Showing posts with label Bill English. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill English. Show all posts

Tuesday, 21 March 2017

An Open Letter to Anne Tolley, the Minister for Social Development - a Ministry that is systematically broken.

Dear Mrs Tolley,


I am writing this open letter to you to inform you of how the Ministry of Social Development has failed the standard; to tell you about the poor service I received between December and March while I was in receipt of a Job Seekers Benefit which completely negated the empathy your staff was able to provide.  I am also writing to ask how you intend to fix the multiple systematic failures that I and many others encounter ona daily basis when dealing with the Ministry of Social Development.

During 2016 I began my Masters of Education.  I supplemented the Student Loan allowance I received with relief teaching when my studies allowed.  This allowance ended in early November, meaning relief teaching was my only form of income.


In December the school year finished, meaning I had no primary source of income until some time in February when schools required relief teachers to cover illness, classroom release time, professional development and other such absences of classroom teachers.


Consequently I made contact with the Ministry of Social Development (MSD) in mid November in order to kick start the process for the Job Seekers Benefit.  I met with a client manager at the Cambridge office on November 29th and discussed that I was a short term project with my intentions being to return to study in 2017 to complete my Master’s dissertation and relief teaching.  


I had with me some of the documents I had been asked to bring and could obtain, and discussed which documents I still needed to supply in preparation for relieving drying up by the second week of December (due to depleted school budgets for relieving).  It did take several weeks to supply my documentation, but one thing I am very certain of is that I supplied my current and correct residential/mailing address on my form applying for the Job Seekers Benefit.


I made a second and possibly a third trip into the Cambridge office during December to drop in documents, as well as emailing some that I was unable to print due to technical difficulties.  I was assured that I was accepted and the Job Seekers Benefit would start the week before Christmas.  I awaited written confirmation.  It did not arrive.

In the end I made a phone call to MSD in the week leading up to Christmas asking when I would be paid and the amount.  I was told I would be paid $212 each Thursday, including the amount to cover a regular expensive prescription I require - expensive because I don’t get the generic.

My family spent Christmas in Whitianga.  On Boxing Day I went to town to do an errand for my parents and one of the shops I visited had a job vacancy advertised on the door.  I approached the shop keeper and asked her about the job.  I emailed her my CV, she phoned me, and I secured the position which was minimum wage casual hours to relieve her more experienced casual worker over the busy summer holiday period.  I had never worked in retail before, so I was looking forward to the experience.


After the stat days ended, I contacted MSD through their 0800 number.  I explained that I had secured a position and that it was casual hours.  They explained there was an $80 gross cap and then they would deduct from the total of my weekly benefit.  I believe that this $80 gross cap has not changed in many many years despite increases to the minimum wage, rents, and general inflation and that it takes no account of the fact that the job will be secondary taxed, that my student loan repayments must be paid and that I have KiwiSaver.  


I was told that as long as I rang by the end of Friday with my hours worked for the week that my following week’s payment could be adjusted, even if I just guessed the hours I would be working on Saturday and Sunday of that weekend.  


Remember, this is the week between Christmas and New Years, and I’m ringing on the Wednesday after two stat holidays, with the full knowledge that there would be two more stat holidays the following week.


So on the last Friday of 2016, I rang MSD, with my guessed amount of hours I would be doing before the end of Sunday coming and the person who answered the phone told me I should have informed them of my hours on Wednesday just gone due to the stat holidays the following week.  Because I had earned over $80 gross, I was now in arrears with MSD and would have my benefit reduced by $10 a week in order to recover the arrears.


I asked for written confirmation of this.  They said they would mail it to me.  I asked if it could be emailed to me as I was working away from home.  They said they couldn’t do that and it would be sent by snail mail.  Please note: when I returned home for two days two weeks later, there was no mail from MSD at my home.  Not one letter in over six weeks of dealing with MSD.


I continued to work in this shop throughout January, finishing on Wednesday 1 February as I had secured a new job back in Hamilton to start on Friday 3 February and in anticipation of oodles of teachers becoming ill or needing CRT or PLD eventually.  I also needed to start sorting out my re-enrollment at University.


