1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:06,320 Speaker 1: The issues is the interviews and the insight. Andrew Dickens 2 00:00:06,400 --> 00:00:10,000 Speaker 1: on early edition with one roof make your property search 3 00:00:10,320 --> 00:00:12,280 Speaker 1: simple new stalks, it'd be. 4 00:00:13,880 --> 00:00:15,640 Speaker 2: As we'll come on to you. Welcome to your sir 5 00:00:15,760 --> 00:00:19,000 Speaker 2: Patrick's day. I'm Andrew Dickinson. Coming up on the program 6 00:00:19,000 --> 00:00:21,520 Speaker 2: in the next sixty minutes. Should there be a national 7 00:00:21,560 --> 00:00:26,239 Speaker 2: reporting system for bullying in schools? And why isn't there 8 00:00:26,239 --> 00:00:28,280 Speaker 2: one yet? We'll have that story for you in five. 9 00:00:28,560 --> 00:00:30,240 Speaker 2: It's a hell of a weekend of sport, the black 10 00:00:30,240 --> 00:00:32,680 Speaker 2: Caps and the Warriors. Saw walkin the f C takes 11 00:00:32,680 --> 00:00:35,800 Speaker 2: your foot off the accelerator and Liam Lawson is slow, 12 00:00:36,120 --> 00:00:39,400 Speaker 2: breaks down and then crashes out in a wet Melbourne 13 00:00:39,640 --> 00:00:43,160 Speaker 2: Andrew Ordison on sport. In ten and jobless benefit numbers 14 00:00:43,200 --> 00:00:46,159 Speaker 2: surged despite the government making it harder the sponge, So 15 00:00:46,240 --> 00:00:48,760 Speaker 2: what's going wrong with their scheme? We'll have that story 16 00:00:48,760 --> 00:00:51,120 Speaker 2: for you just before sex. We'll have correspondence from around 17 00:00:51,120 --> 00:00:52,879 Speaker 2: New Zealand and around the world and you can have 18 00:00:53,000 --> 00:00:56,080 Speaker 2: your say by using the text ninety two. Ninety two 19 00:00:56,160 --> 00:00:58,560 Speaker 2: is the number. A small charge does apply, or you 20 00:00:58,560 --> 00:01:01,560 Speaker 2: can email me Dickens at news zeb dot co dot nz. 21 00:01:01,960 --> 00:01:03,160 Speaker 2: It's seven after five. 22 00:01:04,680 --> 00:01:05,399 Speaker 1: The agenda. 23 00:01:06,200 --> 00:01:09,240 Speaker 2: Monday, the seventeenth of March, at least fifty nine people 24 00:01:09,280 --> 00:01:11,559 Speaker 2: have been killed at more than one hundred and fifty 25 00:01:11,640 --> 00:01:15,360 Speaker 2: five injured in a nightclub fire in North Macedonia. 26 00:01:15,800 --> 00:01:16,000 Speaker 3: Now. 27 00:01:16,000 --> 00:01:19,280 Speaker 2: The blaze broke out around two thirty am local time 28 00:01:19,319 --> 00:01:22,800 Speaker 2: at the Pulse club in Kokani. Fifteen hundred people were 29 00:01:22,800 --> 00:01:25,880 Speaker 2: attending a concert by d NK. They're a popular hip 30 00:01:25,880 --> 00:01:30,080 Speaker 2: hop duo in the country, and there's trouble. Arrest warrants 31 00:01:30,120 --> 00:01:31,560 Speaker 2: have been issued for four people. 32 00:01:31,959 --> 00:01:33,800 Speaker 4: The police have said that they are going to be 33 00:01:33,880 --> 00:01:38,000 Speaker 4: interviewing everyone who had anything to do with the organization 34 00:01:38,360 --> 00:01:42,080 Speaker 4: of the event, and there's already, of course speculation in 35 00:01:42,200 --> 00:01:45,880 Speaker 4: the local media about whether the nightclub was the correct 36 00:01:45,920 --> 00:01:48,800 Speaker 4: sort of facility for this kind of event to be held. 37 00:01:49,800 --> 00:01:52,360 Speaker 2: Meanwhile, at least thirty four people have died in the 38 00:01:52,440 --> 00:01:57,800 Speaker 2: United States, including twelve in Missouri alone. The cause deadly tornadoes. 39 00:01:57,880 --> 00:02:02,640 Speaker 2: They tore through several Southeast and states, flipping, cause thlatetning 40 00:02:02,640 --> 00:02:03,680 Speaker 2: homes and killing people. 41 00:02:03,920 --> 00:02:06,880 Speaker 5: Everything around it here is really bad. The trailer park 42 00:02:06,960 --> 00:02:10,600 Speaker 5: up up the street had fatalities. So I mean, we 43 00:02:10,639 --> 00:02:12,720 Speaker 5: don't have nothing compared to anything like that. I still 44 00:02:12,760 --> 00:02:14,240 Speaker 5: have a home they don't. 45 00:02:14,680 --> 00:02:17,480 Speaker 2: And in Kansas, at least eight people died after more 46 00:02:17,480 --> 00:02:20,080 Speaker 2: than fifty five vehicles were involved in a crash. This 47 00:02:20,240 --> 00:02:22,919 Speaker 2: is due to a dust storm. More than two hundred 48 00:02:22,919 --> 00:02:25,560 Speaker 2: and fifty thousand homes have been without power across seven states, 49 00:02:25,560 --> 00:02:28,000 Speaker 2: including Michigan, Missouri, and Illinois. 50 00:02:28,520 --> 00:02:30,760 Speaker 6: Tornadoes are kind of like snakes. Where there's one, there're 51 00:02:30,800 --> 00:02:32,760 Speaker 6: ten to be many, and in this instance, we had 52 00:02:32,800 --> 00:02:35,880 Speaker 6: two back to back outbreaks of severe weather. In fact, 53 00:02:36,160 --> 00:02:38,919 Speaker 6: earlier this week Thursday into Friday, we had one outbreak 54 00:02:39,160 --> 00:02:43,000 Speaker 6: that brought dozens of tornadoes across Parsville, Mississippi Valley, and 55 00:02:43,040 --> 00:02:46,040 Speaker 6: then of course today, this Saturday outbreak in the Sunday 56 00:02:46,040 --> 00:02:49,359 Speaker 6: morning is still ongoing right now with upwards of two 57 00:02:49,360 --> 00:02:51,440 Speaker 6: dozen tornadoes. So I think by the time all is 58 00:02:51,480 --> 00:02:54,120 Speaker 6: had and done, between two outbreaks, we'll probably have fifty 59 00:02:54,160 --> 00:02:55,440 Speaker 6: to seventy five tornadoes. 60 00:02:56,200 --> 00:02:58,680 Speaker 2: And finally home is a little bit closer for the 61 00:02:58,680 --> 00:03:01,440 Speaker 2: two American astronauts who have been stranded on the International 62 00:03:01,440 --> 00:03:05,600 Speaker 2: Space Station since June, because the rocket with their replacement 63 00:03:05,639 --> 00:03:11,440 Speaker 2: crew has now successfully docked with the station. Butch Wilmore 64 00:03:11,440 --> 00:03:13,480 Speaker 2: and Sunny Williams were only due to be on the 65 00:03:13,520 --> 00:03:16,760 Speaker 2: space station for eight days, but because of technical issues 66 00:03:16,800 --> 00:03:20,040 Speaker 2: with the experimental spacecraft they arrived on by Boeing, they 67 00:03:20,080 --> 00:03:22,200 Speaker 2: have been there more than nine months. 68 00:03:22,680 --> 00:03:25,560 Speaker 6: Houston, thank you for tuning in this early morning. 69 00:03:26,040 --> 00:03:27,800 Speaker 7: Was a wonderful day. 70 00:03:27,880 --> 00:03:31,360 Speaker 6: Great to see our friends arrive, so thank you so much. 71 00:03:31,520 --> 00:03:35,560 Speaker 2: I cannot tell you the immense joy of our crew 72 00:03:35,600 --> 00:03:37,200 Speaker 2: when we looked out the window and we saw the 73 00:03:37,200 --> 00:03:40,720 Speaker 2: space station for the first time. Wow, what a story. 74 00:03:40,760 --> 00:03:43,480 Speaker 2: And the question here is are they miserable or has 75 00:03:43,480 --> 00:03:45,880 Speaker 2: this been an unexpected life highlight? And the other thing 76 00:03:45,920 --> 00:03:47,560 Speaker 2: to note is just how long we managed to keep 77 00:03:47,600 --> 00:03:52,120 Speaker 2: them supplied with food and oxygen to stay alive nine months. 78 00:03:52,120 --> 00:03:53,040 Speaker 2: It's ten after. 