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    cyclone gabrielle recovery

    Explore " cyclone gabrielle recovery" with insightful episodes like "Kirsten Wise: Napier mayor accepts new data showing the region was unprepared for Cyclone Gabrielle", "Hinewai Ormsby: Hawkes Bay Regional Councillor says the region will need more than extra $10 million to recover after Cyclone Gabrielle", "Darren de Klerk: Silt Recovery Taskforce Lead on Cyclone Gabrielle clean-up slowing as money runs out", "Rehette Stoltz: Gisborne Mayor on the damages in the region six months after Cyclone Gabrielle" and "Grant Robertson: Finance Minister tight-lipped on Hawke's Bay managed retreat details, claims cost-sharing details up to councils" from podcasts like ""Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive", "Early Edition with Kate Hawkesby" and "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive"" and more!

    Episodes (13)

    Kirsten Wise: Napier mayor accepts new data showing the region was unprepared for Cyclone Gabrielle

    Kirsten Wise: Napier mayor accepts new data showing the region was unprepared for Cyclone Gabrielle

    Napier's mayor accepts a report finding the city was hugely unprepared for Cyclone Gabrielle.

    RNZ reports the City Council commissioned an independent review of its response.

    The Resilient Organisations report shows the Council wasn't set up to cope with such an event, and only a few staff had emergency management training.

    Kirsten Wise says it's good to get the feedback - to plan for future events.

    "We certainly acknowledge that we weren't as prepared as we could have been, and that is what we're now focused on- ensuring that we have actually taken on board the recommendations of this report."

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    Hinewai Ormsby: Hawkes Bay Regional Councillor says the region will need more than extra $10 million to recover after Cyclone Gabrielle

    Hinewai Ormsby: Hawkes Bay Regional Councillor says the region will need more than extra $10 million to recover after Cyclone Gabrielle

    The cyclone clean-up in Hawkes Bay has been given a cash injection, but officials say it's not enough.

    The Government's announced another $10 million in funding for the region, on top of the $130 million already given.

    After the cyclone, local officials told the Government it's going to be a $200 million dollar job, at least.

    Hawkes Bay Regional Council's Hinewai Ormsby says there's still a lot of silt to clean up.

    "In terms of getting the job done, completed and getting our economy back to the state it was - being the fruit bowl of New Zealand - we're going to need far more support to get the job finished."

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    Darren de Klerk: Silt Recovery Taskforce Lead on Cyclone Gabrielle clean-up slowing as money runs out

    Darren de Klerk: Silt Recovery Taskforce Lead on Cyclone Gabrielle clean-up slowing as money runs out

    A slow down for the clean-up of silt in the cyclone ravaged Hawke's Bay.

    About $44 million has been committed to managing silt and debris.

    But the Regional Council says the money's run out a month earlier than expected.

    Silt Recovery Taskforce Lead Darren de Klerk says they've explained the issue to the Government.

    "To get us going for the next six months through to the end of summer 2024, we've forecast around $18 million. That should put a significant dent in the silt."

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    Rehette Stoltz: Gisborne Mayor on the damages in the region six months after Cyclone Gabrielle

    Rehette Stoltz: Gisborne Mayor on the damages in the region six months after Cyclone Gabrielle

    Homes are still covered in silt and roads are far from repaired six months on from Cyclone Gabrielle.

    The devastating weather event left Gisborne without power and communication for days, and took the lives of 11 people nationwide.

    Gisborne Mayor Rehette Stoltz told Kate Hawkesby that resilience is as important as recovery, which could cost billions.

    She says we can't just keep on patching up these areas, as more storms expected in the coming years.

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    Grant Robertson: Finance Minister tight-lipped on Hawke's Bay managed retreat details, claims cost-sharing details up to councils

    Grant Robertson: Finance Minister tight-lipped on Hawke's Bay managed retreat details, claims cost-sharing details up to councils

    The Finance Minister's staying tight lipped on how much the Government will fork out for managed retreat in Hawke's Bay.

    The region's councils are being asked to consider and consult on a cost-sharing agreement to buy-out cyclone-stricken homes.

    The package also includes Government contributions for flood protection projects - to protect houses which can still be lived in.

    Minister Grant Robertson says the details on the cost-sharing are for the councils to discuss first.

    "Within the next few days, a week or so I hope, we should be in a position to be able to announce all the details."