During January, my Job Seekers Benefit was never the same week to week.  The hours I worked in the shop were never the same and lessened towards the end of January as the holiday makers drifted back to their homes and schools.  I never received each week from either the casual job or the benefit combined the amount I was meant to receive for the Job Seekers Benefit, $212.  


Consequently, what I did earn covered my petrol and food.  I didn’t do anything exciting or excessive during that time, but I was in no position to pay my cell phone account, meet the minimum payments on my credit cards, pay the cost of the service and WOF of my car in January, pay my HP or pay the cost of the storage unit where 99.9% of everything I own (including teaching resources) is stored in.  Several times, after my automatic payments for insurances went out, I was left sub-zero, and once I had to ask the shopkeeper I was working for to urgently pay me early so I could survive the weekend.


I was quite stressed out with the amount of arrears I was building up and certain health conditions were exacerbated, and I still haven’t combatted them now.


So let’s just recap on some important points here:
  • In November in my initial application I supplied my current residential/mailing address.
  • I had received no written documentation by mail from MSD at any point since 29th of November and it is now February.
  • I was not given the correct information about when to ring MSD to provide my hours of work during the first week of my temporary casual position when there were stat days changing the normal pattern of how it is done.
  • I am now in arrears with MSD and my benefit is accordingly reduced by $10 per week to recoup the arrears.
  • There was barely a week in January I received the $212 I was supposed to get if I had of just sat on my arse receiving a benefit instead of working as casual position.


These points above are very important, because over the next five weeks, the calamity of systematic disasters that is MSD just pile on.


I began my new position on Friday 3 February.  It is ten hours a week, flexible days to work in with the work I am required to do as well as my study and relief teaching.  Best of all I was being paid about $10 more an hour than the casual retail position I had over January.


On Tuesday 7 February (Monday being a public holiday called Waitangi Day), I rang MSD to inform them I had finished working in the shop in Whitianga and was now working in a new position for ten hours a week in Hamilton.  I informed MSD that I did not know when I would start being paid by my new job (turns out that it wasn’t until March due to numerous technical issues) and that I was currently in the red to the tune of $72 and that the next Job Seekers payment would not get me back into the black as it was about $69.


The person I spoke to was excited about my new job.  She looked into my situation and was able to make the next payment bigger so that I was $70 in the black rather than the red the next day, and informed me I would need to see a client manager as soon as possible, but that she could not make an appointment that day as the MSD booking system had ‘fallen over’.


After speaking with MSD, I began to ring everyone I was in arrears with to bargain with them over paying what I owed.


The following Tuesday I rang MSD again to book an appointment with a client manager.  I explained again that I had started a new job in Hamilton.  I was told I had an appointment the following Tuesday at 2:30pm.


On Tuesday 21 February I arrived at the Cambridge MSD office for my 2:30pm appointment.  By this time, MSD had the security people acting as quasi-receptionists.  They checked my ID and were confused about me having an appointment.  I went in and sat down.  I was approached by an MSD staff member who informed me they had no record of my appointment.  I insisted I had an appointment.  The staff member went away.  The staff member came back and said my appointment was for the Te Awamutu office.  I replied that at no stage during the call on the previous Tuesday did the call centre staff member say “Te Awamutu” and I expected my appointment to be Cambridge because all my previous dealings were with Cambridge.



By this stage I’m pretty pissed off, emotional and extremely thirsty.  I tell the staff member I have had to leave my place of work to come to this appointment and I am not leaving without seeing the appointment through.  She responds that they do not have any gaps in their appointments and I will have to take my chances.  I ask for a cup of water (there are no water stands available or cups for MSD clients) and begrudgingly the staff member brings me a plastic cup of water from their staff room while I ring the MSD 0800 number to make a complaint.


So I spend my time waiting in the Cambridge office on the phone making a verbal complaint to the call centre, who assures me that they will send me a written outcome of my complaint and informs me that I would not be able to get a new appointment in the Cambridge office until Monday 6 March!  
After that I spend my time on Twitter bitching about how broken the system at MSD is.


