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    rotorua

    Explore " rotorua" with insightful episodes like "Tania Tapsell: Rotorua Mayor on the Government's new emergency housing laws", "Fisher Wang: Rotorua Lakes Councillor on transparency in local democracy", "Tania Tapsell: Rotorua Mayor on National's plan to scrap emergency hotels and reform Kainga Ora", "Chris Bishop: National housing spokesperson on the party's plan to end emergency housing motels in Rotorua" and "Garry de Thierry: Rotorua Intermediate Principal on the fights occurring at a CBD bus stop" from podcasts like ""Early Edition with Kate Hawkesby", "Early Edition with Kate Hawkesby", "Election 2023", "Election 2023" and "Heather du Plessis-Allan Drive"" and more!

    Episodes (20)

    Tania Tapsell: Rotorua Mayor on the Government's new emergency housing laws

    Tania Tapsell: Rotorua Mayor on the Government's new emergency housing laws

    Rotorua's Mayor is feeling upbeat about the Government's new emergency housing laws.  

    Families with children living in emergency housing for more than 12 weeks will go to the top of the social housing waitlist.  

    The verification process, eligibility settings, and obligations will also be strengthened for those entering emergency housing. 

    Tania Tapsell told Mike Hosking that there's a lot of children in these environments, so it's great they're targeting those most in need. 

    She sees hope for a quicker end to what's been a shambles, not only in Rotorua but across the country. 

    LISTEN ABOVE 

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Fisher Wang: Rotorua Lakes Councillor on transparency in local democracy

    Fisher Wang: Rotorua Lakes Councillor on transparency in local democracy

    A Rotorua Councillor says they'll be more transparent with the public, but some meetings need to be confidential. 

    A Chief Ombudsman review of eight councils has found some have effectively closed workshops to the public for invalid reasons. 

    It followed complaints they were undermining local democracy by making decisions away from the public eye. 

    Rotorua Lakes Councillor Fisher Wang told Kate Hawkesby that the community should also expect the council to be fully informed. 

    He says that means sometimes they have to meet and discuss things behind closed doors when the topic is of a confidential nature. 

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    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Tania Tapsell: Rotorua Mayor on National's plan to scrap emergency hotels and reform Kainga Ora

    Tania Tapsell: Rotorua Mayor on National's plan to scrap emergency hotels and reform Kainga Ora

    An end may just be in sight for Rotorua's emergency housing. 

    If elected, the National Party are promising to scrap Rotorua's emergency hotels within 2 years. 

    They also want to reform Kainga Ora, giving the organisation more power to evict unruly tenants. 

    Rotorua mayor Tania Tapsell joined Mike Hosking. 

    LISTEN ABOVE 

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Chris Bishop: National housing spokesperson on the party's plan to end emergency housing motels in Rotorua

    Chris Bishop: National housing spokesperson on the party's plan to end emergency housing motels in Rotorua

    National's Chris Bishop vows the use of emergency social housing motels in Rotorua will come to an end.

    The party will do so through building more social housing and implementing tighter eligibility criteria so people have to use grants in areas they are already living.

    Chris Bishop says emergency housing in Rotorua has become a 'massive' permanent institution, with the Government pumping millions into a short-term solution.

    "The Government has basically washed their hands of it and said- it's all too difficult, we're not going to try and make a difference here. What we're going to do is say- if you've been in a motel for 12 weeks or longer, you have an absolute priority to get out of that motel and get into a social house."

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Garry de Thierry: Rotorua Intermediate Principal on the fights occurring at a CBD bus stop

    Garry de Thierry: Rotorua Intermediate Principal on the fights occurring at a CBD bus stop

    Rotorua Principals are becoming increasingly concerned about fights occurring at a CBD bus stop.

    Police presence has been increased in the area at the request of Mayor Tania Tapsell, but despite this, children still say they feel unsafe.

    Rotorua Intermediate School Principal Garry de Thierry told Heather du Plessis-Allan that he saw seven security people and a policeman at the bus stop earlier this afternoon.

    He said he’s confused, angry, and disappointed that they have gotten to this stage.

