1 00:00:01,200 --> 00:00:05,320 Speaker 1: The issues, the interviews and the inside. Ryan Bridge on 2 00:00:05,600 --> 00:00:09,280 Speaker 1: earlier edition with one roof love where you live, News 3 00:00:09,320 --> 00:00:10,840 Speaker 1: Talk said, be good. 4 00:00:10,720 --> 00:00:13,240 Speaker 2: Morning, six half five. Great to have your company. Let's 5 00:00:13,240 --> 00:00:15,720 Speaker 2: look at the export numbers. Dery still number one, but 6 00:00:15,840 --> 00:00:17,919 Speaker 2: tourism wants it's top spot back. 7 00:00:18,000 --> 00:00:18,760 Speaker 3: Thank you very much. 8 00:00:18,840 --> 00:00:21,479 Speaker 2: Louise Upston on the new tourism numbers this morning. Gavin 9 00:00:21,520 --> 00:00:24,560 Speaker 2: Gray in the UK, there's a growth downgrade for the Brits. 10 00:00:24,680 --> 00:00:26,279 Speaker 3: What's changing with your power bill? 11 00:00:26,840 --> 00:00:31,520 Speaker 2: And we've got bootcamp two point zero for bad kids. 12 00:00:31,560 --> 00:00:33,480 Speaker 3: The agenda Wednesday, the fourth of March. 13 00:00:33,560 --> 00:00:36,519 Speaker 2: Gold States preparing for more attacks this morning, especially the 14 00:00:36,520 --> 00:00:39,239 Speaker 2: Saudis are going after the wheel infrastructure. They had a 15 00:00:39,320 --> 00:00:43,000 Speaker 2: hit to the US embassy and read yesterday. Israel meanwhile 16 00:00:43,040 --> 00:00:45,360 Speaker 2: confirming strikes in Tehran, Beirute. 17 00:00:45,560 --> 00:00:49,800 Speaker 4: There is a state of panic. There's state of complete 18 00:00:50,040 --> 00:00:54,840 Speaker 4: shock about what happened. People have fled in their pajamas. 19 00:00:55,880 --> 00:00:58,560 Speaker 4: They just roll their kids with them and some of 20 00:00:58,600 --> 00:01:02,280 Speaker 4: them have even a broads. There are very serious concerns 21 00:01:02,320 --> 00:01:05,120 Speaker 4: that what's happened this morning might be the start of 22 00:01:05,240 --> 00:01:07,479 Speaker 4: a very large military campaign. 23 00:01:07,520 --> 00:01:10,760 Speaker 2: So after yesterday, Rubio is saying it was the Israelis. 24 00:01:10,800 --> 00:01:13,119 Speaker 2: It was Netanyahu that dragged us into this whole thing, 25 00:01:13,160 --> 00:01:14,840 Speaker 2: and we took the opportunity when we saw it. 26 00:01:14,959 --> 00:01:16,480 Speaker 3: Ntnaho's laughing it off. 27 00:01:16,880 --> 00:01:20,240 Speaker 5: I mean, that's that's ridiculous. Donald Trump is the strongest 28 00:01:20,280 --> 00:01:23,320 Speaker 5: leader in the world. He does what he thinks is 29 00:01:23,400 --> 00:01:26,200 Speaker 5: right for America. He does also what he thinks is 30 00:01:26,280 --> 00:01:30,400 Speaker 5: right for future generations. And frankly, we're partners in that 31 00:01:30,440 --> 00:01:35,000 Speaker 5: effort because I've devoted my life to securing the life 32 00:01:35,000 --> 00:01:38,040 Speaker 5: of the one and only Jewish state. And believe me, 33 00:01:38,080 --> 00:01:39,039 Speaker 5: it's been a struggle. 34 00:01:39,120 --> 00:01:39,640 Speaker 3: To the UK. 35 00:01:39,720 --> 00:01:43,600 Speaker 2: The Brits have had a budget, sorry, a growth forecast downgrade. 36 00:01:43,680 --> 00:01:46,759 Speaker 2: This is after their budgets twenty twenty six forecast down 37 00:01:46,760 --> 00:01:49,559 Speaker 2: to one point one percent, was one point four percent 38 00:01:49,640 --> 00:01:51,280 Speaker 2: last year. Rachel reevespinning it. 39 00:01:52,040 --> 00:01:55,360 Speaker 6: I've always said that growth is for a purpose to 40 00:01:55,440 --> 00:01:59,600 Speaker 6: make working people better off, and I can confirm that 41 00:02:00,000 --> 00:02:03,040 Speaker 6: e P per person is set to grow more than 42 00:02:03,200 --> 00:02:07,000 Speaker 6: was expected in the autumn, with growth of five point 43 00:02:07,080 --> 00:02:11,560 Speaker 6: six percent over the course of this parliament. That compares 44 00:02:11,720 --> 00:02:15,720 Speaker 6: to a fool in GDP per capita in the last parliments. 45 00:02:15,720 --> 00:02:18,400 Speaker 2: That person big thing to come out of bills and 46 00:02:18,480 --> 00:02:20,560 Speaker 2: Hills testifying over Epstein is. 47 00:02:20,520 --> 00:02:21,320 Speaker 3: That they look old. 48 00:02:21,560 --> 00:02:24,440 Speaker 2: Have you seen the photos? I suppose they are aging, 49 00:02:24,440 --> 00:02:26,160 Speaker 2: aren't they. But the other thing to come out was 50 00:02:26,200 --> 00:02:29,200 Speaker 2: the video that I've now released of Hillary storming out. 51 00:02:29,520 --> 00:02:30,000 Speaker 4: I've done with. 52 00:02:30,320 --> 00:02:32,120 Speaker 7: If you guys are doing that, I am done. You 53 00:02:32,160 --> 00:02:34,280 Speaker 7: can hold me in contemp from now until the cows 54 00:02:34,280 --> 00:02:39,520 Speaker 7: come home. This is just typical behavior. Oh for Heaven's 55 00:02:39,600 --> 00:02:42,160 Speaker 7: sad to understand how that's permissible. 56 00:02:43,840 --> 00:02:44,680 Speaker 8: It doesn't matter. 57 00:02:44,800 --> 00:02:47,000 Speaker 3: We are abiding by the same rules. 58 00:02:48,720 --> 00:02:50,400 Speaker 5: Yeah, well, I would like to take a break at 59 00:02:50,400 --> 00:02:50,720 Speaker 5: this norm. 60 00:02:50,919 --> 00:02:53,320 Speaker 3: I'd like to have died Grandma Cranky. 61 00:02:55,400 --> 00:02:58,520 Speaker 1: Get ahead of the headlines on an early edition with 62 00:02:58,760 --> 00:03:02,000 Speaker 1: Ryan Bridge and one roof love where you live. 63 00:03:02,240 --> 00:03:04,680 Speaker 3: News talks'd be nine two the number six. 64 00:03:04,760 --> 00:03:06,239 Speaker 2: Would love to hear from you this morning, as I 65 00:03:06,280 --> 00:03:08,359 Speaker 2: always do. Hey, we've got the Global Dairy Trust. It 66 00:03:08,440 --> 00:03:11,480 Speaker 2: will starve us some good news. Global Dairy Trade auction 67 00:03:11,600 --> 00:03:13,800 Speaker 2: out overnight. It was up five point seven percent. They 68 00:03:14,160 --> 00:03:15,440 Speaker 2: just keeps going up and up and up. 69 00:03:15,440 --> 00:03:16,160 Speaker 3: Doesn't it. This year. 70 00:03:16,320 --> 00:03:18,000 Speaker 2: End of last year it was down, down, down, Now 71 00:03:18,040 --> 00:03:21,040 Speaker 2: it's up up, up, up five point seven percent. The 72 00:03:21,160 --> 00:03:23,519 Speaker 2: previous auction was up three point six one before that 73 00:03:23,760 --> 00:03:26,400 Speaker 2: six point seven. And you look at the things we 74 00:03:26,520 --> 00:03:30,320 Speaker 2: care about, butter up six point one percent and skim 75 00:03:30,440 --> 00:03:32,320 Speaker 2: milk powder this is where we make our money, and 76 00:03:32,400 --> 00:03:34,840 Speaker 2: the milk powders, so whole milk powder up four and 77 00:03:34,880 --> 00:03:38,960 Speaker 2: a half percent, skim milk powder up nine point one percent, 78 00:03:39,560 --> 00:03:42,520 Speaker 2: Mozzarella We celibate of that too, specially in China. Seven 79 00:03:42,600 --> 00:03:44,880 Speaker 2: point nine percent increase for them. So there you go, 80 00:03:45,200 --> 00:03:48,080 Speaker 2: good news for dairy farms. It might be why they 81 00:03:48,160 --> 00:03:51,480 Speaker 2: still maintain and retain the number one spot for our 82 00:03:51,600 --> 00:03:55,080 Speaker 2: export dollars. We'll talk about that with Louise Upston Layer. 