Eventually I am approached by the deputy manager of the Cambridge and Te Awamutu MSD offices.  She takes me down to a desk at the back of the office and apologises for the stuff up by the call centre.  She talks through my situation with me and I explained for the third time I have changed my job in February, that I was a short term project for them, that it was a matter of weeks before relief teaching really kicked in and my ten hour a week job would pay me.  


She makes adjustments to my Job Seekers Benefit for the week to accommodate the fact that I am yet to be paid by my new job (due to technical difficulties).  We then discuss the accounts I have in arrears and the ones I would like help with to pay, acknowledging that any help I receive for these would need to be repaid.  


As much as she would have liked to help, the way MSD is set up now would much rather see an individual drown in debt and never get out of the poverty cycle.  Rather than get a hand up to ensure that I continued to have a good credit rating and didn’t garner further debt, MSD refuses to help.


I left MSD that afternoon feeling rather despondent and weighed down with sadness at how our social welfare system condemns people to a cycle of poverty and benefit dependency.  It is a full time job dealing with their systems, and if I listen to the 0800 number tell me while I am on hold one more time that I can do stuff online I will scream!!!  If a real staff member can not help me, how the bloody hell is a website going to ensure I get my entitlements and understand the situation and how it should be sorted out - and I am an educated person!!


But what left me most astonished was to find out that MSD has a sinking lid on staff - when a staff member leaves, they are not replaced,  Consequently, they are understaffed.  Some not very bright management person further up the food chain in the Ministry of Social Development thinks that the internet and the kiosks at MSD offices are the answer to everything.  I’m under the impression from another person I know that the kiosks in Te Awamutu usually are crashed and that no staff member at the Te Awamutu office actually knows how the kiosks even work!


So let’s recap where I am at the 21st of February 2017:
  • In November in my initial application I supplied my current residential/mailing address.
  • I had received no written documentation by mail from MSD at any point since 29th of November and it is now nearly the end of February.
  • I was not given the correct information about when to ring MSD to provide my hours of work during the first week of my temporary casual position when there were stat days changing the normal pattern of how it is done.
  • I am now in arrears with MSD and my benefit is accordingly reduced by $10 per week to recoup the arrears.
  • There was barely a week in January I received the $212 I was supposed to get if I had of just sat on my arse receiving a benefit instead of working as casual position.
  • I couldn’t make an appointment on the 7th of February as the MSD booking system had ‘fallen over’.
  • I’ve had to explain three times in February that I started a new job in February.
  • I’ve turned up to an appointment to find I’ve been booked into an office I’ve never attended and was not verbally told or received a letter as to what office my appointment was for.
  • I am left to wallow in debt.


But wait, there is more.


Finally on 1 March, my ten hour a week job is able to pay me what I am owed, out of cycle, as I am facing financial hardship.  During this week I received enough bookings for relief teaching in March to meet my minimum financial needs.  So on Friday 3 March I ring up and ask for my Job Seekers Benefit to be finished.


Oh.  My.  God!  It is almost as hard to get off the bloody benefit as it is to get on the damn thing!


Once again I have to explain that in addition to the relieving (which I will get almost $200 in the hand a day after tax, student loan, NZEI fees, KiwiSaver and Teacher Retirement Scheme are taken out) that I also have the ten hour a week job before the call centre guy believes that I will be financially ok!  This is so ironic after MSD systems tell me they can not help me out of the arrears with my phone (essential for schools to be able to contact me on and for me to contact them) and storage fees!  He had been wanting me to supply pay slips and the blood of a virgin to get out of being on a benefit.  I just wanted the benefit to stop before they piled on more arrears (which were totalling about $400 at that stage).


So after I get an almost agreement to end my benefit, I ask about the complaint I made about the call centre getting my appointment wrong.  He assured me a letter had been sent out.  I said I hadn’t received it.  In fact, I said to him, I have received absolutely NO written correspondence form MSD since my initial contact in November, and I thought that was most unusual since they would not email me.


So this is when the next clanger happened.


He read out the address they were sending my mail to.


