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Commerce Commission warns Foodstuffs North Island for ‘likely' breaking competition law

Commerce Commission warns Foodstuffs North Island for ‘likely' breaking competition law

NZ Heralda day ago
The Commerce Commission has issued a warning to Foodstuffs North Island for their treatment of a supplier that likely breached grocery competition law.
Grocery Commissioner Pierre van Heerden said Foodstuffs North Island appeared to have obstructed and delayed a supplier request by acting in ways that were uncooperative and unreasonable.

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‘Scary stuff': Locals on crash corner fear it will take a death to get it fixed
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RNZ News

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‘Scary stuff': Locals on crash corner fear it will take a death to get it fixed

A car crashed into the retaining wall of Mike's Courtney Rd home Photo: LDR / supplied Locals on a busy Tauranga street fear someone will die before anything substantial is done to improve safety on a bend notorious for crashes. Three times in the past year, a car has ploughed into the retaining wall of Mike's home on Courtney Rd in Gate Pā. Courtney Rd runs between two shopping centres on Cameron Rd and Fraser St, with Mike's house on a hill between two corners. The street has a long history of crashes. Mike, who didn't want his surname published, said he lived there for 16 years. In that time, he said, four crashes had done damage and there'd been countless smaller accidents, including cars mounting the kerb. Last year, before Mike moved out, he had just got out of his ute when a car came through the retaining wall. A few seconds earlier, and it would have crushed his leg. Mike said his tenant and her child were narrowly missed by a car in one recent crash, and he is worried someone will be killed. It was "pretty scary stuff", and Mike said his tenants lived in fear of being hit. In an accident years ago, a car hit the wall with so much force that blocks went flying and broke house windows, he said. "We can't get insurance on that wall, because these pricks keep going through it." His insurance had gone up and he had to cover the cost of repairs if the driver or their insurance company didn't pay, he said. Mike wants Tauranga City Council to extend a metal safety barrier from the corner toward his property to improve safety but has been told it's too expensive. "Is it going to take somebody to die to do something?" Another crash that damaged a streetlight and trees of a home in Courtney Rd in Gate Pā. Photo: LDR / supplied Mike's property manager, Toni Cranston, wrote to the council after the tenants threatened to leave because of the crashes. 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"It's just been pure luck that nobody's actually been taken out or seriously injured." He agreed extending the barrier would protect pedestrians and the homes. "For the small cost that it would cost the council to stick in 10m of fence and posts - a bit of a barrier - it could be lifesaving." Kelly said traffic had increased on Courtney Rd since 2020 as people used it as a shortcut between Cameron Rd and Fraser St, with the problem expected to worsen with a new housing development nearby. The council's acting safety and sustainability manager, Karen Hay, said that because of the high cost of physical safety measures, the council evaluated requests based on vehicle speeds, traffic volumes, accessibility, and crash data. This was to ensure all safety concerns were addressed fairly and equitably, she said. "Areas where deaths or serious injuries have occurred are given higher priority." 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Immigration levy could hit international student numbers, say universities
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RNZ News

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Immigration levy could hit international student numbers, say universities

Universities New Zealand says the cost of an immigration levy is likely to be passed on to students. File photo. Photo: RNZ Universities say a proposal that could make them pay a levy to Immigration New Zealand might harm international student numbers. The government is considering a law change that would allow Immigration New Zealand to levy organisations that benefit from its work, such as education providers. At the moment, it can only charge visa applicants. "Currently there are people and groups who do not contribute to the broader costs of the immigration system (because they do not pay an immigration levy; only visa applicants can be charged a levy under the Immigration Act 2009 (the Act)), but who do receive its benefits or create risks that require mitigation," a regulatory impact statement said. The statement said education providers benefited from Immigration NZ services that they did not directly pay for. "Education providers that enrol international students directly financially benefit from the immigration system by tapping into a wider pool of students who are generally charged high fees than domestic students for their education," it said. "Education providers that enrol international students also derive significant financial benefits from access to foreign students and benefit from the ICT, border, and settlement activities funded from the levy." Universities New Zealand said the cost of a levy was likely to be passed on to students and could deter them from enrolling in this country. It said the government needed to be careful the user-pays model did not cost the country more in lost economic activity than it earned Immigration New Zealand. "On average, each international student at a New Zealand university spends around $36,000 to study and this flows through to another $22,000 of broader economic activity for the country for a total of around $58,000 per student annually," it said. "International students have choices as to where they study and cost is a particularly important factor for many of the students from lower income countries." Universities New Zealand said Immigration NZ increased its student visa fees in October 2024 by 90 percent and actual student enrolments for the university sector for 2025 ended up about 10 percent below forecast. "As government considers amending settings around making users pay for public services, we hope that government will also consider the public benefits that flow through to the wider economy from these students," it said. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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