83 00:03:55,080 --> 00:03:57,720 Speaker 2: I mean, tourism though, is coming back and they had 84 00:03:57,760 --> 00:03:59,760 Speaker 2: some very pleasing numbers which we'll share with you later 85 00:03:59,800 --> 00:04:04,080 Speaker 2: on the program before six on oil, and we will 86 00:04:04,120 --> 00:04:05,960 Speaker 2: talk a little bit about this this morning. In fact, 87 00:04:06,000 --> 00:04:08,440 Speaker 2: we'll talk about it quite a lot. But this one 88 00:04:08,560 --> 00:04:12,560 Speaker 2: hundred and twenty dollars a barrel number. So JP Morgan 89 00:04:12,760 --> 00:04:16,039 Speaker 2: had come out yesterday and said that if a worst 90 00:04:16,120 --> 00:04:18,360 Speaker 2: case scenario, if things go from bad to worse, and 91 00:04:18,400 --> 00:04:19,919 Speaker 2: bad to worse and bad to worse, we could hit 92 00:04:19,920 --> 00:04:23,480 Speaker 2: one hundred and twenty dollars a barrel. How many barrels 93 00:04:23,480 --> 00:04:26,760 Speaker 2: are physically disrupted, how long the disruption lasts. These are 94 00:04:26,760 --> 00:04:30,800 Speaker 2: all important things, of course, whether a credible replacement supply, 95 00:04:31,200 --> 00:04:34,240 Speaker 2: like you know, when the release your strategic reserves, how 96 00:04:34,400 --> 00:04:38,280 Speaker 2: quickly you can actually mobilize them and avoid the whole 97 00:04:38,360 --> 00:04:41,720 Speaker 2: thing clamping up and the log jam continuing. That's all 98 00:04:41,800 --> 00:04:44,600 Speaker 2: quite important. But this is from their report. They say, 99 00:04:44,680 --> 00:04:47,880 Speaker 2: we estimate that if the conflict lasts more than three weeks, 100 00:04:48,000 --> 00:04:51,480 Speaker 2: golf oil producers would exhaust storage capacity and would be 101 00:04:51,560 --> 00:04:54,960 Speaker 2: forced to shut production. Under this scenario, brink crew trade 102 00:04:55,560 --> 00:04:58,080 Speaker 2: could hit one hundred to one hundred and twenty dollars 103 00:04:58,240 --> 00:05:01,120 Speaker 2: a barrel. Now that is a day zone for us, 104 00:05:01,320 --> 00:05:04,440 Speaker 2: according to Kelly Echold from Westpac, I'll tell you why 105 00:05:04,640 --> 00:05:08,880 Speaker 2: in a few moments, Bryan Bridge, eleven minutes after five 106 00:05:09,760 --> 00:05:11,520 Speaker 2: lots more to come. We'll talk about the boot camps. 107 00:05:11,640 --> 00:05:13,839 Speaker 2: And it's not the same. So we had a boot 108 00:05:13,880 --> 00:05:17,360 Speaker 2: camp that didn't do very well, although there were some 109 00:05:18,120 --> 00:05:20,520 Speaker 2: if you look in the sort of fine print, there 110 00:05:20,560 --> 00:05:23,360 Speaker 2: were some good things that came out of it, but 111 00:05:23,520 --> 00:05:25,480 Speaker 2: you kind of had to look hard to see them. 112 00:05:26,440 --> 00:05:29,240 Speaker 2: But we're doing a two point zero version of boot camp. 113 00:05:29,279 --> 00:05:32,279 Speaker 2: It's not the same one. They heard the minister yesterday 114 00:05:32,400 --> 00:05:35,320 Speaker 2: saying we've had learnings. So we'll talk about those next 115 00:05:35,440 --> 00:05:37,560 Speaker 2: News TALKSB on. 116 00:05:37,640 --> 00:05:41,720 Speaker 1: Your radio and online on Iheard Radio Early edition with 117 00:05:42,000 --> 00:05:45,279 Speaker 1: Ryan Bridge and one roof Love where you Live. 118 00:05:45,600 --> 00:05:47,800 Speaker 3: News Talks EDB fourteen after five. 119 00:05:48,200 --> 00:05:50,839 Speaker 2: So we're getting changes to our power bills that could 120 00:05:51,000 --> 00:05:52,680 Speaker 2: mean we get money back in our pocket. 121 00:05:52,760 --> 00:05:54,800 Speaker 3: This is what they're telling us. Do we believe this? 122 00:05:55,320 --> 00:05:58,120 Speaker 2: So the Electricity Authority is updating the rules and this 123 00:05:58,279 --> 00:06:00,320 Speaker 2: is what we're going to get. You can look forward 124 00:06:00,360 --> 00:06:04,120 Speaker 2: to on your power bill, a clearer bill plane language, 125 00:06:04,600 --> 00:06:07,080 Speaker 2: and a requirement that you're on the best plan for 126 00:06:07,279 --> 00:06:10,720 Speaker 2: your usage. Now is this really going to save us money? 127 00:06:10,960 --> 00:06:12,560 Speaker 2: And if they tell you that you're not on the 128 00:06:12,640 --> 00:06:15,200 Speaker 2: best plan for your usage, are you going to change? 129 00:06:15,360 --> 00:06:17,440 Speaker 2: Because half the problem is us, isn't it. We look 130 00:06:17,480 --> 00:06:19,040 Speaker 2: at our bills and we go on, it's expense. I've 131 00:06:19,040 --> 00:06:22,039 Speaker 2: got to hate them, and then we pay it they reckon. 132 00:06:22,120 --> 00:06:24,039 Speaker 2: There will also be a cap on how far back 133 00:06:24,200 --> 00:06:26,960 Speaker 2: energy companies can hit you with backdated charges, so we'll 134 00:06:26,960 --> 00:06:30,200 Speaker 2: find out more about that with the Utilities Disputes Commission 135 00:06:30,240 --> 00:06:33,800 Speaker 2: a few minutes rich first, though, Boot camps are back 136 00:06:33,839 --> 00:06:36,520 Speaker 2: for young offenders. This is the second pilot, starting Monday, 137 00:06:36,600 --> 00:06:40,880 Speaker 2: ten teenagers. Last time, six of the ten participants reoffended 138 00:06:41,040 --> 00:06:44,040 Speaker 2: while they were on the program. One of them died 139 00:06:44,040 --> 00:06:45,320 Speaker 2: in a car accident sadly. 140 00:06:45,400 --> 00:06:45,520 Speaker 5: Now. 141 00:06:45,560 --> 00:06:50,360 Speaker 2: A review acknowledged the extent of the reoffending, but also 142 00:06:50,760 --> 00:06:54,000 Speaker 2: noted the seriousness and the frequency of the offending had 143 00:06:54,160 --> 00:06:58,360 Speaker 2: reduced for those in the pilot when compared to a 144 00:06:58,480 --> 00:07:02,000 Speaker 2: control group. Aaron Hendry is use development worker and Kickback 145 00:07:02,120 --> 00:07:02,920 Speaker 2: co founder. 146 00:07:02,720 --> 00:07:06,600 Speaker 3: With me this morning. Hey Aaron, heykub good thank you. 147 00:07:06,760 --> 00:07:06,800 Speaker 5: So. 148 00:07:07,240 --> 00:07:09,760 Speaker 2: Look, it's not perfect, but none of these things are is, 149 00:07:09,960 --> 00:07:11,840 Speaker 2: but it sounds like there might be a glimmer of 150 00:07:11,920 --> 00:07:12,360 Speaker 2: hope there. 151 00:07:14,400 --> 00:07:17,320 Speaker 9: I think if we stood back and look at the 152 00:07:17,320 --> 00:07:19,880 Speaker 9: evidence and the expertise around, you know, what really works 153 00:07:19,920 --> 00:07:22,120 Speaker 9: for kids, we wouldn't be We wouldn't be going ahead 154 00:07:22,160 --> 00:07:24,600 Speaker 9: with another book can Basically, essentially, what we're trying to 155 00:07:24,640 --> 00:07:28,240 Speaker 9: do is make an already flawed child prison system work. 156 00:07:28,640 --> 00:07:31,440 Speaker 9: We're putting millions of dollars into this project for a 157 00:07:31,520 --> 00:07:33,440 Speaker 9: very small cohort of young people, and at the same 158 00:07:33,480 --> 00:07:36,520 Speaker 9: time we're pulling the resources out of the community that 159 00:07:36,600 --> 00:07:39,240 Speaker 9: are essentially needed to prevent children from needed to come 160 00:07:39,280 --> 00:07:41,280 Speaker 9: into the justice system in the first place. 161 00:07:41,720 --> 00:07:46,320 Speaker 3: Where are the resources being pulled from these millions? Look, look, 162 00:07:46,360 --> 00:07:47,239 Speaker 3: what we're. 163 00:07:47,040 --> 00:07:48,920 Speaker 9: Seeing, at least in the community is a real lack 164 00:07:49,600 --> 00:07:52,400 Speaker 9: of access to housing. There's a real lack of you know, 165 00:07:52,920 --> 00:07:57,840 Speaker 9: intensive support for FINO for children and the kickback the kids. 166 00:07:57,880 --> 00:07:59,560 Speaker 9: That kickback serves that these are the kids that are 167 00:07:59,560 --> 00:08:02,000 Speaker 9: on their pat way to the justice system, right These 168 00:08:02,000 --> 00:08:04,400 Speaker 9: are children that are experiencing homelessness, that are sleeping rough. 