It was an address I have NOT lived at since May 2013, almost four years ago.  
What really annoys me is that I know who lives there now and I certainly do not want that old sticky beak getting my personal mail from MSD!


This was about when I got pretty shitty again.  This is when I explained that I had written the correct current residential/mailing address on the forms in November.  This is when I asked to make yet another complaint about the conduct and the systems of MSD and how this had been inconveniencing me.


Later that day I received an apologetic call from the deputy manager of the Cambridge and Te Awamutu MSD offices.  She sincerely apologised for the mistake with not updating my address in November, and ensured that my benefit would be paid one last time the following Thursday.


So let’s recap again on the calamity that is the system at MSD:
  • In November in my initial application I supplied my current residential/mailing address.
  • I had received no written documentation by mail from MSD at any point since 29th of November and it is now March.
  • I was not given the correct information about when to ring MSD to provide my hours of work during the first week of my temporary casual position when there were stat days changing the normal pattern of how it is done.
  • I am now in arrears with MSD and my benefit is accordingly reduced by $10 per week to recoup the arrears.
  • There was barely a week in January I received the $212 I was supposed to get if I had of just sat on my arse receiving a benefit instead of working as casual position.
  • I couldn’t make an appointment on the 7th of February as the MSD booking system had ‘fallen over’.
  • I’ve had to explain three times in February that I started a new job in February.
  • I’ve turned up to an appointment to find I’ve been booked into an office I’ve never attended and was not verbally told or received a letter as to what office my appointment was for.
  • I am left to wallow in debt.
  • I have received no written response to the complaint regarding my appointment being made at the wrong office.
  • I practically have to fight to end my benefit.
  • I discover that all the mail I should have received since November from MSD has gone to an address I haven’t lived at since May 2013 because my address details were not inputted correctly, if at all, in November when I applied for the Job Seekers Benefit.


But wait, there is more.


I get a letter from MSD informing me formally of the arrears I owe and asking me to contact them.  It does generously allow me to use my Community Services card until it expires.


What Community Services Card?

They sent me one in December and a new one in February - to the address I have not lived at in nearly four years.

So I ring up asking for a new card.  They can’t send me one because I am no longer on a benefit.  So instead they send me forms to make an application for a new one.

Can I make another complaint?

So let’s just recap again the systematic disaster that MSD is:
  • In November in my initial application I supplied my current residential/mailing address.
  • I had received no written documentation by mail from MSD at any point since 29th of November until the end of the second week of March.
  • I was not given the correct information about when to ring MSD to provide my hours of work during the first week of my temporary casual position when there were stat days changing the normal pattern of how it is done.
  • I am now in arrears with MSD and my benefit is accordingly reduced by $10 per week to recoup the arrears.
  • There was barely a week in January I received the $212 I was supposed to get if I had of just sat on my arse receiving a benefit instead of working as casual position.
  • I couldn’t make an appointment on the 7th of February as the MSD booking system had ‘fallen over’.
  • I’ve had to explain three times in February that I started a new job in February.
  • I’ve turned up to an appointment to find I’ve been booked into an office I’ve never attended and was not verbally told or received a letter as to what office my appointment was for.
  • I am left to wallow in debt.
  • I have received no written response to the complaint regarding my appointment being made at the wrong office.
  • I practically have to fight to end my benefit.
  • I discover that all the mail I should have received since November from MSD has gone to an address I haven’t lived at since May 2013 because my address details were not inputted correctly, if at all, in November when I applied for the Job Seekers Benefit.
  • My Community Services card is sent to the wrong address twice and they will not supply me with a replacement despite it being their mistake that I did not receive it.


