Beehive Bulletin - Friday, 30 April 2004
Friday, 30 April 2004
Beehive Bulletin
30 April 2004
Labour caucus approves abstention on foreshore
Prime Minister Helen Clark says the Labour caucus earlier this week gave Associate Maori Affairs Minister Tariana Turia and Tainui MP Nanaia Mahuta permission to not support the government's foreshore legislation. An abstention or non-vote provided Mrs Turia with a way to continue as a Minister but a vote against the legislation was a step too far.
Helen Clark says she's not in the business of trying to crush the last vestige of spirit out of people but also needed to uphold fundamental principles of government. She accepted there was an agonising decision ahead for Mrs Turia. (An announcement from Tariana Turia was expected mid afternoon Friday.)
New approach to get beneficiaries back to
work
New measures to support sickness and invalids' beneficiaries back in to work were launched this week. Social Development and Employment Minister Steve Maharey says beneficiaries in the Manukau region are the first to trial the new service that will be progressively rolled out across the country.
Measures include more active case management of clients by nearly halving the number of beneficiaries a case manager works with; better support for employers to take on or retain staff experiencing illness or disability; and health treatment, including surgery, where this enables beneficiaries to take on paid work.
Steve Maharey says work is fundamental to people's self worth and independence and the government wants to ensure all New Zealanders have an equal opportunity to get and keep paid employment.
Building a Future
Housing Minister Steve Maharey has released a discussion document outlining New Zealand's housing needs over the next ten years. Speaking at the launch of the New Zealand Housing Strategy Mr Maharey outlined a number of pressure points within the housing sector such as rising house prices and rents that have put many households under stress.
He says there are concerns about housing quality,
affordability, housing for older people and housing needs
for different ethnicities. The discussion document
summarises key housing issues facing New Zealand and gives a
proposed plan of action. Building the Future can be viewed
at local libraries or on line at:
www.hnzc.co.nz/nzhousingstrat
Legal
information online Justice Minister Phil Goff this
week launched a new website called LawAccess, which gives
the public an extensive range of law-related information.
LawAccess - www.lawaccess.lsa.govt.nz
Visitor spending up again International
visitors injected $6.4 billion into the New Zealand economy
in 2003 - an impressive 3.9 per cent increase on 2002's
record figures. Tourism Minister Mark Burton says in a year
where the tourism sector faced worldwide challenges such as
SARS, global conflict, and terrorism, New Zealand has
emerged as an international success story. In 1999, the
government began to work closely with the industry to
develop the New Zealand Tourism Strategy 2010 -- a plan for
building a sustainable tourism industry. Mark Burton says he
is delighted the industry is growing and has struck a
balance between managing the impacts of tourism on this
country and maximising its economic benefits. Legal
support for Inquiry participants Two lawyers will be
made available for complainants and police officers involved
in the Commission of Inquiry into Police misconduct. The
lawyers will not appear before the commission but will be
available to complainants and police officers should they
have any concerns they feel unable to raise with the counsel
assisting the commission. Attorney-General Margaret
Wilson says it is important people understand the inquiry is
not an adversarial hearing which means the normal approach
applying in a criminal trial is not called for. She says at
this stage there seems no need for complainants or police
officers to have independent lawyers. ENDS