About that poll

October 19, 2009

A new comment on an old post reminded me that I’d forgotten my offer to set up a poll to pick the Blog Award for Radio NZ.

The offer was made after Radio NZ said it couldn’t afford to enter this year’s New Zealand Radio Awards.

I nominated Jim Mora as broadcaster of the year and  Afternoons  and Country Life for best programme.

Others nominated Brian Crump, Media Watch and Peter Sledmere.

Any further nominations should be made today and I’ll set up a poll tomorrow.

Since I offered a box of Whitestone Cheese to the winner/s and my generosity knows considerable bounds I’ll stipulate nominations must be restricted to two categories – one for people, best broadcaster, and the other for best programme.


I support the Greens

October 19, 2009

They’ve spotted a missing apostrophe in a government press release – or at least the place where the apostrophe would be if it wasn’t missing.

In doing so they’ve also found their sense of humour.

The Green Party renewed it’s call for better grammatical standards in New Zealand, if only to keep world peace.

This is a Green campaign I’m happy to support – although I may live to regret that given my own propensity for proofreading failures.

P.S.

I’m already regretting it because it was only when I read the comments on the post that I noticed the apostrophe missing from the original press release had found its way into the sentence I copied above.

You of course will have noticed it straight away.


Can we be trusted?

October 19, 2009

When people criticise the policies of the 80s and 90s they forget the reason drastic action was needed.

New Zealand had been spending more than it earned for years and governments had no option but to take very tough measures to reduce debt and get the economy growing again.

The situation we’re facing now isn’t quite as bad as it was back then but it still calls for serious changes in government income and expenditure.

If the country was a farm, we’d cull excess stock and conserve feed carefully for animals which needed it most. We’d go through the budget, cutting costs where we could, getting rid of any luxuries and reassessing what we defined as necessities. We’d also look at every aspect of the operation to see how we could make more from it and be on the look out for other opportunities for additional income, including the sale of non-core assets.

It’s harder to do that sort of thing as a government if you want to be re-elected. You’d have to trust the voters to recognise that tough times require tough remedies.

Can we be trusted?

If you listen to the protests about cutting funding for hobby classes you’d say no. But do those protests have wide support or do most people wonder why the taxpayer was ever involved in helping adults do yoga or embroidery in the first place?

I think most people recognise the recession calls for restraint and unlike Labour, I think they accept that means cuts in government spending.

It’s the opposition’s job to oppose but by doing that now Labour’s advocating more spending and more debt. Tonight’s 3 News Reid Research poll  suggests that’s not a recipe voters wish to try. 

National has jumped almost two points to 59.9 – a return to the high it registered in the 3 News Reid Research February poll.

Labour has dropped two to 27, a return to its February low.

The Greens have dropped marginally, while the Maori Party has bounced back up to 2.4.

The other minor parties are struggling.

ACT is up ever so slightly to 1.7, NZ First has a few diehard fans left, Jim Anderton’s Progressives have three voters out of 1,000 and poor old Peter Dunne has none.

There’s no comfort for Labour in the  preferred Prime Minister results either. John Key is up 4.2 to 55.8% and Phil Goff dropped  to 4.7 %.

If people aren’t listening to the opposition it provides the government with an opportunity to talk.

It’s an opportunity to tell us how bad things really are and how putting them right won’t be easy; but that it can be done and it must be done if we’re not to stagnate for the next couple of decades.

It’s an opportunity to start culling.

Has anyone missed the Ministry of Rural Affairs since its functions were taken over by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry?

Would anyone miss the Ministries of Women’s Affairs and Senior Citizens, the Children’s, Families and Retirement Commissions if any vital functions they perform were taken over by whichever of the Ministries of Education, Health or Social Development were best suited to the responsibilities?

Would anyone miss the Ministry of Racing if it disappeared altogether?

It’s an opportunity to take welfare back to where it should be – a hand up for people in genuine need not a hand out for people in want.

It’s an opportunity to change attitudes and that needs a change in language.

If politicians stopped talking about entitlements and called them benefits again it would make it much easier to cull any based on political ideology and retain those which help people who really need them.

It’s an opportunity to look for opportunities for more income.

National promised not to sell any state assets this term and it’s a promise the government will keep. But if Labour in the UK is talking about selling some of their assets which would be better off in private hands then the government here can start telling us what could be sold – partially or fully - if voters give them a second term.