So what do I think needs to change to ensure that the staff of MSD, who are empathetic and try hard to help but are hampered by a broken system, can actually help beneficiaries break the cycle of poverty and benefit dependency?
  • Actually have enough staff to do the job - even a simple job like inputting an address.  
  • Cut down the waiting time for an appointment.  No one should have to wait two weeks for an appointment when they are on the bones of their arse.  No one should have to wait more than 24 hours in a working week to be seen.
  • Have a computer system that makes sense that anyone can use.
  • Clearly display entitlements so that people know what they are entitled to and how to access them.
  • If MSD gives the wrong advice that means the client ends up owing arrears, don’t ping the client for the wrong advice - especially when it comes to statutory holidays.
  • Up the $80 cap for income outside of the benefit to recognise the fact that the minimum wage has increased and so has inflation.  The $80 cap should not include pinging you for Student Loan repayments or KiwiSaver either.
  • When a person is a short term project with good earning potential, help them out to keep their credit rating so they stay afloat.  There are ways and means to ensure it does get paid back.
  • Stop insisting on people begging their family for financial assistance.  The whole point of a social welfare system is for the social welfare system to support an independent adult - not to make them dependent on extended family members who are trying to hold their own financial commitments together.


While I was not treated as harshly as I was in 2010 when last needed the Unemployment Benefit to pretend I was surviving, it was still a very stressful experience.  Last time the people were incredibly harsh, but that just may be the Thames office experience.  This time I found the staff to be empathic and understanding - but they were hamstrung by a system that is unresponsive and broken.




Once again I am left feeling that our social welfare system is condemning so many to a life of poverty and dependency.  I heard former Prime Minister John Key say in one of his final interviews as and MP this week that he believes that people don’t want to be dependent on the state and do not want the state interfering in their lives.  I think John Key fails to remember what the state did for him during his childhood and that the original purpose of the welfare system was to ensure that everyone could participate as a full citizen in society.  


In 1972, the Royal Commission on Social Security had reinforced the role of welfare as “to ensure, within limitations which may be imposed by physical or other disabilities, that everyone is able to enjoy a standard of living much like that of the rest of the community, and thus is able to feel a sense of participation in and belonging to the community” (Kelsey, 1995, p.271).  Since the National government decimated this social contract in 1991, poverty and dependency on social welfare has been exacerbated and nothing the current National government under John Key or Bill English has improved outcomes for these people.

As an educated person, who has the power to earn five times plus more than the benefit pays a week (if school is in), the benefit is not the place I want to be.  But this experience made it clear how some people are trapped into the cycle because they are penalised so harshly for trying to earn extra cash during the peak summer period or a crop harvesting time to try and get ahead and get out of the benefit cycle.  Employers are also disadvantaged by the system as some people will limit what they will work so as not to be in danger of losing their benefit.  And that is why I think that the $80 cap on earning extra needs to be increased.


So to end this open letter to you Mrs Tolley, I'd like to tell you that the Ministry of Social Development fails the standard (and you know all about standards and failing to meet those when you were the Minister of Education); the systems at the Ministry of Social Development are broken and fail to help people break the poverty and dependency cycle; and I think it is time we did something to #ChangeTheGovt to fix the Ministry of Social Development.


But what are you going to do to fix it Mrs Tolley?


And I mean fix it, not f**k it up any more than the system already is.


Bibliography:
Kelsey, J. (1995). The New Zealand experiment: A world model for structural adjustment? (1997 ed.). Auckland, N.Z.: Auckland University Press.




Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Outsourcing hospital & Meals on Wheels meals - why this is a dumb as move.

Thanks 3News for the pic!
If you have had the "pleasurable" experience of a hospital stay you will know all about the food.  It is mass produced and has been known to arrive in a tepid state, but for the majority of hospital stays the food has been cooked within the resident hospital kitchen or in a kitchen within a short drive.
 
Tony Ryall, the former Minister of Health from December 2008 until he stepped out of politics into a flash as job at the September 2015 election, was on a drive to cut costs in the health sector and "streamline" systems.  He set up a Crown company called Health Benefits Ltd (HBL) with the goal of  making cost savings in the health sector.  One of those cost cutting efficiencies he looked into was catering of patient meals by hospital kitchens. 
 
In April 2013, the Labour claimed that Mr Ryall was looking at outsourcing patient meals and closing 50 hospital kitchens.  It would come at the cost of 1300 jobs.  (Govt may close all NZ hospital kitchens.  NZ Herald 10/4/13).
 