169 00:08:05,080 --> 00:08:07,559 Speaker 9: You know, the youngest we've met is nine. It's starting 170 00:08:07,560 --> 00:08:10,160 Speaker 9: to steal to survive, starting to get into really dangerous 171 00:08:10,160 --> 00:08:13,440 Speaker 9: situations and doing some pretty dangerous stuff. Right. There is 172 00:08:13,520 --> 00:08:16,040 Speaker 9: not the resources in the community right now to adequately 173 00:08:16,120 --> 00:08:19,080 Speaker 9: respond to those children with the speed that they need 174 00:08:19,200 --> 00:08:22,160 Speaker 9: that response. And that has gotten a lot harder over 175 00:08:22,200 --> 00:08:24,920 Speaker 9: the last couple of years. And so what our government 176 00:08:24,960 --> 00:08:27,280 Speaker 9: should be doing and have been advised to do, is 177 00:08:27,360 --> 00:08:30,320 Speaker 9: start to really invest in our community so we can 178 00:08:30,440 --> 00:08:33,719 Speaker 9: do that early intervention really really well. And where is 179 00:08:33,760 --> 00:08:35,599 Speaker 9: that where there is a need for you know, a 180 00:08:35,720 --> 00:08:38,320 Speaker 9: far more intensive reference support that that is done within 181 00:08:38,440 --> 00:08:42,000 Speaker 9: local communities, within final environments, and we provide the support 182 00:08:42,000 --> 00:08:45,080 Speaker 9: both the finer and to Thomitiki and Tongite. Right. One 183 00:08:45,080 --> 00:08:46,959 Speaker 9: of the concerning things I think we have around the 184 00:08:47,280 --> 00:08:49,720 Speaker 9: extend of the second boot camp, right, So we've extended 185 00:08:49,760 --> 00:08:51,800 Speaker 9: it now, so three months to six months. That's going 186 00:08:51,880 --> 00:08:54,120 Speaker 9: to be resource intensive. But what we know is where 187 00:08:54,520 --> 00:08:57,079 Speaker 9: the boot camp has failed is in the transitions. The 188 00:08:57,120 --> 00:08:59,600 Speaker 9: government knew this coming into it, where they struggle as 189 00:08:59,600 --> 00:09:02,640 Speaker 9: the trends of now that's that's the resources around housing support, 190 00:09:03,400 --> 00:09:06,600 Speaker 9: addressing poverty, addressing what's going with a final home, access 191 00:09:06,640 --> 00:09:08,960 Speaker 9: to disability support, finance for all those sort of things. 192 00:09:09,440 --> 00:09:12,839 Speaker 9: That investment supports early intervention and it supports transition, but 193 00:09:13,200 --> 00:09:16,800 Speaker 9: we aren't seeing a real significant increase in the resources 194 00:09:16,880 --> 00:09:19,240 Speaker 9: to go into that transition. We always know that in 195 00:09:19,320 --> 00:09:21,480 Speaker 9: a real secure environment like the you know, like the 196 00:09:21,520 --> 00:09:23,760 Speaker 9: book camps, like other child prison models, you're going to 197 00:09:23,800 --> 00:09:25,800 Speaker 9: reduce the fanisture in that short period of time while 198 00:09:25,840 --> 00:09:27,120 Speaker 9: they're in in the care. 199 00:09:27,720 --> 00:09:30,360 Speaker 2: You mentioned a nine year old that you're looking after 200 00:09:30,520 --> 00:09:34,199 Speaker 2: that's stealing to survive or about to start stealing to survive. 201 00:09:34,920 --> 00:09:37,240 Speaker 2: What's where's why is where is the nine. 202 00:09:37,120 --> 00:09:40,760 Speaker 3: Year old living? And why aren't they getting money? Yeah? 203 00:09:40,920 --> 00:09:43,400 Speaker 9: Yeah, so we meet. We met a range of children, right, 204 00:09:43,480 --> 00:09:46,400 Speaker 9: so we had you know, almost twenty percent of the 205 00:09:46,480 --> 00:09:48,640 Speaker 9: children that we met over of the young people we 206 00:09:48,800 --> 00:09:53,400 Speaker 9: serve over last year, we're under fifteen, right, So these 207 00:09:53,400 --> 00:09:57,000 Speaker 9: are kids that they're FINO often really struggling in poverty, 208 00:09:57,440 --> 00:10:00,880 Speaker 9: housing and security, homelessness themselves. You know, many of the 209 00:10:00,960 --> 00:10:03,160 Speaker 9: children that we see coming through our doors that are 210 00:10:03,200 --> 00:10:08,040 Speaker 9: in those situations have some form of disability, whether form 211 00:10:08,080 --> 00:10:09,920 Speaker 9: of disability. 212 00:10:10,040 --> 00:10:12,079 Speaker 2: Yeah, this nine year old, I mean, it's quite a 213 00:10:12,120 --> 00:10:15,439 Speaker 2: shocking example. You've raised this a nine year old. So 214 00:10:15,800 --> 00:10:17,640 Speaker 2: where's mum and dad? Where are they living? 215 00:10:18,520 --> 00:10:18,720 Speaker 8: Yeah? 216 00:10:18,800 --> 00:10:21,720 Speaker 9: Yeah, Look, I won't speak about like very specific circumstances, 217 00:10:21,760 --> 00:10:23,520 Speaker 9: but what I'll say in terms of the context of 218 00:10:23,559 --> 00:10:26,160 Speaker 9: the children that we about the context of the children 219 00:10:26,240 --> 00:10:29,200 Speaker 9: that we meet, including you know, kids as young as 220 00:10:29,280 --> 00:10:33,160 Speaker 9: there is that they're often the FINO themselves are in poverty, 221 00:10:33,200 --> 00:10:36,560 Speaker 9: they're often experiencing homesode, and they're not getting and many 222 00:10:37,040 --> 00:10:41,480 Speaker 9: many times the that we're talking and the families that 223 00:10:41,559 --> 00:10:44,440 Speaker 9: we're talking about really love their kids and are trying 224 00:10:44,440 --> 00:10:46,199 Speaker 9: to do the best they can to support them. But 225 00:10:46,240 --> 00:10:49,920 Speaker 9: there's real complex stuff happening for those children and the 226 00:10:50,080 --> 00:10:52,760 Speaker 9: support for the FINO just is not there. And know 227 00:10:52,840 --> 00:10:55,160 Speaker 9: I said before, you know that that concern around faced 228 00:10:55,280 --> 00:10:57,839 Speaker 9: and other disabilities. Some parents are just really struggling to 229 00:10:57,920 --> 00:11:00,319 Speaker 9: understand how can we support our child of all the 230 00:11:00,320 --> 00:11:03,079 Speaker 9: stuff that they've gone through and they don't have the 231 00:11:03,240 --> 00:11:05,680 Speaker 9: adequate support something from the children we're talking about I'm 232 00:11:05,679 --> 00:11:08,720 Speaker 9: going right now. Yeah, a looking like needing life long 233 00:11:08,840 --> 00:11:11,120 Speaker 9: support and those resources aren't in placeful. 234 00:11:11,200 --> 00:11:13,000 Speaker 2: Okay, I've got to live there, Aaron, We've got to run. 235 00:11:13,040 --> 00:11:16,480 Speaker 2: Aaron Hendry, youth development worker, Kickback co founder Times nineteen 236 00:11:16,480 --> 00:11:19,120 Speaker 2: after five views and views. 237 00:11:18,920 --> 00:11:22,240 Speaker 1: You trust to start your day. It's early edition with 238 00:11:22,520 --> 00:11:25,480 Speaker 1: Ryan Bridge and one roof Love where you. 239 00:11:25,559 --> 00:11:27,520 Speaker 3: Live News talks that'd be twenty one. 240 00:11:27,520 --> 00:11:30,400 Speaker 2: As I mentioned earlier, The Electricity Authority updating the rules 241 00:11:30,440 --> 00:11:33,800 Speaker 2: for your power bill, clearer bills, playing language, a requirement 242 00:11:33,880 --> 00:11:36,280 Speaker 2: that you're on the best plan for your usage. Neil 243 00:11:36,320 --> 00:11:39,640 Speaker 2: mallon is Utilities Disputes Commissioner and CEO of ME this morning, now, 244 00:11:39,679 --> 00:11:43,640 Speaker 2: good morning, Good morning Ryan. Will these make any difference 245 00:11:43,679 --> 00:11:45,280 Speaker 2: to what we're actually paying on the bills? 246 00:11:46,600 --> 00:11:46,720 Speaker 5: Oh? 247 00:11:46,800 --> 00:11:49,160 Speaker 10: Look, I think they will long term because what they 248 00:11:49,200 --> 00:11:51,600 Speaker 10: will do is reduce some of the inefficiencies in the system. 249 00:11:51,920 --> 00:11:55,120 Speaker 10: I think particularly for consumers who get caught up in 250 00:11:55,360 --> 00:11:58,079 Speaker 10: errors with their metering or their billing and face a 251 00:11:58,160 --> 00:12:00,760 Speaker 10: large back or they'll make a real difference of those consumers. 252 00:12:01,160 --> 00:12:01,760 Speaker 3: Is it going to be. 253 00:12:01,840 --> 00:12:04,080 Speaker 2: Easier for us to understand? I mean, they're pretty easy 254 00:12:04,120 --> 00:12:05,280 Speaker 2: to understand, now, aren't they. 255 00:12:06,440 --> 00:12:06,600 Speaker 8: Oh? 256 00:12:06,679 --> 00:12:09,880 Speaker 10: Look, I think I think there's difficulties between different retailers 257 00:12:10,000 --> 00:12:13,439 Speaker 10: understanding plans. We get a lot of complaints about, you know, 258 00:12:13,960 --> 00:12:16,840 Speaker 10: not understanding usage, not understanding how much people are paying 259 00:12:16,880 --> 00:12:19,480 Speaker 10: for their bills. I think having some standard things will 260 00:12:19,520 --> 00:12:22,640 Speaker 10: really help consumers. It will also promote switching, It will 261 00:12:22,679 --> 00:12:24,800 Speaker 10: reduce the complaints that come through to us when we 262 00:12:24,880 --> 00:12:26,439 Speaker 10: deal with them, and it we make it easier for 263 00:12:26,559 --> 00:12:28,679 Speaker 10: us to sort of resolve those complaints with consumers as well. 264 00:12:28,720 --> 00:12:30,040 Speaker 10: So I think they're positive changes. 