79 00:03:52,880 --> 00:03:58,200 Speaker 1: Five on your radio and online on iHeartRadio Early edition 80 00:03:58,520 --> 00:04:01,640 Speaker 1: with Andrew Dickens and One Roof to make your property 81 00:04:01,680 --> 00:04:03,280 Speaker 1: search simple if you. 82 00:04:03,480 --> 00:04:06,720 Speaker 2: Talks it be so. The investment conference finished on Friday 83 00:04:06,720 --> 00:04:09,320 Speaker 2: with a general feeling of optimism about New Zealand and 84 00:04:09,360 --> 00:04:11,800 Speaker 2: its plans. But then again, there is so much work 85 00:04:11,800 --> 00:04:14,120 Speaker 2: that has not been done, and we have so much 86 00:04:14,320 --> 00:04:18,160 Speaker 2: work that needs to be done. There's plenty of work. 87 00:04:18,680 --> 00:04:21,680 Speaker 2: The sticking point has always been who's going to pay 88 00:04:21,720 --> 00:04:24,640 Speaker 2: for it? Now this government's not happy to pay for stuff, 89 00:04:24,920 --> 00:04:26,840 Speaker 2: so much so that they were prepared to risk a 90 00:04:26,880 --> 00:04:29,599 Speaker 2: deeper recession last year by canceling work that needed to 91 00:04:29,640 --> 00:04:32,480 Speaker 2: be done. So with their hands firmly locked in their pocket, 92 00:04:32,760 --> 00:04:37,920 Speaker 2: the government is talking outpps. Public private partnerships Now. PPPs 93 00:04:38,120 --> 00:04:40,960 Speaker 2: aren't a simple and easy thing. To negotiate a contract 94 00:04:41,000 --> 00:04:45,040 Speaker 2: that satisfies both sides is a very great skill. Steven 95 00:04:45,080 --> 00:04:47,400 Speaker 2: Joyce was quite good at it. And the great unknown 96 00:04:47,640 --> 00:04:51,320 Speaker 2: is stuff ups and unseen circumstances, and we've seen that 97 00:04:51,360 --> 00:04:54,719 Speaker 2: with Transmission Gully, which has resulted in long and painful 98 00:04:54,760 --> 00:04:57,960 Speaker 2: remediation and litigation, which is making it a more expensive 99 00:04:58,000 --> 00:05:00,560 Speaker 2: project than if we'd done it more eventually in the 100 00:05:00,560 --> 00:05:04,360 Speaker 2: first place. When you look at PPPs, risk transfer is 101 00:05:04,400 --> 00:05:06,720 Speaker 2: a big thing. And so if we make our private 102 00:05:06,760 --> 00:05:10,800 Speaker 2: partner pay for it all all, then they will want 103 00:05:10,839 --> 00:05:13,279 Speaker 2: no risk, pay for it all, want no risk. That 104 00:05:13,400 --> 00:05:17,040 Speaker 2: exposes the crown. If the private partner wants quicker profits, 105 00:05:17,320 --> 00:05:20,000 Speaker 2: then quality drops. That's not good. But if they are 106 00:05:20,120 --> 00:05:23,880 Speaker 2: long term hold, quality increases that is good. But it's 107 00:05:23,880 --> 00:05:26,400 Speaker 2: a mind reading exercise to see exactly what your private 108 00:05:26,400 --> 00:05:28,520 Speaker 2: partner is thinking, and often they fall a part. And 109 00:05:28,560 --> 00:05:31,479 Speaker 2: then there's the simple maths that governments can source capital 110 00:05:31,760 --> 00:05:35,040 Speaker 2: far cheaper than private entities. And with all that in play, 111 00:05:35,400 --> 00:05:39,360 Speaker 2: you can see why there's only been eight PPP projects 112 00:05:39,400 --> 00:05:43,599 Speaker 2: in the past fifteen years. They are devilishly difficult to 113 00:05:43,640 --> 00:05:46,560 Speaker 2: be win win, but this government will have you believe 114 00:05:46,640 --> 00:05:49,359 Speaker 2: that billions of dollars in the hands of white knights 115 00:05:49,360 --> 00:05:51,640 Speaker 2: are about to come charging over the horizon and into 116 00:05:51,720 --> 00:05:54,599 Speaker 2: our economy lickety split. Frankly, if I see two come 117 00:05:54,600 --> 00:05:58,120 Speaker 2: off inside a decade, I'll be impressed. But if that 118 00:05:58,240 --> 00:06:00,600 Speaker 2: is all we get, that will still leave an infrastructure 119 00:06:00,640 --> 00:06:05,800 Speaker 2: deficit that still desperately needs to be wiped out. Andrew Dickens, Now, 120 00:06:05,800 --> 00:06:08,240 Speaker 2: the headline today is a jobless benefit numbers serve, So 121 00:06:08,320 --> 00:06:10,320 Speaker 2: let's run you through the numbers. There are nearly twenty 122 00:06:10,320 --> 00:06:12,960 Speaker 2: two thousand more kiwis receiving the job Seeker Benefit than 123 00:06:13,000 --> 00:06:15,360 Speaker 2: a year ago. That's a jump of almost twelve percent. 124 00:06:15,560 --> 00:06:18,320 Speaker 2: That's the same as adding the town of Aspurton to 125 00:06:18,400 --> 00:06:21,120 Speaker 2: our beneficiaries. There were more than two hundred and ten 126 00:06:21,160 --> 00:06:24,200 Speaker 2: thousand people on the job Seeker Benefit in February, eleven 127 00:06:24,200 --> 00:06:27,200 Speaker 2: point five percent more than in February twenty twenty four 128 00:06:27,839 --> 00:06:30,320 Speaker 2: of the two hundred and ten thousand, four hundred and 129 00:06:30,360 --> 00:06:33,359 Speaker 2: fifty six receiving the job seeker benefit last month, one 130 00:06:33,440 --> 00:06:37,320 Speaker 2: hundred and nineteen thousand odd we're receiving the work Ready payment, 131 00:06:37,680 --> 00:06:40,760 Speaker 2: and ninety thousand or nearly ninety one thousand we're receiving 132 00:06:40,800 --> 00:06:44,600 Speaker 2: the job seeker which is the Health Condition and Disability payment. 133 00:06:45,200 --> 00:06:47,680 Speaker 2: And slightly better news, a total number of people seeking 134 00:06:47,760 --> 00:06:50,760 Speaker 2: or receiving job seeker both work Ready and Health Condition 135 00:06:50,839 --> 00:06:54,240 Speaker 2: and Disability did actually reduce by one point three percent, 136 00:06:54,279 --> 00:06:56,880 Speaker 2: but that doesn't make the headlines. That's compared to January 137 00:06:56,880 --> 00:06:59,560 Speaker 2: twenty twenty five. Now, at the same time, the government 138 00:06:59,560 --> 00:07:03,880 Speaker 2: has ensued this austerity program excuse me, which has rippled 139 00:07:03,920 --> 00:07:06,400 Speaker 2: out from the public service and government contractors to the 140 00:07:06,400 --> 00:07:09,960 Speaker 2: wider population, and that's kind of nullified the stricter regime. 141 00:07:10,320 --> 00:07:12,640 Speaker 2: And given the possibility of a flat economy due to 142 00:07:12,640 --> 00:07:16,680 Speaker 2: global instability, it doesn't seem that the government's grand promises 143 00:07:16,720 --> 00:07:19,880 Speaker 2: to slash the beneficiaries is going to come true anytime soon. 144 00:07:20,760 --> 00:07:23,120 Speaker 2: The government sold the belief that there were many people 145 00:07:23,240 --> 00:07:26,920 Speaker 2: raughting the system, so making the system harder to navigate. 146 00:07:26,960 --> 00:07:29,840 Speaker 2: And adding penalties will cut the number of peoples who 147 00:07:29,880 --> 00:07:34,080 Speaker 2: are just cruising on your money. The question is how 148 00:07:34,200 --> 00:07:38,840 Speaker 2: many people are in fact bludging and have we overestimated 149 00:07:38,880 --> 00:07:41,640 Speaker 2: that all along for political rhetoric. Well let's get an answer, 150 00:07:41,680 --> 00:07:43,960 Speaker 2: shall we. We're going to talk to an employment specialist 151 00:07:44,120 --> 00:07:49,800 Speaker 2: just before six it's now five point fourteen. There's been 152 00:07:49,840 --> 00:07:53,280 Speaker 2: cause for a national reporting system for bullying in schools 153 00:07:53,600 --> 00:07:57,280 Speaker 2: and my first question is why haven't we already got one. 154 00:07:57,480 --> 00:07:59,360 Speaker 2: Well we'll answer that in just a few moments time 155 00:07:59,640 --> 00:08:05,080 Speaker 2: with a VPTA president, Chris Abercrombie. This is Newstalk ZBB Andrew. 156 00:08:04,760 --> 00:08:08,600 Speaker 1: Dickens on Afili edition with one roof Make your Property 157 00:08:08,640 --> 00:08:11,240 Speaker 1: Search Simple U storg zibby. 158 00:08:11,120 --> 00:08:13,400 Speaker 2: Sixteen past five, Good morning to you, joe Anne. Joanne 159 00:08:13,400 --> 00:08:15,360 Speaker 2: sent me a text. She said, why you're so negative 160 00:08:15,400 --> 00:08:19,160 Speaker 2: this morning? Andrew, give PPPs a chance and this government 161 00:08:19,200 --> 00:08:21,840 Speaker 2: a chance to negotiate them before condemning them as a failure. 162 00:08:21,840 --> 00:08:23,840 Speaker 2: I didn't comdemn them as a failure. What I just 163 00:08:23,920 --> 00:08:27,920 Speaker 2: warned was they're really hard, they're really difficult, and it 164 00:08:28,080 --> 00:08:30,280 Speaker 2: might not be as I said. The white Knight that 165 00:08:30,280 --> 00:08:32,960 Speaker 2: suddenly charges over the horizon and fixes all that problems. 166 00:08:33,240 --> 00:08:35,520 Speaker 2: I just thought I was being rational. Now there's been 167 00:08:35,559 --> 00:08:39,640 Speaker 2: a call for national reporting systems for bullying in schools. 