Latest news with #Māori


NZ Herald
8 hours ago
- Business
- NZ Herald
Moana Pasifika's owners reject misuse of public funding claims amid investigation
The owners of Moana Pasifika have rejected allegations of inappropriate use of public funding and say no taxpayer money has been used to support the Super Rugby Pacific team. It comes after the Government's principal policy adviser on Māori wellbeing and development, Te Puni Kōkiri, announced an independent review into


Scoop
9 hours ago
- Business
- Scoop
Allegations Public Money Used By Whānau Ora For 'Electioneering' To Be Investigated
Te Puni Kōkiri (TPK) has launched an independent review into allegations of inappropriate use of public funding appropriated for Whānau Ora commissioning services. The independent review relates to allegations of funding misuse by two agencies, Te Pou Matakana Limited - otherwise known as the Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency - and Pasifika Futures Limited, and would focus on whether the agencies met their contractual obligations when using the public money. The review followed Māori Development Minister Tama Potaka seeking urgent advice on "electioneering concerns" relating to an advertisement encouraging Māori to sign-up to the Māori electoral roll paid for by Te Pou Matakana Limited released this week, and the revelation Super Rugby franchise Moana Pasifika had also received Whānau Ora funds. Te Puni Kōkiri chief executive and secretary for Māori development Dave Samuels said Te Puni Kōkiri had written to both organisations looking for an explanation. "It is in everyone's best interest that we find out what happened. We must safeguard taxpayers' money which is why I have commissioned a thorough review to get to the bottom of these serious allegations," Samuels said. The reviewer and terms of reference for the review were expected to be announced next week, however, Outcome Agreements signed with the two agencies and whether they met their contractual obligations would be in scope. Te Puni Kōkiri said after an open procurement process Whānau Ora had shifted to a new and transparent funding model with data-driven insights, which would make it easier to measure outcomes and ensure value for money. Commissioning contracts with Te Pou Matakana Limited and Pasifika Futures Limited end on Monday, and four new commissioning agencies begin Whānau Ora contracts the next day on 1 July. Te Pou Matakana Limited and Pasifika Futures Limited have been approached by RNZ for comment.


Newsroom
12 hours ago
- Politics
- Newsroom
The secret to-do list of David Seymour
Monday * Attend my first press conference as Deputy Prime Minister and speak solemnly about international affairs to strengthen the perception I am a world statesman worthy of respect. * Name some worthy academic no one has ever heard of and hold them to ridicule. * RSVP to the birthday party for a child of an influential donor from the Atlas Project. Tuesday * Take credit for the budget cuts to Radio New Zealand to strengthen the perception that Act is a powerful enemy of state-funded left-wing propaganda that attacks Act at every opportunity and gives Labour, the Greens and old scribble-face a free ride. * Increase state funding of Act's comms department. * Confirm that I will be happy to play pin the tail on the donkey at the Atlas Project children's birthday party. Wednesday * Ridicule Labour MP Willie Jackson for his comments that the Regulatory Standards Bill is set up for my mates from powerful corporations who are following their manifest destiny to despoil the countryside in exchange for massive profits which ought not be subject to tax. * Meet mates for drink. * Draw a line in the stand and decline invitation to actually play the donkey that gets a tail pinned to it at the Atlas Project children's birthday party. Thursday * Give Act's comms department the hard word to find someone who has made ridiculing remarks about me so I can whine and complain about it to strengthen the perception I am constantly under attack by the intelligentsia. * Find a way to undermine Luxon. * Find a way to undermine someone who votes Green and hugs trees. * Find a way to undermine somehow who can be described as a Māori fanatic. * Find a way to undermine someone who performs selfless acts for the betterment of society and gives hope to families doing it hard but who is associated with Labour. Friday * Seek private medical treatment for multiple puncture wounds inflicted by rich little brats wielding really sharp pins who seemed to take great pleasure in pinning a donkey's tail all over my body at the Atlas Project children's birthday party. Their parents seemed to enjoy it too. I can still hear their mocking laughter.