265 00:12:30,240 --> 00:12:31,959 Speaker 2: Neil, there's going to be a cap on how far 266 00:12:32,200 --> 00:12:35,200 Speaker 2: back the energy companies can hit you with a backdated charge. 267 00:12:35,640 --> 00:12:37,280 Speaker 3: Do you deal with a lot of disputes about that. 268 00:12:37,360 --> 00:12:38,440 Speaker 3: How far back are we talking? 269 00:12:39,600 --> 00:12:42,560 Speaker 10: Look, we're talking about it being reduced to six months, 270 00:12:42,600 --> 00:12:45,400 Speaker 10: which is a really big shift. We at utilities of 271 00:12:45,440 --> 00:12:48,880 Speaker 10: Sheets deal with around about fourteen thousand complaints a year, 272 00:12:49,360 --> 00:12:52,319 Speaker 10: and last year we dealt with abound one hundred and 273 00:12:52,320 --> 00:12:56,319 Speaker 10: two hundred complaints dealing with really specific backdoor issues. And 274 00:12:56,360 --> 00:12:58,360 Speaker 10: it doesn't sound like a lot, but the average bill 275 00:12:58,440 --> 00:13:00,959 Speaker 10: for a consumer was around two thy and three hundred. 276 00:13:01,000 --> 00:13:04,040 Speaker 10: That's for a household. For a business it was eighteen thousand, 277 00:13:04,600 --> 00:13:07,679 Speaker 10: and you're dealing with in some cases, people getting hit 278 00:13:07,760 --> 00:13:09,720 Speaker 10: with that bill in one go and it being deducted 279 00:13:09,720 --> 00:13:12,800 Speaker 10: from their account. So it's a significant change that we've 280 00:13:12,840 --> 00:13:15,480 Speaker 10: been pushing for for a couple of years. And to 281 00:13:15,559 --> 00:13:18,080 Speaker 10: be fair, some retailers have been really positive and worked 282 00:13:18,120 --> 00:13:21,520 Speaker 10: with utility spits to reduce the amount voluntarily that they 283 00:13:21,520 --> 00:13:24,720 Speaker 10: would go back, but we were seeing differences between retailers. 284 00:13:24,800 --> 00:13:27,360 Speaker 10: We were seeing consumers getting really impacted by this. So 285 00:13:27,440 --> 00:13:29,760 Speaker 10: we've been pushing for that change for the last couple 286 00:13:29,760 --> 00:13:32,040 Speaker 10: of years and it's positive to see it any right, Neil. 287 00:13:31,920 --> 00:13:34,920 Speaker 2: Appreciate your time this morning, Neil mallon Utilities Disputes, Commissioner 288 00:13:34,920 --> 00:13:38,200 Speaker 2: and CEO. Time is twenty three after five, Ray and bread. 289 00:13:38,280 --> 00:13:40,600 Speaker 2: We'll wait and see where comes through when we get seaper. 290 00:13:40,840 --> 00:13:43,520 Speaker 3: Does anyone think we're going to get cheaper power bills now? 291 00:13:43,840 --> 00:13:44,199 Speaker 3: The UK. 292 00:13:44,360 --> 00:13:46,440 Speaker 2: We're had to Gavin Gray after News at five point thirty. 293 00:13:46,559 --> 00:13:49,559 Speaker 2: UK government is considering sending a Royal Navy warship to 294 00:13:49,640 --> 00:13:54,000 Speaker 2: the Mediterranean because you know, Cyprus, their RAF based there 295 00:13:54,120 --> 00:13:57,120 Speaker 2: was hat well, there was a couple of issues, one 296 00:13:57,200 --> 00:14:00,480 Speaker 2: of which was the runway at the air base was 297 00:14:00,800 --> 00:14:03,400 Speaker 2: hit by a couple of drones. The damage was only mine, 298 00:14:03,679 --> 00:14:05,880 Speaker 2: but the government so they're going to look at sending 299 00:14:06,080 --> 00:14:10,199 Speaker 2: HMS Duncan, a type forty five destroyer. Apparently the government 300 00:14:10,280 --> 00:14:13,120 Speaker 2: there wants more back up because of what's happening in 301 00:14:13,200 --> 00:14:14,959 Speaker 2: the Middle East, so they're going to send them some 302 00:14:15,080 --> 00:14:17,880 Speaker 2: air defense at least that's what they're considering. Gavin will 303 00:14:17,960 --> 00:14:19,520 Speaker 2: update us after five point thirty. 304 00:14:19,680 --> 00:14:21,560 Speaker 3: News Talk, said b the early. 305 00:14:21,520 --> 00:14:25,440 Speaker 1: Edition full show podcast on iHeartRadio how It By News 306 00:14:25,480 --> 00:14:26,160 Speaker 1: Talks AB. 307 00:14:27,840 --> 00:14:30,320 Speaker 2: Five twenty six, News Talk said be most common question 308 00:14:30,400 --> 00:14:32,920 Speaker 2: I'm getting asked at the moment is with the Middle East, 309 00:14:33,080 --> 00:14:35,320 Speaker 2: when does it start to affect us here in New Zealand. 310 00:14:35,320 --> 00:14:37,920 Speaker 2: And I'm talking about the economy. If it's still going 311 00:14:38,000 --> 00:14:41,560 Speaker 2: in two or three weeks, then lots of countries, including ours, 312 00:14:41,560 --> 00:14:43,840 Speaker 2: will start to feel the pinch. This is not my words, 313 00:14:43,920 --> 00:14:46,160 Speaker 2: This is the economist. So we have about two or 314 00:14:46,240 --> 00:14:48,600 Speaker 2: three weeks of stocks of oil in New Zealand. I 315 00:14:48,680 --> 00:14:49,880 Speaker 2: know it's not a hell of a lot, is it, 316 00:14:50,160 --> 00:14:52,600 Speaker 2: Although that's more than what we did have. This government 317 00:14:52,640 --> 00:14:56,720 Speaker 2: actually changed the requirement Brent Crewe futures topped out at 318 00:14:56,760 --> 00:14:59,520 Speaker 2: eighty five dollars a barrel overnight. That's the highest it's 319 00:14:59,560 --> 00:15:03,040 Speaker 2: been in a eighteen months, JP Morgan. As I mentioned earlier, 320 00:15:03,080 --> 00:15:05,320 Speaker 2: they say we could hit one hundred and twenty. The 321 00:15:05,440 --> 00:15:08,880 Speaker 2: Iraqis are now pulling back on their production refineries in 322 00:15:09,000 --> 00:15:13,000 Speaker 2: Asia overnight, they, according to Bloomberg, thinking about cutting production 323 00:15:13,160 --> 00:15:17,000 Speaker 2: by twenty or thirty percent because of the humus log jam. 324 00:15:17,640 --> 00:15:20,640 Speaker 2: You've got tankers backed up, unable to port all this 325 00:15:20,720 --> 00:15:24,520 Speaker 2: stuff means delays. And our economy runs on oil and gas, 326 00:15:24,960 --> 00:15:27,880 Speaker 2: it runs on fossil fuels. It's a common misconception that 327 00:15:28,000 --> 00:15:30,840 Speaker 2: we don't in New Zealand because we generate so much 328 00:15:31,160 --> 00:15:35,760 Speaker 2: renewable energy. But that's generation eighty percent all thereabouts. People 329 00:15:35,800 --> 00:15:38,960 Speaker 2: often think that's the same as use. In fact, about 330 00:15:39,120 --> 00:15:42,160 Speaker 2: sixty percent of our energy supply of what we use 331 00:15:43,240 --> 00:15:45,760 Speaker 2: day to day, comes from fossil fuels. Did you know 332 00:15:45,880 --> 00:15:49,200 Speaker 2: that Kelly Echold from Westpac told me yesterday it's likely 333 00:15:49,320 --> 00:15:51,960 Speaker 2: petrol prices will go up for US. As of yesterday, 334 00:15:52,120 --> 00:15:55,080 Speaker 2: he estimated eight cents a liter at the pump within 335 00:15:55,120 --> 00:15:57,680 Speaker 2: a week or two. Now, oil prices at the moment 336 00:15:57,760 --> 00:16:02,280 Speaker 2: are actually, by comparison to recent is quite low. But 337 00:16:02,960 --> 00:16:05,320 Speaker 2: your one hundred to one hundred and twenty dollars barrel 338 00:16:05,400 --> 00:16:09,080 Speaker 2: forecast is key. That's the point at which our inflation 339 00:16:09,360 --> 00:16:12,080 Speaker 2: forecast would have to change, he reckons. And we know 340 00:16:12,240 --> 00:16:14,600 Speaker 2: what that means, don't we price is going up. Think 341 00:16:14,640 --> 00:16:16,320 Speaker 2: about how much of what you do in a day 342 00:16:16,400 --> 00:16:21,120 Speaker 2: driving a car, using a plastic pen, powering your business trucks, 343 00:16:21,160 --> 00:16:25,280 Speaker 2: getting food to supermarkets. Think about how much that uses oil. 344 00:16:25,720 --> 00:16:29,000 Speaker 2: We're dependent. And once you get those prices going up, 345 00:16:29,080 --> 00:16:31,440 Speaker 2: you get general prices going up, and then you get 346 00:16:31,480 --> 00:16:34,160 Speaker 2: the reserve banks back up, and then what is this 347 00:16:34,320 --> 00:16:38,040 Speaker 2: the event the hell that our recovery dies on. Please 348 00:16:38,080 --> 00:16:41,680 Speaker 2: don't don't don't freak out. Don't freak out. We're not 349 00:16:41,800 --> 00:16:44,520 Speaker 2: there yet. We're not there yet. National certainly will be 350 00:16:44,600 --> 00:16:49,000 Speaker 2: hoping not. But the ingredients are there, and the language 351 00:16:49,040 --> 00:16:50,720 Speaker 2: you have to say coming out of the White House 352 00:16:50,760 --> 00:16:53,480 Speaker 2: over the last twenty four hours. Isn't exactly helping to 353 00:16:53,560 --> 00:16:54,360 Speaker 2: allay our fears? 