Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
The issues, the interviews and the insight.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Ryan Bridge on early edition with ex Pole insulation keeping
Kiwi Holmes warm and dry.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
This winter news talk sa'd be good morning.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
It has just gone six after five on your Monday.
Bunch of crime announcements coming your way this week. The
government clearly very keen to be seen to be doing
something on crime. It's one of the few areas left
that they dominate labor when it comes to polling. So
a couple of announcements this week. We'll look at the
so called radical change we're expecting on shoplifting and theft.
Speaker 4 (00:33):
That's just before six this morning. Healthy homes, it's your
final warning.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
Really for landlords this week to get steer house and
house and order before the tenants can complain and you'll
be whacked with a fine worth thousands. Gavin Gray and
the UK for US and Rod Stewart at Glastonbury making
some quite political and politically charged comments to the crowd.
A cat amongst the pigeons. Just gone seven after five.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
The agenda the headed.
Speaker 3 (00:59):
For you when Nuclear Watchdog has said that Iran will
be able to start enriching uranium again in a matter
of months. Raphael Grossi's US strikes on the three main
Iranian science called severe but not total damage.
Speaker 5 (01:12):
Iran had a very vast, ambitious program and part of
it may still be there, and if not, there is
also the self evident truth that the knowledge is there,
the industrial capacity is there. Iran is a very sophisticated
(01:33):
country in terms of nuclear technology. As is obvious, military
operations are not. You are not going to solve this
in a definitive way military right too.
Speaker 3 (01:42):
Bleston bry Now organizers there say they're appalled by comments
made by the punctuo Bob Villain calling for death to
the Israeli military during a performance on Saturday.
Speaker 2 (01:52):
At one point, he.
Speaker 6 (01:53):
Led the crowd in a chance of death to the
idea in reference to the Israelian military. Now the Glassone
Festival have said both comments very much crossed the line
and are reminding people that they say hates me to
be won, He's tolerated.
Speaker 3 (02:10):
Rod Stewart will have more on Rod Stewart's performance. Shortly,
the Senate Republicans This is in the US voted to
take Trump's A Big, Beautiful Bill into the next phase
of discussion, making it basically more likely it's going to
pass in the coming days. Monday their time, the Senate
move fifty one forty nine to open debate on the bill.
Two Republicans instantly have joined the Democrats and opposing it.
(02:30):
See it's quite remarkable then, only about twenty percent of
bills get read like this on the Senate floor.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
And a reminder here, this is over nine hundred pages.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
And it's been approximated that it takes about fifteen hours
to read.
Speaker 7 (02:43):
But certainly a delaying tactic.
Speaker 4 (02:46):
It is your agenda for Monday morning.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
The first word on the News of the Day early
edition with Ryan Bridge and x Fole Insulation keeping Kiwi
Holmes warm and dry.
Speaker 3 (02:57):
This winter news talks it'd be and Trump is going
after basically those two Republicans who have jumped ship and
abandoned his support for his bill. He's going after them
a helpful leather this morning. I'll get to that in
a second. Just a wonderful story, a wonderful story at
the weekend in the Herald. I don't know if you've
managed to see it. The headline is on the up
(03:20):
South Micio pig farm manageress journey to home ownership, and
it's one of those stories where you think. You know,
you go to read the newspaper and a lot of
it is negative and occasionally you come across something like
this and just warms your heart.
Speaker 4 (03:33):
And it did that for me at the weekend.
Speaker 3 (03:35):
So it's a immigrant who's come here, and I don't
know how the story came to fruition. It seems that
he's bought a property which is very happy about in Potatadou,
and I think through the property developers this story came
into the media anyway, that's not important. Basically, so many
people in New Zealand saying I cannot afford a house.
(03:58):
You know, I'm hard done by the world is against me.
You can't get ahead. Here's a guy who comes from
the Philippines. His name's Jeanie Marnall, comes from the Philippines
with his family. Just bought his first house in Potato,
first Kivi house in Potatadoo and is absolutely overjoyed and
over the moon because he grew up dirt poor in
(04:20):
the Philippines. And the story goes through his life and
it's just worth a read. In the eighties and nineties,
between his primary school classes, he would walk around the
streets of the Philippines selling rice, dried coconut, caramelized banana,
everything in between.
Speaker 4 (04:35):
He would do that in his lunch breaks.
Speaker 3 (04:37):
At primary school, he collected fears on jeepkneys on the weekends,
worked as a faery crew member, often returning home just
in time to.
