Kerre Woodham Mornings Podcast

Newstalk ZB
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Feb 27, 2023 • 11min

Mike King: Mental health advocate teams up with winery to launch I Am Hope field wellness centre in Napier

Wellbeing support is available for cyclone-stricken Napier residents. Mental health advocate Mike King and winery owner Greg Miller are opening the "I Am Hope Wellness Centre" there today. It's situated on the flood-ravaged Valley d'Vine restaurant premises on Linden Estate. A team of four counsellors and one doctor are taking annual leave for a fortnight to offer health services at no cost. King told Kerre Woodham they want to be operating for a minimum of three months. He says he's contracting as many counsellors as he can to spend at least six hours at the centre a day, paid for by donations. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 27, 2023 • 6min

Kerre Woodham: Rob Campbell may find he has some spare time on his hands soon

Rob Campbell is a very big cheese. He was named Deloitte chairman of the Year in 2017 and awarded a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to business in 2019. Not bad for a poacher turned gamekeeper, a former Unionist turned businessman,  appointed as Chancellor of Auckland, University of Technology, and more recently charged with the onerous burden of transforming New Zealand's health system – Te Whatu Ora. However, for a very busy man, he may have some much needed spare time coming soon after his comments on LinkedIn criticising National's Three Waters policy, and more specifically National’s leader Christopher Luxon. As a result, the Prime Minister has refused to express confidence in Campbell, which is pretty much tantamount to ordering his Health Minister to fire Campbell. And Hipkins has said that Campbell's comments were inappropriate. And they are, for a senior public civil servant.   Public servants must be seen to be Caesar's wife, beyond reproach, beyond tribal politics. Anyone who's followed Rob Campbell's career can't be clutching their pearls at the thought that Campbell harbours some reservations about National’s policies and about National full stop. What is astonishing is that he's been so self-indulgent. He knows the requirements of working in the public sector. You can, of course, have an opinion. Everybody has an opinion. Some people can air them, like me. Some people, like public servants like Rob Campbell, can't. You can express them with your mates around the BBQ. You can't do it on social media if you want to keep your job.   This is one of the biggest jobs in the country right now and you've got a man who says, pretty much, that he doesn't think much of National. He hates the fact that they're not willing to look at co-governance, which is something Rob Campbell's been strong on all the way through his working life. Can you really have a man at the helm going into an election year, who has pretty much indicated he doesn't want to work with National? When you've got the Prime Minister saying inappropriate … there's a process to follow … don't think it's on. This is a man looking for some spare time and I think he's just found it.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 26, 2023 • 7min

Kerre Woodham: Where do we even begin with the clean-up?

I was listening to Justine Wilson this morning, the woman Mike interviewed who runs the KiwiEsk Luxury Lodge in Esk Valley. Mike was asking for her reaction to the announcement yesterday that businesses hit by cyclone damage can get grants of up to $40,000 to help with the immediate costs of the damage. Cyclone Recovery Minister Grant Robertson said more announcements on funding support will be made in the coming days and weeks. All well and good. It will be seen as a boon for some people, but you can hear the voice of Justine Wilson that 40K was neither here nor there.  Her home and business has been completely devastated. The level of silt and rubbish and muck is incomprehensible. She just needs a plan, a blueprint of what to do from here.  For many of us this is unchartered territory. A massive flood, a landslide, a damaged home or business written off.  Where do we start the clean-up? The clean-up and clearance that has to be done before we can even think about rebuilding. I wouldn't even know where to begin. If you're lucky, you'll have a Brown Buttabean in your community. Someone who steps up, takes charge, gets rid of rubbish, cleans out homes, restocks them with furniture and food. That's what Dave Letele did, and his team, in the immediate aftermath of Auckland's massive floods, and that work is ongoing both in Auckland and Hawkes Bay. The Wairoa community have taken upon themselves to begin the clean-up. Because in effect, they have to. They're cut off for most of the country except for air, so the only way they can see an improvement in their day-to-day lives is by rolling up their sleeves and making that improvement themselves. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 26, 2023 • 11min

Roger Sutton: Former Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Agency Head on post-cyclone clean ups

The clean-up post Cyclone Gabrielle is uncharted territory for many kiwis. If you have a house at the bottom of your driveway, as Justine Wilson does, a house that wasn't there yesterday, doesn't belong to you and doesn't belong there, how do you get rid of it? How do you prioritise earthmoving equipment, house moving trucks, tow trucks, volunteers with shovels when there are limited resources and so much need? Former Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Agency (CERA) Head Roger Sutton joined Kerre Woodham to discuss what to do. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 23, 2023 • 8min

Kerre Woodham: How is compensation for ferry disruptions even a question?