354 00:16:54,440 --> 00:16:54,560 Speaker 9: Is it? 355 00:16:55,400 --> 00:16:58,920 Speaker 2: R twenty nine minutes after five nine to ninety two 356 00:16:59,120 --> 00:17:00,760 Speaker 2: is the number to text? A lot of people tax 357 00:17:00,880 --> 00:17:04,480 Speaker 2: thinking about our social worker on the program earlier. Not 358 00:17:04,680 --> 00:17:07,840 Speaker 2: many of you happy with him, someone says at the 359 00:17:08,000 --> 00:17:08,960 Speaker 2: start of World War three. 360 00:17:10,040 --> 00:17:12,000 Speaker 3: Oh, look, that's a question beyond my pay grade. 361 00:17:12,960 --> 00:17:16,359 Speaker 2: I hope not. I really hope not. It wouldn't be 362 00:17:16,359 --> 00:17:17,879 Speaker 2: a good It wouldn't be a good thing, would it. 363 00:17:18,480 --> 00:17:20,320 Speaker 2: We'll go to Gavin Gray, he might know. He's our 364 00:17:20,440 --> 00:17:23,080 Speaker 2: UK europe correspondent. He's with us after News at five 365 00:17:23,080 --> 00:17:24,960 Speaker 2: point thirty and we'll talk to a little he's Upstate 366 00:17:25,000 --> 00:17:27,760 Speaker 2: about these numbers on tourism. A lot of growth happening 367 00:17:27,800 --> 00:17:30,760 Speaker 2: there and not just from the Aussies coming from China. 368 00:17:30,840 --> 00:17:32,440 Speaker 3: To News TALKSB. 369 00:17:43,000 --> 00:17:45,600 Speaker 1: The News you Need this morning and the in depth 370 00:17:45,600 --> 00:17:50,080 Speaker 1: analysis early edition with Ryan Bridge and One Room Love 371 00:17:50,160 --> 00:17:50,760 Speaker 1: where you Live. 372 00:17:51,000 --> 00:18:04,840 Speaker 3: News Talks B twenty four away from six. Good morning, 373 00:18:04,880 --> 00:18:05,720 Speaker 3: great to have your company. 374 00:18:05,800 --> 00:18:08,119 Speaker 2: We had two Louise Upston on the new tourism numbers 375 00:18:08,160 --> 00:18:10,160 Speaker 2: you've just heard about in the news that's coming Before 376 00:18:10,200 --> 00:18:10,800 Speaker 2: six we head to. 377 00:18:10,760 --> 00:18:12,240 Speaker 3: Gavin Graham in the UK as well. 378 00:18:12,280 --> 00:18:14,600 Speaker 2: There's a really interesting study that's come out this morning 379 00:18:14,720 --> 00:18:20,040 Speaker 2: from Massi University. This is their Massi University's Food Experience 380 00:18:20,200 --> 00:18:24,520 Speaker 2: and Sensory Testing Feast Laboratory, which sounds like a fascinating 381 00:18:24,560 --> 00:18:27,320 Speaker 2: place to work. It found that and I don't think 382 00:18:27,359 --> 00:18:30,679 Speaker 2: this will be a great surprise because it stands to reason. 383 00:18:30,800 --> 00:18:34,119 Speaker 2: But depending you can, as a human when you're drinking 384 00:18:34,280 --> 00:18:37,000 Speaker 2: cow's milk tell the difference in what the cow is 385 00:18:37,080 --> 00:18:39,960 Speaker 2: being fed. Apparently, so not only can you tell, and 386 00:18:40,040 --> 00:18:44,440 Speaker 2: apparently this is already well documented, the stage of lactation 387 00:18:45,000 --> 00:18:47,960 Speaker 2: at which the milk was extracted that will change the 388 00:18:48,080 --> 00:18:50,800 Speaker 2: flavor profile of the milk, So when it comes out 389 00:18:50,840 --> 00:18:53,199 Speaker 2: of the teath you can tell that. Apparently if you've 390 00:18:53,240 --> 00:18:56,119 Speaker 2: given a blind taste test, now we know that you 391 00:18:56,200 --> 00:18:59,119 Speaker 2: can also tell depending on where the cow's been grazing, 392 00:18:59,240 --> 00:19:01,280 Speaker 2: you can tell that there's taste difference as well. So 393 00:19:01,400 --> 00:19:05,280 Speaker 2: they had herds included cows grazing on standard pasture under 394 00:19:05,320 --> 00:19:08,960 Speaker 2: contemporary management. That's your herd. A. Then cows were fed 395 00:19:09,200 --> 00:19:15,880 Speaker 2: a diverse pasture under regenitaive regenitate, let's. 396 00:19:15,680 --> 00:19:19,000 Speaker 3: Kip that word. That's your Herd B, and then there 397 00:19:19,119 --> 00:19:19,280 Speaker 3: was a. 398 00:19:19,320 --> 00:19:22,480 Speaker 2: Herd C and they basically blind tasties for people and 399 00:19:22,520 --> 00:19:23,479 Speaker 2: they could tell the difference. 400 00:19:23,720 --> 00:19:24,240 Speaker 3: But there you go. 401 00:19:25,359 --> 00:19:28,680 Speaker 2: It is twenty three minutes away from six Bridge. Let's 402 00:19:28,680 --> 00:19:30,240 Speaker 2: go to Callum and Dunedin Modern Callum. 403 00:19:31,400 --> 00:19:32,439 Speaker 8: It's actually Jamie. 404 00:19:32,600 --> 00:19:37,360 Speaker 3: But hello Jamie. Tell us about the Forsyth Bar Stadium. 405 00:19:38,240 --> 00:19:41,240 Speaker 11: Yeah, well, Duneedan City councilors are considering the fate of 406 00:19:41,400 --> 00:19:43,720 Speaker 11: the stadium. They set to decide whether to put more 407 00:19:43,800 --> 00:19:47,640 Speaker 11: money into it after warnings it's in a financial unsustainable position. 408 00:19:48,080 --> 00:19:51,000 Speaker 11: Doing nothing could see debt balloon from eighty five million 409 00:19:51,080 --> 00:19:55,000 Speaker 11: dollars to almost two hundred million by twenty sixty. Of course, 410 00:19:55,080 --> 00:19:58,200 Speaker 11: this just comes a month before competition ramps up for 411 00:19:58,280 --> 00:20:01,679 Speaker 11: the city with Christ Churches one zed stadium, of course opening. 412 00:20:02,080 --> 00:20:04,639 Speaker 11: The first option in today's report is council putting an 413 00:20:04,680 --> 00:20:07,560 Speaker 11: extra one point twenty five million into the stadium next 414 00:20:07,680 --> 00:20:10,919 Speaker 11: year and more the following year, reducing debt to thirty 415 00:20:10,960 --> 00:20:14,520 Speaker 11: seven million by twenty sixty. The second would inject two 416 00:20:14,560 --> 00:20:18,040 Speaker 11: point twenty five million dollars upfront. Believe less room for 417 00:20:18,160 --> 00:20:19,360 Speaker 11: unexpected costs. 418 00:20:19,720 --> 00:20:20,800 Speaker 3: All right, how's weather. 419 00:20:21,480 --> 00:20:24,399 Speaker 11: Fine with northeasterlies and a high of nineteen. 420 00:20:24,240 --> 00:20:27,639 Speaker 2: All right, thanks Jamie Claire in christ Morning Claire, good morning. 421 00:20:28,200 --> 00:20:30,280 Speaker 2: You've got a landlord of North Canterbury yarn for us. 422 00:20:30,760 --> 00:20:30,960 Speaker 3: Yeah. 423 00:20:31,080 --> 00:20:33,200 Speaker 12: Well, this North Canterbury landlord has been ordered to pay 424 00:20:33,240 --> 00:20:36,800 Speaker 12: more than twenty nine thousand dollars. This is after she 425 00:20:37,080 --> 00:20:41,240 Speaker 12: rented out some unlawful sheds and shipping containers. The Tenancy 426 00:20:41,320 --> 00:20:45,119 Speaker 12: Tribunal has found that Madeline Fee had breached the Residential 427 00:20:45,160 --> 00:20:48,720 Speaker 12: Tenancy Act in multiple ways, including failing to ladge any 428 00:20:48,760 --> 00:20:53,000 Speaker 12: bonds for these so called homes, also seizing tenants goods 429 00:20:53,119 --> 00:20:56,400 Speaker 12: and permitting harassment. One tenant was living in a shed 430 00:20:56,480 --> 00:20:59,920 Speaker 12: that was nowhere near consented for residential use. The tribe 431 00:21:00,160 --> 00:21:03,800 Speaker 12: A found this woman actors intentionally she exposed her tenants 432 00:21:03,840 --> 00:21:06,520 Speaker 12: to harm. They rejected her claim that she was helping 433 00:21:06,640 --> 00:21:10,439 Speaker 12: desperate people, and it ruled that she was maximizing rental 434 00:21:10,560 --> 00:21:16,639 Speaker 12: income from what were non compliant properties. House weather fine 435 00:21:16,680 --> 00:21:18,400 Speaker 12: apart from a bit of a cloud about for Banks 436 00:21:18,440 --> 00:21:22,000 Speaker 12: Peninsula early today and again tonight at northeasterly is developing 437 00:21:22,040 --> 00:21:23,159 Speaker 12: and seventeen degrees. 