Aotearoa / New Zealand

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Recently I talked to three people who were ripped off by builders and tradies. One of them was out by more than a hundred thousand dollars, the others were in the tens of thousands of dollars.

People signed contracts and then didn't finish the job. In one case when confronted the builders said "you can't move in until I am done and if you don't accept this I won't be done for at least a year".

In the other case the contractor demanded double the money halfway into the build and contacted all other builders in the area and smeared the friend so that they didn't pick up the job.

In the third case the contractor took half the money up front, didn't show up for weeks, finally showed up for a few days and did a few things and the fucked right off. This was for about a 30K job.

Court costs are ten thousand dollars per day of trial (including prep work by the attorneys) so all of them had no choice but to take being ripped off. The tradie community seems pretty tight too so once you are ripped off you are known as a mark because all of them had issued with other tradies they hired afterwards.

Needless to say cops and the courts are useless.

Learn to do things on your own I guess. You can't trust any builder or tradie in NZ.

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Widespread internet outages are being felt around the North Island, telecommunications company Voyager says.

It says it has identified an issue affecting "Chorus Wellington UFB (ultrafast broadband) handover".

"This handover services Wellington, Kapiti, Hutt Valley, Palmerston North and through to Napier."

Voyager said Chorus had identified the source of the issue and are working on a fix.

Currently around 90 percent of connections are offline.

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TL;DR If you are reading this (regardless of what instance you are on) then please fill in the Lemmy.nz 2025 Census

Last year we did a census to get an idea about the people using Lemmy - both who they are and how they use Lemmy. You can see the results here.

Lemmy.ca did one the year before, which was our inspiration. The results can be seen here.

I had intended to repeat this each year, and so here we are. I have worked with @otter@lemmy.ca who ran the Lemmy.ca census, with contributions from others, to come up with a refined set of questions that we will keep largely standardised. We also expect to have a LimeSurvey template available that other instances can use if they want to (I can do this right now if someone reading wants it, but it's Lemmy.nz based at the moment so would need tweaks for the specific instance). LimeSurvey is a self-hostable survey tool.

The intent is to catch anyone who interacts with Lemmy.nz. If you see this post, that's you! You're interacting with us by reading our content! Anyone can fill in the survey, it can help us get other insights across Lemmy.

None of the questions are mandatory, so just answer what you are comfortable answering. I expect to leave this open for a while and have some reminders to make sure we get as many responses as possible. I’ll do a results post once the results are in and I have had a chance to analyse them.

Let me know if you have any questions!

Answer the Lemmy.nz 2025 Census

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Last weeks thread here

Welcome to this week’s casual kōrero thread!

This post will be pinned in this community so you can always find it, and will stay for about a week until replaced by the next one.

It’s for talking about anything that might not justify a full post. For example:

  • Something interesting that happened to you
  • Something humourous that happened to you
  • Something frustrating that happened to you
  • A quick question
  • A request for recommendations
  • Pictures of your pet
  • A picture of a cloud that kind of looks like an elephant
  • Anything else, there are no rules (except the rule)

So how’s it going?

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Three people have been charged with manslaughter in relation to the Loafers Lodge fire that killed five of the building's 92 residents.

The charges follow a two-year investigation by police into the state of the building, and whether the management and compliance of its fire safety systems contributed to the outcome.

A 50-year-old man, who has name suppression, was charged with murder and arson. He pleaded not guilty to the charges and is due to stand trial in August.

On Thursday, Wellington police's area investigations manager Detective Senior Sergeant Timothy Leitch said three other people had been charged with manslaughter in relation to the fire.

The people charged were involved with the management and operation of the building and police allege they were responsible for aspects of the building fire safety, Leitch said.

Those charged are two men aged 75 and 58, and a 70-year-old woman. They appeared in the Wellington District Court on Thursday facing five charges of Manslaughter.

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When Helen Clark's Labour government brought in a law that would create waves of undocumented children, even the immigration experts had no idea of the impact it would have on thousands of lives.

The 2006 Citizenship Amendment Act ended automatic citizenship for children born here to overstayers or parents with temporary visas. It was also supported by the National party.

"It is only recent because these children are now finishing high school and realising that their life has now come to an end, they don't have any options as to what to do."

At the time Helen Clark said she was concerned about incidents of people flying to New Zealand for a short time and having babies here to ensure they gained passports, known as "birth tourism".