Speaker 4 (04:45):
Go to school on Monday. Can you imagine that at
primary school?
Speaker 3 (04:50):
Then he gets to university, which is a miracle in
and of itself. With his father's encouragement, he finishes high school,
wins a scholarship to go to the state university, gets
ant agricultural technology degree. There was one problem though, He
lived far away and had to find his own accommodation
and pay for it.
Speaker 4 (05:07):
So what does he do?
Speaker 3 (05:08):
But he doesn't give up, He doesn't start moaning. He
doesn't right to stuff dot co, dot nz at or
the Herald and Winge. No, he finds a thirty six
pig farm with four pens. In exchange for looking after
the pigs, He's offered one of the pens as a
place to sleep. It was free accommodation and paid labor.
He says he lived in a pig pen for a year.
(05:31):
This guy now owns his own home with his family
in Potato and He's not just sitting on his laurels now.
His next goal is to own his own farm. This
is a guy who has who has known true poverty
and has worked his butt off at university. He was
up at two am slaughtering pigs before getting ready to
attend class at seven am to five am. This is
(05:53):
a guy who knows poverty inside out like the back
of his hand, but has ambition, has drive, and has
gusto to make life better for his family. And he's
doing that here in New Zealand, and I think that's fantastic.
Speaker 4 (06:07):
Twelve after five.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
Ryan Bridge on your radio and online on iHeartRadio Early
Edition with Ryan Bridge and ex foll installation keeping Kiey
Holmes warm and dry.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
This winter news Talk said, be welcome along.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
To your Monday just gone fourteen after five. So this
is a procedural vote over in the US Senate, but
it does mean that Donald Trump's Big Beautiful Bill is
a step closer. Fifty one to forty nine. This vote
to get it further through the Senate, and most Republicans
in favor of it. All Democrats opposed to it, but
a couple of Republicans jumped and voted with the Democrats,
(06:43):
which obviously has irked Trump, and so it's probably going
to pass Monday local time. But Trump has basically gone
to town on these Republicans because it's treachery, isn't it.
Speaker 4 (06:56):
Now.
Speaker 3 (06:57):
The problem you've got is this one particular North Carolina
Republican Tom Tillis. He is worried in his particular in
North Carolina about tens of billions in lost funding to
hospitals from Trump's Medicaid cuts that are in the bill.
So you've got a local senator who's saying, well, I'm
(07:17):
up for reelection next year. If I go along with this,
I'll be slaughtered at the polls because I've just cut
tens of billions of dollars of funding from hospitals. So
how am I meant to win a midterm election? And
Trump is saying, well, if you don't support me, what
I will do is go and meet with all of
the people who want to oppose you, who want to
run against you. I'll go and have meetings with him
(07:38):
this week. Give them some free press. So Trump trying
to strong arm a strong arm him back, though it
looks like on these.
Speaker 4 (07:46):
Numbers he won't even need him. At sixteen after five.
Speaker 3 (07:48):
Brian b DDA tomorrow for the landlords of the country's
five hundred and sixty five thousand rental properties. From tomorrow,
all rental properties must meet the government's Healthy Home standards,
which include rule around heating, insulation, ventilation, draft stopping, et cetera.
Matt Ball as the advocacy manager at the Property Investors Federation.
Good morning, Matt, Good morning, Ryan, how are you good?
Speaker 4 (08:09):
Thank you.
Speaker 3 (08:10):
Now, when I say all rental properties, this doesn't well,
I'm assuming still doesn't include kyeing or order right, all
of their homes don't have to be up to scratch
or does that include them too?
Speaker 8 (08:21):
I thought they had to be up to date last year,
but I may be wrong.
Speaker 4 (08:24):
Okay, Well, I'd like to see some numbers on how
well that's coming for them.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
Yeah, me too, Yeah, hey for the rest of the
private landlord. So, Matt, do you think most are up
to standard already?
Speaker 8 (08:38):
It's interesting, Ryan, So I would have said yesterday a
year that most were up to standard, but there was
some interesting reporting out yesterday that said maybe quite a
few more than I thought aren't.
Speaker 4 (08:50):
As in like close to eighty percent.
Speaker 8 (08:53):
Yeah, something like that. I would have thought I would
have thought in the high eighties would have been through
this by now, I mean there's been cleaned, have noticed.