1News
13 hours ago
- Entertainment
- 1News
The hardest part of walking the length of NZ? Maybe the loneliness
Walking the full length of New Zealand on the Te Araroa trail was physically gruelling, but there was an unexpected emotional toll too, writes Naomi Arnold. Every time I've spoken about my Te Araroa trail memoir Northbound in the last three months, the interviewer will invariably ask about my loneliness on trail. It was relentless and profound; the book's subtitle is 'Four Seasons of Solitude on Te Araroa', after all. I spent eight and a half months away from home, walking. I ducked off trail for stretches to do freelance work, but I hiked alone nearly every day, often from dawn into the night. In the book, and lately to interviewers, I talk about how I often felt so overwhelmed with loneliness that I would stop on trail and cringe, wrapping my arms around my middle, sometimes hit with a bout of tears. Sometimes I just kept walking like that, too. When I was recounting this at the Auckland Writers Festival in May, the session chair Liv Sisson observed: 'You're doing it right now.' I realised I had hunched over in my seat and was hugging my torso again, reliving the whole sorry mess in front of an audience. Me and my shadow near lake Tekapo. (Source: Supplied) Loneliness, an emotional state, feels physical like that. I felt it in my heart and in my gut. When I did meet people, my loneliness made it difficult to connect with them; I felt out of place and time, awkward and unwanted, and this made me isolate myself further. When I turned up at the Old Convent at Jerusalem, on the Whanganui River, a rongoā Māori wānanga was in session. I was drowned by winter rains and they invited me in to dry off, stay overnight, and join the lessons. But I couldn't go into the room. I heard laughter and yearned to, but panicked at the thought. I could still talk one-on-one. But I could no longer be with people. ADVERTISEMENT When I returned from trail and came home, I found crowds made me panic and eye contact was disturbing and embarrassing. It took me some time to come right, but I haven't forgotten how it made me feel. People alert: Reaching the outskirts of Auckland. (Source: Supplied) This was all new for me. I had never felt lonely before; I liked being by myself and there were always plenty of people around, or at least the dog, if I wanted a change. I came across the organisation Loneliness New Zealand recently, and discovered there are several different related definitions including being physically or socially isolated as I was; and being emotionally isolated, or lonely. The second one is the one most people associate with loneliness: the sadness, heartache, and distress which essentially means you don't have enough meaningful connection with others. It's not about how many friends or relationships you have nor whether you actually are physically alone. You can feel loneliness from being neglected emotionally, from being misunderstood, and if people close to you aren't emotionally satisfying or fulfilling you. But in my case, those feelings were brought on by being simply alone, with no-one to help me process what I was going through. Te Araroa was a psychic shock. It's not just a thru-hike; it's one of the toughest in the world. There was no-one to laugh or cry with after a 10-hour day spent in mud to the thighs, climbing and descending thousands of metres, or rolling ankles over soggy clumps of tussock. Texts from friends were breezy – 'Are you buff yet?'. I couldn't put the breadth and depth of the suffering into a text back. You had to experience it to understand it yourself, and there was no-one aroud to do that. Walking with a knee brace after a ligament tear. (Source: Supplied) We usually associate loneliness with seniors, but research shows only two out of 15 lonely New Zealand adults are aged 65 or over. According to this research, seniors are doing well; this group is actually the least lonely. When the General Social Survey 2018 asked people if they were lonely most or all of the time in the last four weeks, it found that loneliness was in fact highest among people with sexual identities it characterised as 'other' (12 percent). The loneliness Top 10 then included people who were disabled, who were unemployed, who were solo parenting, who had a household income of $30,000 or less, who were Māori, aged between 15 and 24, or 'not in a family nucleus'. Northland was the loneliest region, but it's also a global issue. Drivers across the OECD are migration, urbanisation, individualism, a decrease in the birth rate, people living longer, a rise in digital technology, fragmentation of family, and much more. ADVERTISEMENT There's likely to be sorrow behind the words 'I'm feeling lonely', the organisation says on its website. I found that quite a gentle and lyrical way of putting it. Sorrow, in its quiet and compounding ways, drives withdrawal and disconnection. Grief, shame, disappointment, trauma, heartbreak too big to recognise, let alone put into words – it all makes you want to shield yourself from the further pain of being misunderstood. You feel it if no-one close to you is strong or aware enough to listen to you without defensiveness and judgement, to validate and respond to what you are feeling and trying to say. You then cannot give back to people emotionally either, creating a self-perpetuating loop of shallow relationships and disconnection that only calcifies with time or continual disappointment, and potentially leads to depression. People with depression or other mental illness are then told they must reach out. What happens when they do, but no-one is able to reach in and meet them there? The empty beauty of Canterbury. (Source: Supplied) What to do about this? My own loneliness was solved by getting out of my extraordinary, self-imposed isolation and gradually returning to the social bonds I already had, an awkward and disjointed process though it was. Connecting with relationships old and new might seem like the most obvious and important solution, but I hadn't realised that connection with our own selves through embracing solitude was just as important. And I did have that too on my long walk. When I am on stage and asked about the good moments of Te Araroa, I remember that solitude felt like a gift at times, not a burden. An unexpected burst of happiness would interrupt at the strangest moments, and when they came I leaned into them, appreciating a break from the physical and mental pain. A long encounter with a South Island robin. A laugh with a woman at a bus stop. The perfect song at the perfect moment. Rain on my tent. A kind text from a friend. A sunrise. I cried a lot of tears of sadness during the year I was lonely. But countering them were many tears of joy, too. It was those that helped me get through.


NZ Herald
16 hours ago
- Entertainment
- NZ Herald
Kiwi author Stacy Gregg's cat-inspired dystopian novel attracts UK publisher Simon & Schuster
Jane Phare talks to author Stacy Gregg about her latest book The Last Journey, autocratic governments, power plays, reconnecting with her Māori heritage, but mostly about cats. Stacy Gregg's publishers are marketing her latest – and 39th – novel as suitable for anyone between 8 and 88. With