Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
The issues, the interviews and the inside. Ryan Bridge new
for twenty twenty four on the early edition with Smith City,
New Zealand's furniture beds and a player store.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
News Dogs.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
It'd be good morning at six after five. Great to
have your company this Monday morning before six. The mental
health changes due today. Who do you call in a crisis?
We'll ask that question, though we're not getting much in
the way of answers. I'll warn you about that. Gavin
Gray in the UK this morning, there's a group wanting
public funding for dental care. And we've beat India in
the cricket at home. Andrew Alderson is all sorts of excited.
(00:38):
Plus Mike is bouncing around the newsroom this morning because
Liam Lawson's doing his driving thing. Will care more about
that just after the news, before the news at five
point thirty. It is a seven after.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Five the agenda.
Speaker 3 (00:52):
It is Monday, the fourth of November. Spain's king has
been confronted by angry locals who was visiting a flood
damaged area in Valencia. Now we're selling mug at him,
yelling at him. You can hear some of it there,
saying you knew about the flooding. I mean, he didn't
(01:14):
know about the flooding, but you can understand why they're upset.
Two hundred of their local residents have died. Ten thousand
troops and police and now being deployed to help with
the cleanup effort. Meanwhile, the Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, that's
just INA's socialist mate. He's been evacuated from a nearby
town following similar protests schools. This is a smog in
(01:35):
Lahore this morning. Schools have been closed and work from
home mandidate's put in place in Pakistan's second largest city
after recording its worst ever air quality. Who do you
blame India? It's believed the worsening equality is a result
of wind carrying pollution from across the border. King Kitching,
the UK's National Health Service, schools and charities are among
(01:57):
those paying millions in rent to Charles and Prince William,
their landlords. An investigation has found about one hundred and
eight million New Zealand dollars is made every year by
the royals who lease land to public services.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Thank you, LIUs and gentlemen for paying your rent every
now and.
Speaker 4 (02:13):
Then their private estates. The Duchess of Lancaster and Cornwall
make Charles and William fifty pounds a year, but they
have repeatedly refused to reveal exactly which properties they own.
Speaker 5 (02:28):
Then we have a report on the bills of properties
a Dancy Way.
Speaker 3 (02:33):
Yeah, this is a new investigation coming out and we're
going to go to Gavin Gray on this just after
five point thirty this morning to find out exactly what
the King and Prince William pay in terms of income
tax on those duchies.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
Right.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
Buildings have been damaged in a Russian drone attack on
Ukraine's capital cav for the second day in a row.
All of the drones are believed to have been intercepted
by air defense systems. No injuries have been reported there.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
The first word on the News of the Day early
edition with Ryan Bridge and Smith City, New Zealand's.
Speaker 2 (03:04):
Furniture Beds and a playing Store News Talk.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
SIY So their US election is this week? Does anyone care?
Nine two ninety two. If you do or if you don't,
love to hear from you as well. I will talk
about that briefly at five point thirty, but we're not
going to do much more on it today because it'll
be you know wall to wall coverage, as you can
at Walter Wall's coverage if you will in the next
couple of days. What I do want to talk about
(03:26):
this morning, though, is this really interesting story in the Herald.
So do you feed your baby or do you have
family who feed their babies the baby food and the pouches.
So there was all of this talk that it was
going to it was terrible for your infant, for your child,
because they're sucking on these things. They're not chewing or
using their mouths as they should be. Also, they're worry
(03:47):
they're all going to get obese because they're quite seat
that sweet, those little sucky pouches. Apparently all of that
was for nothing. All of that worry was for nothing.
There's been some proper research done by the university or
a Tiger university, i should say, finding showed just one
in four children were having the pouches regularly, so not
a big deal. But also just five percent of infants
(04:11):
were actually sucking them. Most of the parents were putting
them into a spoon and doing it that way. So
what's the problem, Well, there is no problem, but it
just shows you why you shouldn't listen to nutritionists I mean,
nutritionists are like microbiologists and psychologists. They're just overly cautious
panic pants people, aren't. They just don't listen to them.