I thought I'd start with the fact that Consumer NZ has come out and said that stranded Cook Strait ferry passengers have a strong case for payout. And the thing that astonished me when I heard that story, that passengers may have a case for claiming reimbursement after having their ferry trips cancelled, is that there's any question at all of there being compensation.   Interislander and Blubridge both operate ferries between the North and South Islands, but they have been beset with breakdowns and engine problems over the past few weeks. Some ferry sailings have had to be cancelled, and given that ferries are already booked to full capacity, that's meant huge expenses for many passengers. Some have had to abandon their cars, find somewhere, anywhere to park them -not necessarily a safe place, just anywhere, and then fly back a month later to pick them up. Others have had to find medium term accommodation while they wait for a place on the ferry. The small town of Picton has been overwhelmed trying to find rooms at the inn for stranded passengers and it's not the fault of the customers. I could maybe accept that if bad weather prevents the ferry sailing, well, that's just the way the cookie crumbles and you accept that as part of travel, safety first, you know you don't operate in bad weather, so that's fine. You suck it up and accept it. But if a ferry doesn't sail because of a mechanical breakdown because they've got an engine that's pakaru, that's on the company, surely to goodness.   Airlines have to compensate passengers for unplanned costs brought about by flight cancellations, they accept that. People have plans and if you disrupt those plans then there's going to be expense involved. But no, all ferry companies have to do is refund the price of the ticket, which simply does not seem fair; so many people have been affected by this. And again, if the ferries aren't sailing because they've got crusty old ferries that are breaking down, that’s on the company. They're selling a service. They're promising to provide a means of conveyance, and if they can't do it because of failings on their part then the costs of the passengers should be compensated.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 22, 2023 • 4min

Kerre Woodham: I'd prefer Govt cut back on spending rather than hike taxes to pay for Gabrielle recovery

Listening to Adrian Orr, the Reserve Bank Governor this morning, you realise New Zealand is between a rock and a hard place. As a country, we need to rebuild and rebuild a more resistant, resilient infrastructure in the wake of Cyclone Gabriel, and indeed all the other cyclones that have hit this summer. And we're going to need to be looking at reinforcing existing infrastructure around the country. Gisborne, parts of Hawkes Bay, Coromandel, the far north and parts of Auckland have been devastated this time around. Next time, it could just as easily be another part of the country that's in the line of fire of the next weather event. It's going to cost and it's going to cost billions. We've already spent billions insulating the country against the effects of Covid, or more aptly, Covid lockdowns. Now we have a huge task ahead to try to help devastated communities recover from the effects of the numerous cyclones, but more specifically, Gabrielle and to future proof the rest of the country. So how are we going to pay for it? There are two choices. We either borrow, or we tax. The Reserve Bank is trying to get inflation under control after the boom of the Covid recovery spending. Yesterday, it raised the OCR the wholesale rate at which banks can borrow money from 4.25 percent to 4.75 percent. There were also predictions that, along with the rest of the world, inflation would begin to get under control by mid-2024 as unemployment rises. However, if the Government opts to borrow to spend up big on the cyclone recovery, it will pump cash into the economy. And as we saw with the Covid spending that will make it harder to keep inflation under control. Alternatively, if taxes were hiked up to pay for the recovery, that wouldn't be very popular. If the Government cuts back on its spending, that’s not particularly appealing to the Government. That's a reprioritisation of money and won't be inflationary. Now, neither option really is appealing to any political party. Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr says it's not up to him to make a recommendation; it's purely a political decision. Like everyone else, he's waiting to see which way the Government jumps So what is the more fiscally sensible thing to do? What option would you prefer? I don't particularly want to see a hike in taxes, I'd much prefer to see the Government cut back on much of its spending A) because it's leading by example B) because I believe there's a lot of fat in the system. We will all have to pay at some point. I'd really rather not borrow given the billions that were spent on Covid. I'd rather we find it within our own budget if we can, but it's going to be expensive and it is not just the areas that have been hard hit by successive Cyclones, culminating this time around in Gabriel. We are going to have to make all of New Zealand more resistant to weather events in the years ahead. All of us, and we're all going to have to pay for that. How do we do it?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 22, 2023 • 9min