438 00:21:23,240 --> 00:21:26,320 Speaker 2: Thank Claire, Max and Wellington morning Max, good morning, you've 439 00:21:26,320 --> 00:21:29,040 Speaker 2: got a new type of parking warden raking in the cash. 440 00:21:29,760 --> 00:21:31,280 Speaker 3: Yeah, so this is in the Hut Valley. 441 00:21:31,800 --> 00:21:33,440 Speaker 13: Gone of the days of keeping an eye out for 442 00:21:33,480 --> 00:21:36,000 Speaker 13: a parking warden or checking for chalk on the tire 443 00:21:36,080 --> 00:21:38,520 Speaker 13: when leaving your car for a little while. 444 00:21:38,600 --> 00:21:38,879 Speaker 3: Somewhere. 445 00:21:38,920 --> 00:21:41,480 Speaker 13: The hud City Council making well over one hundred thousand 446 00:21:41,480 --> 00:21:45,800 Speaker 13: dollars more a month in parking fines since rolling out 447 00:21:45,840 --> 00:21:49,879 Speaker 13: license plate technology A year ago. Monthly parking enforcement revenue 448 00:21:49,920 --> 00:21:51,800 Speaker 13: was about two hundred and eighty thousand dollars in twenty 449 00:21:51,840 --> 00:21:54,600 Speaker 13: twenty four, it's now more than four hundred thousand dollars. 450 00:21:55,040 --> 00:21:59,920 Speaker 13: So the technology involves wardens. I suppose driving past camera 451 00:22:00,200 --> 00:22:03,520 Speaker 13: is affixed to their vehicles that can scan license plates 452 00:22:03,960 --> 00:22:05,600 Speaker 13: marry them up with the parking machines. 453 00:22:05,840 --> 00:22:07,760 Speaker 3: It can also check wafts and regio's. 454 00:22:08,440 --> 00:22:10,520 Speaker 13: A typical fine of one hundred and fifty dollars later 455 00:22:10,600 --> 00:22:13,320 Speaker 13: shows up in the post, often weeks after the fact. 456 00:22:14,320 --> 00:22:15,520 Speaker 3: Stung me over Christmas. 457 00:22:15,560 --> 00:22:17,359 Speaker 13: In fact, got a fine in the posts and couldn't 458 00:22:17,400 --> 00:22:19,560 Speaker 13: quite work out at first when and where because it 459 00:22:19,600 --> 00:22:21,679 Speaker 13: happened a month ago. The council says it's a new 460 00:22:21,720 --> 00:22:25,359 Speaker 13: technology that's made parking compliance more efficient, allowing its parking 461 00:22:25,400 --> 00:22:28,320 Speaker 13: team to cover a much wider area than possible on foot. 462 00:22:28,960 --> 00:22:30,800 Speaker 3: That's just what we want, isn't it. How's your weather? 463 00:22:31,440 --> 00:22:34,640 Speaker 13: Yeah, cloudy with some drizzle this morning, clearing later seventeen. 464 00:22:35,560 --> 00:22:38,000 Speaker 3: Thank you, neighvas an Auckland morning never good morning. 465 00:22:38,040 --> 00:22:39,480 Speaker 14: Sorry, I was a bit late to the studio. I 466 00:22:39,560 --> 00:22:42,040 Speaker 14: was having a wee chilly check check to a producer McKenzie. 467 00:22:42,359 --> 00:22:44,800 Speaker 14: She said she's had the same dream for the past 468 00:22:44,840 --> 00:22:47,840 Speaker 14: three nights where she woke up and it was the 469 00:22:47,960 --> 00:22:51,080 Speaker 14: nightmare really and where she was late for work, you know, 470 00:22:51,200 --> 00:22:52,800 Speaker 14: and the alarm didn't go off. So she's had that 471 00:22:52,960 --> 00:22:55,240 Speaker 14: same night meres three days in a row, probably at 472 00:22:55,240 --> 00:22:55,840 Speaker 14: about one am. 473 00:22:55,920 --> 00:22:58,800 Speaker 2: Maybe that's because McKenzie there was a day not so 474 00:22:58,960 --> 00:23:02,280 Speaker 2: long ago where there did happen and we had to call. 475 00:23:03,320 --> 00:23:05,159 Speaker 2: So sorry to call you out on air, but I 476 00:23:05,280 --> 00:23:07,879 Speaker 2: know I would normally never do anything like that. But 477 00:23:08,200 --> 00:23:11,440 Speaker 2: because you've raised it, don't talk to Neva Kenzie and 478 00:23:11,640 --> 00:23:16,040 Speaker 2: she comes on here and spills the beans. Hey, you also, 479 00:23:16,080 --> 00:23:25,880 Speaker 2: could you help me with something struggled with regenerative regenerative yes, man, 480 00:23:26,359 --> 00:23:27,840 Speaker 2: and I think too hard. 481 00:23:27,720 --> 00:23:30,240 Speaker 14: One, because you know, we wake up so early. It's 482 00:23:30,320 --> 00:23:33,240 Speaker 14: getting your mouth around those words regenerative, mind you, because 483 00:23:33,320 --> 00:23:35,400 Speaker 14: you not what it should be fair. 484 00:23:36,720 --> 00:23:39,439 Speaker 7: That's where you pay the big bucks for goodness crying. 485 00:23:39,800 --> 00:23:41,560 Speaker 3: Loads of people have been texting in about that story. 486 00:23:41,720 --> 00:23:43,639 Speaker 2: It's a great yarn about what the milk tastes like 487 00:23:44,080 --> 00:23:46,560 Speaker 2: depending on what you're feeding it. And apparently this person 488 00:23:46,760 --> 00:23:49,800 Speaker 2: is that it was actually already confirmed in the film 489 00:23:49,920 --> 00:23:54,040 Speaker 2: Napoleon Dynamite. He was tasting milk in a competition, said 490 00:23:54,040 --> 00:23:55,760 Speaker 2: the cows have been eating onions and he can. 491 00:23:55,680 --> 00:24:00,800 Speaker 14: Tell I don't like milkn't. It's a shame. 492 00:24:02,320 --> 00:24:03,359 Speaker 3: Our weather today, nev. 493 00:24:03,400 --> 00:24:06,720 Speaker 14: Fine, fine, you can just notice those southerlyes in the air, 494 00:24:06,960 --> 00:24:09,679 Speaker 14: a little bit of a bite, but beautiful clear Skys 495 00:24:09,720 --> 00:24:11,560 Speaker 14: twenty one is a high here in Autland today. 496 00:24:11,400 --> 00:24:13,960 Speaker 2: Brilliant, thank you, eighteen minutes away from six News talks 497 00:24:14,000 --> 00:24:15,880 Speaker 2: they'd be. We'll get to Gavin Gray in the UK next. 498 00:24:16,040 --> 00:24:18,359 Speaker 2: There's been a bit of chatter lately about Kiwi savor. 499 00:24:18,440 --> 00:24:21,800 Speaker 2: You might have noticed government super retirement savings in general, 500 00:24:21,920 --> 00:24:24,399 Speaker 2: and we're all wondering what the landscape will look like 501 00:24:24,520 --> 00:24:27,000 Speaker 2: when it's our turn to stop work. That's why it's 502 00:24:27,080 --> 00:24:29,840 Speaker 2: good to know that your kiwisaver plan is working hard 503 00:24:30,000 --> 00:24:33,040 Speaker 2: now to gain the benefits of time, and that's where 504 00:24:33,160 --> 00:24:35,120 Speaker 2: Milford really proves its worth. 505 00:24:35,200 --> 00:24:36,760 Speaker 3: Their investment experts. 506 00:24:36,400 --> 00:24:40,280 Speaker 2: Are actively managing their clients' funds with a long term mindset. 507 00:24:40,600 --> 00:24:44,040 Speaker 2: Data from morning Star is very much worth noting. Milford's 508 00:24:44,080 --> 00:24:46,440 Speaker 2: kii Saver funds are number one for performance over the 509 00:24:46,480 --> 00:24:50,280 Speaker 2: past ten years and the active growth, balanced and conservative 510 00:24:50,320 --> 00:24:55,000 Speaker 2: categories that is proven long term consistency. You can look 511 00:24:55,040 --> 00:24:57,800 Speaker 2: for the numbers yourself. Check them out Morningstar dot com 512 00:24:57,880 --> 00:25:00,840 Speaker 2: dot au so let time and expert Pie work for you. 513 00:25:01,600 --> 00:25:05,359 Speaker 2: Check out Milford Asset dot com forward slash kiwisaver Past 514 00:25:05,400 --> 00:25:08,520 Speaker 2: performance not a reliable indicator of future performance. Milford Funds 515 00:25:08,560 --> 00:25:11,080 Speaker 2: Limited as the issuer of the Milford kiwisab Plan. Go 516 00:25:11,200 --> 00:25:13,720 Speaker 2: to Milford Asset dot com to read the Milford Kiwisabplan 517 00:25:13,800 --> 00:25:17,520 Speaker 2: Product disclosure Statement and Milford's Financial Advice Provider Disclosure Statement. 