"Every year now more and more children are going to be coming out of high school and realising that they can't study, they can't go and get jobs because it would be a breach of the law for employers to employ someone who's here unlawfully. So they can't work, they can't study, they can't travel, they just simply cannot do anything."

McClymont says he has not had a satisfactory response from the government to his suggestion that New Zealand follow Australia and Britain by giving children birthright citizenship after 10 years of habitual residence.

"Really, it's hard to see what the justification is for punishing these children. Nobody is making the argument that these children have done something wrong and that they deserve to be punished.

"The only potential argument is that these children are being punished as a deterrent for others against having children here in New Zealand," he says.

"It's just unfathomable as a society that we can actually do this to children and use them for this purpose. There doesn't seem to be any moral justification whatsoever for treating them so badly."

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by Dave@lemmy.nz to c/newzealand@lemmy.nz
 
 

TL;DR Lemmy.nz turns 2 today. I made a video!

There's a mirror here if it doesn't work: https://files.catbox.moe/xca9pn.mp4

Last year I posted a video celebrating Lemmy.nz's first birthday. Today I'm doing it again! No sound, and my video skills haven't got any better, but at this point it's practically a tradition for me to do a bad video and a history write up.

Here's a bit of history of the last year here for those that are unable to watch the video or who just want to know more. If anyone has other memories to add, please do!

Picking up from where the last one left off - we were having trouble with Lemmy.world and had added a second server in Finland that was responsible for collecting the activities from Lemmy.world and sending them in batches to Lemmy.nz so it could keep up. This was a temporary solution until (A) Lemmy got the functionality to send in parallel, and (B) Lemmy.world updated and turned this on. We finally got there just 6 weeks ago on 20 April 2025, and the batcher was turned on 6 May 2024, so we spend almost a full year running the batcher. Luckily it worked really well for us, we were very lucky to have a Lemmy user/contributor able to build such a tool and happy to provide the support to set it up and monitor it.

We participated in Canvas 2024, where everyone places a pixel on a big shared canvas to create art. Here is a post about our NZ contribution, though many of us also contributed to other art on the canvas (and we also had many from outside NZ helping us at times).

We did a census around this time last year, and the results were released about a month after our birthday last year. This year I have been working with Lemmy.ca (who were the inspiration for our census) to create a mostly shared structure so that both of us and any other instances who want to can have a shared set of questions for easier comparison across instances. I expect to have the survey up and running in the coming days so keep an eye out!

The video has a section on some of the news stories across the year, including Dunedin Airport introducing a time limit on hugs, Auckland City Mission distributing meth lollies, a call to police about a realistic looking sex doll, someone leaving flavoured milk at a petrol station, and a guy who did a performance in Wellington where he folded a fitted sheet.

I also included a section on how we do boats good in NZ, with the grounding of the ferry Aratere, the sinking of the navy boat Manawanui, and a commuter ferry sailing through a SailGP practice (I think the ferry was in the right on that one though).

We entered Lemmyvision with the Alien Weaponry song Mau Moko, and got 3rd! Last year we got 5th so that's a pretty good result.

Some things not mentioned in the video:

  • There was a migration of hardware of our hosts, moving from owned hardware to leased dedicated hardware as the hardware was aging.

  • We now have two lemmy-ui front end containers running load balanced, which should help with errors we were getting sometimes. We've had the two containers a little while now and I do feel like it's helping.

  • We are currently piggy-backing on hosting, but the guys giving us hosting are now stepping away from hosting the other services on the shared host (like Mastodon.nz, Pixelfed.nz) and are passing these on to others as they find people willing to take them on. It's likely as this happens we will need to move off to our own hosting, handle donations ourselves, etc. More info will come as plans are sorted.

The last year was certainly a lot less dramatic than the first year. Hopefully the next year will be like that too!

Thanks to everyone for being here!

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Politics is brutal. If you consider running for office one day, read this.

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Last weeks thread here

Welcome to this week’s casual kōrero thread!

This post will be pinned in this community so you can always find it, and will stay for about a week until replaced by the next one.

It’s for talking about anything that might not justify a full post. For example:

  • Something interesting that happened to you
  • Something humourous that happened to you
  • Something frustrating that happened to you
  • A quick question
  • A request for recommendations
  • Pictures of your pet
  • A picture of a cloud that kind of looks like an elephant
  • Anything else, there are no rules (except the rule)

So how’s it going?