Speaker 3 (09:01):
Right, And this sample that you're talking about, one thousand
random rental properties in the last two months, found only
twenty three percent with fully compliant.
Speaker 8 (09:09):
Yeah, that's quite a low number. When you look at
the numbers in detail, it seems like there are five
different standards, right, So a lot of landlords are compliant
with it's one or two or three of the standards,
but they might miss out on only one. So apparently
draft stopping only fifty percent of landlords up to speed
on that one, and that that is the reason for
(09:30):
the low compliance rate. So there's still a lot more
heaters in houses, there's a lot more insulation, there's a
lot more moisture barriers, all that sort of stuff. So
homes are definitely drier and warmer, and we see that
in the Sensus data. But yeah, there's still a few
people who do need to fully comply.
Speaker 3 (09:48):
Okay, and what happens to them if they don't? They
can the tenants can go to the make a complaint.
They can potentially get a fine, but presumably there's a
period of discussion that could happen between that.
Speaker 8 (09:59):
Yeah, the recommend approach in this is, you know, if
you're a tenant and your home's not quite up to scratch,
have a chat with your landlord and see if they'll
get the work fixed, and then if they won't, that's
when you can start taking action through the tenancy tribunal.
I mean, there's a lot of variation around the country.
For example, and this is the extreme, but I've seen
homes where it's definitely not up to scratch, but the
(10:22):
tenant is living in it. They're very happy because they
get a cheap rent, and the landlord's happy because the
tenant's happy. So both parties just keep it quiet. There'll
be plenty of that going on around the country, but
by and large, I think most landlords will get things
fixed if the tenant asks them to do it. Really
they should do it proactively straightaway.
Speaker 3 (10:42):
Matt Appreciate Times Wanting Matt Bull from the Property Investors Federation.
Speaker 4 (10:46):
Nineteen after five.
Speaker 3 (10:47):
Yeah, it does seem odd that I suppose you can
get the next tenant come in and they're not happy.
Even though the previous one might have been perfectly happy
with the way things were, the next one may not be,
and that I guess is the challenge of running a
rental property. Nineteen after five News Talks MB Andrew Alison
was Sport next Liam Lawson looking.
Speaker 2 (11:04):
Good news and views you trust to start your day.
It's early edition with Ryan Bridge and ex Bowl Insulation
keeping Kiwi, Holmes, Ward and Drey this winter News Talks.
Speaker 4 (11:16):
He'd be five twenty one on News Talks.
Speaker 3 (11:17):
There'd be Gavin Gray out of the UK after the
News at five point thirty.
Speaker 4 (11:20):
Right now, Andrew Alison was Sport Andrew, Good morning, Gretting's Ryan.
A great run for Liam Lawson his best performance to date.
Speaker 9 (11:27):
As indeed, so he has started in sixth and he's
first and sixth that the Red Bull Ring in Austria
and that will be. That'll give him some enormous confidence.
So I imagine racing bulls. He's I mean relatively he's speaking.
His teammate Isaac Hadger So had his first in twelfth.
So Lawson with that sixth place earns eight points. But
(11:50):
mcclaraen running away with the show for me to one
at the moment. Landa Norris winning his fourth Grand Prix
of the year and second place. Oscar Piastri so one
and two. The other key result there with Max for
starting and he clipped on the opening lap just not
far from the start by Keimmie Antonelli, and that took
him out of the race of his first DNF for
the season.
Speaker 3 (12:10):
Right, Okay, and his losses Land Lawson's game.
Speaker 9 (12:14):
Oh for sure, I mean loss is going to take
that isn't that He's had some tough time so far,
has faced some brutal scrutiny, but that will be an
enormous philip for his confidence.
Speaker 4 (12:23):
Yeah, hopefully the first step on a sort of a recovery.
Speaker 9 (12:26):
Yes, yes, and potentially on for other seasons.
Speaker 4 (12:29):
Yes.
Speaker 3 (12:30):
Now, skateboarder Jessica Redy, this is a fifteen year old
has taken bronze at the X Games in Salt Lake City.
Speaker 9 (12:35):
Well, yeah, I don't really know my Ali from my
Nali front side. I'm not sure about you, but I've
been watching Ready with interest this morning, and that is
a that's a tremendous performance under a bit of pressure
there at Salt Lakes the X Games. And yes, he's
just seemed to have some real poise under pressure, and yeah,
great to observe that. So just as fifteen years old
(12:57):
and I guess comes into contention. It has been one
and this thincture was in contention for the Paris Games
as a thirteen year old but didn't quite make it.