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Tania Tapsell: Rotorua mayor believes recent attacks on teenage girls in the region could be gang-related

    Tania Tapsell: Rotorua mayor believes recent attacks on teenage girls in the region could be gang-related

    Rotorua's mayor has expressed concern over recent attacks, and says at least one incident could have been gang-related.

    A 15-year-old girl was assaulted by three other girls outside Rotorua Library in the CBD on Monday afternoon.

    This follows a 13-year-old girl being beaten and left bloodied in an unprovoked attack last week.

    Mayor Tania Tapsell says she's working alongside the police to devise solutions and prevent similar acts of violence.

    "Regardless of this, we should not be having to worry about community safety in our public spaces."

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Tania Tapsell: Rotorua mayor announces plans to reverse decision to sell reserve sites for housing developments

    Tania Tapsell: Rotorua mayor announces plans to reverse decision to sell reserve sites for housing developments

    Rotorua mayor Tania Tapsell has recently announced that she plans on reversing the previous plan to sell 10 reserve sites off for housing development.

    The Rotorua council will meet to discuss this further on Thursday, where the proposal will be discussed further.

    In the leadup to this meeting, Tania Tapsell explained that the aforementioned decision wasn't made with the people of Rotorua in mind and isn't relevant to their concerns anymore.

    "This was one of those really bad decisions in politics where the politicians didn't listen to the people. The proposal was originally developed because of the housing shortage we have, but we received over 600 submissions of which the vast majority were against selling reserves." 

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Brent Whibley: Patchell Group CEO on rising diesel costs setting them back extra $87,000

    Brent Whibley: Patchell Group CEO on rising diesel costs setting them back extra $87,000

    The rising price of diesel is burning a big hole in one company's pocket.

    Yesterday, the cheapest diesel in Tauranga was $2.39 at Gull Speedlane, while 91 petrol was $2.28.

    Rotorua-based Patchell Group, transport trailers and equipment manufacturers, say diesel cost the company an extra $87,000 dollars in the first six months of this year.

    Chief Executive of Brent Whibley says they didn't expect it to have such an impact.

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    Kate Hawkesby: My hero of the week

    Kate Hawkesby: My hero of the week

    I have a hero of the week this week. In the wash up from the local body elections, and although very excited about the country's newest and youngest Mayor 23-year-old Ben Bell of Gore, which is quite an achievement - my bouquet goes to Rotorua's new Mayor Tania Tapsell. 

    Absolute go-getter, smart, considered, hardworking and really passionate about her city. She’s the sort of Mayor you feel happy for, irrespective of any political direction, just because they feel like they’ve earned it. 

    They deserve to be where they are, they’re in it for the right reasons. Not platitudes and empty words, but for the real and right reasons. 

    She’s gone hard all along on emergency housing and it speaks volumes she got voted in because that’s exactly what the people of Rotorua are focused on right now. 

    It was a travesty of former Mayor and Labour stalwart Steve Chadwick to allow emergency housing to get so bad in Rotorua. She’s left an absolute headache and a nightmare for Tapsell to try to undo. 

    But within her first week in the job she’s already fired a salvo at the Government over its demands for landlords to bring houses up to healthy homes standards, while allowing vulnerable families to stay in unhealthy and sometimes unsafe emergency motels. 

    So it’s one rule for us and one for the Government it seems. All this at a huge cost to the taxpayer, as we know. 

    Well sadly the Minister Carmel Sepuloni didn’t know exactly. When asked in an interview what it’s costing the taxpayer, she said “a lot”. Which isn’t that helpful.

    It’s also disturbing she doesn’t know that figure off the top of her head instantly, but that’s what's to be expected from a Government obsessed with spending other people’s money and not caring too much about having any accountability for it.

    The most disturbing thing Sepuloni does is defend the emergency housing. How can anyone standing on what used to be Golden Mile and is now derogatorily referred to as MSD strip, look at that, and defend it? 

    When challenged on the shocking condition and accommodation standards of some of these motels that the Ggovernment’s funding, Sepuloni said basically it’s not their problem. 