168 00:08:39,720 --> 00:08:43,480 Speaker 2: The Children's the Chief Children's Commissioner wants to see regular 169 00:08:43,600 --> 00:08:46,920 Speaker 2: publicly reported data made available for all to see, but 170 00:08:47,000 --> 00:08:49,320 Speaker 2: the Ministry of Education believes it should be left up 171 00:08:49,360 --> 00:08:53,040 Speaker 2: to the individual schools themselves. That's despite a quarter of 172 00:08:53,080 --> 00:08:56,680 Speaker 2: the Principles nationally saying they see physical harm or property 173 00:08:56,720 --> 00:08:59,559 Speaker 2: damage every day. So I'm joined now by the PPTA 174 00:08:59,679 --> 00:09:02,000 Speaker 2: Press and it's Chris Abercrombie. Thank you for getting up 175 00:09:02,000 --> 00:09:05,560 Speaker 2: for us. Chris, are good, It's all good. Are you 176 00:09:05,600 --> 00:09:07,880 Speaker 2: in favor of a national reporting system? 177 00:09:08,200 --> 00:09:12,120 Speaker 3: I'm not necessarily opposed to. The issue is with two 178 00:09:12,120 --> 00:09:14,280 Speaker 3: and a half thousand south governing schools with two and 179 00:09:14,320 --> 00:09:17,280 Speaker 3: a half thousand different definitions of bullying, So until we've 180 00:09:17,280 --> 00:09:21,320 Speaker 3: saw that out, you couldn't have a national database on 181 00:09:21,360 --> 00:09:22,040 Speaker 3: the issue. 182 00:09:22,559 --> 00:09:24,560 Speaker 2: So if there is to be a national reporting system, 183 00:09:24,559 --> 00:09:27,800 Speaker 2: you want all these schools to actually coordinate the way 184 00:09:27,800 --> 00:09:28,760 Speaker 2: they do things. 185 00:09:29,440 --> 00:09:31,120 Speaker 3: Well, though, we just have to. I mean, I'm sure 186 00:09:31,120 --> 00:09:32,760 Speaker 3: if we've got ten different people in a room, we 187 00:09:32,880 --> 00:09:36,200 Speaker 3: have ten different definitions of what bullying is. And so 188 00:09:36,559 --> 00:09:38,560 Speaker 3: until we get a shared understanding of what it is 189 00:09:38,640 --> 00:09:41,680 Speaker 3: until we all know then that you couldn't have a 190 00:09:41,760 --> 00:09:42,679 Speaker 3: national database. 191 00:09:43,200 --> 00:09:46,280 Speaker 2: Okay, but if we get it sorted, would a national 192 00:09:46,360 --> 00:09:47,360 Speaker 2: database actually help? 193 00:09:48,400 --> 00:09:50,960 Speaker 3: Well, that's the resourcing that came with it. I mean, 194 00:09:51,000 --> 00:09:55,160 Speaker 3: there's all good measuring a problem, understanding an issue, but 195 00:09:55,200 --> 00:09:57,720 Speaker 3: then it's the next thing to support it. There is 196 00:09:57,840 --> 00:10:02,040 Speaker 3: no nationally coordinated or very nationally coordinated programs to support 197 00:10:02,080 --> 00:10:04,880 Speaker 3: schools to deal with bullying. Like you said, the Ministry 198 00:10:05,080 --> 00:10:06,840 Speaker 3: believes it's best the schools to deal with it, and 199 00:10:06,840 --> 00:10:08,680 Speaker 3: we've got two and a half thousand different ways of 200 00:10:08,760 --> 00:10:09,200 Speaker 3: doing that. 201 00:10:09,760 --> 00:10:11,720 Speaker 2: Well, do you believe, because we've got so many different 202 00:10:11,720 --> 00:10:15,280 Speaker 2: ways of reporting on it, that the bullying is actually 203 00:10:15,320 --> 00:10:17,000 Speaker 2: being under reported in New Zealand. 204 00:10:18,440 --> 00:10:20,920 Speaker 3: I don't know to say anything about that, but what 205 00:10:20,960 --> 00:10:22,240 Speaker 3: I do know is that if we do want to 206 00:10:22,320 --> 00:10:24,480 Speaker 3: seriously deal with this, and here has reported it and 207 00:10:24,559 --> 00:10:26,920 Speaker 3: Peace has reported it, then we need to really get 208 00:10:26,960 --> 00:10:29,520 Speaker 3: some national action on this. We do have what's called 209 00:10:29,960 --> 00:10:33,160 Speaker 3: Positive Behavior for Learning program, but not all schools are 210 00:10:33,160 --> 00:10:35,200 Speaker 3: part of it, and the funding has been dropping for 211 00:10:35,240 --> 00:10:36,240 Speaker 3: that for a number of years. 212 00:10:36,360 --> 00:10:38,800 Speaker 2: So you're the president of the PEPTA, would you you 213 00:10:38,840 --> 00:10:41,200 Speaker 2: could possibly knock heads together and say let's come up 214 00:10:41,200 --> 00:10:42,880 Speaker 2: with a standardized way of doing this. 215 00:10:44,360 --> 00:10:46,559 Speaker 3: Well, I appreciate you think I can do all of that, 216 00:10:46,600 --> 00:10:49,360 Speaker 3: but we can. I mean, well you all have a 217 00:10:49,360 --> 00:10:51,839 Speaker 3: discussion about that. It was really really vital. I was 218 00:10:51,880 --> 00:10:53,600 Speaker 3: believed when I was at school, so I know how 219 00:10:53,880 --> 00:10:58,000 Speaker 3: devastating it can be for dealing with these kind of issues. 220 00:10:58,040 --> 00:11:00,440 Speaker 3: So any support that we can do to it, and 221 00:11:00,520 --> 00:11:04,000 Speaker 3: maybe the children's Questions call will kicked out bad idea. 222 00:11:04,280 --> 00:11:06,320 Speaker 2: Good stuff, and I thank you Chris abber crumby the 223 00:11:06,320 --> 00:11:09,640 Speaker 2: PPTA President And this is News Talk zet B. Yeah, 224 00:11:09,800 --> 00:11:14,880 Speaker 2: really tough weekend at Melbourne for Liam Lawson. Interesting people 225 00:11:14,920 --> 00:11:16,720 Speaker 2: think the race was ruined because of the weather. I 226 00:11:16,720 --> 00:11:18,679 Speaker 2: think it made it even more exciting. And it was 227 00:11:18,800 --> 00:11:22,360 Speaker 2: magnificent run at the end to see to see Vistep 228 00:11:22,520 --> 00:11:25,360 Speaker 2: and charging at Lando Norris who has the best car. 229 00:11:25,720 --> 00:11:27,520 Speaker 2: So we'll talk more about this and of course the 230 00:11:27,559 --> 00:11:30,480 Speaker 2: magnificent performances by the black Caps and the Warriors in 231 00:11:30,480 --> 00:11:35,640 Speaker 2: just a few moments time with Andrew Orderson. It's five twenty. 232 00:11:35,360 --> 00:11:37,840 Speaker 1: The news you need this morning and the in depth 233 00:11:37,880 --> 00:11:41,959 Speaker 1: analysis Early edition with Andrew Dickens and one roof make 234 00:11:42,040 --> 00:11:44,760 Speaker 1: your Property search Simple News Talk zib. 235 00:11:44,640 --> 00:11:47,040 Speaker 2: B five twenty two Andrew Ordison, good morning to you. 236 00:11:47,640 --> 00:11:50,720 Speaker 2: Greeting's Andrew Poor Lilliam Lawson a slow in Q one, 237 00:11:50,800 --> 00:11:52,960 Speaker 2: broke down in Q two and then crashed in the race. 238 00:11:53,000 --> 00:11:55,160 Speaker 2: That's a bad weekend, it is, it is. 239 00:11:55,200 --> 00:11:57,800 Speaker 8: It's not the ideal start isn't really for Leam Lawson 240 00:11:58,000 --> 00:12:01,120 Speaker 8: And wow he was getting it together. He's up to thirteenth, 241 00:12:01,200 --> 00:12:04,360 Speaker 8: they're out of pitt Lane. But yeah, when you're crashing 242 00:12:04,360 --> 00:12:07,040 Speaker 8: and then it doesn't doesn't bow well we mixed for stuff. 243 00:12:07,080 --> 00:12:10,320 Speaker 8: I guess for the overall team with the second that's 244 00:12:10,360 --> 00:12:14,720 Speaker 8: not so some sort of redemption is it that Norris winning? 245 00:12:14,920 --> 00:12:17,560 Speaker 8: But yeah, I think Lawson Wson work to do what 246 00:12:17,640 --> 00:12:20,080 Speaker 8: ahead of the Chinese rompre he'd never raced that track 247 00:12:20,160 --> 00:12:23,160 Speaker 8: before the first time in the car. China next weekend, 248 00:12:23,440 --> 00:12:27,360 Speaker 8: good luck. But look McLaren is obviously the team to be. Yeah, yeah, 249 00:12:26,960 --> 00:12:29,720 Speaker 8: it's that. I mean again we saw that the constructors 250 00:12:29,760 --> 00:12:33,240 Speaker 8: last year, how tight it was and how competitive it is, 251 00:12:33,960 --> 00:12:35,640 Speaker 8: and it's an element to it. 252 00:12:35,800 --> 00:12:38,679 Speaker 2: Yeah, going into the next week again now black Caps 253 00:12:38,720 --> 00:12:42,600 Speaker 2: versus Pakistan, Yes, Hagle, the oval looked a picture, didn't it? 254 00:12:42,640 --> 00:12:46,240 Speaker 2: And it was full Yeah, you know, did last long though. Well, look, 255 00:12:46,480 --> 00:12:50,040 Speaker 2: the first two overs from Kyl Jamison were a beautiful thing. 256 00:12:50,200 --> 00:12:53,200 Speaker 8: Oh god, he's just he's so hard to play. Just 257 00:12:53,240 --> 00:12:57,320 Speaker 8: that it's steepling, bounce, et cetera. And really showcasing himself 258 00:12:57,320 --> 00:12:59,679 Speaker 8: with what three for eight his overall figures, I think 259 00:12:59,720 --> 00:13:01,880 Speaker 8: Jacob after getting four for fourteen in the end as well. 260 00:13:01,920 --> 00:13:03,320 Speaker 8: But ye're just coasting. 