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    Sandra Hazlehurst: Hastings Mayor on the Government's buyout of cyclone affected homes

    Sandra Hazlehurst: Hastings Mayor on the Government's buyout of cyclone affected homes

    The mayor of Hastings says locals have faced an awful wait for certainty in the wake of Cyclone Gabrielle.

    The Government revealed today that it'll join councils to fund voluntary buyouts of homes that were hit hard by severe flooding.

    That applies to Category 3 properties —where the risk from future severe weather is too great— estimated to be about 700 properties nationwide.

    There are up to 10-thousand Category 2 properties, which will need flood protection and resilience measures.

    Sandra Hazlehurst told Jack Tame that it's been a very stressful time for the community.

    She says that the option of voluntary buyout is going to reassure people.

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    Jack Tame: The Government should buy out weather affected homes

    Jack Tame: The Government should buy out weather affected homes

    At first blush, the government’s plan to buy out homeowners affected by this year’s extreme weather events makes a lot of sense. It would be the absolute height of stupidity to be rebuilding houses in places that are inevitably gonna’ be hammered again the next time there’s a significant rainfall or storm.

    Everyone is desperate for certainty but the real test of the scheme will come down the line. I want to know how the split is gonna’ work for properties in Category Three, where it doesn’t make sense to rebuild, and homeowners will need to be bought out. The houses in Category Three were consented by local councils, and if you were making an argument over liability, there’s good reason to think local councils bare the majority of it. But in some cases, consenting decisions were made decades ago, and you needn’t look too deeply into local government finances to appreciate that most councils don’t have hundreds of millions of dollars sloshing around.

    I think it’s inevitable much or most of the burden for funding those buyouts will fall to central government and to taxpayers. And keep in mind it’s highly likely that this process will work as a blueprint of sorts for even greater managed retreat in the next few years.

    There are all sorts of other tricky details that will inevitably lead to conflict. How will disputes work for homeowners who don’t agree with their homes new category? How will insurance payouts work? And what about places that weren’t insured in the first place?

    As swift as the process has been so far… the detail will be the hardest bit.

    And I’m reminded of something my Dad said in the years after the Christchurch earthquake. Ultimately, even for those homeowners who could claim EQC payments, those people who didn’t end up financially any worse off than before the quakes, despite the damage to their homes, these kind of events still take something from everyone affected. They rob you of time.

    And for that, there is no recourse.

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    Neil Kirton: Hawke's Bay Regional Councillor wants NEMA to cover some of the Cyclone Gabrielle repair costs

    Neil Kirton: Hawke's Bay Regional Councillor wants NEMA to cover some of the Cyclone Gabrielle repair costs

    Hawke's Bay Regional Council is asking the National Emergency Management to help cover some of the costs from Cyclone Gabrielle.

    The Council is facing an $885 million repair bill, and wants NEMA to chip in $56 million.

    Councillor Neil Kirton says the Council could claim back multiple costs - but they're being challenged.

    "The air travel by helicopter, etc. to service isolated communities, now we've got NEMA saying- look, we're not going to pay for a whole host of those helicopter costs."

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    Kate Hawkesby: Why isn't there any urgency in distributing the relief funds?

    Kate Hawkesby: Why isn't there any urgency in distributing the relief funds?

    So despite more money being announced yesterday for cyclone recovery, there’s still money floating around that hasn’t even been allocated or spent yet.

    Months on from Cyclone Gabrielle, more than 30 million dollars in donations is still unspent. How’s that possible? What is it they’re waiting for? It was reported that, “So far, only 5 million of the 24 million donated to the Red Cross Disaster Fund has been allocated, while none of the 11.7 million raised in a March Lotto draw has been dispersed… as 79 cents of every donated dollar remains unspent, earning interest of 150 thousand dollars, the Red Cross is defending the time taken, saying it's allowed for crucial planning and trials.”

    The Red Cross has been worried about ‘distributing the money too quickly’ apparently. Well no danger of that.

    “So far the Red Cross has received 140 applications for grants of which it’s approved 32,” it was reported. 32. Out of 140. Why is it taking so long when these people are desperate and have been for months? When it would appear abundantly clear where the money needs to go?

    New Zealanders are incredibly generous and always very quick to dig deep for those in strife. People deeply affected by post cyclone scenes, threw money at the cause rapidly, and in huge amounts.

    This country is phenomenal at fundraising and the generosity was abundant. So to then hear that months later, a chunk of it is still just sitting there unspent, accruing interest in a Red Cross account, is disappointing to say the least.

    We regularly hear from people in the Hawkes Bay and Gisborne regions, who say that they’ve not seen a volunteer or had any support. People who’ve been tearing their hair out over the lack of action.