Tony Ryall - former Minister of Health
At the time Mr Ryall said that they were merely consulting the unions on streamlining services, but believed efficiencies could save more than $10 million per year and be channelled back into "frontline health services".
 
What is more "frontline" than feeding your patients?
 
The Greens also warned against the outsourcing of patient meals (Outsourcing hospital food will cost NZ in the long run.  www.greens.org.nz, 10/4/13).

But this article in the Otago Daily Times Frozen meals - sent from Auckland (13/4/15) shows that not a lot of thought has been put into the practicalities of it at all. 

Meals on wheels will be made in Auckland and trucked to Dunedin and Invercargill under a proposal to outsource hospital food services, the Compass Group confirmed yesterday.
The Southern District Health Board is yet to decide whether to approve the proposal.
The meals on wheels would be frozen, and reheated in local hospital kitchens.
Patient meals would be prepared on-site, using components driven ''around New Zealand'' in trucks, Compass said.
A stock of pre-prepared meal components would be held at a Dunedin distribution centre.
''The pre-prepared components of the meals will be prepared by specialist suppliers based in a number of different regions of New Zealand [including] Tauranga, Mt Maunganui, Dunedin, Auckland.''
Asked if Compass planned to subcontract meals on wheels to another provider, the food giant said: ''Compass Group is working with an Auckland-based supplier to supply the individual snap frozen meals for the meals on wheels solution''. Asked how often the meals would arrive in trucks, Compass said it was yet to be determined.    
Asked what contingency plans were in place for adverse weather, Compass said it was part of planning work that would happen with the health board.
Since the proposal was announced nearly two years ago, it has been unclear where meals would be produced.
Last week, health board members relented to union demands and deferred the final privatisation decision by a month to the May meeting.
Service and Food Workers Union organiser Anna Huffstutler, of Southland, said producing meals on wheels in Auckland reduced the amount of work available for local staff.
She also questioned the logistics of transporting meals during a civil defence emergency.
''What's the back-up plan?''
Ms Huffstutler is pleased about the deferment of the final decision, saying unions had lacked enough information to form a counterproposal.
The counterproposal would include suggestions on how money could be saved. Securing the extra month had given a sense of hope the board might be willing to listen to a proposal from unions, she said.
The Compass Group says it can save the health board $7 million over the 15-year contract.

Considering how long this proposal has been worked on, you really have to wonder why there are no answers to the questions raised by Anna Huffstutler, the SWFU organiser.  It also does not appear that much consulting has been done with the unions over how this proposal will work considering Mr Ryall said in April 2013 that was on the agenda.  And not even saving half a million dollars a year for the Otago District Health Board?  Have they not considered the wider costs to the patients and the community?  By the way, you really should click on the article to read the comments under the article - they're pure gold!
 
No one supports this idea because it is a bad idea.  Like I just said above, have they considered the impacts to the wider community of what Tony Ryall has envisioned for the whole country?  I have, and here is why it is flawed:
  • How can a health board justify supplying frozen meals to patients and Meals on Wheels clients instead of freshly made meals on a health basis?
  • The practicalities, cost and environmental impact of trucking these components around the country! And don't we have enough trucks on our roads already?
  • The personal touch to food preparation will be gone and the likelihood of some food allergy not being catered for increases.
  • Who likes mass produced food? Patients and Meals on Wheels clients may as well go get a frozen meal out of the New World (et al) freezer!
  • The jobs lost to the catering staff and the impact on their families.
  • What about the impact on local suppliers and growers when everything in centalised to Auckland?
  • What happens during bad weather or a natural disaster when the "components" can't get through?  (As pointed out by the SFWU organiser).
  • So if we're getting rid of the catering staff for patients and Meals on Wheels clients does that mean cafeterias for staff and visitors will also be replaced with a vending machine selling frozen meals and a pay by the second microwave?
  • Compass, the company charged with making it happen, has a "colourful" history (horse meat in your hospital meal sir?).
  • Considering the cost saving is merely $7 million over 15 years for the Otago DHB (that's less than half a million per year!), how does that compare to the costs of the unemployment benefits that will need to be paid to the redundant catering staff nationwide? And did they consider the impact on the tax take of more workers being unemployed and paying less tax as a result?