261 00:13:03,760 --> 00:13:06,120 Speaker 2: There was beautiful victory. People were saying, like churs, Pakistan 262 00:13:06,160 --> 00:13:08,040 Speaker 2: has been playing on terrible pictures, But we've been playing 263 00:13:08,080 --> 00:13:10,920 Speaker 2: on those terrible pictures too in the ACC Champions Trophy, 264 00:13:10,960 --> 00:13:12,040 Speaker 2: and yet we cope better. 265 00:13:12,120 --> 00:13:14,120 Speaker 8: Well, it's about adapting, is it. And you think about 266 00:13:14,120 --> 00:13:16,280 Speaker 8: how many people or how many players top players missing 267 00:13:16,280 --> 00:13:18,560 Speaker 8: from that New Zealand first to Leaven if you like. 268 00:13:19,320 --> 00:13:21,640 Speaker 8: But a great first Juny for Michael Brace were keptaening 269 00:13:21,679 --> 00:13:23,720 Speaker 8: at home for the first time at least kept them overseas, 270 00:13:23,720 --> 00:13:28,199 Speaker 8: I think, and yeah, putting together quite the overall showcase 271 00:13:28,480 --> 00:13:30,040 Speaker 8: and mount Side for getting a few as well. 272 00:13:29,960 --> 00:13:33,680 Speaker 2: Yeah, exactly, Mount smart magic for the Warriors that back. Baby, 273 00:13:33,679 --> 00:13:37,520 Speaker 2: it's our year. Oh that was stunning display, wasn't it really? 274 00:13:37,559 --> 00:13:40,960 Speaker 8: When you think about the how loa things were after 275 00:13:41,000 --> 00:13:44,040 Speaker 8: the opening week in Las Vegas, with the loss of 276 00:13:44,080 --> 00:13:46,640 Speaker 8: the Raiders, things looking grim, but the Warrior is able 277 00:13:46,640 --> 00:13:49,000 Speaker 8: to turn around and convincingly. 278 00:13:49,080 --> 00:13:50,760 Speaker 2: Really, I mean, what was it in the thirty six 279 00:13:50,880 --> 00:13:52,120 Speaker 2: sixteen double score? 280 00:13:52,240 --> 00:13:52,560 Speaker 3: Yeah? 281 00:13:52,679 --> 00:13:53,920 Speaker 2: Yeah, just put them away. 282 00:13:54,320 --> 00:13:57,520 Speaker 8: Yeah, there was a time I think was the first 283 00:13:57,559 --> 00:13:59,400 Speaker 8: time I thought well, maybe it's going to teata here 284 00:13:59,440 --> 00:14:00,880 Speaker 8: and get think into it. 285 00:14:01,400 --> 00:14:03,280 Speaker 2: But yeah they on. 286 00:14:03,320 --> 00:14:07,600 Speaker 8: And RTEs was an imperious form Metcalf showing a bit 287 00:14:07,600 --> 00:14:09,840 Speaker 8: a skill there, good good science. 288 00:14:09,559 --> 00:14:13,599 Speaker 2: Good stuff and may thank you. Five twenty four, The early. 289 00:14:13,480 --> 00:14:17,600 Speaker 1: Edition full show podcast on iHeartRadio powered by News Talk 290 00:14:17,640 --> 00:14:20,040 Speaker 1: TIB News Talks b. 291 00:14:20,160 --> 00:14:22,640 Speaker 2: It is Our five twenty seven. So last week is 292 00:14:22,680 --> 00:14:25,320 Speaker 2: the world puzzled over war and peace and the end 293 00:14:25,360 --> 00:14:28,960 Speaker 2: of globalization and rules based free trade. New Zealand was 294 00:14:29,000 --> 00:14:32,920 Speaker 2: wondering about our free lunch program in schools. David Seymour, 295 00:14:33,280 --> 00:14:35,080 Speaker 2: a long term opponent of the idea, was put in 296 00:14:35,120 --> 00:14:37,520 Speaker 2: charge of it by Prime Minister Christopher Luxan, which may 297 00:14:37,520 --> 00:14:40,480 Speaker 2: have been an ingenious move politically, but this may rebound 298 00:14:40,520 --> 00:14:43,640 Speaker 2: in their faces. The act leader reckons he can centralize it. 299 00:14:43,720 --> 00:14:46,480 Speaker 2: Well he did and cut costs until each lunch costs 300 00:14:46,520 --> 00:14:49,040 Speaker 2: three dollars a child. But then the providers had problems, 301 00:14:49,360 --> 00:14:51,160 Speaker 2: none more so than the bell who went bust, and 302 00:14:51,200 --> 00:14:54,360 Speaker 2: we finished the week bringing in lunches from Australia. But 303 00:14:54,400 --> 00:14:56,440 Speaker 2: there's more sticking in the town that wasn't covered much. 304 00:14:56,760 --> 00:14:59,280 Speaker 2: Longtime listened Matt, good morning to your Matt, and longtime 305 00:14:59,320 --> 00:15:01,520 Speaker 2: opponent of a whole idea was incensed by part of the 306 00:15:01,560 --> 00:15:04,080 Speaker 2: story from last week and sent me an email. It 307 00:15:04,200 --> 00:15:06,000 Speaker 2: was in the story about the Gismond kid who got 308 00:15:06,000 --> 00:15:09,600 Speaker 2: burnt by his school lunch, But what got met was 309 00:15:09,640 --> 00:15:12,400 Speaker 2: the revelation that the school orders three hundred and ten 310 00:15:12,520 --> 00:15:15,320 Speaker 2: lunches each day, but at the moment, one hundred and 311 00:15:15,320 --> 00:15:17,760 Speaker 2: fifty go untouched by the kids who didn't like the 312 00:15:17,800 --> 00:15:21,360 Speaker 2: look of the offering. And then the principal breathlessly reported 313 00:15:21,360 --> 00:15:23,840 Speaker 2: that some have given up on the school lunches and 314 00:15:23,880 --> 00:15:29,240 Speaker 2: they've started bringing their own meals from home, which is 315 00:15:29,320 --> 00:15:31,200 Speaker 2: exactly what the parents should have been doing in the 316 00:15:31,280 --> 00:15:34,440 Speaker 2: first place. And what Matt hated about that is the 317 00:15:34,600 --> 00:15:38,160 Speaker 2: entitlement of those who took the meals but never needed them. 318 00:15:38,640 --> 00:15:41,560 Speaker 2: And I think it's entirely predictable offered a free meal. 319 00:15:41,600 --> 00:15:45,800 Speaker 2: Who says no, except it's not free. You and I 320 00:15:45,960 --> 00:15:49,160 Speaker 2: pay for it. But some parents will argue, oh, that's 321 00:15:49,240 --> 00:15:51,760 Speaker 2: us getting our tax back. We paid our taxes, we 322 00:15:51,840 --> 00:15:55,880 Speaker 2: get a free lunch for Johnny Labor. When they set 323 00:15:55,920 --> 00:15:57,960 Speaker 2: this up, thought that if one child goes hungry, then 324 00:15:58,040 --> 00:16:00,720 Speaker 2: all children should be fed, which is I got opened 325 00:16:00,800 --> 00:16:05,680 Speaker 2: up for exploitation. So how do we fix this? Well, 326 00:16:05,720 --> 00:16:07,840 Speaker 2: obviously the help should be targeted at the kids who 327 00:16:07,840 --> 00:16:11,440 Speaker 2: are hungry, and if a kid comes to school hungry 328 00:16:11,480 --> 00:16:15,120 Speaker 2: and empty handed, then they should be helped. So how 329 00:16:15,120 --> 00:16:17,800 Speaker 2: do we do that? And I wonder, how about a 330 00:16:17,880 --> 00:16:22,360 Speaker 2: lunch club where the children who come in without food 331 00:16:22,760 --> 00:16:26,720 Speaker 2: and are hungry put their hands up and offered a 332 00:16:26,840 --> 00:16:29,280 Speaker 2: chance to make a meal for themselves if they need it. 333 00:16:29,800 --> 00:16:31,680 Speaker 2: And maybe they could sit there together and make a 334 00:16:31,680 --> 00:16:34,680 Speaker 2: toasted sandwich. Maybe they could make a marm mite sandwich 335 00:16:34,680 --> 00:16:37,880 Speaker 2: and make the prime minister happy. Because remember what is 336 00:16:37,920 --> 00:16:41,280 Speaker 2: that Chinese proverb? Give a man a fish, then he 337 00:16:41,320 --> 00:16:44,240 Speaker 2: eats for a day. Teach him how to fish and 338 00:16:44,320 --> 00:16:47,080 Speaker 2: he feeds himself for a lifetime. Let's teach these kids 339 00:16:47,160 --> 00:16:51,480 Speaker 2: how to make their own lunches. Andrew Dicka is twenty nine. 340 00:16:51,480 --> 00:16:53,400 Speaker 2: One of the great stories, of course, is the astronauts 341 00:16:53,400 --> 00:16:55,240 Speaker 2: who will be coming home. They went up there for 342 00:16:55,280 --> 00:16:57,880 Speaker 2: eight days, they've stayed up there for nine months. And 343 00:16:57,920 --> 00:17:00,200 Speaker 2: would you know it, when the spaceship arrived at the 344 00:17:00,200 --> 00:17:03,760 Speaker 2: space station, the guy who compiled in the space up 345 00:17:03,760 --> 00:17:08,280 Speaker 2: from Earth floated into the space station in an alien costume. 346 00:17:08,800 --> 00:17:09,040 Speaker 9: Laugh. 347 00:17:09,520 --> 00:17:12,159 Speaker 2: We're just about cried. But what a good news story. 