(04:31):
They'll ruin your life. They're like an overbearing helicopter parent. Anyway,
we can get that one other way another one. This
is eating related eating adjacent scientists in the US. Again,
this is the probably nutritionist types. They are advising the
government there on new dietary guidelines because they want to
(04:53):
limit how much red meat you can eat. Oh fun, police,
what's more fun than red meat? You know, probably booze
to go with, and they wouldn't like that either. So
here are some facts about red meat. Some studies have
found that unprocessed red meat consumption is associated with heart
disease and premature death. However, other research has found that
(05:13):
only a modest link or no link to cardiovascular disease exists.
So are you a meat eater? I love a bit
of meat, just don't go too hard on the bacon
and the sausages. And you know, we also have grass
feed here in New Zena. Remember great beautiful grass fed
lamb and beef and venison and stuff. Go hard. Don't
worry about that, just go on eleven enough to.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
Five, Ryan Bridge, Hey, really cool.
Speaker 3 (05:39):
News this is and interesting that it's not news as well.
This is out of Maha. Rocket Lab is celebrating its
fiftieth rocket launch from ma here hopefully tonight. Whether permission,
it'll go ahead at eleven thirty pm. It's its fifty
fourth mission, which means that it's had obviously fifty here
and four launches out of the States. Fantastic news company,
(06:01):
huge valuation, brilliant for New Zealand, science, innovation, technology, everything
we want, but also not quite a big headline because
we're just used to it now, which is a fantastic thing.
It's twelve after five, It's Monday morning, and you're on
News Talk Set.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
B on your radio and online on iHeartRadio Early Edition
with Ryan Bridge and Smith City, New Zealand's Furniture, Beds
and a Flying Store Youth Talk, said B.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
Fourten after five. Great to have your company. Trump speaking
in a campaign rally in Pennsylvania right now, two days
to go until election. He's probably not going to say
anything that interesting or shocking because they tend not to
at the stage of the campaign, but will bring you anything,
if any If he does say anything of interest. If
you're in Wellington, on average, you're paying four thousand, four
(06:54):
hundred dollars for annual home insurance. That is well above
the national average of two thousand, seven hundred. It's just
just for home insurance and it's more than double the
Auckland average of twenty one hundred. The price of one
house policy, one contents policy in one car policy is
up seventeen percent on a year ago seventeen percent. There's
(07:15):
your sticky inflation. It's called a past.
Speaker 2 (07:17):
Five Brian Bridge.
Speaker 3 (07:18):
A new report out this morning shows the eye watering social,
economic and fiscal costs of the current approach to dental
healthcare in this country. It shows our current dental policy
settings costs two point five billion in loss productivity. It's
responsible for further costs when sick days, impatient care, and
cardiovascular disease are all taken into account. Apparently this prompting
(07:39):
calls for universal dental care. Max Harris is the Action
Station campaigner with us this morning. Max, Good morning, Good morning, Ryan,
nice to be on. Nice to have you on the show.
First of all, because I said to my producer Leo,
I said, hang on, who's done this report? So your
Action Station. What is action station?
Speaker 6 (07:57):
Action Stations an organization that works on campaigns and policy.
But the report has actually been done by Frank Advice
in Wellington using using a treasury methodology.
Speaker 3 (08:09):
Right, so you, I mean you guys have been accused
of being a left wing kind of group, are you?
Speaker 7 (08:15):
No, I don't think so.
Speaker 6 (08:17):
Expacsion Session does call itself kind of broadly progressive right
and talked about using values. But we you know, we
run a range of campaigns on community issues, kind of
responding to concerns in the community. And one that's come
up in the last few years has been dental and
actually quite a lot of people on the right and
(08:37):
left have talked about what a problem it is that
we have to pay so much for dental in this
country and that's what's prompted this report.
Speaker 3 (08:44):
And Frank group the group that's done the report. Are
they they got economists in there? I mean, is economists
looked over this report.
Speaker 6 (08:52):
This was this was authored by someone of the backgrounds
in economics. The Frank Advices connections to impact lads so
that they do a lot of work on things like
social investments. So yes, very much. This was authored by
an economist using an approach by treasury.