518 00:25:18,440 --> 00:25:22,440 Speaker 1: International correspondence with Ensit Eye Insurance Peace of Mind for 519 00:25:22,520 --> 00:25:23,720 Speaker 1: New Zealand Business. 520 00:25:24,240 --> 00:25:26,919 Speaker 2: Sixteen away from six fig at Silleries Upton on tourism 521 00:25:26,960 --> 00:25:29,800 Speaker 2: and a second first. The UK government considering whether to 522 00:25:29,920 --> 00:25:32,800 Speaker 2: send a Navy warship to the Mediterranean. This is after 523 00:25:32,880 --> 00:25:35,280 Speaker 2: what happened in Cyprus read the Middle East. Let's go 524 00:25:35,359 --> 00:25:37,840 Speaker 2: to Gavin Gray are UK europe correspondent, Gavin what are 525 00:25:37,840 --> 00:25:39,600 Speaker 2: they saying, Ryan? 526 00:25:39,640 --> 00:25:42,560 Speaker 7: Were you timed as well? About ten fifteen minutes ago. Now, 527 00:25:42,640 --> 00:25:46,199 Speaker 7: the government did finally admit it was going to deploy 528 00:25:46,359 --> 00:25:50,240 Speaker 7: a Royal Navy warship to the Mediterranean, HMS Dragon. It's 529 00:25:50,280 --> 00:25:52,720 Speaker 7: a Type forty five destroyer is to be sent to 530 00:25:52,760 --> 00:25:55,800 Speaker 7: the region. And it comes after some pretty stinging criticism 531 00:25:55,880 --> 00:25:58,600 Speaker 7: from the Cypriot government about a lack of air defense 532 00:25:58,680 --> 00:26:01,440 Speaker 7: frankly from the UK. The Middle East War, of course, 533 00:26:01,560 --> 00:26:06,440 Speaker 7: continues to get worsip with seamen to Widen and the 534 00:26:06,720 --> 00:26:10,359 Speaker 7: Prime Minister says that he is sending helicopters with counter 535 00:26:10,520 --> 00:26:14,120 Speaker 7: drone capabilities to Cypress. Now there's a British Air Force 536 00:26:14,200 --> 00:26:16,720 Speaker 7: base on Cypress. But of course it was the Cypriotic 537 00:26:16,880 --> 00:26:19,760 Speaker 7: president who was so angry at the fact that one 538 00:26:19,840 --> 00:26:24,600 Speaker 7: of those drones from Iran was successful in damaging that 539 00:26:24,720 --> 00:26:28,280 Speaker 7: Air Force base, the ACRETII base. Now the government says 540 00:26:28,280 --> 00:26:30,840 Speaker 7: it caused minimal damage, but we're told it hit the runway. 541 00:26:30,920 --> 00:26:34,119 Speaker 7: That is pretty serious. If an RAF base. So the 542 00:26:34,560 --> 00:26:37,920 Speaker 7: Royal Navy currently has no major warship in the Mediterranean 543 00:26:38,000 --> 00:26:41,640 Speaker 7: region and the government looks like it's finally actually doing 544 00:26:41,720 --> 00:26:45,040 Speaker 7: something about that. And it follows reports that France was 545 00:26:45,119 --> 00:26:48,159 Speaker 7: going to move air defense systems to Cypress after the 546 00:26:48,680 --> 00:26:51,800 Speaker 7: British base was hit. You can imagine how embarrassing that 547 00:26:51,960 --> 00:26:54,040 Speaker 7: was as a prospect of having to be helped out 548 00:26:54,080 --> 00:26:55,679 Speaker 7: by France to guard our own troops. 549 00:26:55,960 --> 00:26:59,800 Speaker 2: Now let's go to Rechel Reeves the forecasts that the 550 00:27:00,160 --> 00:27:03,160 Speaker 2: growth forecasts being downgraded. But she's spinning this as actually 551 00:27:03,240 --> 00:27:03,720 Speaker 2: not their bit. 552 00:27:04,960 --> 00:27:08,320 Speaker 7: Yeah, absolutely, absolutely summed up perfectly. She's spinning this as 553 00:27:08,400 --> 00:27:12,240 Speaker 7: all going according to plan. However, the statistics don't quite 554 00:27:12,320 --> 00:27:14,600 Speaker 7: suggest that. Plus the fact of course she announces it 555 00:27:14,960 --> 00:27:18,119 Speaker 7: during the very week we've seen energy prices rocket because 556 00:27:18,240 --> 00:27:22,360 Speaker 7: of that Iran conflict. So we now get the economic 557 00:27:22,480 --> 00:27:26,560 Speaker 7: forecast this year economic growth has been downgraded from one 558 00:27:26,640 --> 00:27:30,879 Speaker 7: point four percent to one point one percent. That downgrade 559 00:27:31,000 --> 00:27:33,840 Speaker 7: has taken place in just three months and was calculated 560 00:27:33,920 --> 00:27:38,960 Speaker 7: before this military action. And it looks like as well, 561 00:27:39,160 --> 00:27:43,399 Speaker 7: UK unemployment will increase to five point three percent this 562 00:27:43,560 --> 00:27:47,119 Speaker 7: year before falling gradually. They're predicting to four percent and 563 00:27:47,280 --> 00:27:50,440 Speaker 7: inflation predicted to be two point three percent this year 564 00:27:50,640 --> 00:27:53,080 Speaker 7: but falling over the coming couple of years. The government 565 00:27:53,200 --> 00:27:57,920 Speaker 7: is saying its measures of stability are working. Other people 566 00:27:57,960 --> 00:28:00,440 Speaker 7: are saying, just look at the figures. How can you 567 00:28:00,600 --> 00:28:03,640 Speaker 7: say they are working. Either way, everything could be thrown 568 00:28:03,720 --> 00:28:06,320 Speaker 7: up in there depending on what happens with Eron. 569 00:28:07,040 --> 00:28:09,760 Speaker 2: Appreciate your time, Gavin gray Are UK europe correspondent. It 570 00:28:09,880 --> 00:28:13,240 Speaker 2: is eleven away from six brand Bridge tourism well and 571 00:28:13,320 --> 00:28:16,000 Speaker 2: truly back in business. Total spend has hit forty six 572 00:28:16,080 --> 00:28:18,080 Speaker 2: point six billion in the year of March. That's up 573 00:28:18,119 --> 00:28:21,320 Speaker 2: three point three percent. Now overseas visitors spend this is 574 00:28:21,400 --> 00:28:24,119 Speaker 2: your foreigners coming here and having fun, jump seven percent 575 00:28:24,359 --> 00:28:27,800 Speaker 2: to eighteen point one billion. Eleven percent of the workforce 576 00:28:27,920 --> 00:28:30,520 Speaker 2: is tourism employed in the sector, so that's good. Louise 577 00:28:30,600 --> 00:28:32,920 Speaker 2: Upston tourism mister here to talk about the numbers. Louise, 578 00:28:32,960 --> 00:28:36,159 Speaker 2: good morning, Good morning Llan. That is good news. And 579 00:28:36,280 --> 00:28:38,880 Speaker 2: particularly the foreign visitors and the Chinese are coming back. 580 00:28:38,920 --> 00:28:43,000 Speaker 2: They're still not recovered from COVID right, yeah. 581 00:28:42,960 --> 00:28:46,280 Speaker 8: So just the numbers that were released yesterday relate to 582 00:28:46,400 --> 00:28:51,280 Speaker 8: the period to March twenty five, so that is you know, 583 00:28:51,440 --> 00:28:54,200 Speaker 8: looking at historic data. But it's really great to see 584 00:28:54,320 --> 00:28:58,240 Speaker 8: strong recovery in international visitors because if you think about 585 00:28:58,320 --> 00:29:02,520 Speaker 8: what that means, more tourists means more customers for Kiwi businesses. 586 00:29:03,080 --> 00:29:06,400 Speaker 8: That's why we're seeing the jobs, the number of Kiwis 587 00:29:06,440 --> 00:29:10,920 Speaker 8: employed in tourism and hospitality increasing as well. That's exactly 588 00:29:11,040 --> 00:29:13,240 Speaker 8: what we want in terms of growing the economy. 589 00:29:14,360 --> 00:29:16,440 Speaker 2: In terms of the Chinese numbers, have you seen in 590 00:29:16,520 --> 00:29:19,120 Speaker 2: the intervening period them coming back stronger? 591 00:29:20,360 --> 00:29:25,120 Speaker 8: Definitely, so tourism businesses would say the Lunar New Year period, 592 00:29:25,240 --> 00:29:28,160 Speaker 8: which is just the last few weeks, has been particularly strong. 593 00:29:29,080 --> 00:29:31,040 Speaker 8: There were a number of changes that we made at 594 00:29:31,080 --> 00:29:34,640 Speaker 8: the end of last year around some visa settings that 595 00:29:34,760 --> 00:29:37,640 Speaker 8: have had a significant impact. One of them is that 596 00:29:38,080 --> 00:29:41,560 Speaker 8: if a Chinese person is in Australia and they have 597 00:29:41,680 --> 00:29:45,520 Speaker 8: an Australian visa, they can enter New Zealand visa free. 598 00:29:46,520 --> 00:29:49,840 Speaker 8: We think, and we're trialing that for twelve months. We 599 00:29:49,960 --> 00:29:54,000 Speaker 8: think that's had a really significant impact. So as we 600 00:29:54,120 --> 00:29:57,720 Speaker 8: see more data coming out, I'm very very positive that 601 00:29:57,880 --> 00:30:01,560 Speaker 8: we will achieve our target it of getting our visitor 602 00:30:01,680 --> 00:30:04,000 Speaker 8: numbers back to what they were pre COVID. 