348 00:17:12,760 --> 00:17:16,960 Speaker 2: Now on the way, we're going to talk to Callen 349 00:17:17,000 --> 00:17:21,360 Speaker 2: Proctor about a great train journey that's coming back. And later, yes, 350 00:17:21,400 --> 00:17:26,040 Speaker 2: we will talk Ukraine and Sakia. Stamer is moving into 351 00:17:26,160 --> 00:17:29,040 Speaker 2: operational phase for his military. It's all to come on 352 00:17:29,080 --> 00:17:31,399 Speaker 2: Early edition by'm Andrew Dickens and for Ryan Bridge. 353 00:17:31,400 --> 00:17:40,960 Speaker 10: This is News Talk MD, the first word on the 354 00:17:41,040 --> 00:17:43,120 Speaker 10: News of the Day, Early Edition. 355 00:17:43,119 --> 00:17:46,760 Speaker 1: With Andrew Dickens and one roof make your property Surgeon 356 00:17:46,960 --> 00:18:01,080 Speaker 1: symbol you talk Zippy, I. 357 00:18:01,119 --> 00:18:04,920 Speaker 2: Made rescums in for Ryan Bridge. Welcome to you of Monday. 358 00:18:05,600 --> 00:18:08,199 Speaker 2: So the big story today is that the job seecret 359 00:18:08,320 --> 00:18:11,919 Speaker 2: numbers have surged despite the government moving to cut the 360 00:18:11,920 --> 00:18:14,760 Speaker 2: beneficiaries over the past year, near the eighteen months of 361 00:18:14,760 --> 00:18:17,159 Speaker 2: their existence. So the question is why isn't it working 362 00:18:17,359 --> 00:18:19,679 Speaker 2: so far. Had a text from Hawaiana Hall on Maina. 363 00:18:20,600 --> 00:18:22,280 Speaker 2: She says, you're damned if you do, and you're damned 364 00:18:22,280 --> 00:18:24,040 Speaker 2: if you don't. New Zealand needs to dig its way 365 00:18:24,080 --> 00:18:26,040 Speaker 2: out of a hole. But if they try something, it 366 00:18:26,080 --> 00:18:28,560 Speaker 2: won't work. If they do nothing, they are useless. And 367 00:18:28,600 --> 00:18:30,680 Speaker 2: that is a fair point. I think the real point 368 00:18:30,720 --> 00:18:34,040 Speaker 2: here is to figure out exactly how many bludges are there. 369 00:18:34,119 --> 00:18:36,640 Speaker 2: We know it's a flat economy, so there are more 370 00:18:36,680 --> 00:18:39,159 Speaker 2: people unemployed. The question is how can we cut out 371 00:18:39,160 --> 00:18:41,560 Speaker 2: the bludges. So we'll talk about this with an employment 372 00:18:41,600 --> 00:18:44,720 Speaker 2: specialist shortly. I don't know if you've noticed it, but 373 00:18:44,760 --> 00:18:46,439 Speaker 2: the world and New Zealand is in a bit of 374 00:18:46,440 --> 00:18:49,880 Speaker 2: a hotspot right now. It doesn't matter why the mercury 375 00:18:49,960 --> 00:18:53,560 Speaker 2: is just rising. The country's being baked. We walk through 376 00:18:53,560 --> 00:18:55,879 Speaker 2: my local park, it looks like hay instead of verdant 377 00:18:55,920 --> 00:18:59,480 Speaker 2: green fields. And we find it reported now that Hamilton 378 00:18:59,560 --> 00:19:01,680 Speaker 2: is in a heat wave the summer, with fifteen days 379 00:19:01,680 --> 00:19:04,120 Speaker 2: where the city never dropped below twenty seven degrees. Now, 380 00:19:04,480 --> 00:19:07,360 Speaker 2: remember twenty seven degrees is what many places have. It's 381 00:19:07,400 --> 00:19:09,879 Speaker 2: just that we aren't used to it, and kind of 382 00:19:09,960 --> 00:19:12,760 Speaker 2: experts believe this sort of scenario could happen in Hamilton 383 00:19:13,000 --> 00:19:17,119 Speaker 2: every three and four summers, so this, in the medium 384 00:19:17,200 --> 00:19:20,359 Speaker 2: term will be the new normal. Many in Hamilton have 385 00:19:20,440 --> 00:19:23,639 Speaker 2: to say loving it twenty seven degrees is not horrific. 386 00:19:24,000 --> 00:19:27,439 Speaker 2: They are basking in a Mediterranean summer. But experts have 387 00:19:27,560 --> 00:19:31,080 Speaker 2: worn that the vulnerable are going to have problems going forward, 388 00:19:31,240 --> 00:19:34,199 Speaker 2: in particular the elderly. So if you are preparing for 389 00:19:34,240 --> 00:19:37,080 Speaker 2: your golden years in Hamilton, you might want to make 390 00:19:37,119 --> 00:19:39,640 Speaker 2: sure your house is nice and shady. You might want 391 00:19:39,680 --> 00:19:42,040 Speaker 2: to make sure it's well ventilated. And when you open 392 00:19:42,080 --> 00:19:44,040 Speaker 2: all the doors you get a breeze, and you might 393 00:19:44,080 --> 00:19:46,679 Speaker 2: want to get some mere conditioning in and then just 394 00:19:46,720 --> 00:19:49,320 Speaker 2: pray we have enough electricity to keep you cool in 395 00:19:49,400 --> 00:19:53,840 Speaker 2: summer and warm in winter. Twenty two minutes to six. 396 00:19:53,840 --> 00:19:56,320 Speaker 2: We're going around the country right now. Callum Proctor joins 397 00:19:56,359 --> 00:19:58,679 Speaker 2: us from Duneed and hello Callum. 398 00:19:58,160 --> 00:19:58,800 Speaker 3: Morning Andrew. 399 00:19:58,880 --> 00:19:59,720 Speaker 2: The Southern is back. 400 00:20:01,320 --> 00:20:03,600 Speaker 11: It is, yeah, well just for a limited time only 401 00:20:03,920 --> 00:20:07,520 Speaker 11: in May. Great Journeys New Zealand, which is KIWI Rail's 402 00:20:07,560 --> 00:20:12,240 Speaker 11: tourism division, is reviving the popular Southerner route and what 403 00:20:12,320 --> 00:20:15,840 Speaker 11: promises to be a bit of nostalgia This journey will 404 00:20:15,880 --> 00:20:19,119 Speaker 11: trace part of the historic rail route between Danita and 405 00:20:19,200 --> 00:20:22,480 Speaker 11: christ Church for four days from May seventeenth. Back in 406 00:20:22,520 --> 00:20:24,080 Speaker 11: the day it went or to Way to inv Cargol, 407 00:20:24,520 --> 00:20:27,320 Speaker 11: but at won't this time. Spokesperson Tracy Goodor says it 408 00:20:27,359 --> 00:20:30,359 Speaker 11: gives travelers a rare opportunity to immerse themselves in the 409 00:20:30,400 --> 00:20:33,880 Speaker 11: area's history and heritage. She says this route was once 410 00:20:33,960 --> 00:20:37,160 Speaker 11: a South Island travels staple before it finished in two 411 00:20:37,200 --> 00:20:37,800 Speaker 11: thousand and two. 412 00:20:38,480 --> 00:20:40,160 Speaker 2: It is very pretty, but I can tell you callum. 413 00:20:40,200 --> 00:20:42,239 Speaker 2: I'm getting texts out of South and saying it is 414 00:20:42,280 --> 00:20:44,600 Speaker 2: not this other if it doesn't come to end cargo 415 00:20:44,720 --> 00:20:46,880 Speaker 2: so that they are not happy. That's a good point. 416 00:20:46,920 --> 00:20:47,960 Speaker 2: How's Dunedin's weather. 417 00:20:50,000 --> 00:20:52,920 Speaker 11: We've got a strong wind watch here, strong northwest gusts 418 00:20:53,000 --> 00:20:56,480 Speaker 11: ninety k's turning southwest this evening. Change in the weather 419 00:20:56,600 --> 00:20:59,720 Speaker 11: later today, occasional rain possibly heavy before that, the high 420 00:20:59,720 --> 00:21:00,640 Speaker 11: today twenty five. 421 00:21:00,920 --> 00:21:02,679 Speaker 2: Thank you so much, Claise here it joins me from 422 00:21:02,720 --> 00:21:05,359 Speaker 2: christ Which tell Claire, good morning. Did you have a 423 00:21:05,359 --> 00:21:06,880 Speaker 2: miracle in Canterbury over the weekend? 424 00:21:07,200 --> 00:21:08,360 Speaker 12: Well, a near miracle. 425 00:21:08,400 --> 00:21:08,560 Speaker 5: Look. 426 00:21:08,600 --> 00:21:10,680 Speaker 12: This is the story of a Salowyn couple who say 427 00:21:10,720 --> 00:21:13,280 Speaker 12: they feel lucky to be alive after a car plowed 428 00:21:13,440 --> 00:21:15,480 Speaker 12: through their bedroom while they slept. 429 00:21:15,760 --> 00:21:16,359 Speaker 9: This was at. 430 00:21:16,320 --> 00:21:19,679 Speaker 12: Roliston on Shillingford Boulevard at about three point forty on 431 00:21:19,760 --> 00:21:23,600 Speaker 12: Saturday morning. Llewellen ventor says he woke to a rumble 432 00:21:23,600 --> 00:21:26,040 Speaker 12: and a bang and then became trapped in a door 433 00:21:26,080 --> 00:21:29,040 Speaker 12: frame while his wife was stuck. This is crazy under 434 00:21:29,080 --> 00:21:32,320 Speaker 12: the car wheel, he says. The bedroom curtain is what 435 00:21:32,400 --> 00:21:34,320 Speaker 12: saved their lives. That stopped some of the debris and 436 00:21:34,440 --> 00:21:37,399 Speaker 12: shrapnel which was flung across the room. The pair managed 437 00:21:37,440 --> 00:21:40,399 Speaker 12: to escape somehow without serious injury. They got cuts and 438 00:21:40,440 --> 00:21:43,719 Speaker 12: bruises during the event. The driver moderately injured. 