But now he comes into the reckoning and come into
the spotlight and bring bring skateboarding to the four in
New Zealand.
Speaker 4 (13:12):
Notastic.
Speaker 3 (13:13):
Yeah, I just remember a lot of grazed shins and
sort of ankle twisted ankles and it wasn't that fun
for me, But.
Speaker 9 (13:21):
Not not really my bag in the half five for
were in the skatebowl or whatever.
Speaker 4 (13:24):
But there you, Goment.
Speaker 9 (13:25):
I appreciate the skill and the balance and the just
this year confidence that you need to perform some of
those tricks.
Speaker 3 (13:31):
So good just running literally running into concrete. Warriors, are
we now know concerned this is not our year?
Speaker 9 (13:42):
This would come up with two losses in a row,
But I think yeah, I mean the concerns. Look Metcalf
two getting that knee injury and getting scored it off
off the park. Yeah, it's a tricky one for the Warriors,
but then again they've played so well and still have
that buffer ye, yes, coming into the next etc. I
think you're disappointed to lose to the Broncos. But nonetheless
(14:05):
there's still very much in the reckoning.
Speaker 3 (14:08):
But you do worry, do you don't you that you
worry that they've lost any and everything.
Speaker 4 (14:12):
It's all daring head lights downhill from here, you know
what I mean?
Speaker 9 (14:15):
Yeah, well, given what since ninety ninety five there hasn't
been an overall grand final when there has.
Speaker 4 (14:21):
Been the premiership minor premiership.
Speaker 9 (14:22):
Of course, but yeah, that's uh, yeah, it's that's that's that's.
Speaker 4 (14:26):
What you get if you're a Warriors fan.
Speaker 9 (14:28):
Is it the ups and downs And that's the joy
of the of the NRL season.
Speaker 4 (14:32):
Everyone's used to that roller coaster. No one's no one's
fretting on that basis.
Speaker 3 (14:36):
Just yet a well worn course, Thanks very much, Andrew Ortison,
twenty four minutes after five News Talks be coming up next.
Speaker 4 (14:43):
How the courts could get in the way.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
Of Parliament on this tough on crime legislation. A lot
of it coming in yesterday, more coming this week. That's
next the early.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
Edition for All the show podcast on iHeart Radio Power News.
Speaker 3 (14:57):
Talks, News Talks in be It is five twenty seven.
The government's so called crackdown on crime is more than
just tough talk. But that doesn't necessarily mean it's going
to make a difference, not for want of trying. It's
because the courts are a law unto themselves. They apply
sentencing discounts like a Brisco's sale. Judges are like the
(15:19):
Briscoes lady. Ninety percent off for remorse, ten percent off
for your family report. You're free to leave the dock
with time served. Don't worry if it's a murder charge off,
you go. Good on your son. We look forward to
welcoming you back to court again soon. I mean, you
feel like there's almost must be a sign and a
cup of coffee when you leave.
Speaker 4 (15:38):
And we all know the story.
Speaker 3 (15:40):
COVID lockdowns happen, Communities fell apart, lives thrown off kilter, crime.
Speaker 4 (15:44):
Spreads, police hq the courts.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
The government went softer on crime, wrap around services trumped
a good old whack around the back of the years.
The authorities lost control of the streets, We lost faith
in the authorities, and now here we are, having elected
the government to do something about it. A couple of their
new laws came into force yesterday, including caps on sentencing
and new aggravating factors. These are real changes, not just rhetoric,
(16:08):
but whether they actually make a difference or not will
depend on whether the courts get the message. They're the
ones with the real power here. Look no further than
the current aggravating factors that they're not using properly, including assaults,
assaults on first responders, you know, your ambulance, your paramedics,
your cops. The government is stepping in to fix this,
(16:31):
even though it shouldn't need fixing. It's already an aggravating
factor in sentencing, but the ambulance staff and the first
responders say it's basically fallen by the wayside. The courts
weren't focused on them when making decisions, even though they're
the victims, and even though they're the first responders. Courts
(16:52):
have a lot of leeway here. So now the government
is stepping in again to extend and expand this provision,
to make it even hopefully fingers crossed this time we
might actually see some movement from the courts following the
direction they've been set by Parliament. But it's just like
(17:12):
those as you see on TV selling you know, sofas
up to eighty percent off stare wide is not the
same as eighty percent off stare white is it and
there's big enough leeway here to drive a truck through
when it comes to the courts and tough on crime
twenty nine after five Brian Bridge talks there B and
we'll get to our reporters and Gavin Gray in the UK.