Speaker 3 (09:10):
Okay, all right, so you've got an economist on the job.
Let's talk about what does it that actually say.
Speaker 6 (09:17):
So what the report does is, you know, a lot
of the time when we talk about what it would
take to address dental in this country, we focus on
the costs, and that's fair enough. But the report looks
at the cost of not doing anything about dental and
it comes up with some pretty interesting others I think. So,
for example, is that the cost of not providing deal
(09:39):
care in the public system in this country is three
point one billion in terms of quality of life and
two point five billion in terms of loss product. Yes,
things like people not going for job interviews, not participate
because of the shame of stigma.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
Make I'm really sorry. We're gonna have to We're gonna
to cut the short I think because your phone line
is terrible. It sounds like you're coming to us from
a toilet. That's very annoying. That's Max Harris Action station campaigner.
So the report, as you heard where it's come from.
But the report looks at a couple of things. It
looks at not just the fiscal cost, the straight fiscal
(10:19):
cost of how much a universal system would cost you,
but also things like sick days and the economic impact
and lost productivity and all that kind of stuff. We've
got some numbers for you'll give them to you shortly.
That's a shame about the line. Eighteen after five News talksp.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
News and Views.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
You Trust to start your day's early edition with Ryan
Bridge and Smith City, New Zealand's Furniture Beds and a
Flying Store.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
News Talk ZIB.
Speaker 3 (10:43):
Five on your Monday morning. Great to have your company
this morning. We've just been talking to Action Station. This
is a group that's along with a consultancy frank group.
They're called put together a report. They reckon that the
fact we don't have universal gental care is costing us
huge in this country, not just fiscally but also in
terms of lost productivity, etc. There are some caveats to
(11:05):
this report I want to point out which they point
out in the report as well. They don't quite have
up to date numbers because there's a grant that goes
to lower income people for dental care. There's also other
changes that have been made that would affect the outcome
of the report. It's twenty one minutes after five. Rich
Sow we won the cricket Andrew Ordison's here.
Speaker 8 (11:24):
Hey greetings, Ryan. This is one of the well not
only in New Zealand's greatest Test series victory, but arguably
one of the best in cricketing history.
Speaker 3 (11:33):
Wow, I could see you getting all excited.
Speaker 8 (11:37):
I'm pretty you know. It's a monumental achievement to beat
into a three nil at home, especially a full strength
in the inside there juggernaut, and Fornezena to do that,
especially without Caine Williamson, Trent Bolton the like to be
able to turn that around. And I just pu tell
eleven for one hundred and sixty will young player of
the series filling in for Kay Williamson effectively, it's it's remarkable.
Speaker 3 (12:01):
Did we have a great one or did they have
a shocker or a bit of both? A bit of both.
Speaker 8 (12:05):
But I think you'd have to hand credits in New
Zealand the way they were able to just play India
out of the contest and spin India out of the
contest with you know, Santana in the second Test he
said on combat at India with pace in the first game,
but then again in the thirdiest I just putel just
delivering any this is the same ground one get A
(12:26):
stadium where he picked up the fourteen wickets including the
ten for back in December twenty twenty one, but able
to deliver again in the town of the city of
his birth.
Speaker 3 (12:35):
Right Formula one. It's on back on in Sarpolo after
rain delayed the qualifying yesterday. How's old Liam doing?
Speaker 8 (12:41):
Liam last report was seventh, I think it was, and
in fact, looking up there now seventh through twenty four
of the sixty nine laps max for stuff in the
Big Mover, moving from seventeenth on the grid up to
sixth currently in the race and George Russell leading the
way over Lando Norris. A bit of debate about Norris too.
I think going off it was an aborted start, large stroll,
(13:04):
flying off the track in the formation lap, and I
think he took off too early in the next phase,
so that some debate over with there'd be some penalty there.
But from a his youal perspective, Lawson again performing strongly
in seven so far.
Speaker 3 (13:21):
It's quite weird.
Speaker 8 (13:22):
Yeah, rate effected conditions like to forward.