As with many ideas from Tony Ryall, this one is a dog with fleas and now he's gone and isn't there to bully push them through the truth is slowly coming out.  In fact his flag ship HBL is now under investigation by the Auditor General (Scheme can't pay back loans, Stuff, 19/4/15):

The Government's flagship health cost-cutting scheme has taken out millions of dollars worth of taxpayer-funded loans, despite concerns it could not pay a cent back, new documents reveal.
Once dubbed a government "ponzi scheme" by district health boards (DHBs), Health Benefits Limited (HBL) has been granted more than $10 million in loans by the Government. HBL was also given three separate extensions to the deadline to pay the money back, amid concerns the original deadline would leave the crown entity insolvent.
The final deadline for HBL to pay at least $10.2 million back is now March 31. If the money isn't paid back, it is likely to be recovered from the already cash-strapped budgets of DHBs.
The organisation is now the subject of an investigation by the auditor-general.
HBL was set up by former health minister Tony Ryall in 2010 to save DHBs $750 million over six years by establishing shared contracts for key hospital services.
But documents show the group took out an initial $8m "short-term credit facility", or a low-interest loan, from the Government in July 2013 so it could develop three detailed business cases for its food services and linen and laundry services and its National Infrastructure Platform programmes.
In a June 2013 letter HBL chairman Ted van Arkel told the Government the loan would be an "interim step" while the group worked with both the Ministry of Health and Treasury to establish a "long-term capital structure".
Van Arkel said it was expected the three projects would deliver $189.7m in savings across the health sector, once the contracts had been filled. It was proposed the money loaned would be paid back through the successful contract providers, but, failing that, DHBs were liable.
Ryall and Finance Minister Bill English approved the loan, with a deadline for repayment set at April 30, 2014.
But subsequent documents show the HBL board had to ask the Government for an extension, after project delays meant it could not afford to repay its loans.
In an email to English's economic adviser Simon Carey, Ministry of Health chief financial officer Mike McCarthy warned that if the loan was outstanding at June 30, "we would have a possible legal issue".
"I have now spoken to the [chief financial officer] and interim [chief executive] of HBL, they advise if the loan is not extended they will not be able to make payment as they have insufficient cash reserves and will be insolvent," he wrote.
On June 24 last year Ryall wrote to van Arkel approving an extension to March 31 this year.
In August, HBL requested the Government lend it more money so it could meet its forecast costs; hoping to increase its $8m debt to $15.1m. Ryall only approved handing the group an extra $2.2m, taking the total loan value to $10.2m.
But a ministerial report shows DHBs were not forewarned of the amount, despite their liability for the loans.
Ryall retired from politics at the election.
HBL is being wound down by Health Minister Jonathan Coleman in June, with its programmes transferred to Auckland regional DHB-led services provider HealthAlliance.
Neither the Government nor HBL has been able to provide any information over whether the loan has been, or is being, paid back.
Labour health spokeswoman Annette King said she had been concerned about HBL for more than two years.
"And I'm delighted the the auditor-general has agreed to my request for an inquiry."
In June 2014, a memo between some DHB chief financial officers branded the organisation a ponzi scheme, calling it the biggest threat to the public health system in a generation.
Coleman has said that HBL had delivered $300m in savings. His office has not yet answered questions and a spokesman for van Arkel refused requests for comment.
 - The Dominion Post

This not only raises questions about the management of Tony Ryall and why he conveniently left parliament at the last election for a job in the private sector with Simpson Grierson, but it raises questions about our Minister of Finance, Bill English, and his ability to actually understand numbers and how money works.

There'll be some horror stories to come yet in the health system from the decisions Tony Ryall made.  I predict there will be some particularly nasty stories in regards to the waiting lists.

This is yet another example of how the National led government is really not qualified to led this country based on its own trumpet blowing of being the best managers of the economy.  This is yet another example of how the National led government has failed to meet the standard yet again.

Sunday, 10 August 2014

Poverty in New Zealand: The New Haves and the Have Nots.