    She pushed it back on council and said it’s a council issue, those regulations happen at council level. So let’s get this straight - the Government handed the city of Rotorua this problem, and it is a problem, it’s a big undeniable shambles of a problem, they then made the problem worse over a sustained period of years and then they sit back and go, ‘oh now that’s your problem Rotorua’. 

    They’re going to ‘have conversations’ with Iwi and council apparently. And I’m just so glad for Rotorua that the person they’ll be having those ‘conversations’ with, is Tania Tapsell. 

    I have a feeling it will be a darn sight tougher for the Government than dealing with Steve Chadwick. 

    So I wish Tania well, she’s agitating for action on this – among other things, within her first hundred days in office, and I hope she continues to get the momentum and drive she’s going to need for this battle. 

    Not just on the emergency motels but all the crime associated with them and with getting back Rotorua’s long held reputation as the fantastic tourist attraction it is.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Heather du Plessis-Allan: Rotorua will not recover from this

    Heather du Plessis-Allan: Rotorua will not recover from this

    I’ve suspected something for a while, and now that I’ve watched the Sunday programme on the emergency housing disaster in Roturua, I’m convinced.  Rotorua will not recover from this.  It will not go back to being the city it was. 

    It’s just not possible.  This has gone too far now. 50 motels on or near Fenton Street are housing the homeless. There are about 1100 people in Rotorua in these motels or similar.

    All of these people need houses. The council reckons it’s going to take them 5 years, at least, to build enough homes which means for the next five years those people are still in those motels, trashing them like we saw on Sunday. Causing fights on the street outside. Freaking neighbours out so they sleep with baseball bats by the door.

    So for the next five years they will also keep trashing Rotorua's reputation.  

    Who of us are going to want to go on holiday to Rotorua? If we can afford to go to Hawke's Bay or New Plymouth or Queenstown, why would we go to Rotorua? Which means there will be no other business for those motels, really, other than to keep doing what they’re doing .

    Eventually - if it hasn’t already happened - this will drive families out of town.  Parents will take their kids and find jobs and schools in towns that are safer and have a future. They will sell their houses before the value falls too far. And the people who will be left behind will be those too cash strapped to leave, the emergency accommodation people, the moteliers and the security guards.

    National and the Maori Party are right to call for an inquiry into what’s happened here.  This is as Rawiri Waititi says "a train wreck". We will probably for decades talk about what the 6th Labour Government did to Rotorua.  

    But no inquiry will rescue Rotorua.  The damage is done. 

    The one time jewel in our tourism crown seems destined to end up like Patea: a town that ran out of opportunities. Rotorua is just a bigger version. 

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Kerre Woodham: I'm not OK with the Govt giving out billions for emergency housing and failing to account for it

    Kerre Woodham: I'm not OK with the Govt giving out billions for emergency housing and failing to account for it

    I have now seen the Sunday programme on emergency housing in Rotorua.

    Really, it's what we have known has been happening, but seeing the inside of these motel units, seeing the cramped and squalid conditions in which many of them are living, seeing and hearing from the women who have been tenants in these houses, and who were supposed to be getting the sort of pastoral care from a highly paid welfare organisation.

    It's just driven home so many of the failings of temporary accommodation and motels being used as temporary accommodation.

    It also frightened the daylights out of me now the borders are open, that these motels are also being rented out to overseas tourists. They are in no condition for anybody to be in there, some of them.

    Certainly, some of the ones highlighted by the TVNZ crew, you wouldn't put animals in there, far less vulnerable, high-needs families, far less overseas tourists who have spent a fortune looking for the holiday of a lifetime. They'll certainly get it, but it won't be what they imagined.

    Steve Chadwick, the mayor of Rotorua, says she has gone to the Government and said we want to be able to stop the moteliers from renting out their motels to both tourists and to emergency housing providers, and I think that would be a very, very good start.

    But seeing the exploitation of the vulnerable by opportunists drives home the failings of this system. Seeing the lack of accountability for the money being spent looking after these people, further underscores just how lax and careless this Government is with our money.