The debacle over the free-to-air rights for the Rugby World Cup is a wonderful illustration of why the state would be better off not owning commercial television stations.

Labour sold several Landcorp farms in the last nine years. It would be silly to dump all of them on the market at once, especially when prices are depressed, but preparing to sell some if the price was right would be sensible.

Increasing the tax take, not by increasing tax rates but through measures which help private individuals and businesses increase their productivity, would also help the income side of the public ledger.

None of this is particularly radical and the opposition can be trusted to oppose most of it. But I think the majority of people can be trusted to understand what contributed to the $10.5 billion deficit and that more of the same won’t make it go away fast enough.


October 19 in history

October 19, 2009

On October 19:

1453 The French recapture of Bordeaux brings the Hundred Years’ War to a close, with the English retaining only Calais on French soil.

1469 Ferdinand II of Aragon married Isabella I of Castile which paved the way to the unification of Aragon and Castile into a single country, Spain.

A detail of the painting Our Lady of the Fly, attributed to Gerard David and/or someone of the circle of Jan Mabuse

1512 Martin Luther became a doctor of theology


Luther in 1533 by Lucas Cranach

1850 – Annie Smith Peck, US mountaineer, was born.

1882 Italian artist Umberto Boccioni was born.

Umberto Boccioni self-portrait

1899 Miguel Ángel Asturias, Guatemalan writer, Nobel Prize laureate, was born.

 

1931 English writer John le Carré was born.

John le Carré in Hamburg (10 November 2008)

1943 Streptomycin, the first antibiotic remedy for tuberculosis, was isolated by researchers at Rutgers University

Streptomycin

1946 Englsih writer Philip Pullman was born.

1966 US President Lyndon Johnson & his wife, Lady Bird, arrived at Ohakea for a 24 visit to New Zealand.

1974 Niue beccame a self-governing colony of New Zealand.

 

 Sourced from NZ History Online & Wikipedia.


Moon Over the Alps

October 18, 2009

Mills and Boons books were in the rental part of the public library.

I didn’t know this when I picked up Moon Over the Alps by Essie Summers and was discombobulated when told I had to pay 10 cents to take it out. That was a whole week’s pocket money.

My mother came to my rescue. I took the book home, fell in love with it and proceeded to read anything else by the author I could get my hands on. The romance, the passion – in a very seemly stop-at-the-bedroom-door fashion – the food . . 

As a bonus almost all the books were set in New Zealand, some in North Otago and one even had a heroine called Elspeth. It was the first time I’d ever come acorss a character in a book who bore my name.

These books had everything a 14 year old could ask for. Then I grew up and it was about 20 years before I read another book by Essie Summers.

I was coming to terms with life with a severely disabled child and some days were very black. A friend gave me a pile of books to read, among them was Moon Over the Alps. It was just what I needed – escapism which didn’t require thought with a guaranteed happy ending. It was a bit like eating chocolate without the kilojoules.

 Some people sneer at the romance genre and I haven’t taken to any by other authors. But Essie Summers’ books helped me feel better and her own real life story provided some  inspiration. She wrote dozens of books without the aid of a computer while bringing up her family and being the wife of a minister in the days when that was a job in itself.

dairy 10004

Post 18 in the post a day for New Zealand Book Month challenge.

book month logo green

Over at In A Strange Land Deborah  gives us The Kuia and the Spider by Patricia Grace, illustrated by Robyn Kahukiwa.


Better at science than politics

October 18, 2009

Adam Smith at Inquiring Mind has been testing his political and scientific knowledge with Pew quizes.

I got only 7/12 in the political quiz but thanks to a couple of lucky guesses managed 12/12 in the scientific one.

Would it be unscientific to conclude this means I have a better knowledge of science than US politics?


Govt wastes $1b on social services

October 18, 2009

Guyon Espiner interviewing Tariana Turia on Q & A this morning:

TARIANA . . . What I’m saying is already we have a whole range of services that are contracted out, they’re extremely prescribed, and over the years we’ve seen a huge waste of public money on these services, because none of those things have in fact empowered families to take that responsibility for themselves, to not remain in that mode of thinking that people need to do things for them.  We want to change that and that came out strongly in our conference yesterday that our people want that.