165
 
 

Times have gotten rough for a lot of us and as a slave to a feline one of the things that I have found that has gotten completely overpriced is flea treatment.

I normally purchase Bravecto plus (3 month) and the average price is getting close to double what it was a few years ago (averaging $90 for each 3 month treatment).

Kitty was facing gaps in treatment due to other bills taking precedence but thankfully I came across a Tauranga vet service "MyVet" who are selling most of the common flea treatments (and other treatments & prescriptions) for about half the price of everywhere else.

In January I used some holiday pay and brought a years supply saving about $150.

Which may not seem like a big saving but it buys a whole lot of cat biscuits and soft food.

  • Cat tax provided.

Her name is Matilda Sassy Pants, she is a tortoiseshell seal point tonkinese who I took in after my mum had to go into a rest home.

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Financial literacy will become a core element of the New Zealand social sciences curriculum for Year 1-10 students from 2027. But what is being proposed presents a limited picture of the factors influencing people’s financial wellbeing.

The specifics of the curriculum have yet to be released. However, the government’s announcement emphasised a focus on individual responsibility. Young people will be taught what they need to live within their means and how to accumulate enough wealth for retirement.

When announcing the new curriculum, Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson said:

We are all consumers, and financial literacy can set young Kiwis up to be savvy consumers – whether it’s knowing how to invest wisely, choose the best loan at a bank, or even identify a scam.

However ... focusing only on individual responsibility risks ignoring the economic systems – and inequities – that shape young people’s lives.

Inequality in New Zealand has risen significantly in the past three decades. And the richest New Zealanders pay less tax than in similar OECD countries.

Knowing how to manage household accounts is, undeniably, an important skill. But individual skills can’t necessarily overcome the hurdles within the broader economic and social context.

...

The resources being used in the classroom also exclude any significant discussion of broader economic systems and policies. Much of what is currently available is created in partnership with banks and financial organisations such as ASB’s GetWise and BNZ’s SavY programmes. These focus on budgeting, saving, banking and paying off debt.

...

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Financial literacy will become a core element of the New Zealand social sciences curriculum for Year 1-10 students from 2027. But what is being proposed presents a limited picture of the factors influencing people’s financial wellbeing.

The specifics of the curriculum have yet to be released. However, the government’s announcement emphasised a focus on individual responsibility. Young people will be taught what they need to live within their means and how to accumulate enough wealth for retirement.

When announcing the new curriculum, Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson said:

We are all consumers, and financial literacy can set young Kiwis up to be savvy consumers – whether it’s knowing how to invest wisely, choose the best loan at a bank, or even identify a scam.

However, as our research shows, focusing only on individual responsibility risks ignoring the economic systems – and inequities – that shape young people’s lives.

Inequality in New Zealand has risen significantly in the past three decades. And the richest New Zealanders pay less tax than in similar OECD countries.

Knowing how to manage household accounts is, undeniably, an important skill. But individual skills can’t necessarily overcome the hurdles within the broader economic and social context. Europeans, get our weekly newsletter with analysis from European scholars Focus on managing money

Financial literacy – under the term “financial capability” – is only briefly mentioned in the current New Zealand curriculum. The topic is positioned as a potential outcome of learning across different subject areas, rather than taught as its own distinct class.

Classroom resources focus on individual actions. Students are taught to manage money, set goals and manage risks.

There is no real discussion of economic inequality in the curriculum. And even the few references there are have a strong focus on personal responsibility.

Teaching resources available for senior economics, for example, explore topics such as income, taxation, product costs and the scarcity of resources.

In senior business studies, references to economic inequality are indirect. For example, the “key concepts” page alludes to ideas such as “supply and demand” and “scarcity” that can loosely be associated with economic inequality. But it is not explicit.

The resources being used in the classroom also exclude any significant discussion of broader economic systems and policies. Much of what is currently available is created in partnership with banks and financial organisations such as ASB’s GetWise and BNZ’s SavY programmes. These focus on budgeting, saving, banking and paying off debt.

...

Globally, there has been a growing emphasis on financial literacy education, partly because of the complexity of modern financial products. And, as one study observed, “the risks of, and responsibility for, financial decisions are being increasingly shifted from governments and employers onto individuals”.

