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High Court finds Government in breach of OIA
The Government must change its arrogant approach to the public’s right to know about official information, following a court decision that Trade Minister Tim Groser acted unlawfully by refusing to make the slightest effort to release information about the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA), the Green Party said today. “A High Court decision today that Trade Minister Tim Groser acted unlawfully in a blanket withholding of information about the TPPA must signal the end of the National Government’s abuse of the...
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Stronger rules and response needed to protect beaches from oil spills
Stronger rules and enforcement to protect our beaches and marine environment are needed in the wake of new information that more than 360 oil spills have occurred in New Zealand waters since the 2011 Rena disaster, the Green Party said today. “With summer just around the corner, we need better ways of protecting the beaches and seas that are so important to Kiwi ways of life,” Green Party environment spokesperson Eugenie Sage said. “Every New Zealander has a birthright to...
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Key’s Camp Taji trip whitewashes reality
The Prime Minister’s comments about Camp Taji’s safety are an attempt to whitewash the reality there, particularly in light of the damning US report on the camp’s safety, the Green Party says.
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Green Party backs mandatory captioning petition
Green Party MP Mojo Mathers is proud to sponsor a petition launched today by the Captioning Working Group, which calls for mandatory captioning to be put into law. The petition was created by the New Zealand Captioning Working Group, which is leading the fight for captioning in this country. “I want to acknowledge all of the organisations backing this petition and everyone who is supporting the push for mandatory captioning in New Zealand,” said Green Party disability spokesperson Mojo Mathers....
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Independent evaluation of Charter Schools needed
A genuinely independent, expert evaluation of the Government’s charter schools programme is needed in light of revelations that Education Minister Hekia Parata interfered to prevent evaluators comparing the performance of charter school students with students at normal state schools. “It’s time for education specialists to provide honest, expert opinion on whether or not charter schools are working for New Zealand’s kids,” Green Party education spokesperson Catherine Delahunty said. “New Zealanders need a genuinely independent expert evaluation of National’s charter schools...
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Government needs a plan to support people working in coal industry
The National Government needs a plan to support people who work for Solid Energy and communities like Huntly as the coal industry winds up, the Green Party said today. “People who work for Solid Energy deserve the Government’s support to find new jobs,” Green Party spokesperson for workplace relations and safety Denise Roche said. “National’s mismanagement loaded Solid Energy up with debt and drove it into the state it’s in today, so National has a responsibility to support the people...
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KiwiSaver withdrawals highlight growing hardship
Record numbers of people are withdrawing from their KiwiSaver schemes due to significant financial hardship, the Green Party said today. The Financial Market Authority’s annual report on KiwiSaver shows that $43 million was withdrawn from KiwiSaver last year for reasons of significant financial hardship, up 38 percent from last year. A new record number of people are withdrawing their retirement savings, up 11 percent to 8,911 as calculated by the Parliamentary Library. “Record numbers of people are suffering significant financial...
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Charter schools evaluation reveals next to nothing
The only useful conclusion in the Government-sanctioned evaluation of charter schools is the confirmation that smaller classes work better, the Green Party says. The evaluation, carried out by consultancy firm Martin Jenkins and released publicly yesterday, was a narrow study of three of the first five charter schools, which are part of the National Government’s charter schools experiment. "The report was meant to focus on innovation but the only educational ‘innovation’ clearly identified is that smaller class sizes work better,”...
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Greens support E tū union launch
Today’s launch of the new union E tū, formed through the merger of the EPMU and the Service and Food Workers’ Union, has been welcomed by the Green Party. The new union covers over 50,000 members and is New Zealand’s largest private sector union. “A strong union movement is essential to reducing inequality, and I am confident the new E tū union, with its larger membership base and organising capacity, will be able to cover more hard working New Zealanders...
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Super Fund tilts towards clean energy
The New Zealand Superannuation Fund’s commitment to invest NZ$540 million in clean energy is its clearest signal yet that they are taking climate change seriously, the Green Party said today. The release of the Fund’s annual report today details how the Fund’s $540 million commitment to invest in clean energy as part of a wider priority this year to explore opportunities to invest in climate-resilient infrastructure and complete their Climate Change and Investment Strategy project. “The Super Fund is putting...