Speaker 2 (17:32):
Next Brian Bridge on early edition with ex bowl insulation
keeping kilios warm and try this winter news talks at B.
Speaker 3 (17:55):
Every morning and welcome to your Monday twenty four away
from six on newstalks at B will begin gover them
and look at chasers for security guards. A couple of
options on the table for retail crime that before six,
also Givin Gray out of the UK, staying in the
UK for now. Rod Stewart at Glastonbury, what an absolute legend.
Speaker 4 (18:13):
He's eighty, he's sweating profusely.
Speaker 3 (18:16):
Takes his jacket off at one point because it's a
heat wave in the UK thirty one degrees celsius or
at eighty.
Speaker 4 (18:23):
And he's rocking out.
Speaker 3 (18:24):
A full set joined by simply Reads, Mick Tacknell, joined
by Ronnie Wood from the Rolling Stones, a whole bunch
of others, has a fantastic time, a fantastic set.
Speaker 4 (18:33):
Crowd loves it and Just hours before this.
Speaker 3 (18:39):
He'd given an interview which is turning to be quite
controversial because you can imagine it's like a cat amongst
the pigeons, with the crowd at Glastonbury all quite.
Speaker 4 (18:45):
Young and liberal.
Speaker 3 (18:47):
He came out and threw his support behind Farage and
Reform UK, saying we've got to give him a chance
because we kind of sick of the Tories.
Speaker 4 (18:58):
Twenty three minutes away from six News.
Speaker 3 (18:59):
Too big to our reporters around the country, Callum Proctor
and Dnedan Cullen, Good morning morning. Right now, Queenstown Lakes
proposing new rules for freedom camping.
Speaker 4 (19:08):
What's that about? Well, this is a draft.
Speaker 10 (19:11):
By law for the Queenstown Lakes disrec Council that I've
never had a freedom camping by law in place, so
they're consulting the public on this. They are proposing to
allow our self contained vehicles to camp for free and
one hundred and fifty eight designated car parks across sites
in Queenstown, Wannaka, Kingston and Oratown, amongst others. Campus can
stay there for a maximum of two nights every thirty days.
(19:34):
The rules will not apply those to tents or other
temporary structures. The straff will also allow for freedom camping
on most rural roads, but prohibited on roads and built
up urban areas. It's a big issue for the region.
It experiences more than double the numbers of any other
region in New Zealand when it comes to freedom camping.
And these proposals will be consulted on from next week.
Speaker 4 (19:55):
All right, and how's the where they come them?
Speaker 10 (19:57):
Early showers, clear of fine breaks today stillies and a
high of eleven.
Speaker 3 (20:01):
Thank you, Courtney Winters in christ Church. Hey, Courtney, good morning,
good morning.
Speaker 4 (20:06):
So the energy efficient buildings in the city are going
to get more recognition.
Speaker 11 (20:10):
Yes, So, the City Council has launched a new initiative
where buildings that meet recognized energy efficiency standards can have
their certified ratings added to consent records. It's part of
its Eco Design service, which provides people with guidance on
reducing carbon footprint while building Head of Building Consenting Stephen Thomas,
says the initiative will help property owners add visibility to
(20:34):
their building's energy efficiency ratings. He says it also aligns
with the Council's climate adjectives.
Speaker 4 (20:40):
All right, how's your weather.
Speaker 11 (20:42):
Cloud increasing in the morning? A chance of a shower,
then fine spells, southwesterlies and a high of nine.
Speaker 4 (20:47):
Cheers Courtney Max and Wellington Haymax. Good morning, Good morning.
Now Keepy Rail looking to boost its capacity.
Speaker 12 (20:53):
Yeah, so a story in the post this morning. The
Kayadahi Ferry is heading to Singapore today for dry dock
maintenance and when it returns, the added teddy, of course,
is being retired or at least sold to some poor
third world country. So in the Kayada he returns. QBREL
is looking at boosting capacity from one thousand to thirteen
one hundred and fifty. That would mean reverting some of
(21:15):
the premium lounges and the cabins back into open seating,
which is easier said than done. You've got to hire
more crew. You've also got got to get maritime and
Z's approval. Perhaps you could do the same with the
Kaitaki Ferry in peak times as well. That's also being
looked at by QBREL. Passenger booking slightly up at peak
times for inter islander. Issues with the fairies, of course,
(21:37):
have been well documented. It is squeaky bum time now
for Kiburel. Yes they've not heard that one.