Speaker 3 (13:24):
The start, Does that benefit Lawson or they were all
kind of about the same. I suppose everyone drives rain and.
Speaker 8 (13:30):
I think it would be tricky. Yeah, you want your
wipers on, Ryan, You know, I.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
Noticed the commentator. So the commentator's voice was quite excited
on lap one. But you don't maintain that energy for
seventy laps, do you. I'm assuming that you calm down.
Speaker 8 (13:47):
David Cross voice is always strong on that one, right,
and then on the on the penultlement and ultimate laps
of the race in.
Speaker 3 (13:54):
Particular, but he chills out in the middle.
Speaker 8 (13:56):
Pretty hard to maintain that tempo throughout, much like it
is for the driver themselves. I imagine with the cars.
Speaker 3 (14:02):
I was listening to our own voice of Rugby on
Turn On News Talks early Sunday morning for the All Blacks.
Tight we sort of just got there in the end.
Speaker 8 (14:13):
Yeah, imagine it speaking of crescendos and peaks, except that
Elliot would have been in formed. And yeah, that was
a tight result. It twick, I mean, one of the
toughest cauldrons to go to in the world of rugby
eighty two thousand in fine voice, swing thow, sweet Chariot
combating the All Blackshaka. But yeah, that was a terrific
(14:36):
result they were able to hold on. I mean, of course,
England Jewish Ward missing a couple of kicks of the
drop goal and also the penalty. But Damian McKenzie with
that fine conversion to Mark Laya's solo effidence of the corner.
Really the right winger getting there and creating that match
winning try and McKenzie coming on as a sub in
delivering with the kick from the corner. So yeah, all
(14:56):
from the sideline, I should say, so yeah, fine result.
Speaker 3 (14:59):
Fine result. I wait to start the just fine not great, Tim.
I think it was just.
Speaker 8 (15:04):
An even contest and it was just tough going for
the All Blacks England putting up the decent show. I
mean what the real standout player for me having watched
it was Wallace, a titi bled sye flinker. He keeps
going from strength to strength and just he was a
tower of strength for the All Blacks. And then you know,
this first season is remarkable.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
Andrew, great to have you on the shows. There was
Andrew Orlison, he'd be sports celeb. Twenty five minutes. Honestly,
it is like a little party out there between Leam
Lawson and the cricket. Twenty five minutes after five News
Talks EB.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
The early edition Full the Show podcast on iHeartRadio powered
by News Talks.
Speaker 3 (15:40):
It be twenty seven after five news Talks. He'd be
great to have your company this Monday morning. Of course,
Donald Trump is going to win the US election. Of
course he is. I've been saying that since July on
this program, not that anyone will listen to me. He
would have also, by the way, would have whipped Biden
like a bottle of cream. Too many Americans are hurting
with the cost of living, and that's all motivation you
(16:00):
need really to get out and vote, isn't it. Republicans
are doing it early in record numbers, which they don't
normally do, including in the swing states. In Georgia, half
of the eight million eligible voters there went early, which
is astonishing. They also included seven hundred thousand people who
never voted in twenty twenty. Now, why would they be
voting this time around? You could say it might be
(16:23):
the fact it's a female, a woman of color, that
they wanted to elect, but the polls show the more
likely motivation is financial. You feel poor, pissed off, and
you vote the current lot out, be it Biden or Harris. Plus,
Harris hasn't helped herself swearing black and Blue that Biden
nomics is working when people know in their pockets that
it's not blindly defending Biden's mental state despite everyone thinking
(16:48):
he's gone do lally And it's sort of reminiscent actually
that of Jacinda durn Remember here she refused to call
the constant living crisis a crisis, despite the fact it's
like the toughest economic period in a generation. It enrages
people when you do that, and calling Trump a Nazi
or a fascist isn't going to stop him because people
don't vote for Trump because he's a saint. Do they?