GUYON What is the magnitude of this, because I looked at a consultation document which has been released on the Ministry of Social Development website, about the Whanauora policy and it talks about a Whanauora fund being set up.  Now in the past you’d talked about possibly a billion dollars going into that.  Are we looking at that sort of magnitude?

TARIANA Well to be frank with you there’s probably a billion dollars already being wasted now, so a billion dollars that’s put into Whanauora that going to transform families’ lives so that they’re not so dependent on the state to do for them, but more importantly that their families become sites of safety.  That’s a critical part of Whanauora.

Like Stephen Franks, who was a guest on the panelwhich discussed this interview, I’m not sure how spending a billion dollars from the state helps people become independent from it.

But I agree that too much is spent now on measures which increase dependence rather than assisting people to become independent.


What really matters?

October 18, 2009

In a week when we’ve been told the nation’s accounts have at $10.5 billion deficit and ACC is sinking under its own weight, people are wasting time and energy arguing about who should screen rugby matches.

And in all the reports on all the arguments has anyone given satisfactory answers to these questions:

* Why is access to free-to-air sports on television a right?

* Why is it acceptable to pay to attend a game but not to watch it on television?

* How many people who want to watch the Rugby World Cup on television don’t have reasonable access to pay TV?

* Would it be cheaper to pay for these people to get pay TV for the duration of the RWC or pay for a taxi to take them to a pub where they could watch the match for free than it is to provide free-to-air coverage?

If that sounds like a silly question answer this:

* Is watching free-to-air sport a higher priority than health care?

That might sound like a silly question too. But when we’re borrowing enough to build a new hospital each week to maintain what the government provides now, it’s a very sensible question which leads on to another:

Why are taxpayers supporting anything that could be considered a luxury when we’re borrowing to fund necessities?

What really matters – the things a few people want or what most people need?


On ACC they said:

October 18, 2009

Not all editorials and columns agree with the government view on ACC’s problems and solutions.

But there is concensus that there is a big problem in need of an enduring solution.

Southland Times:

That belt-tightening exercise we’re enduring with ACC – there comes a point where what you’ve got is no longer a tightened belt. It’s a tourniquet. Confuse the two and something’s going to blacken and fall off, writes The Southland Times in an editorial.

Many eyes are bulging at the severity of the huge rises to ACC levies, and the toughening up of the qualifying criteria. These measures, including an extra $320 a year coming out of the average wage (which actually seven out of 10 workers are on or below), do need scrutiny for over-reaching.

ODT:

Of greater concern is the growth of future liabilities, from $9.4 billion to $23.8 billion in four years, and a good deal of the responsibility for widened and costly coverage can be laid at the door of the Clark government.

An example is the physiotherapy benefit . . . According to the Government, the subsidy introduced by Labour in 2004 and budgeted to cost $9 million a year had by this year risen to $139 million and was projected to rise to $225 million by 2011-12, with no equivalent rise in rehabilitation rates.

It has quoted other examples of how the scheme has developed far beyond its original concept to cover diseases like leptospirosis and brucellosis and medical conditions like asthma, when, it argues, these should instead be paid for out of Vote Health.

To these might be added trauma of various kinds suffered by victims and perpetrators resulting not from accidents but from criminal acts, mental injury arising from workplace trauma, and sports injuries.

When it began with the 1972 Accident Compensation Act, only those who were employed were entitled to claim for workplace accidents. That soon changed to cover all accidents, including motor vehicle accidents, regardless how injury occurred.

Timaru Herald:

The unworkable or unprofitable parts will have to be bundled back into a Government scheme. And somewhere in the middle the romantic notion of a Government-funded no-fault system will have to be modified in a politically-acceptable way.

It is a Herculean task and one that will provide a stern test for the National Government. Whatever happens in the long term, what is crystal clear today is that taxpayers will have to dig deep to get ACC out of the mire. Having a unique highly regarded system is great in theory. It is also extremely expensive.

The Press:

What would really undermine ACC and its no-fault comprehensive coverage principle would be a lack of firm action taken now to control its costs, with major levy rises not just a short-term source of financial pain for New Zealanders but something that continues well into future years.

The Nelson Mail:

Though there has been no shortage of spin around ACC’s balance sheet and performance during National’s 11 months in office, it is clear some significant changes were needed in order to bring the scheme back under control.