Speaker 8 (21:46):
No, I.
Speaker 4 (21:48):
Just taken a package. Makes no very good from you? Hey,
what's you with you doing today? The weather's fine?
Speaker 12 (21:57):
It might be the odd shower this afternoon fifteen.
Speaker 7 (22:00):
Hey, I hadn't heard of that one either. Have you
and I been under a rock? I think it's a maxism.
Speaker 4 (22:08):
I think it is fair.
Speaker 3 (22:09):
Ah, very funny. Hey, what's happening in Auckland? This is
the ike Another IKEA update from you?
Speaker 7 (22:14):
Yes, well, look the resource consent for the IKEA development
and as everyone knows here in Auckland, Sylvia Park. Now
it's under the microscope because what's happened is that access.
The conditions involve inviting Manifenawag groups to undertake cultural monitoring,
cut a care and other cultural ceremonies at various milestones
of this development. So this includes the pre start meeting,
(22:37):
beginning of earthworks immediate, you know, prior to completion of
the bulk earthworks and acting MP Simon Court he's come out,
he's the Undersecretary for the Resource Management Reform. He says
these conditions are absurd. So he's saying, look, thinking about
having to stop work and hold a ceremony at all
of these different stages A great cost of the contract
(22:58):
to the client. He's saying it's ridiculed. He's not happy
about it. We've gone to Auckland Council for comment. We're
still waiting, so it's going to be back and forth.
Watch the space.
Speaker 3 (23:07):
Yeah, because it does seem at every store. I mean,
I can understand you might have one blessing ceremony, but
to have lots of them at all the.
Speaker 4 (23:13):
Different stages, it's right.
Speaker 3 (23:14):
And apparently there's also cost with that, like you got
to put on the coffees and get the coffee card
over and the muffins and you know what I mean.
Speaker 7 (23:21):
Yep, at every milestone. So yeah, watch this space. Let's
see what happened.
Speaker 4 (23:24):
Very good and how's our weather? Never okay?
Speaker 7 (23:26):
Isolated showers, fine spells increasing from the afternoon. Yeah, seventeen
is a.
Speaker 4 (23:29):
High, brilliant squeaky bums.
Speaker 3 (23:31):
Eighteen away from six News talks hid Be we'll get
to Gavin Gray out of the UK next plus before six,
we'll take a look at changes you can expect this
week are on retail crime and can they actually turn
the retail crime problem around? Presumably you would need to
focus on no matter how small the crime, there will
be a repercussion. That would be your starting point, wouldn't it.
Speaker 4 (23:54):
We'll look at that before six.
Speaker 3 (23:56):
News Talk said it is sixteen minutes away from six
o'clock here on News Talk SVB, and we've got good
news for you this morning.
Speaker 4 (24:03):
On Milford. They've just taken out the Consumer New Zealand.
Speaker 3 (24:07):
People's Choice Award Keiwisaver for their Milford Keewisaver plan.
Speaker 4 (24:10):
That makes it eight years in a row. Now.
Speaker 3 (24:14):
There's also morning Star's latest independence survey found at Morningstar
dot com dot au which you can check out, showing
Milford has had the number one performing Kewisaver funds in
the growth, balanced and conservative categories for returns over the
past ten years.
Speaker 4 (24:28):
Incredible stuff.
Speaker 3 (24:29):
All of this down to Milford's expert team and their
active approach to investing. So why wouldn't you make the
switch to Milford for your keysaver account. It's really easy
to do. You just go online, you need a photo ID,
your IOD number handy and it's done. Past performance is
not a reliable indicator of future performance Milford Funds Limited.
As the issue of the Milford Keewisaver Plan, please read
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(24:51):
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To close this, please visit milfdesa dot com slash giving.
Speaker 2 (25:02):
Advice International correspondence with ins and Eye Insurance Peace of
Mind for New Zealand business.
Speaker 4 (25:09):
Recording to stick now.
Speaker 3 (25:10):
Gavin Gray are UK, you're correspondent given Welcome to the show.
We've got news out of Austria. This is from the
UN Nuclear watchdog, which seems to contradict.
Speaker 4 (25:19):
What Trump's been saying about the strikes on Iran.