(17:12):
Add to that the fact that the markets are pricing
in a Trump victory, the fact he always does better
on election day than in the polls because his voters
don't like polsters, and that, while he's not a had
in the popular vote, his polling now is higher at
the stage of the campaign than when he won in
twenty sixteen. Add those things together you have a pretty
(17:32):
strong case. I think that Donald Trump is going to
take back the White House this week twenty nine after five.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
Ryan Bridge new for twenty twenty four on early edition
with Smith City, New Zealand's Furniture Beds and a playing store.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
News Talk Siddy, good morning.
Speaker 3 (18:00):
It is twenty four minutes away from six year on
news Talk said, be great to have your company this
Monday morning, though I do hate Monday mornings because it
means sport and there is a lot of it this morning.
Historic record breaking bashing of India by our black Caps.
We are very excited about this. Andrew Orlison has been
in here literally sweating with excitement this morning. Actually, somebody
(18:21):
has texted to say, Ryan, despicable that News Talk couldn't
lead the news with the historic black Caps win. Mozzie,
thanks for your text. They did have it in Sport
and literally we had Andrew Willison in here just moments
ago breathlessly telling us how exciting it was. And it
is exciting and well done to the black Caps. Also
to Liam Lawson who was coming seventh. Apparently someone has
(18:43):
hit Liam Lawson just nudged him a little bit and
he is now down to tenth. He's in tenth place
currently and they are thirty two laps out of sixty nine.
Mike is obviously very excited about this and he'll be
in just before sixth form. More on that also, what
is new Zealand's hottest suburb. We've got more than two
(19:04):
thousand suburbs in this country. I'll tell you they answer
to that question in just a second.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
Twenty three to six, Ryan Bridge, We're.
Speaker 3 (19:10):
Going to my reporters around the country, starting in Dunedan
with Callen proc to Callen, Good morning. An investigation has
cleared a controversial Dunedin pet show. Yeah morning, Ryan.
Speaker 9 (19:20):
This was the Exotic Pet expo in Donedan back in July.
You may remember it. It was labeled a Willy Wonka
experience by some. The woman behind the sex post says
she's been cleared of animal abuse accusations. Attendees and a
stall holder blasted the event, claiming false advertising and inadequate
animal welfare standards. The SPCA has confirmed its investigation is closed,
(19:44):
but won't comment any further due to privacy. The organizer,
Amedia Seal, says the PCA did not find any issues.
She says they're welcome to inspect the animals at her
home rescue anytime, and she's contemplating organizing a bigger and
better event next year.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
Your weather today, most of the cloudy chants.
Speaker 9 (20:03):
Of a shower or to today for Zanedin and a
high twenty brilliant.
Speaker 3 (20:06):
Thank you, Claires and christ Church Clear, good morning to you. More.
Christ Church Hospital staff worried about the toxic fumes at work.
Speaker 10 (20:14):
Yes, sir Ryan, good morning. This is the toxic fumes
that have been coming from the construction on site at
christ Church Hospital. We now know that more than eighty
staff have come forward with concerns that they may have
been exposed. Work on the new tower of the hospital,
which is where the fumes are coming from, has been
paused after dozens of staff fell ill. One was even hospitalized.
(20:35):
As of last month, multiple radiology workers say they've suffered
breathing problems, rashes and headaches from what's believed to be
a chemical used in some paint work. Health INZED Deputy
Chief Executive Martin Killo says an ongoing health monitoring program
is now being established to help those who have been impacted.
Investigations into the cause of the issue do remain ongoing.
Speaker 3 (20:56):
Right clear. How's your weather today?
Speaker 10 (20:58):
Mainly fine with cloud and increasing this evening northeast of
these developing early today and a high of twenty one brilliant.
Speaker 3 (21:04):
Thank you. Mex Is in Wellington this morning. Mechs good
morning to you. Good morning, Transmission Gully. There is a
link road that's closed.
Speaker 11 (21:13):
Yeah, only two years since the Transmission Gully opened. This
is the two kilometer whitehang you do, a link road
which connects State Highway one with eastern Pottydoor. It's closing.
It needs new electricity cables and drinking water pipes. It's
going to be an absolute nightmare for locals. Closed from
today for about five months. The council says, when Transmission
(21:34):
Gully was built again only two years ago did it open.