Some of the proposals will sail in – no more entitlements for injured methamphetamine “cooks” for example – but increased levies have already provoked wide-ranging protest.

Dominion Post:

There is no such thing as a free ACC system.

That must be central to the honest conversation the Government is asking New Zealanders to have about the scheme. Stripped to its essentials, the scheme is an insurance one, and that means any entitlement in the scheme costs money, and must be paid for by levies.

The debate must also recognise that the ACC was established to compensate people who are injured. It was not meant to be an extension of the social welfare system, cushioning people against all misfortune. The distinctions it makes are arbitrary, and can be seen as unfair . . .

. . .  The job facing Dr Smith and his colleagues is to convince the public that what is being done is fair, and within the spirit of the deal that saw New Zealanders trade away their right to sue for a no-fault right to compensation.

That deal remains a good one. It should be made to work and made affordable, not torn up.

Taranaki Daily News:

The massive increases aimed at the two-wheelers just highlights what a sorry mess ACC has become. The corporation was introduced in 1974 on April Fool’s Day which probably says much about what it has become – a $24 billion liability to the taxpayer.National promised to put the boot into bureaucrats and under-performing government departments when it came to power last year.

ACC was clearly in its sights and so it should have been.

Quite apart from the horrific imbalance between money taken in and that dished out, New Zealanders have become sick of the tales that have leaked from the corporation throughout its 35-year existence.

Remember the outrage of the prisoner being paid ACC for injuries suffered during the act of crime?

While those criminal instances might be a fraction of the ACC’s overall costs it nevertheless highlights the stupidity of parts of its system.

Past abusers of ACC are partly responsible for the current tightening in all areas.

Deborah Hill Cone:

A benefit now has a cosier name – an entitlement – which is “a right granted by law or contract”. Big. Difference. . .

There has been a lot of talk of entitlements over the ACC-in-a-pickle problem. . .  And the punters who have “entitlements” are no longer called claimants; they are clients, lest it might sound as though they are putting their paw out. The ACC public relations dude told me the Labour Government had asked for the jargon change – Labour understood the power of Neuro-linguistic Programming. The theory was that people had actually paid their premiums and so shouldn’t feel they were getting summat for nothing. Dinky idea, but as we now know, the premiums do not cover the cost of the ACC scheme – so claimants are getting something for nothing. Actually. . .

. . . I am still waiting for someone to explain to me why it is that large corporates, such as Fonterra and Air New Zealand, can opt out of ACC and self-insure – but I can’t. Oh, I get the practical reason – that I don’t have a lazy mill to cover a claim – but where is the policy rationale? The opt-out clause (cosy name: the “partnership programme”) takes 15 per cent of the country’s workers out of ACC. So if these corporates can manage their health and safety liabilities more efficiently than ACC, what does that say about ACC?

Herald on Sunday:

. . .  in the 35 years since ACC was established, so many bits have been carved off and clipped on that it bears little resemblance to the original design.

Anomalies abound: people who work in dangerous jobs pay more in earner levies than people who work in offices, but rugby league forwards incur no more expense by way of premium payment than those whose leisure preference is macrame. . .

More profoundly, many of its conceptual assumptions have been corrupted by this piecemeal regulatory intervention. ACC has not been reviewed since the 1980s and, once it has dealt with the immediate crisis, the Government would do well to consider another reassessment of the entire system.

In 1974, we entered a social contract by which we surrendered the right to sue. As a society, we were keen to avoid the litigious and ludicrously expensive American model.

But it is not an absolute truth than our system is better. Anyone who spends time in the US will quickly notice the lengths to which people go to avoid posing a risk to others.

That carefulness flows from fear of being sued, of course, but it’s worth wondering whether we here have grown too accustomed to being reckless of others’ – and our own – welfare, in the knowledge that someone else will pay.

If nothing else, the crisis we face now reminds us that we are all that someone else.

Deborah Coddington

The Government can remain insurer of last resort for dangerous employers with bad track records, but why should safe, careful employers who look after their workers continue to pay high levies and cross-subsidise the former?


Maori seats not needed

October 18, 2009

The Maori Party is aiming for 18 seats in parliament by 2017.

I hope they succeed because that will prove there is no need for Maori seats.