As political economist Chris Clarke has noted, there is an “irreconcilable gap” between the aims of financial literacy education and people’s “actual success in securing their security and wellbeing through financial markets”.

Other economists have pointed out how issues of intergenerational wealth and entrenched socioeconomic disadvantage – the “racial wealth gap” – cannot be overlooked when talking about “poor financial choices and decision making”.

But another form of financial literacy education is possible. Young people could be taught to understand and analyse how governments make decisions for the financial wellbeing of their citizens. They could also learn the value of employment rights, labour and workplace safety laws, and the role of unions and other civic initiatives.

Rather than focusing on taxes and balancing household accounts, students could learn about their individual responsibilities within the economic systems they are part of.

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A Christchurch foodbank is "absolutely heartbroken", "mad" and "gutted to the core" after two thieves stole frozen and chilled food meant for hundreds of families in need.

On Sunday night, at 10.20pm, two individuals dressed in balaclavas and gloves broke the locks of Hoon Hay Foodbank's walk-in freezer and chiller.

"You have completely depleted [sic] all supplies of any meat and frozen and chilled items that were going out to hundreds of whānau [sic] who genuinely need the help to put Kai on the table... all you had to do was send a text and book in for a food parcel to access food if you were in need."

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Those people who have sought to deify our wilderness … those days are over. We are not going to sit around and read poetry to rare lizards, whilst our current account deficit goes down the gurgler,” Jones said.

Lol :)

As an aethiest, if you must be into the whole deity thing, deifying nature is no bad thing, it literally underpins everything.

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New Zealand's first super-sized grid-connected battery - built at a cost of $186 million - will help improve Northland's energy resilience in future power outages, Meridian Energy says.

The company said its Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) would also help smooth out power peaks and troughs, by storing energy when electricity is cheap and releasing it at times of peak demand, such as early mornings and evenings.

The battery park consisted of 80 shipping-container-sized batteries spread over a two-hectare site at Marsden Point, next the former oil refinery south of Whangārei.

Project director Alan de Lima said at full capacity the giant battery could supply 100 megawatts (MW) of power, enough for 60,000 homes or about half Northland's population, for two hours.

It had been connected to the grid since the beginning of the year and would start operating as soon as final tests had been signed off.

It was also stage one of Meridian's planned Ruakākā Energy Park.

Stage two would involve building a $227m 130MW solar farm, with 250,000 panels spread over 172ha of land next to the battery.

Work was due to start in August with power expected to start flowing in early 2027.

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For the first time in 20 years, Rotorua residents can wake up and officially breathe in clean air.

Bay of Plenty Regional Councillor Lyall Thurston said it had taken a collective effort from the community, councils, government and public health officials for Rotorua to officially shed its "polluted" air quality status.

Rotorua has long struggled with poor winter-time air quality, due to smoke from wood burners getting trapped by Rotorua's unique landscape.

For a time, Rotorua was the city with the worst winter-time air pollution in the country and in 2008 it recorded 37 days when PM10 air pollution exceeded the national standard.

To remove the polluted status, Rotorua was required to have no more than one breach of the national standard a year, for five years in a row.

In 2020 it recorded its first year with only one day exceeding the standard. The following four years it had no days exceeding the standard, meaning the "polluted" status can finally be removed.

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Last weeks thread here

Welcome to this week’s casual kōrero thread!

This post will be pinned in this community so you can always find it, and will stay for about a week until replaced by the next one.

It’s for talking about anything that might not justify a full post. For example:

  • Something interesting that happened to you
  • Something humourous that happened to you
  • Something frustrating that happened to you
  • A quick question
  • A request for recommendations
  • Pictures of your pet
  • A picture of a cloud that kind of looks like an elephant
  • Anything else, there are no rules (except the rule)

So how’s it going?

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But I just say to people, 'Go home, regroup, heal, gather yourself, touch down with your whānau [family] … and come back with some more to put on the table here'."

She urged anyone considering moving to Australia to ensure they had a secure job, enough money, accommodation and understood their entitlements before making the move.

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So, is it just me, or does this seem counterproductive? And surely the FMA has a method to track employees time already?

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The new scheme, which came into effect in April, removed English-language requirements and lowered the investment threshold for the “growth” visas to NZ$5mn (US$3mn). Applicants must spend just 21 days in the country to establish residency, down from three years. The application process has also been cut to 11 days, on average, according to the immigration department.

No poors !

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