Apparently no one knew the scale of residential development nearby,
and this work is now needed to cater for future
demand as well. Locals are understandably not happy. The commute
is going to be a killer, a significant to build
up of traffic, likely on that side of Pottydoor as well.
(21:54):
And they're also cynical. Recent sewer and water main work
took far longer than advertised as well, so they're not
sure five months is it going to be enough.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
You'd think they just have room alongside the building a
new mate. We just leave a little bit of room
for some cables or some water pipes should you need them.
You would think maybe that's too hard how's you weather.
Speaker 11 (22:15):
A cold start but mostly fine. Today's stronger northerly is
fifteen the high in the city.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
Nice one. Thanks Max Neva's an Auckland hay Neva, good morning.
A new giant Christmas tree.
Speaker 5 (22:24):
Is coming November, and I'm feeling Christmasy and here we
have a giant new Christmas tree. So it's going to
be about well over eighteen meters high. It's going to
be decorated with over ten thousand lights, four thousand per
hootaca with flowers, and two hundred big giant bables. Now
it's set to Shasha Bubles set to open later this
(22:48):
month down Lower Queen Street and for Bet the heart
of the city chief executive. She says, Look, this is
going to be positive. It's going to be great. The tree.
It's going to be a mainstay for the city center
for years to come. And in addition it's going to
be you know, they'll have all those celebrations to round Christmas.
So they've got the Smith and Coey windows that they're
going to light up center, parades coming.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
That's all on for young and old aj met It's
quite a big Trainone who's paying for it is at
heart of the city. Maybe it must be yeah, and
the local businesses exactly.
Speaker 5 (23:18):
I thought, how long will it take for someone to
try and climb there with some.
Speaker 3 (23:23):
Or do you know what'll they'll all be defecating around it?
Oh Christmas, that's what they're doing. You're quite are they
flinging around and all sorts?
Speaker 5 (23:36):
Well, you know this was going to be my positive story.
Speaker 3 (23:39):
No ruined. How's the weather today? Never fine?
Speaker 5 (23:42):
Fine apart from some morning cloud, chance of an afternoon shower.
But seventeen is the high here in Auckland.
Speaker 3 (23:48):
Brilliant. Thank you neither and not can for us this
morning Gavin Gray and the UK. Next, we're talking mental health.
What are you doing? A crisis changes coming today? Also
New Zealand's hottest.
Speaker 1 (23:57):
Suburb All Ahead International correspond with ins and Eye Insurance
Peace of Mind for New Zealand Business.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
A quarters to section on news talks. Did the if
one's been red flagged over in sal Paulo they're slipping
and sliding around the track. It's quite wit. Liam Lawson
currently in tenth place, but obviously it's been paused for now.
We're going to Gavin Gray are UK and Europe correspondent
this morning angry crowds have confronted the Spanish King in Valencia.
This after all the flooding, Gevin, what are they saying?
Speaker 12 (24:29):
A green? At times, actually it looked like the sort
of security ring that was supposed to be put around
the King in Queen of Spain was not going to
cope when they turned into one particular sort of pedestrian
street that were absolutely set upon by protesters who were
shouting murderer and shame on them and also flicking and
throwing mud at them. Of course, mud is plentiful in
(24:50):
and around the region of Valencia at the moment, following
those floods this week, in which more rainfall fell in
eight hours than they normally get in an entire year.
The death toll has also risen in the last forty
eight hours. It's now said to be two hundred and seventeen,
but the police are continuing to check underground car parks
tunnels as well for people who have died in their cars,
(25:12):
and it is thought many many more are still missing.
I have to say, I think King Philip and Queen
Letitia they felt they had to go. They were consoling
members of the crowd. They did act extremely sort of
calmly to this that they faced. But frankly, you know,
there were members of the Valencian Parliament saying the King's
visit was a very bad decision. They didn't listen to
the warnings and people there are angry that the warnings
(25:33):
about the weather came too late and then they've not
been given enough help.
Speaker 3 (25:37):
Yeah, I mean, you can understand where they're coming from.
County and two hundred people, as you said, have lost
their lives in that region. Let's move to the UK.