439 00:21:44,680 --> 00:21:46,920 Speaker 2: Didn't the guy in the house lift the car? 440 00:21:47,440 --> 00:21:50,280 Speaker 12: It's what she says? Yeah that The wife says that 441 00:21:50,640 --> 00:21:52,840 Speaker 12: the husband pulled the car off her and she just 442 00:21:52,840 --> 00:21:55,800 Speaker 12: doesn't know how that happened. So amazing in those situations. 443 00:21:55,840 --> 00:21:57,320 Speaker 2: What a man. What's your weather? 444 00:21:58,520 --> 00:22:02,359 Speaker 12: Fine and gusty here today, northwesterlies developing night this morning. 445 00:22:02,680 --> 00:22:04,160 Speaker 12: The high thirty degrees. 446 00:22:04,440 --> 00:22:06,440 Speaker 2: Max told joins us Now from Wellington, hellm X. 447 00:22:06,680 --> 00:22:07,200 Speaker 3: Good morning. 448 00:22:07,400 --> 00:22:09,199 Speaker 2: So we've got a woman who's defording a trust so 449 00:22:09,320 --> 00:22:11,880 Speaker 2: she can go gambling yeah. 450 00:22:11,920 --> 00:22:15,520 Speaker 13: So this was a potdoer based trust, herupu Afinaki Potidoer. 451 00:22:15,600 --> 00:22:18,840 Speaker 13: It helps the needy children and families. Aisha Warren came 452 00:22:18,880 --> 00:22:21,280 Speaker 13: on board at twenty nineteen to help with the payroll. 453 00:22:21,520 --> 00:22:25,320 Speaker 13: She would take on accounting and online banking services and 454 00:22:25,400 --> 00:22:28,840 Speaker 13: eventually started making fake invoices that led to her stealing 455 00:22:28,880 --> 00:22:31,880 Speaker 13: over a million bucks over two years, some of which, 456 00:22:31,920 --> 00:22:34,880 Speaker 13: as you say, yeah, she would waste on online gambling, 457 00:22:35,520 --> 00:22:38,320 Speaker 13: not an uncommon story in this country. She is forty 458 00:22:38,320 --> 00:22:40,800 Speaker 13: one now. A few days before her trial was due 459 00:22:40,800 --> 00:22:44,000 Speaker 13: to start in Wellington, she came clean admitted the charge 460 00:22:44,000 --> 00:22:47,600 Speaker 13: of obtaining by deception. This trust had been running since 461 00:22:47,600 --> 00:22:51,440 Speaker 13: the seventies. It was a proven, well oiled machine providing welfare, 462 00:22:51,480 --> 00:22:55,760 Speaker 13: health education services to the Potidoer community. In her time there, 463 00:22:56,280 --> 00:22:58,520 Speaker 13: the books lost over a million bucks. 464 00:22:58,560 --> 00:22:58,760 Speaker 2: I e. 465 00:22:59,160 --> 00:23:01,919 Speaker 13: She almost drove it to the ground. She's been reminded 466 00:23:01,960 --> 00:23:03,399 Speaker 13: on bail, sentenced in July. 467 00:23:04,160 --> 00:23:05,400 Speaker 2: And I thank you. And how's your weather? 468 00:23:06,440 --> 00:23:08,639 Speaker 13: Partley? Cloudy, a little bit of drizzle later on, some 469 00:23:08,640 --> 00:23:11,040 Speaker 13: stronger winds this afternoon, early twenties. 470 00:23:11,440 --> 00:23:13,280 Speaker 2: And never reat a man who joined us from Aukanahalla, 471 00:23:13,280 --> 00:23:15,560 Speaker 2: and never good morning. So when you caught it. This 472 00:23:15,600 --> 00:23:17,440 Speaker 2: is where the America's Cup was based. It's a new 473 00:23:17,480 --> 00:23:20,280 Speaker 2: area of Auckland and people who live and work there 474 00:23:20,280 --> 00:23:22,680 Speaker 2: getting a bit worried about how much it costs to park. 475 00:23:23,000 --> 00:23:23,480 Speaker 2: That's right. 476 00:23:23,560 --> 00:23:26,560 Speaker 14: So what's happened is that the businesses in Whin you'd quarter, 477 00:23:26,960 --> 00:23:30,959 Speaker 14: they're concerned about parking charges. So people now they're going 478 00:23:31,000 --> 00:23:34,040 Speaker 14: to have to pay. This is on Sundays, also on 479 00:23:34,119 --> 00:23:36,680 Speaker 14: public holidays, bringing it in line with the rest of 480 00:23:36,720 --> 00:23:40,200 Speaker 14: the CBD. So you'll remember, Andrew, that area was exempted 481 00:23:40,240 --> 00:23:43,959 Speaker 14: from parking charges and changes. This is while the wind 482 00:23:44,000 --> 00:23:46,359 Speaker 14: Crossing Bridge, remember that was being repaired, took months and 483 00:23:46,400 --> 00:23:49,600 Speaker 14: months and you know all those businesses there, they weren't 484 00:23:49,600 --> 00:23:52,800 Speaker 14: getting that foot traffic. Well now, the conservatory owner, Tricky 485 00:23:52,800 --> 00:23:55,480 Speaker 14: Hartley says, this is just going to add another barrier 486 00:23:55,520 --> 00:23:58,160 Speaker 14: to customers wanting to visit. It may stop people going 487 00:23:58,160 --> 00:24:01,400 Speaker 14: out there or make them. She's you know, the local 488 00:24:01,480 --> 00:24:01,879 Speaker 14: and steered. 489 00:24:01,960 --> 00:24:04,560 Speaker 2: Yeah, yeah, absolutely, And that bridge was always supposed to 490 00:24:04,560 --> 00:24:06,720 Speaker 2: be temporary, that's right. That's what happens when you do 491 00:24:06,800 --> 00:24:07,480 Speaker 2: things on the cheap. 492 00:24:07,640 --> 00:24:12,159 Speaker 14: Hou'salkin's weather well cloudy today, isolated afternoon and evening showers 493 00:24:12,160 --> 00:24:13,600 Speaker 14: still warm. Twenty five is the. 494 00:24:13,560 --> 00:24:15,600 Speaker 2: High and I thank you, and at seventeen minutes to six, 495 00:24:15,640 --> 00:24:18,200 Speaker 2: and of course the heat wave in Hamilton and the 496 00:24:18,200 --> 00:24:20,359 Speaker 2: white Kaddo. It's being pointed out in the text of 497 00:24:20,359 --> 00:24:24,040 Speaker 2: course big farming area. So yes, some people are enjoying 498 00:24:24,040 --> 00:24:26,480 Speaker 2: the hot weather, but that doesn't bring showers of rain, 499 00:24:26,520 --> 00:24:30,960 Speaker 2: which is needed for growing grass, for feeding stock, which 500 00:24:31,000 --> 00:24:32,960 Speaker 2: is the backbund of our economy. So that's the thing 501 00:24:33,200 --> 00:24:35,199 Speaker 2: I mean. While someone else is Hamilton was hotter in 502 00:24:35,280 --> 00:24:38,040 Speaker 2: nineteen thirty four, that is true, So this is not 503 00:24:38,119 --> 00:24:41,000 Speaker 2: a new high. That's misinformation. Never said that. What I 504 00:24:41,119 --> 00:24:44,200 Speaker 2: said was they're now saying these sorts of summers three 505 00:24:44,240 --> 00:24:47,560 Speaker 2: and every four. It's hot enough to be a problem. 506 00:24:47,960 --> 00:24:51,879 Speaker 2: It is seventeen minister six terrible, terrible nightclub fire in 507 00:24:52,000 --> 00:24:55,760 Speaker 2: Macedonia and people have been arrested for it. It's the 508 00:24:55,800 --> 00:24:58,560 Speaker 2: old you know, let's let off some fire weeks inside scenario. 509 00:24:58,840 --> 00:25:02,240 Speaker 2: So we'll cover this. And also UK prison sekir Stammer 510 00:25:02,680 --> 00:25:06,560 Speaker 2: saying that they are moving to an operational phase in 511 00:25:06,840 --> 00:25:10,439 Speaker 2: the Ukraine. This is the UK. So Gavin Gray is 512 00:25:10,520 --> 00:25:13,280 Speaker 2: next from the UK on newstalksb. 513 00:25:13,280 --> 00:25:17,439 Speaker 1: International correspondence with Insigneye Insurance Peace of Mind for New 514 00:25:17,520 --> 00:25:20,400 Speaker 1: Zealand business at the time. 515 00:25:20,440 --> 00:25:23,200 Speaker 2: Right now, it's fourteen to nine on Monday, the seventeenth 516 00:25:23,240 --> 00:25:25,160 Speaker 2: of match s Patrick's day and off to the UK. 517 00:25:25,240 --> 00:25:28,439 Speaker 2: We go and Gvin Greg, good morning to you either Andrew. 