    Since 2017, the Government has spent a billion dollars housing people in motels. Great for the moteliers.  Great for those that get on the gravy train of caring for the vulnerable. Where the hell has that money gone?

    I am so sick and tired of this Government refusing to front up, refusing to answer questions. If they do answer on the rare occasion when a blue moon has risen in the sky and a Government minister will come on and talk about these huge programs that they have created to advance the cause of those who are most vulnerable with high, complex needs. If they do answer, it's a Bureau speak which is unintelligible. They don't answer the questions.

    I'm not good with the Government taking billions and billions of dollars, handing it over to all the people have got on the gravy train and then failing to account for it.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Barry Soper: Newstalk ZB Political Editor on a bad week for National and the Greens

    Barry Soper: Newstalk ZB Political Editor on a bad week for National and the Greens

    All eyes will be on Chris Luxon going into his first National Party Conference as party leader.

    However, it hasn't been a good week for the National Party, with doubts from commentators on his leadership.

    And the Party President role is up for grabs, with Peter Goodfellow stepping down.

    It also wasn't a good week for James Shaw.

    Shaw was the only candidate named for their leadership contest, there are questions over whether he will get past the 75 percent threshold to retain his leadership.

    Rotorua locals are standing up to their council.

    More than 3600 submissions have been received on the issue of using motels for emergency housing.

    Newstalk ZB Political Editor Barry Soper joined Heather du Plessis-Allan.

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    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Trevor Newbrook: Restore Rotorua chair says locals have had enough of emergency housing

    Trevor Newbrook: Restore Rotorua chair says locals have had enough of emergency housing

    Emergency housing motels in Rotorua are applying for resource consent to continue as emergency housing providers.

    Currently, motels operating under Ministry contracts are unlawful as the district plan only consents them to having short term visitors.

    If all 12 motels in Rotorua get consent granted, they would be approved to have 1008 occupants in 301 units.  

    Lobby group Restore Rotorua chairman Trevor Newbrook said the number of submissions was "massive" and it tells him the people of Rotorua have had enough.

    Trevor Newbrook joined Kerre Woodham.

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    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Emotional struggles in a performing arts career that worships body image: An interview with Bobby Mihi Howard

    Emotional struggles in a performing arts career that worships body image: An interview with Bobby Mihi Howard

    I loved this chat with well known Rotorua performer Bobby Mihi Howard. I have really enjoyed working with Bobby, and have learned so much from her in the last few months. I am humbled by the honesty and vulnerability Bobby shared during our chat. She is a passionate advocate for all women, with an ability to understand the particular challenges Maori women face in learning about and maintaining their health. 

    Today we talk about her journey and the emotional struggles that a big woman faces in a performing arts career that worships body image. Bobby and I first talked about working together in 2020. It took her a year along with a cancer diagnosis and threat of blood pressure medication for her to step into the space of taking care of herself and her body. Although getting healthy was her primary objective, Bobby has also lost a lot of weight and last week I had a text saying she had lost even more.

    Bobby and I are discussing how we can work together to bring better health to the community - so watch this space!

    I hope you enjoy listening to Bobby's story and it helps you feel inspired on your health journey. 

    Nga mihi ki a koe Bobby mo te wahine toa, me te aroha

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    I highly recommend - Dr Estrelita van Rensburg and Issy Warrack's books. You can find them here:

    Eat Well or Die Slowly - Your Guide to Metabolic Health
    https://www.amazon.com/Eat-Well-Die-S...

    Eat Your Way to Health - Recipes for Success
    https://www.amazon.com/Eat-Your-Way-H...

    Seafood and Vegetarian Recipes
    https://www.amazon.com/Vegetarian-Sea...

    Westend Vortex Training with ThatCuzzyTrexx

    Westend Vortex Training with ThatCuzzyTrexx

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    This podcast is with the bro Trexx, The king of the vortex.

    Terewai is a social media comedian with 85k follower (sept 2020) and a wealth of knowledge around the game, he drops some hilarious takes on some things he has noticed and has a great sense of what is funny in 2020.

    In this episode we take a dive into his backstory and how it all happened to develop, from starboy to his latest and greatest skits.

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