Speaker 13 (25:22):
Indeed, good mind to Iran.
Speaker 1 (25:23):
Yes.
Speaker 13 (25:24):
The IAEA, the International Atomic Energy Agency based in Vienna,
is basically saying that it believes that the damage caused
by those bunker busting bombs in Iran gave damage severe damage,
but not total damage, and that because contradicts Donald Trump's
claim from America that Iran's nuclear facilities were totally obliterated.
(25:49):
Raphael Grossi is the head of the IAEA, and he
says Tehran could in a matter of months a few
cascades of centrifuge is spinning and producing in riched uranium, so,
in other words, back in the business of producing nuclear material.
He said that the industrial and technological capabilities of Iran
(26:10):
could mean that they're able to start again in a
matter of months rather than the years that, of course
has been coming out of America. It's a second report
that's come out with Pentagon Intelligence assessing that the US
strikes only set the program back by months. Don Trump
was furiously refuting that, saying that the facilities had been
(26:30):
completely destroyed. What's Iran saying, Well, actually, the conflicting messages
saying the strikes had achieved nothing and the Foreign Minister
saying that there was excessive and serious damage. So we'll
wait to see that. Iran's already strained relationship with the
IAEA is further challenged when it's parliament moved to suspend
cooperation with the Atomic watchdog.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
Appreciate your time, this woman, Gavin Gavin Gray are UK
europe correspondent, just gone fitteen away from six ran. The
government this week expected to make an announcement on retail crime.
Previous changes announced include expanding citizens arrest powers. You remember
that one. Apparently this week they will make changes and
announce changes, I should say around laws for shoplifting and theft.
(27:13):
It also comes on the back of that police direction
remember this where an internal directive revealed that they would
only respond to shoplifting worth more than five hundred bucks.
Carolyn Young is the chief executive Retail Lings ed Carolyn,
good morning.
Speaker 14 (27:26):
What Anna, how are you this morning?
Speaker 4 (27:27):
Very well? Thank you?
Speaker 3 (27:28):
Now, I know you're on the government's advisory group for
retail crime. Do you what are you? Probly assumably you've
been given a heads up about what's happening this week.
What are they looking at?
Speaker 14 (27:42):
Well, I guess it's a couple of things. One is
that we know that there's a lot of recidivis defending
in retail, so people coming back time and time and
time again. So really being able to deal with those
offenders in having charges and repercussions in the court system
(28:04):
that are deterrence against those offending. So if someone comes
into your shop and they steal one hundred and fifty
dollars and it's one hundred and twenty dollars in it,
you know, like it's a cumulative factor. It all adds up.
So making sure that the police have the tools in
which they can use data to ensure that they capture
all of someone's offending so then they can be dealt
(28:26):
with at the highest level rather than at the lowest level.
So that's why it's really important not to have thresholds
around for police, because a lot of offending is not
necessarily done at a higher level, but cumulatively it's thousands
and thousands of dollars, So being able to really do
something that will impact them through the court system is
one piece. Is that the other thing.
Speaker 3 (28:48):
Just in terms of record keeping for that, do you
at the moment do retailers have the ability to keep
those records so that that can be enacted properly.
Speaker 14 (28:58):
Well, there's a couple of things. One is that for
the bigger stores, they use a platform called Aura, which
is effectively a really smart database where the police can
then go through and link various crimes that have been
committed that are a very similar, look into them and
determine whether they've done by the same people, and then
(29:19):
you know, they're able to capture them that way, and
so that's a really useful tool. For the smaller retailers,
they need to use one O five or one one one,
which you know is a little more tricky. So it
is up to the police to be able to do
those connections and for the police to have better resources
and tools, and that's going to be really important to
(29:39):
be effective. So not only that retailers need to report
every crime so that it's really understood the size of
the issue, so that we get the right resourcing, but
also to have the right tools for police to be
able to really link a lot of that offending together
so that when they go to court they really dealt
with appropriately.
Speaker 4 (29:57):
On the full list. What's the other thing to change
your reckons coming.
Speaker 14 (30:01):
Well, a little bit further down the line, but trespass
is really important. It's because we've had these decidius offenders.
You're really having the ability to trespass someone that's in
your store that's either aggressive or violent or offending on
a regular basis, so that they can't come back again,
and having some teeth in behind that and something that
(30:21):
fits in modern society. That's going to be wrong.
