, and it's difficult or nigh impossible to track trends over time. So you don't know whether a policy or a plan is delivering because they don't track it. And we've seen that. I've had interviews with public officials on this show who haven't had a clue how to measure the success of a policy that is costing you and I millions and millions of dollars a day. So really at first reading, doesn't this make sense? We've been demanding to know the results of so many of the ideologically driven projects that Labour has put in and they can't tell us. But for those who do work in business or have worked in the public sector, can a Government department, should a Government department be run like a widget factory? Is it even possible to do so? There are so many competing priorities for our tax dollars right now, and over the next few years, that we simply cannot afford to throw good money after bad. I want to know if these projects are working. If they're not, we get rid of them, we try something else. But are there any pitfalls in requiring the public service to perform professionally. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aug 21, 2023 • 8min
Raelene Castle: Group Chief Executive of Sport New Zealand on the impact of the Women's FIFA World Cup
The FIFA Women's World Cup has been an absolute feast of sport, culminating in Spain winning its first ever Women's World Cup, last night in Sydney. It was a triumph for not just 'women's sport’ but sport in general. Almost 2 million people attended 64 matches across nine host cities. In Australia, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has promised $200 million to improve sporting facilities and equipment specifically for women and girls, following the history-making performance of the Matildas. How will the World Cup's success translate here in New Zealand? Kerre Woodham was joined by Group Chief Executive of Sport New Zealand, Raelene Castle, to discuss what the impact may be. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aug 20, 2023 • 11min
Jan Tinetti: Education Minister on the standardisation of reading, writing, and math curriculums
The Government's making it compulsory for every school in the country to teach reading, writing, and maths the same way. Education Minister Jan Tinetti said it's not always clear how core areas should be taught - and this will set out a clear mandate. This follow's yesterday's announcement that if elected, financial skills would become a core part of the school curriculum. The Party's promising to make teaching financial literacy compulsory from 2025. Minister of Education Jan Tinetti joined Kerre Woodham to discuss the proposals. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aug 18, 2023 • 4min
Kerre Woodham: With an election approaching, Labour have fallen in love with roads
What the Dickens is this Government doing? They take away GST on fruit and veg with one hand, in a blatant vote buying grab, then they slap on 12 cents to the fuel tax with the other hand. Admittedly, over a period of years, but they seem to have absolutely no idea what they're doing. Having demanded that we all jump on our unicycles and use cycleways over the past six years, having halved the cost of public transport so that we fall in love with sitting, sweaty cheek by unshaved jowl with one another on the buses. After having sneered at anyone who has the temerity to suggest that actually be quite nice to drive your car from point A to point B now, with an election approaching, they've fallen in love with roads. $20 billion worth of love in fact. Road improvement up the ying-yang. You've got a road, they'll improve it. I just don't understand how the Government can say, oh, cost of living crisis, here, let's take GST off fruit and veg. And by the way, we're going to add 12 cents to fuel tax. How is that supposed to help the poorest and those who need assistance more most? There have got to be other ways of doing it.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aug 17, 2023 • 6min
Kerre Woodham: Lauren Dickason's trial leaves us with more questions than answers
Yesterday the jury in the Lauren Dickason trial reached its verdict. They'd been deliberating since early afternoon on Monday, and they reached a majority verdict, which is a verdict agreed to by all, except one juror and can only occur if the foreperson states an open court there is no probability of the jury reaching a unanimous verdict. It’s a case that really did shock the country, I think. I don't think that's an overstatement. Dickason never denied killing her children. 6 year old Liane, 2 year old twins Maya and Karla, in September 2021. But she pleaded not guilty to murder, claiming she was suffering such severe mental distress that she could not be held criminally responsible for her actions. I really feel for the jury in this trial. It must have been gruelling sitting there listening day in, day out to the details of such a dreadful case and the judge made mention of that when he discharged them. There's talk of an appeal, but as it stands, Dickason will face a life sentence for the murder of each child. There are so many questions and issues that arise from this case, that are greater than this case as well. First of all, Dickerson is not remanded in custody in prison. Instead, she's under a compulsory treatment order at Hillmorton Hospital, where she has been since the days after the murders. The judge who presided over the case, Justice Mander, is seeking expert reports on her mental state and to help him decide what sentence would be appropriate for her. Should the case have been heard in front of a judge alone, given the expert testimony upon which both the Crown and defence relied so heavily, both diametrically opposed to one another too? Are our laws still fit for purpose? Chris Gallivan in the interview with Mike this morning says our laws are a dog's breakfast around murder. Should we have degrees of murder? To understand that not all murders are committed with the same forethought with the same set of circumstances. And then, the question of how anyone can be allowed to endure 17 rounds of IVF? I know of women who've undergone two rounds and found it physically and psychologically gruelling. Do we need to have a rethink about how we select jurors? Do we have a panel of professional jurors? This is something that's been talked about before, too, as have degrees of murder. So many questions after this case has come to an end, if indeed it has, there may well be an appeal, because that's certainly what the defence lawyers indicated.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.