The Lazy Dog

October 18, 2009

Sometimes you get a menu and are scratching to find something that appeals.

This was not the case when we stopped for lunch at The Lazy Dog a couple of weeks ago.

The menu full of tempting dishes,from light snacks to hearty meals. We both chose tomato soup, chunky with olives,  served with fresh bread and accompanied by a glass of pinot noir.

lazy dog 1

The cafe at Queensberry on the Wanaka-Cromwell Road is owned by Dean – a former seal diver and chef in the South African navy - and Diana Harker. It’s also the cellar door for Lochaburn wines.

 The couple leased the cafe at Akarua Winery in Bannockburn before building the Lazy Dog.

The name is part of the story of changing land use. Grape vines now grow where merinos used to graze and the dogs which no longer have to work the sheep grow lazy in the vineyard.

As a poem on the cafe wall explained:

The Old ewe stamps, her sneering eyes

Say, “Now young dog I did advise

You step aside or get a shunt

You’re no tough hound, you are a runt.”

He whines uneasily in his sleep

She’s got him worried, that old sheep.

In dreams as in his waking days

That ewe eats dog as well as hay.

 

Now vines climb up hill faces steep

They’re farming grapes instead of sheep.

The sheep have gone  (the old ewe too)

There’s nothing for a dog to do.

He’ll go no more through wind and fog,

For now he is a lazy dog.


October 18 in history

October 18, 2009

On October 18:

1386 The University of Heidelberg opened.

1851 Herman Melville‘s Moby-Dick was first published as The Whale.

1867 The United States took possession of Alaska after purchasing it from Russia for $7.2 million.

Flag of Alaska State seal of Alaska

1897 Isabel Briggs Myers, American psychological theorist, was born.

1922 The British Broadcasting Company (later Corporation) was founded.

BBC logo

1924 Amateur radio operator Frank Bell made the first trans-global radio transmission to London when he sent a Morse code transmission. It was received and replied to by London-based amateur operator Cecil Goyder.

1925 The Grand Ole Opry opened in Nashville, Tennessee.

Grand Ole Opry Logo 2005.png
1926 US singer Chuck Berry was born.
 
 
1927 US actor George C. Scott was born.
 

1929 Violeta Chamorro, President of Nicaragua, was born.

 
1929 Women were recognised as “Persons” under Canadian law.
 
1934 Sweedish actress  Inger Stevens  was born.
 
1954 NZ Opera had its first opening night, performing The Telephone, in Wellington.
1991 Azerbaijan declaresd its independence from the USSR.
 

Sourced from NZ History Online & Wikipedia.


Saturday’s smiles

October 17, 2009

Paddy was in New York.

He was patiently waiting and watching the traffic cop on a busy street crossing. The cop stopped the flow of traffic and shouted,

‘Okay, pedestrians.’

He’d let the pedestrians cross then stop them and allow the traffic to pass.

He’d done this several times but Paddy still stood on the footpath.

After the cop had shouted, ‘Pedestrians!’ for the tenth time, Paddy went over to him and said, ‘Is it not about time ye let the

Catholics across?’

Hat Tip: the Ag-Letter from Baker & Associates. If you want a weekly update of managing and marketing information, and the odd joke, you can subscribe here.


FSU fails foreign investment 101

October 17, 2009

When I posted on Farming Systems Uruguay in August I was restrained in my criticism.

I didn’t say that we were so unimpressed by what we learned when we visited one of their farms that we sold our shares in the company as soon as we got home.

I didn’t say that the manager of the farm we visited, who is one of New Zealand’s top dairy farmers, wasn’t being left to manage. He had to answer to the company’s representative who visited once a week not just on strategy but on day to day farming practices.

I didn’t say that the manager had only had a two-week Spanish course when he arrived, been getting just one lesson a week since then and his wife and children weren’t getting any help with the language at all.

I didn’t say that the manager told us of visiting another FSU farm where he’d been concerned that the cows were hungry and asked why they weren’t in a paddock with more grass. He was told that was being saved for the directors’ visit.

I didn’t say that everything we saw contradicted the glowing picture being painted in New Zealand of the company, its farms and the opportunities in Uruguay.

I didn’t say that we could see there was money in the business for PGG Wrightson and anyone else who could clip the ticket but we couldn’t see what was in it for investors in FSU.