Speaker 3 (30:24):
What's not making that work at the moment, Because you
can trespass people at the moment, right, So what's not working?
Speaker 14 (30:30):
Yeah, you can trustpass people at the moment. It is
quite tricky because the laws are really structured for when
you know the person, you know your name and you
know their address, being able to use like a photo
to trespass someone, being able to assure a trespass notice
even if they're walking away and won't to accept it,
and then you know, then using that as a tool
(30:52):
to identify someone as they're coming into your store so
that then you don't get them in your store. So
modernizing it, making it easy is actually process.
Speaker 4 (31:02):
And less of a consultative or consensus.
Speaker 3 (31:06):
Approach to delivering it to Carolyn, I appreciate your time,
Carolyn Young, Chief Executive Retailian Z. Those changes, according to
news talks that'd be expected to be announced by the
government this week eight to six Haeryl News talk said.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
B the news you need this morning and the in
depth analysis earlier this year with Ryan Bridge and ex
Bowl Insulation keeping Kiwi homes warm and dry this winter,
news talk said be.
Speaker 3 (31:30):
Six minutes away from six news talks d B we
moved on our smoking laws in well it was Hell
and Clark, so we were early two thousands.
Speaker 4 (31:37):
Of France playing catch up just a few years later.
Speaker 3 (31:41):
Anyone who lights up on a beach or a public
park from today, local time in France will be breaking
the law for the first time. The band does not cover, however,
unlike ours, terraces of bars and restaurants, because the French
just love a durry, don't They are also within ten
meters of any school or swimming pool or library, you
can be fined the fines one hundred thirty five euros
up to a maximum of seven hundred euros.
Speaker 4 (32:03):
Presumably that would be for a business, not an individual.
Five away from six.
Speaker 1 (32:07):
Now, Bryan Bridge, Mike.
Speaker 4 (32:09):
Is up with us next.
Speaker 3 (32:09):
Hey, Mike, good morning, Good morning. Do you care what
the International Atomic Energy Agency has to say?
Speaker 15 (32:17):
I think it's really important in the sense that you
want to know what they did and why they didn't,
how they did, how effective it was.
Speaker 4 (32:22):
But do do they even know? I mean, this is
the problem they have, and that's that's been the problem.
Speaker 3 (32:28):
So you've got America telling you one thing and then
you've got the un telling you another, but no one
really actually can prove or different.
Speaker 15 (32:35):
Do you go to Glastonbury to be lectured to?
Speaker 4 (32:38):
Well, you do in the midday.
Speaker 15 (32:40):
Glassbury, listen to some songs, have a good time, and
or to you know, chant we need to kill some
people and then give the finger to somebody else. It's
just like, man, it's like, what happened to having a
good time?
Speaker 4 (32:52):
Well?
Speaker 3 (32:53):
I mean music's always been political, hasn't it. I mean
Woodstock was political.
Speaker 15 (32:57):
It was, but it was in political in a musical way.
You know, there's nothing wrong with protest songs, but just
just after talent, Yeah exactly. I mean that's not a talent,
is it. You don't go to see the talent?
Speaker 4 (33:08):
Death to the idea? Pi? Yeah? Have you seen it
in a nice tune? However it might be tolerable, I guess.
Speaker 15 (33:14):
So I watched Liam this morning. By the way, do
you know the significance of this? Yes, he has more
points now than Yuki Sonoda. Oh okay, yeah, so work
that part through, So that's interesting. Max didn't even finish.
Max got run into and so he comes sixth. He
was the best performing Red Bull driver today.
Speaker 14 (33:34):
Is that?
Speaker 4 (33:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (33:34):
Which is great? And he needs and we've got the
it enough to save him. It keeps going.
Speaker 15 (33:42):
We've got Silverstone this coming weekend in London the middle
of summer, which will be nice, and then they're going
for a break. So he does well there, I think
it might what I'm saying it could be, it could
be coming right, It could be coming right. But like
the Warriors, Prime don't say that, Prime Minister after seventh.
Speaker 4 (33:56):
Fourth earlier, this is some Rod Stewart to play you out.
Speaker 3 (34:00):
Dedicated this song to the soldiers in Ukraine at Glastonbury.
Speaker 4 (34:03):
News Talk SETB.
Speaker 1 (34:10):
For more from early edition with Ryan Bridge.
Speaker 2 (34:12):
Listen live to News Talk st B from five am weekdays,
or follow the podcast on iHeartRadio