So King Charles and Prince William have huge estates and
it turns out that they're charging public institutions, even charities
rinked to use the buildings that they own.
Speaker 12 (25:58):
Yes, so this is slightly complicated because of the structure
of how it's dealt with. But they run a couple
of organizations, the Duchies of Lancaster and Cornwall. Now they
do not form part of the crown estate. The Crown
of State is something separate and the Crowner State profit
is used basically to calculate the funding given by the
(26:18):
government and that is taxed. These particular things seem to
be far more relaxed, and it's said that the deals
they have with National Health Service organizations, public bodies and
charities are worth roughly one hundred million New Zealand dollars
a year to them now. A spokesperson for the Duchy
of Lancaster, the private estate of King Charles, said, and
(26:39):
I quote it complies with all relevant UK legislation and
regular whose standards applicable to its range of business activities.
But this has been splashed across the Sunday Times. There's
a documentary on television as well coming and it doesn't
look good for the Royals on all this. The Duchy
of Cornwall, which is Prince William's separate entity, the Duchy
of Lancas through as the Kings, both hold very large
(27:02):
amounts of land, including quite a lot of commercial property
in England and Wales, and this is the property that
they've been renting out. The estates are not subject to
corporation tax which the rest of us have to pay,
and the Roles do not pay capital gains tax that's
a tax on an increase in value of an asset
you sell. But they do voluntarily pay income tax.
Speaker 3 (27:23):
On the sob ah that's what it is. Because there
was some confusion, so they voluntarily pay the income tax.
That's the difference. Gavin. Thank you very much for clarifying that.
Gavin Gray, our UK europe correspondent.
Speaker 2 (27:34):
It is twelve to six bran Bridge.
Speaker 3 (27:36):
From today, police are dialing back the number of mental
health callouts that they will attend. Phase one of the
reduced services will see police complete faster handovers in the
emergency department, transport requests and attendance at mental health facilities
will need to meet a higher threshold. This is happening
from today. All four phases set to be unpremented by
September next year. Anthony O'Brien is the Associate professor in
(27:59):
Mental health Nursing at the University of Whykoto. He's with
us Live this morning. Good morning, Good morning, Ryan Tura,
thank you for being with me. What can you just
tell me practically, if someone is having a mental health
crisis today, what will change?
Speaker 7 (28:14):
Well, that will depend on the type of mental health
crisis they're having. Ryan, That's a term that covers a
broad range of experiences that people might have. Sometimes their
mental health crisis that necessitate the involvement of police for
safety reasons. Other times the mental health crisis that can
be managed by primary mental health services or sorry, primary
health services or by mental health specialist services, and that's
(28:37):
where most mental health crises are managed. They're not actually
managed by police. So for some people to be no change.
I guess where there'll be a change will be if
it's a situation where police feel that their presence is
not necessary, they'll want to negotiate that if they're asked
to attend.
Speaker 3 (28:56):
Right, does the hospital have a team of psychologists or
specialists that could go attend an event outside of the
hospital or are they based there and don't move?
Speaker 7 (29:07):
So the mental health services are predominantly community based, so
they are mobile. They're not based in the hospital, they're
based in community clinics. That's right throughout the country. There's
been the case for the best part of thirty years now.
Speaker 3 (29:18):
But is that for emergency responses.
Speaker 7 (29:22):
Yeah, sure, that's for emergency responses here, So.
Speaker 3 (29:27):
Why have the police been doing it then?
Speaker 7 (29:30):
So once again you have to think about mental health
events being a broad range of different types of events
and some do require the presence of a mental health service,
some don't, and it's the one and the presence of police,
and some don't. The majority don't, The vast majority so
the ones that that police and mental health services respond
(29:53):
to together, or that mental health asks for a police presence,
they are the ones where as I understand it, there's
no commitment to say we're not going to do that anymore.
It's the ones where police feel their presence is not necessary,
where in the past they have attended, feeling that they
(30:13):
may be able to offer some help support. They're the
ones that they're not going to be attending.