I didn’t say any of that on the earlier post because it’s more than two years since we were there and I thought things might have improved. Brian Gaynor’s column shows they haven’t.

Everything he writes supports what we saw and heard in Uruguay.

What works in business in one country doesn’t necessarily work in another. The sobering lessons from the experiences of several companies which ventured across the Tasman show that and at least they speak the same language there.

Uruguay is not just another country, it has a different climate, different language and different culture.

It’s on a similar latitude to northern New Zealand but on a continent which gets much hotter than we do. Pastures which last 10 years or more here will have to be replaced every two or three years there. That’s good for PGG Wrightson which has the rights to all the business on the farms and will sell the seed. But it’s not good for farm profits and FSU shareholders.

Spanish is probably one of the easier languages for English speakers to learn. With total immersion you should have a good grasp of the basics after three months and be reasonably fluent in a year. But Gaynor says the last New Zealand manager who had been in Uruguay for two and a half years never learned the language.

 It is the height of ignorance to live and work in another country without being able to converse with the locals. It’s also not good for business because you never get the full story if you have to rely on interpreters. But that the manager didn’t learn isn’t necessarily his fault. If his staff spoke English they would when talking to him and the demands of the farm would take precedence over Spanish classes.

But one of the first lessons of foreign investment 101 is that the people working on the ground must speak the local language. Ensuring its managers and their families learn Spanish should be one of FSU’s priorities.

Then there’s the culture. They do things differently in Latin America you can’t just pick up what works here, transplant it there and expect it to work as it does at home.

Adolf at No Minister is even less impressed than I am. He blames the directors. They are responsible for the decisions they made but I think they only see what the people in Uruguay want them to see and have no idea of what’s really going on.

PGW will make money by clipping the ticket on everything the farms buy but it’s going to be a long time before the farms make a profit and shareholders get a return on their investment.

There are wider concerns too. Crafar Farms has shown what happens when a business grows too quickly without good processes, systems and staff. If that happens here, the potential for problems half a world away are even greater.

New Zealand deserves its reputation for high standards of animal welfare and environmental practice. Our reputation is at risk  from companies which try to emulate what we do here in other countries and fail to do it properly.


Jane and the Dragon

October 17, 2009

I indenitifed with Jane from the first sentence:  Jane hated sewing.

However, there’s a lot more to the heroine of Jane and the Dragon written and illustrated by Martin Baynton than a dislike of practising her stitches.

She wants to be a knight but the only one who takes her seriously is the court jester.

There’s a moral to this story about following your dream and not being frightened to do the unexpected, but it’s not heavy handed. This is first and foremost a delightful tale which is beauitifully illustrated.

The inscription in the copy on our daughter’s book shelf shows it was given to her as a Christmas present when she was four. We enjoyed reading it to her, she enjoyed being read to and a few years later, read and re-read it herself.

Back then it was just a book. Jane has now been televised and has a website.

dairy 10004

Post 17 in the post a day for New Zealand Book Month challenge.

book month logo green

 Over at In A Strange Land Deborah posts on Down in the Forest by Yvonne Morrison, illustrated by Jenny Cooper.

Rob’s been reading Slinkly Malinki by Lynley Dodd.


Potty

October 17, 2009

Thursday’s post on the woman who called police to report the theft of her marijuana prompted Scrubone to post a list of alternative names for the drug.

One of the common ones is pot from which comes the expression pothead.

Would you also say this bloke who  taped his happy baccy to his forehead was potty?


Better buy flies

October 17, 2009

Air New Zealand is reducing its domestic airfares and allowing business travellers to change flights on the same day without cost.

It has always seemed silly that if a seat’s available on an earlier flight you can’t take it without paying a lot more. The change in policy will also enable passengers to take a later flight providing their is a spare seat.

Price reductions on regional routes will be up to 23%.

That’s very welcome. It can be more expensive to fly to and from regional airports within New Zealand than to cross the Tasman.

Another improvement will enable frequent flyers on regional services to drop off and pick up their own bags directly at the aircraft.

It’s frustrating to walk past your bag on a trolley, as you do when you get off a wee plane, then have to hang round the terminal for it to be brought in.

Frequent flyers will be issues with fast tags to identify their luggage but even so it could be a bit messy because if other passengers see some people picking up their own luggage they’ll want to do the same.


