Auckland hospice thirds number of patients due to funding shortfalls
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Iwi businesses out performing many of NZ's largest businesses
New data shows iwi and hapu owned businesses have emerged from the economic downturn in good shape and performing well. The ANZ NZ report shows these commercial entities are performing better than many of this country's largest listed companies for the 2023 -24 financial year. The findings come from long running collaborative research including 10 years of data and involving 38 iwi/hapu entities managing treaty settlement assets. This report from ANZ comes just months after a report by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment into Te Ohanga Maori - The Maori Economy- found that it is a significant, and increasingly important contributor to the wider economy of New Zealand. ANZ's Head of Maori Relationships, David Harrison, joins Kathryn to talk about the latest report's findings. To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
KiwiRail shift workers concerned over melatonin ban
KiwiRail has banned the use of melatonin for approximately 2,500 of its workers, citing safety concerns. In a memo to staff last month, the State Owned Enterprise said - effective immediately - any staff that were undertaking safety critical work and were taking melatonin or zopiclone would be stood down temporarily and assessed accordingly. It said this was based off a recommendation from its Chief Medical Officer, who had considered the clinical evidence and what was done in comparable industries. The Rail and Maritime Union says it was not consulted on the changes, and the inability for members - many of whom are shift workers - to use medication to help them get to sleep is a serious problem. It is also seeking more information about the evidence cited - especially for melatonin - which is a naturally produced hormone, and helps people get to sleep - rather than a medication which forces someone to stay asleep. It comes as the Government moves to make melatonin easily accessible. Rail and Maritime Union health and safety organiser Karen Fletcher and University of Auckland Associate Professor Guy Warman discuss. To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Whanganui mayor's advice after achieving lowest rates rise in New Zealand
Andrew Tripe. Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin Stop making excuses and come up with a solid plan - that's the advice from Whanganui mayor after the city achieved the lowest rates rise in the country . Whanganui's average rates increase is 2.2 percent for the year ahead. Mayor Andrew Tripe said the low figure was the envy of the country - which has had an increase of about 8.7 percent on average. He told Morning Report the council "went hard and went early". "Early on in my morality I realised that things were going to get tough... alongside my chief executive, I sent him away to put together a five point plan, he came back with a six point plan to find cost savings and efficiency, so we went hard and went early on this - it's no fluke." Tripe said cutting food scrape collections saved Whanganui 1.1 percent on rates. "The majority of our community - over 60 percent - said they didn't want the food scrapes, they are already doing it anyway. As soon as the government said no I pounced on that and we made a decision to cut the foodscrape collection. "I think that was very very well received by our community actually, contrary to what one person might being saying." He said the council had not only kept up all core services, but had increased infrastructure spending by 11 percent compared with last year. "All we have done is been more efficient with what we've got - doing more with less." Tripe reiterated that cost saving cuts - apart from a minor change to a libraries opening hours - were not made to council facilities. He said his advice to other councils was to stop making excuses and come up with a solid plan. "I've got a saying - no result plus a good excuse equals no result. For me don't make excuses, get on with it and put a very very solid plan together. "We put the six point plan together and that has attributed to our rates rise of 2.2 percent this year," he said. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.