603 00:30:04,600 --> 00:30:07,560 Speaker 2: We're still I mean, tourism was number one in terms 604 00:30:07,600 --> 00:30:11,920 Speaker 2: of expert export earnings pre COVID. We haven't returned it 605 00:30:12,000 --> 00:30:14,200 Speaker 2: to its mantle yet. Do you think that'll come soon 606 00:30:14,320 --> 00:30:15,960 Speaker 2: or do you think there is just given too good? 607 00:30:17,280 --> 00:30:20,560 Speaker 8: Well, we're at number two at the moment, and we 608 00:30:20,680 --> 00:30:24,520 Speaker 8: do have an ambitious target to double the value of 609 00:30:24,720 --> 00:30:28,720 Speaker 8: tourism exports within the decade, and we've got a Tourism 610 00:30:28,760 --> 00:30:32,760 Speaker 8: growth roadmap that basically maps out how we do that. 611 00:30:33,480 --> 00:30:37,040 Speaker 8: But it is important. Export growth is important because it 612 00:30:37,160 --> 00:30:41,200 Speaker 8: directly means an increase in jobs for New Zealanders. Key 613 00:30:41,240 --> 00:30:45,240 Speaker 8: we businesses are growing and that means an increase in wages. 614 00:30:45,320 --> 00:30:47,920 Speaker 8: So that's why it is absolutely critical that we keep 615 00:30:48,000 --> 00:30:52,720 Speaker 8: our focus on growing tourism and I'm really really excited 616 00:30:52,800 --> 00:30:54,760 Speaker 8: to see that we're seeing results already. 617 00:30:54,920 --> 00:30:57,320 Speaker 2: All Right, Well, appreciate your time this morning, Louise Upston, 618 00:30:57,440 --> 00:31:00,200 Speaker 2: the Tourism Minister. It is eight to six News Talk 619 00:31:00,320 --> 00:31:01,800 Speaker 2: h B and Mike is here with us. 620 00:31:01,880 --> 00:31:05,280 Speaker 1: Next the first Word on the News of the Day 621 00:31:05,600 --> 00:31:09,800 Speaker 1: early edition with Ryan Bridge and One Route Love where 622 00:31:09,840 --> 00:31:11,360 Speaker 1: you Live News Talks. 623 00:31:11,120 --> 00:31:12,920 Speaker 3: It'd be six to six News Talk, said be. 624 00:31:13,080 --> 00:31:16,280 Speaker 2: Trump is meeting with mertzer Gym and Chancellor right now 625 00:31:16,440 --> 00:31:19,360 Speaker 2: at the White House, and he's given a little update 626 00:31:19,440 --> 00:31:20,360 Speaker 2: on the Middle East. 627 00:31:20,480 --> 00:31:23,120 Speaker 3: That is coming along as you see very well. 628 00:31:23,200 --> 00:31:23,960 Speaker 11: They have no navy. 629 00:31:24,040 --> 00:31:26,600 Speaker 15: It's been knocked out, they have no air force has 630 00:31:26,680 --> 00:31:29,800 Speaker 15: been knocked out, they have no air detection has been 631 00:31:29,880 --> 00:31:32,840 Speaker 15: knocked out, their radar has been knocked out, and. 632 00:31:34,720 --> 00:31:36,240 Speaker 5: Just about everything's been knocked out. 633 00:31:36,600 --> 00:31:39,560 Speaker 3: He Trump says, my opinion is that Iran was going 634 00:31:39,640 --> 00:31:40,240 Speaker 3: to attack us. 635 00:31:40,320 --> 00:31:44,040 Speaker 2: First, Ryan Bridge Mike in the studio morning, Mike, have 636 00:31:44,120 --> 00:31:45,400 Speaker 2: you sorted your leak problem out? 637 00:31:45,440 --> 00:31:48,440 Speaker 15: I was thinking it's not a leak, it's a but 638 00:31:48,640 --> 00:31:51,080 Speaker 15: thank you for caring. I got the quote this morning. 639 00:31:51,160 --> 00:31:54,000 Speaker 15: Funnily enough, having talked to I'll give you the clue. 640 00:31:54,040 --> 00:31:58,520 Speaker 15: The electrician yesterday. Two options won't go round into the 641 00:31:58,560 --> 00:32:01,320 Speaker 15: background of your hang on. Why are we not going 642 00:32:01,360 --> 00:32:05,640 Speaker 15: into the background because too long and detailed catastrophic failure okay, 643 00:32:06,560 --> 00:32:08,240 Speaker 15: headline catastrophic. 644 00:32:07,720 --> 00:32:12,960 Speaker 3: Failure, power failure. Oh yeah, yeah, the grids out, the 645 00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:13,720 Speaker 3: grids out. Okay. 646 00:32:13,840 --> 00:32:20,320 Speaker 15: Anyways, quotes in this morning two options option number one 647 00:32:20,640 --> 00:32:23,120 Speaker 15: are cheaper, but isn't going to happen for a period 648 00:32:23,160 --> 00:32:26,200 Speaker 15: of time due to technical difficulties. Once again so complicated 649 00:32:26,240 --> 00:32:27,160 Speaker 15: that I won't explain. 650 00:32:27,400 --> 00:32:28,880 Speaker 3: So in the meantime, there's no power. 651 00:32:29,000 --> 00:32:31,840 Speaker 15: Oh no, this power, there's power. The main problem, Ryan, 652 00:32:31,920 --> 00:32:35,280 Speaker 15: the difficulty is, well, yesterday it was the swimming pool, lid, 653 00:32:35,320 --> 00:32:39,240 Speaker 15: wooden clothes. But the other problem is the three phase 654 00:32:39,320 --> 00:32:40,680 Speaker 15: aspect of the power problem. 655 00:32:41,120 --> 00:32:49,440 Speaker 2: If you asked, as I watched Trump talk about war three, these. 656 00:32:47,320 --> 00:32:50,120 Speaker 15: Important you asked, these are the important things? So the pool, 657 00:32:50,240 --> 00:32:52,560 Speaker 15: So fix that part of it. But it's three phase. 658 00:32:52,880 --> 00:32:55,320 Speaker 15: So you've got one phase, two phase and three phase. 659 00:32:55,360 --> 00:32:57,640 Speaker 3: Do you understand this? This I can count? No, this 660 00:32:57,800 --> 00:32:59,440 Speaker 3: is reletive. Well you tell me how many phase are 661 00:32:59,480 --> 00:33:02,440 Speaker 3: you at your but for closing a poll? In no, 662 00:33:02,640 --> 00:33:03,600 Speaker 3: for power? How much? 663 00:33:03,960 --> 00:33:04,000 Speaker 9: What? 664 00:33:04,400 --> 00:33:05,600 Speaker 15: How many phases you're at your house? 665 00:33:05,760 --> 00:33:06,160 Speaker 9: What do you mean? 666 00:33:06,200 --> 00:33:07,600 Speaker 3: I have no idea exactly. 667 00:33:07,880 --> 00:33:10,400 Speaker 15: So that's why this is important because if it goes 668 00:33:10,480 --> 00:33:12,360 Speaker 15: that's the first question in the last year. Is that 669 00:33:12,440 --> 00:33:16,000 Speaker 15: a two phase system? What have you got three phase? 670 00:33:16,040 --> 00:33:17,160 Speaker 15: Of course I've got three phases. 671 00:33:17,720 --> 00:33:20,840 Speaker 3: Very complicated. It is complicated. It's down to why haven't 672 00:33:20,840 --> 00:33:21,840 Speaker 3: you got a one phase. 673 00:33:21,880 --> 00:33:25,720 Speaker 15: Because then you've got no power. Phases are about capacity, Ryan, 674 00:33:26,160 --> 00:33:28,920 Speaker 15: So right. So anyway, so the three phase and the 675 00:33:28,920 --> 00:33:31,640 Speaker 15: critical part of the three phases that runs the SPA heater. 676 00:33:31,920 --> 00:33:36,840 Speaker 15: Oh exactly anyway, So option one's the cheap one, but 677 00:33:36,960 --> 00:33:40,800 Speaker 15: the equipment required to find the problem is not readily available, 678 00:33:40,880 --> 00:33:43,960 Speaker 15: so that'll be months. Phase two or option two is 679 00:33:44,040 --> 00:33:46,840 Speaker 15: the immediate fix. By putting even. 680 00:33:46,720 --> 00:33:50,520 Speaker 2: More, how much is that tens of Oh wow tends 681 00:33:50,640 --> 00:33:53,320 Speaker 2: and the problem in the meantime is a poll that's 682 00:33:53,360 --> 00:33:53,760 Speaker 2: not heated. 683 00:33:53,800 --> 00:33:58,680 Speaker 15: In some other stuff, I've embellished the story slightly, but nevertheless, anyway, 684 00:33:58,760 --> 00:34:01,120 Speaker 15: a simpleters this morning. 685 00:34:00,880 --> 00:34:03,840 Speaker 2: From good I need to hear from him, MICUs was 686 00:34:03,880 --> 00:34:06,200 Speaker 2: your next Enjoy your Wednesday morning news Talks. 687 00:34:06,240 --> 00:34:06,520 Speaker 3: It'd be. 688 00:34:10,400 --> 00:34:13,319 Speaker 1: For more from early edition with Ryan Bridge. Listen live 689 00:34:13,480 --> 00:34:16,440 Speaker 1: to News Talks it'd be from five am weekdays, or 690 00:34:16,560 --> 00:34:18,439 Speaker 1: follow the podcast on iHeartRadio.