Feds don’t wear blue gumboots

October 17, 2009

Federated Farmers is sometimes referred to as the National Party in gumboots.

That has never been the case and nor should it be.

Feds is there to look after the best interests of its members and the organisation couldn’t do that if it was aligned in any way with a political party.

Any doubts over whether the organisation wears blue gumboots should have been dispelled by its actions this week.

The organisation put a very strong submission against the proposed Emissions Trading Scheme

“The ETS is world famous only in New Zealand. As the Wall Street Journal showed with several damning editorials, New Zealand is losing business credibility as investors increasingly look at us with incredulity,” says Don Nicolson, President of Federated Farmers. . .

“Federated Farmers made it clear to the Select Committee that the ETS should be repealed and replaced by non-punitive policy measures to transition New Zealand to a low-carbon economy.

Feds is equally vehement in its opposition to proposed increases to ACC levies which could result in a 70% increase in farmers’ levies.

“ACC’s bombshell will hurt farmers already struggling to make ends meet,” says Donald Aubrey, Federated Farmers ACC spokesperson.

. . . Instead of significantly increasing levies, it is time the Government made some tough decisions. I realise some of those decisions may be politically unpopular, but ACC must be brought under control. . . “

Feds would never protest as strongly if it was tied to National and it provides a more powerful voice for its members because of that.

This is apparently lost on some unions which continue to tie themselves to Labour. As Colin Espiner blogged:

But the conspiracy theory peddled by Labour and the EPMU (i.e. Labour) . . .

And Kiwiblog commented:

I can never work out if Labour is the political arm of the EPMU or if the EPMU is the industrial arm of Labour.

The benefits of independence are also lost to the Service & Food Workers Union. An email sent to Kiwiblog shows merger discussions between the SFWU and Public Service Association ended over differences on political allegiance:

The primary reason for doing so was the inability of both unions to reach sufficient agreement on the issue of political relationships and affiliations. Both unions have long standing and proud traditions on the issue of political relationships.

The SFWU has a long standing affiliation status with the Labour party, is this week signing a Memorandum of Understanding with the Green Party and has explored a formal relationship with the Maori Party. The PSA has an equally strong commitment to remaining non affiliated and independent of political parties.

I don’t recall the PSA strongly opposing Labour and its policies but it is free to do so. However, it would be impossible for either the EPMU or SFWU to counter a Labour in the way Federated Farmers does with National and any other parties whose policies are in conflict with the best interests of farmers.

Governments come and governments go. A lobby group which doesn’t commit itself to a party is better placed to deal with all parties whether they are in power or opposition. If it’s allied to a party the interests of  members will take second place to the group’s political allegiance.

 


October 17 in history

October 17, 2009

On October 17:

539 BC King Cyrus The Great of Persia marched into the city of Babylon, releasing the Jews from almost 70 years of exile and made the first Human Rights Declaration

1662 Charles II of England sold Dunkirk to France for 40,000 pounds.

1814 The London Beer Flood killed nine people.

1877 Chief Justice Sir James Prendergast declared the Treaty of Waitangi “worthless” and a “simple nullity”.

1888 Thomas Edison filed a patent for the Optical Phonograph (the first movie).

1907 – Guglielmo Marconi‘s company began the first commercial transatlantic wireless service between Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada and Clifden, Ireland.

1915 US playwright – Arthur Miller was born.

 

1918 US actress Rita Hayworth was born.

1930 US nutritionist Robert Atkins was born.

1942 US musician Gary Puckett was born.

 

1969 Ernie Els, South African golfer, was born.

 
Golfer Ernie Els at US Open.jpg

1979 – Mother Teresa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

 

2007 The Dalai Lama received the United States Congressional Gold Medal.

Sourced from NZ History Online & Wikipedia.


Bafta for Monty Python’s 40th

October 16, 2009

The Monty Python team is to receive a British Film and Television Arts special award to mark their contribution to film and television at their 40th anniversary reunion event in New York.

The Special Award will be presented at an event co-hosted by BAFTA and IFC (Independent Film Channel) to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the creation of Monty Python. John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin will all be in attendance.

The Academy last honoured the Monty Python team in 1987 when they were presented with the Michael Balcon Award for Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema.

In honour of that the Cheese Sketch:

 

There’s lot more where that came from here.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 117 other followers