Speaker 3 (30:17):
Is the sky going to fall in today? Is something
terrible going to happen? Do you think because of this change?
Speaker 7 (30:24):
I don't think the sky is going to fall in.
I know that health and police have been negotiating about
better managing police resource responding to people with mental health
crisis in the community for some time. This has been
going on for a number of years, so it's not new.
There is a memorandum of understanding between police and mental
health that is still in place, or police and health.
(30:45):
They're still in place, so any changes will need to
be kind of negotiated through that memorandum of understanding. And
as I understand it, those discussions are happening between police
and health, so everybody's doing everything they can to kind
of manage this change, and I think health and health
we recognize that there's a lot of calls on police
time and we don't want police to be unnecessarily in
(31:07):
rold Will.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
Yeah. I think most people think they've probably got much
better things to be doing in some of those cases. Anthony,
thank you very much for your time. Anthony O'Brien, Associate
Professor and Mental Health Nursing, University of White Cuto. Big
Change happening from today eight to six.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
The news you need this morning and the in depth
analysis early edition with Ryan Bridge and Smith City, New
Zealand's furniture beds and a playing store.
Speaker 2 (31:29):
News Talk said be six.
Speaker 3 (31:30):
To six News Talk said be the hottest suburb in
New Zealand. According to one roof they've announced this this morning.
There are more than two thousand suburbs. The hottest suburb
is drum Roll East Tummocky in Auckland because of its
potential for growth, property values which are relatively low considering
their neighbors, and also a stepping stone for families who
(31:51):
wanting to send their kids to good schools out in
East Auckland. Other suburbs Masterton came in at number ten.
Good on your Marsterton average property value there at five
hundred and thirty three thousand. Mike is with us this morning.
Good morning morning, good to have you on hat. So
Liam Lawson, how's he doing?
Speaker 13 (32:06):
He's doing well. One of the great things about you
should get on board with this now. Now is a
good time to learn about this because in the rain
a couple of things happen. One is Luck can't do
anything about that. The other driver's skill and so they
started his team that is Sonoda three him five, so
that's unheard of. They don't have a car to be
that fast. So it's in the rain that things get
(32:26):
really interesting. And this race has been complete and utter carnage,
and so you've got red flags, yellow flags, and anything
could happen. Because one of the great criticisms of this
one is it's the stapers at the front or Norris's
at the front. You know what's happening before it's even started.
Speaker 3 (32:41):
The rain changes everything.
Speaker 13 (32:42):
On a day like this, literally anything could happen. So
he got tenth, got tapped by Pstree and spun. Pstre
has been given a ten second penalty, so at the
end of the race Pstre will go back ten seconds
which will be several places, so don't worry too much
about that. So Lawson's currently in tenth, but it sort
of doesn't mean anything because anything could happen.
Speaker 3 (33:02):
So what what what is a good what would be
a good place thing for lem Lawson today today?
Speaker 13 (33:07):
If he finishes that both those guys finish in the
top ten, that's points.
Speaker 3 (33:11):
That's the important point, right, okay for.
Speaker 13 (33:13):
Liam Lawson specifically. Whether he beats the Oda probably won't.
Whether he beats Periers.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
May well do. So you get your points and when's
the big grand finale that we care And throughout.
Speaker 13 (33:23):
Three weeks you've got you've got Vegas and too Middle
Eastern races still to comfortable season. So this is the
fourth to last meeting of the year and so it's
it's all to play for.
Speaker 3 (33:31):
So rain is good as a viewer. As a viewer,
you cannot.
Speaker 13 (33:34):
Ask for more than what we've seen in sar Parlor today.
Speaker 3 (33:38):
Some of them better in the rain than I very
much so.
Speaker 13 (33:40):
And that's that's where that's where your skill is. And
some of them are used to it, some of them aren't.
Some of them come up through charting and know how
to race in the rain. That's what makes it so exciting.
It's edge of your seat, right all.
Speaker 3 (33:50):
On your micas within next, have a great day, run
I'll see tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (34:07):
For more from Early Edition with Ryan Bridge, Listen live
to news Talks it'd be from five am weekdays, or
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