518 00:25:28,760 --> 00:25:32,840 Speaker 2: Terrible fire in the nightclub in North Macedonia, people killed 519 00:25:32,880 --> 00:25:35,040 Speaker 2: and people arrested for courting it. 520 00:25:36,200 --> 00:25:38,679 Speaker 7: Yes, that's right, I'm afraid really grim death toll on 521 00:25:38,720 --> 00:25:42,440 Speaker 7: the rise. It's at least fifty nine people with ages 522 00:25:42,480 --> 00:25:46,119 Speaker 7: so far between fourteen and twenty four years old in 523 00:25:46,160 --> 00:25:49,960 Speaker 7: a nightclub, one hundred and fifty five injured, eighteen said 524 00:25:50,000 --> 00:25:53,800 Speaker 7: to be critical condition with burns. What we believe happened 525 00:25:53,880 --> 00:25:58,160 Speaker 7: is one thousand, five hundred people packed into and around 526 00:25:58,280 --> 00:26:01,560 Speaker 7: the Pulse nightclub in a town roughly one hundred kilometers 527 00:26:01,600 --> 00:26:05,920 Speaker 7: east of the capital of North Macedonia, towards the sort 528 00:26:05,920 --> 00:26:10,399 Speaker 7: of yeah, towards the border with Bulgaria, and they were 529 00:26:10,440 --> 00:26:13,440 Speaker 7: there to see a hip hop duo called d NK. 530 00:26:14,040 --> 00:26:14,240 Speaker 3: Now. 531 00:26:14,280 --> 00:26:19,040 Speaker 7: The problem is it appears that during the concert there 532 00:26:19,080 --> 00:26:23,120 Speaker 7: was a pyrotechnic device. Sparks from that hit the ceiling, 533 00:26:23,520 --> 00:26:26,879 Speaker 7: and the ceiling was made of highly flammable material and 534 00:26:27,000 --> 00:26:30,919 Speaker 7: it just went up incredibly quickly, say our witnesses, and 535 00:26:30,960 --> 00:26:33,159 Speaker 7: of course there was a stampede for the exit, so 536 00:26:33,200 --> 00:26:36,200 Speaker 7: it really really awful. We believe the government is set 537 00:26:36,240 --> 00:26:39,280 Speaker 7: to declare seven days in national mourning and now demand 538 00:26:39,440 --> 00:26:42,520 Speaker 7: urgent inspections of all nightclubs and restaurants used to host 539 00:26:42,840 --> 00:26:46,240 Speaker 7: large gatherings. And yes, we do believe that four arrest 540 00:26:46,359 --> 00:26:49,360 Speaker 7: warrants have been issued and one person so far has 541 00:26:49,400 --> 00:26:50,040 Speaker 7: been arrested. 542 00:26:50,359 --> 00:26:52,280 Speaker 2: It just reminds me of a story out of America. 543 00:26:52,359 --> 00:26:54,480 Speaker 2: And this is like twenty years ago Ben called Great 544 00:26:54,480 --> 00:26:57,520 Speaker 2: White were playing. They had pyrotechnics and one hundred people died. 545 00:26:57,560 --> 00:26:59,359 Speaker 2: More than one hundred people died. You just don't do 546 00:26:59,400 --> 00:27:02,320 Speaker 2: pirate tics indoors, particularly in the smaller venues. But there 547 00:27:02,320 --> 00:27:05,600 Speaker 2: we go. So apparently the United Kingdom is now into 548 00:27:05,640 --> 00:27:07,800 Speaker 2: an operational phase in Ukraine. 549 00:27:08,880 --> 00:27:11,240 Speaker 7: Yes, so there was that phone call, wasn't there a 550 00:27:11,320 --> 00:27:15,359 Speaker 7: virtual call between hosted by the British Prime Minister, but 551 00:27:15,480 --> 00:27:18,840 Speaker 7: involving New Zealand, Australia, Canada, members of the Commonwealth, but 552 00:27:18,880 --> 00:27:22,800 Speaker 7: also nearly two dozen European countries too, with Japan as 553 00:27:22,840 --> 00:27:25,840 Speaker 7: well apparently set to offer assistance for what's being called 554 00:27:25,840 --> 00:27:26,960 Speaker 7: the Coalition of the Willing. 555 00:27:27,320 --> 00:27:27,960 Speaker 9: What do we mean? 556 00:27:28,119 --> 00:27:30,600 Speaker 7: We mean that if and when there is a cease 557 00:27:30,640 --> 00:27:36,359 Speaker 7: far between Ukraine and Russia, that the Coalition of the 558 00:27:36,400 --> 00:27:39,240 Speaker 7: Willing really does think there needs to be some kind 559 00:27:39,280 --> 00:27:43,040 Speaker 7: of a peacekeeping force on site. America says it's not convinced, 560 00:27:43,240 --> 00:27:46,119 Speaker 7: but plenty of people who simply do not trust Vladimir 561 00:27:46,119 --> 00:27:50,000 Speaker 7: Putin to stay out of Ukraine even after that cease far. 562 00:27:50,200 --> 00:27:53,119 Speaker 7: So we're going to, I think, get more details on Thursday, 563 00:27:53,119 --> 00:27:56,119 Speaker 7: where due to have a meeting of military leaders to 564 00:27:56,200 --> 00:28:00,000 Speaker 7: put what are being called strong and robust plans in place. However, 565 00:28:00,440 --> 00:28:02,520 Speaker 7: I have to be honest Andrew, some of the details 566 00:28:02,520 --> 00:28:05,480 Speaker 7: on this are really sketchy. It all sounds promising, but 567 00:28:05,680 --> 00:28:09,520 Speaker 7: until there is actually this agreement, and then until the 568 00:28:09,560 --> 00:28:12,480 Speaker 7: Coalition has got its act together with exactly what it's 569 00:28:12,520 --> 00:28:14,960 Speaker 7: going to offer, we won't really know how effective it is. 570 00:28:15,080 --> 00:28:17,120 Speaker 2: Kevin Gray out of the UK, I thank you. Apparently 571 00:28:17,160 --> 00:28:20,080 Speaker 2: I just said it's fourteen to nine. I had no idea. 572 00:28:20,119 --> 00:28:22,480 Speaker 2: I said that it is now eleven to six. 573 00:28:23,359 --> 00:28:27,280 Speaker 1: International Correspondence with Ends and Eye Insurance, Peace of mind 574 00:28:27,320 --> 00:28:29,200 Speaker 1: for New Zealand business. 575 00:28:29,800 --> 00:28:32,680 Speaker 2: Well, it seems the government's plan to get people off 576 00:28:32,680 --> 00:28:35,040 Speaker 2: the job seeker benefit hasn't been as successful as they 577 00:28:35,040 --> 00:28:38,120 Speaker 2: would wish. The statistics show there's been a twelve percent 578 00:28:38,200 --> 00:28:40,920 Speaker 2: increase in people getting assistance in the past year. That's 579 00:28:40,960 --> 00:28:44,720 Speaker 2: twenty two thousand more kiwis receiving financial support on the 580 00:28:44,920 --> 00:28:49,200 Speaker 2: job seeker alone. That's the size of levin. So is 581 00:28:49,240 --> 00:28:51,160 Speaker 2: this not working? Why is it not working? And could 582 00:28:51,200 --> 00:28:54,480 Speaker 2: it work? Max Whitehead is an employment relation specialist with 583 00:28:54,520 --> 00:28:56,440 Speaker 2: the white Head Group and joins me this morning. Good 584 00:28:56,440 --> 00:28:58,400 Speaker 2: morning to you, Max, Hey, Andrew. 585 00:28:58,840 --> 00:29:01,520 Speaker 9: Wow, look it's not good these numbers. 586 00:29:01,680 --> 00:29:03,880 Speaker 2: No, the way are the numbers dropping? I mean, they 587 00:29:03,920 --> 00:29:06,400 Speaker 2: put penalties in place, they put more hoops for people 588 00:29:06,400 --> 00:29:08,440 Speaker 2: to jump through. Why did it not work? 589 00:29:09,440 --> 00:29:11,360 Speaker 9: Well, it seems to me that the government has really 590 00:29:11,360 --> 00:29:15,240 Speaker 9: got an impression that this country's made up of larger businesses. 591 00:29:15,720 --> 00:29:18,120 Speaker 9: But I may not have said it so often. Ninety 592 00:29:18,240 --> 00:29:21,120 Speaker 9: seven percent of all the enterprises in New Zealand a 593 00:29:21,440 --> 00:29:24,800 Speaker 9: small businesses. And that's the problem. And they're small. They 594 00:29:24,880 --> 00:29:27,760 Speaker 9: don't have a lot of large money for robotics and 595 00:29:27,840 --> 00:29:30,840 Speaker 9: AI and all these other special things that are really 596 00:29:30,880 --> 00:29:34,040 Speaker 9: making the world hum At the moment, and so we're 597 00:29:34,080 --> 00:29:39,280 Speaker 9: at the rock bottom of our productivity in the whole OECD. 598 00:29:39,480 --> 00:29:44,800 Speaker 9: So what's happening is our companies are inefficiently ineffective and 599 00:29:44,880 --> 00:29:49,040 Speaker 9: we're still our talent is just leaving in droves and 600 00:29:49,400 --> 00:29:51,080 Speaker 9: you know, the brain brain as they call it. But 601 00:29:51,120 --> 00:29:55,080 Speaker 9: it certainly is affecting small business. I know of so 602 00:29:55,200 --> 00:29:58,600 Speaker 9: many businesses now that are going to shut their door 603 00:29:58,720 --> 00:30:03,320 Speaker 9: or have done. And even in our family there's three 604 00:30:03,360 --> 00:30:06,080 Speaker 9: people that we know of who are terrified right now. 605 00:30:06,200 --> 00:30:08,680 Speaker 9: They are about to lose their jobs and they can't 606 00:30:08,720 --> 00:30:12,600 Speaker 9: find anything else. It really is affecting the real people 607 00:30:12,600 --> 00:30:13,320 Speaker 9: of New Zealand. 608 00:30:13,560 --> 00:30:18,480 Speaker 2: Okay, so the productivity, the lack of productivity is affecting us. 609 00:30:18,720 --> 00:30:20,920 Speaker 2: But there's also the belief, and you'll hear it on talkback, 610 00:30:21,360 --> 00:30:23,640 Speaker 2: is that there are so many people enjoying the lifestyle 611 00:30:23,800 --> 00:30:26,200 Speaker 2: of being on a benefit, supplementing it with cash jobs 612 00:30:26,280 --> 00:30:29,800 Speaker 2: or unreported side hustles or crime or whatever. The question 613 00:30:29,920 --> 00:30:32,200 Speaker 2: is how many people are routing us? How many many 614 00:30:32,280 --> 00:30:34,760 Speaker 2: blodges do we have? Is that number in the tens 615 00:30:34,760 --> 00:30:37,320 Speaker 2: of thousands or is it a smaller than we might reckon? 