    And I feel for them. It’s the one thing they feared most – that they’d be forgotten about.

    But it doesn’t sit well with us when we see that money’s been raised, yet it’s being held onto for ‘crucial planning and trials’ as the Red Cross says. What does that even mean? What trials? Why is the Red Cross not just getting it done?

    It was reported re the silt for example, that Red Cross has ‘copped criticism for not helping in the cleanup’.. but that they say it’s ‘not that straightforward’.

    Isn’t it?

    Red Cross says they’re ‘enabling people to clean up rather than paying for the trucks and the diggers that are actually lifting the silt..’ They say they’re ‘supporting the families and the communities through either helping to clean out their homes to make them liveable … or providing the equipment and protective gear that helps them do the cleanup themselves.’

    Well that’s all well and good if that actually works and is working, but many of these families we hear from are absolutely exhausted with trying to clean up for themselves, they have jobs and families and livelihoods to try to look after too.

    So it’s a harrowing time for them – and continues to be. I just think for a charitable organisation in the business of providing aid and help – and in raising so much money so quickly from extremely generous New Zealanders, it really behoves them to distribute it efficiently and quickly.

    And it’s not just Red Cross, it’s government money and Lotto money being held up too, by too much bureaucracy and red tape. This is a hugely productive part of our economy, left floundering, so I just don’t know why there isn’t more urgency in getting the money out to people, to get them back on their feet.

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    John Loughlin: Rockit Apples chair among the Hawke's Bay growers calling for more Government assistance after Cyclone Gabrielle

    John Loughlin: Rockit Apples chair among the Hawke's Bay growers calling for more Government assistance after Cyclone Gabrielle

    The Hawke's Bay region is calling out for more Government assistance following Cyclone Gabrielle.

    A report has found the area will have ongoing economic losses of $3.5 billion dollars over the next 10 years if no support arrives immediately.

    Rockit Apples chair John Loughlin says they'd like $750 million dollars to help with clean ups and replanting efforts.

    He says if they don't get help, the results could be disastrous.

    Loughlin says it will cause downsizing and jobs losses, similar to when the Whakatu freezing works closed.

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    John Loughlin: Rockit Apples chair among the Hawke's Bay growers calling for more Government assistance after Cyclone Gabrielle

    John Loughlin: Rockit Apples chair among the Hawke's Bay growers calling for more Government assistance after Cyclone Gabrielle

    The Hawke's Bay region is calling out for more Government assistance following Cyclone Gabrielle.

    A report has found the area will have ongoing economic losses of $3.5 billion dollars over the next 10 years if no support arrives immediately.

    Rockit Apples chair John Loughlin says they'd like $750 million dollars to help with clean ups and replanting efforts.

    He says if they don't get help, the results could be disastrous.

    Loughlin says it will cause downsizing and jobs losses, similar to when the Whakatu freezing works closed.

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    Chloe Johnson: Cyclone Recovery Local Advocate on the Red Cross being slow to spend Cyclone Gabrielle fund

    Chloe Johnson: Cyclone Recovery Local Advocate on the Red Cross being slow to spend Cyclone Gabrielle fund

    Deep frustration from Hawke's Bay locals at the Red Cross's slow spend of its Cyclone Gabrielle fund.

    More than $21 million was raised from donations in the immediate aftermath, but only $4 million has been dished out so far.

    Cyclone Recovery Local Advocate, Chloe Johnson says there's a lot of places the organisation's help is needed, but silt clean up is the most obvious.

    "It's not that we want the Red Cross personnel to go out and clean up, as Secretary General Sarah Stewart has said. We're wanting the funding to go towards professional crews who can get in there with their diggers and excavators."

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    Craig Hobbs: Auckland Council's Director of Regulatory Services says out of home Aucklanders could be waiting awhile

    Craig Hobbs: Auckland Council's Director of Regulatory Services says out of home Aucklanders could be waiting awhile

    Aucklanders that are still out of their homes could be waiting years before they can safely live in them again.

    Hundreds of furious Muriwai residents were left frustrated at a meeting with council staff yesterday, because they couldn't say when they could return.

    The residents have been out for three weeks already.

    Auckland Council director of regulatory services Craig Hobbs told Heather du-Plessis Allan that it could be a matter of months before they can return, or a wait of up to two years to make sure it’s safe.

    Auckland Emergency Management says it's transitioning from response to recovery, as the National State of Emergency ends for the city.

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