Robert Macculloch: Macroeconomics professor discusses how New Zealand will fund our Cyclone Gabrielle recovery

Over the past week, there has been much discussion around how the Government should fund our Cyclone Gabrielle recovery, and whether we should be shoring up existing infrastructure in anticipation of more weather events occurring. Do we borrow? Do we tax? Do we reprioritise spending? In light of the Cyclone disaster, Finance Minister Grant Robertson yesterday left the door open to a review of the Government's no new taxes policy. To discuss, Robert Macculloch, the Matthew S. Abel Professor of Macroeconomics at University of Auckland joined Kerre Woodham. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 21, 2023 • 7min

Kerre Woodham: Same level of crime as you'd usually expect? That's not what the people are feeling

Yesterday, in light of the many phone calls, texts and emails I had, we put in a call with Police Comms asking whether they had someone willing to address the concerns that many people in Hawkes Bay have, regarding looting and general lawlessness. They're trying to get someone, obviously they're very, very busy, and at least emailed back to say they would do their best to get someone on this morning.   As I said yesterday, where there is a vacuum, where there's a lack of communication with the outside world, stories can spread and in that spreading misinformation can grow. We’ve heard the stories of hundreds of bodies piled up around the district, but there is no evidence yet of that. It's in nobody's best interest to deny the fact that people have died, because we know that men, women and children have been killed in this devastating flood after the river burst its banks. We know there may well be more as the clean-up and recovery continues. Who benefits from keeping secret the fact that people have died in the flood? Nobody.  There is no political gain. There's no conspiracy, there's no cover up, there's nothing to see here, just the tragedy of people losing their lives in a flash flood. So there are some egregious tall tales doing the rounds.   But yesterday, we had people ringing up, incensed by the Police Commissioner's comments that crime was pretty much on a par with crime that's normally committed in the community. Andrew Coster said family harm incidents were the most prevalent and that if anybody had any information regarding thefts and looting, they should contact the police. He pointed out that many of the stories Police do investigate are found to be just that, stories. Like the Gun City one; that it had been looted, that is not true. But explain the callers and texters and emailers to me then? They can't all be hysterical. And what would the motivation be? People are tense. People are stressed. People are worried. But I'm not entirely sure all of them are wrong when they say that they are getting car loads of people coming out to scope damaged property in remote areas. I'm getting flashbacks to the Covid response, when the Ministry of Health and the Prime Minister assured every one there was plenty of PPE to go around.   There are mongrels out there, complete and utter mongrels. Is this business as usual? Is this, oh well, you just kind of expect this level of crime at any given time, right? All I know is that when the Police Commissioner says we have a strong police presence in the Hawke’s Bay region, that there's no extreme lawlessness and it's basically just the same level of crime as you'd expect, that's not what the people are feeling. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 21, 2023 • 10min

Supt. Jeanette Park: Eastern District Commander on disconnect between Police and what people are saying on the ground in Hawke's Bay

Somebody who is on the ground in Hawke's Bay is Superintendent Jeanette Park, the Eastern District commander. Superintendent Park joined Kerre Woodham Mornings and was asked whether she could understand the disconnect between what people are hearing from the Police Commissioner and and what they're experiencing. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Feb 20, 2023 • 7min

Sarah Stuart-Black: Red Cross Secretary General on what happens to donations

The New Zealand Red Cross fundraiser for Cyclone Gabrielle relief, backed by NZ Herald and NZME, has reached $5 million thanks to the donations of generous Kiwis. As there have been enquires as to how to donate and what the money goes to, Kerre decided to get the details straight from the horse’s mouth. Secretary General of the New Zealand Red Cross Sarah Stuart-Black, also known as Norm, joined Kerre to give listeners the information they’re after. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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