616 00:30:38,320 --> 00:30:40,160 Speaker 9: Well, I believe there might have been a lot of 617 00:30:40,160 --> 00:30:43,320 Speaker 9: that after COVID because they quite enjoyed the staying at home. 618 00:30:43,360 --> 00:30:47,520 Speaker 9: But Lark, but I think it's not as bad as 619 00:30:47,560 --> 00:30:50,720 Speaker 9: it used to be. There are some people out there, 620 00:30:50,720 --> 00:30:53,600 Speaker 9: but I think those numbers are small. But I think 621 00:30:53,640 --> 00:30:55,760 Speaker 9: what is more concerning for New Zealand, and I think 622 00:30:55,800 --> 00:31:00,280 Speaker 9: our productivity shows it is that the talents leaving and drows. Yes, 623 00:31:00,360 --> 00:31:02,640 Speaker 9: some people are staying home, but I think what we 624 00:31:02,720 --> 00:31:05,880 Speaker 9: ought to be seeing Andrew that the answer to this 625 00:31:06,080 --> 00:31:08,800 Speaker 9: is that government should stop. They've done a wonderful job 626 00:31:08,840 --> 00:31:12,160 Speaker 9: blocking leakage of money out of the system, but look 627 00:31:12,200 --> 00:31:14,160 Speaker 9: at what they learn need to do is focus on 628 00:31:14,200 --> 00:31:18,160 Speaker 9: productivity and get incentives in place so the home loans 629 00:31:18,560 --> 00:31:23,160 Speaker 9: are then redirected into business loans, and also maybe put 630 00:31:23,240 --> 00:31:27,320 Speaker 9: some assistance in for helping businesses understand better robotics AI 631 00:31:27,880 --> 00:31:31,600 Speaker 9: get these things are automation going into the workplace is 632 00:31:31,640 --> 00:31:32,200 Speaker 9: a lot better. 633 00:31:32,680 --> 00:31:33,240 Speaker 3: You know, like. 634 00:31:33,280 --> 00:31:36,440 Speaker 9: Farmers, for example, all around the world they are using 635 00:31:37,000 --> 00:31:39,720 Speaker 9: well they don't even drive tractors anymore, they set them 636 00:31:39,720 --> 00:31:42,560 Speaker 9: on their way and the way they go. There's so 637 00:31:42,680 --> 00:31:45,600 Speaker 9: much to be that could be done. Get our productivity 638 00:31:45,680 --> 00:31:48,000 Speaker 9: up into make some more of effective. 639 00:31:47,600 --> 00:31:50,720 Speaker 2: Nation Max, I thank you so much, New storksb And 640 00:31:50,760 --> 00:31:53,560 Speaker 2: here's the thing. Overall numbers of people on the benefit 641 00:31:53,640 --> 00:31:56,200 Speaker 2: did actually drop by one point three percent, so it 642 00:31:56,320 --> 00:32:00,680 Speaker 2: is working, it's only working slowly. And as Max, we've 643 00:32:00,680 --> 00:32:03,040 Speaker 2: got to get our productivity out. It is our seven 644 00:32:03,080 --> 00:32:03,600 Speaker 2: to six. 645 00:32:06,080 --> 00:32:10,080 Speaker 1: Get ahead of the headlines on early edition Andrew Dickens 646 00:32:10,120 --> 00:32:13,960 Speaker 1: and One Room, make your property search simple news talks. 647 00:32:14,000 --> 00:32:15,680 Speaker 2: It'd be I'd like to take a wanning to Roy 648 00:32:15,800 --> 00:32:17,560 Speaker 2: and Roy would like me to mention the fact which 649 00:32:17,600 --> 00:32:19,280 Speaker 2: has not been mentioned so far, that the Chiefs had 650 00:32:19,280 --> 00:32:20,880 Speaker 2: a good win. But of course that was Friday, that 651 00:32:21,000 --> 00:32:23,320 Speaker 2: was years ago, and yes, twenty three, twenty two over 652 00:32:23,360 --> 00:32:25,800 Speaker 2: the Blues, and that is the top team visits the 653 00:32:25,800 --> 00:32:27,480 Speaker 2: bottom team and that was a close and that was 654 00:32:27,520 --> 00:32:29,480 Speaker 2: a rip roaring game, which shows you just how good 655 00:32:29,480 --> 00:32:32,800 Speaker 2: super rugby is. And Mike Hoskin joins you now Warriors 656 00:32:32,800 --> 00:32:35,840 Speaker 2: one and the Warriors one they won, they won well. 657 00:32:36,480 --> 00:32:38,960 Speaker 2: I thought Mount Smart magic because we've seen Mount Smart 658 00:32:39,000 --> 00:32:42,040 Speaker 2: look great for AUCHANDFC. It was just rocking for the 659 00:32:42,080 --> 00:32:44,080 Speaker 2: Warriors and the boys were on fire. 660 00:32:43,960 --> 00:32:46,480 Speaker 15: Absolutely brilliant. But you know, are they on fire next week? 661 00:32:47,680 --> 00:32:48,640 Speaker 15: You know what I found interesting. 662 00:32:48,760 --> 00:32:50,880 Speaker 2: Raymond Travis came out of the show this morning and said, gee, 663 00:32:50,920 --> 00:32:53,360 Speaker 2: that Melvine Grand Prix was terrible, but you and I went, no, 664 00:32:53,440 --> 00:32:55,520 Speaker 2: it wasn't, no, no, romand doesn't have a clue what 665 00:32:55,560 --> 00:32:57,600 Speaker 2: he's talking about. It came down to a fight out 666 00:32:57,640 --> 00:32:59,840 Speaker 2: between the two. B If you can't. 667 00:32:59,640 --> 00:33:02,320 Speaker 15: Enjoy what happened in Melbourne yesterday, then that's not your 668 00:33:02,400 --> 00:33:04,400 Speaker 15: sport now clearly, because that was all there. I mean, 669 00:33:04,440 --> 00:33:06,560 Speaker 15: you know, the skill required just to stay on the 670 00:33:06,600 --> 00:33:10,400 Speaker 15: track was exceptional because a lot didn't. And this guy Antonelli, 671 00:33:10,680 --> 00:33:14,280 Speaker 15: who's this kid at Mercedes that Toto Wolf has been 672 00:33:14,480 --> 00:33:16,840 Speaker 15: had his eye on for years proved himself to come 673 00:33:16,840 --> 00:33:19,200 Speaker 15: from the back of the field to well. He finished fourth, 674 00:33:19,200 --> 00:33:21,479 Speaker 15: but got a penalty so he finished fifth. But I 675 00:33:21,480 --> 00:33:23,800 Speaker 15: mean that was exceptional. The whole the whole weekend was 676 00:33:24,000 --> 00:33:27,240 Speaker 15: phenomenal in terms of skill required and what you saw 677 00:33:27,320 --> 00:33:30,320 Speaker 15: and carnage and unpredictability and you know, getting to Impoor 678 00:33:30,320 --> 00:33:31,720 Speaker 15: oldly a disaster of a week. 679 00:33:32,080 --> 00:33:35,560 Speaker 2: Q two. His car broke down, then crashed. He broke down. 680 00:33:35,680 --> 00:33:38,160 Speaker 15: He had a new wing put on, so in the 681 00:33:38,160 --> 00:33:41,080 Speaker 15: pit lane the car was slow, like the tires were wrong. 682 00:33:41,240 --> 00:33:43,920 Speaker 15: Tires were wrong. The pit strategy was a problem. So 683 00:33:43,960 --> 00:33:45,240 Speaker 15: there was a little bit of him in there. I 684 00:33:45,240 --> 00:33:47,120 Speaker 15: think he wasn't driving car very well and there's a 685 00:33:47,160 --> 00:33:48,520 Speaker 15: little bit of the car in there. So they got 686 00:33:48,720 --> 00:33:51,080 Speaker 15: sprint weekend, by the way, in China this weekend, so 687 00:33:51,120 --> 00:33:53,320 Speaker 15: that means you've got less practice time. You've got to 688 00:33:53,360 --> 00:33:55,360 Speaker 15: go into a sprint race as well as a Grand Prix. 689 00:33:55,440 --> 00:33:57,720 Speaker 15: So he's got his work cut out for what do 690 00:33:57,760 --> 00:33:58,280 Speaker 15: you do today? 691 00:33:58,320 --> 00:33:58,960 Speaker 2: Well, we'll do that. 692 00:33:59,280 --> 00:34:01,840 Speaker 15: We've announced we're going to start an FTA with India, 693 00:34:01,840 --> 00:34:05,320 Speaker 15: so that's exciting. Trade Minister is in India, so he's 694 00:34:05,320 --> 00:34:08,360 Speaker 15: Withers and Winston Peters is in Washington. Yes, here a Rubyo, 695 00:34:08,360 --> 00:34:09,239 Speaker 15: so all took tim as well. 696 00:34:09,320 --> 00:34:11,320 Speaker 2: Yeah great, So good programming. I thank you, and my 697 00:34:11,400 --> 00:34:14,160 Speaker 2: thanks to producer Kensey. My name is Andrew Dickens. See 698 00:34:14,239 --> 00:34:15,680 Speaker 2: you tomorrow May. 699 00:34:19,360 --> 00:34:22,360 Speaker 1: For more from early edition with Ryan Bridge, listen live 700 00:34:22,480 --> 00:34:25,480 Speaker 1: to News Talks. It'd be from five am weekdays, or 701 00:34:25,560 --> 00:34:27,440 Speaker 1: follow the podcast on iHeartRadio.