On Tuesday July 29th, Nigel Latta's new series, simply titled Nigel Latta, began.  The first episode focused on poverty, subtitled The New Haves and Have Nots.  The show focused on poverty, inequality, how easy it is to land in the poverty trap, the working poor, trickle down economics, food banks and the despair of being trapped by debt.

The statistics on poverty in New Zealand have escalated over the last six years.  It is estimated that 270,000 children are in poverty in New Zealand.  The meme to the right says that 40% of children living in poverty are from the working poor, meaning that someone in their household is in work but it is not enough to lift their household out of the poverty trap.

We have kids coming to school from damp cold homes, malnourished and poorly dressed.  Often they are left in the care of older siblings or adults who are not their parents as their parents work long hours to put food on the table and pay for the basics in life.  Every now and again a curve ball is thrown at the family, for example a large mechanic's bill when the car fails the warrant or a family member dies in a distant town, so the family borrows from a loan shark at exorbitant interest rates, and the family is sucked further down into the poverty vortex trapped by owing money they can't afford to pay back.

And that makes me angry too.  Because if we are not doing right by these children today, what sort of adults will they grow up to be?  How will they teach their kids about money?  How will they treat us when they are running this country and we are old and dottery and can't look after ourselves?  To me there is a clear opportunity for karma, for what goes around comes around.  So we have to pay attention to this situation.  Now.


And one thing that stood out, while watching this programme, is how poverty becomes inter-generational, how we are handing down poverty from parent to child to grandchild.

During the airing of this show I live tweeted and below is a Storify collection of my tweets and the responses I got, as well as the tweets of others which spoke to me on the night as well.



As I watched this documentary with my parents, it caused a great deal of discussion.  My Mum and I are openly supportive of the left, but my Dad likes to play devil's advocate and claims to be on the right.  But that night, and on many other occasions of late, he said some decidedly left wing statements. 

My Dad is a truck driver.  He starts early in the morning.  He's also driven late into the night at other jobs.  He sees, at times, where the homeless are.  It is a growing problem.

My Mum is a trauma nurse, so she meets people of all socio-economic levels who live in all sorts of situations.  There are times when she has a patient who is homeless, and sometimes their condition means they can not be released from hospital unless they have a safe, warm place to live.  It is a bit hard if your home is under a bridge, in a cardboard box or a car parked up in a different place each night.

As a teacher I see a variety of students who come from different home situations.  I've taught kids who live in wonderfully warm homes with their own room, hot water, no mould issues and with all the mod cons.  These kids come to school having had a good breakfast, have a variety of great food for lunch, and then go home to a flash as dinner at night.  They wear the latest clothes, although I often find they are not always dressed as warmly as they should be. 

Then I've taught children who's family are bunking in with grandparents or at an aunty's house.  I've taught children from families who have too many people for the bedrooms available in the house.  I've taught children who have come from homes with damp and cold issues, black mould, a lack of heating and insulation.  I've taught children who didn't get a proper breakfast that morning, who may have bought a pie on the way to school instead and will eat another (cold) for lunch.  I've taught children who think eating raw noodle from the packet is a nutritious lunch, or who pick a lemon off the tree as they run to bus for lunch.  And I've taught children who have gone home to no nutritious evening meal.  I've taught kids who come to school in ill fitting clothes, clothes with major holes that are worn out.  I've taught kids who come to school with no shoes, no warm clothes on bitterly cold days.  I've taught kids with chronic health problems such as asthma, glue ear, repeated chest or throat infections, school sores.... because of their living conditions and/or lack of access to healthcare.

Most of those kids came from homes where at least one parent was working. 

What does that say about the ability of people to be able to provide the basics for their children?

To me that tells me the following:
  • the cost of housing is too high.
  • the state of that housing is too low.
  • expenses like food, electricity and healthcare are too high.
  • people are not earning enough money to house, feed and clothe their kids.
I have taught in a variety of schools, from decile one to ten, and these kids are at all of them.  At the lower end it is the majority of kids in all classes.  At the upper end there are one or two families at least in every class who face these issues.

And I have to say it has gotten worse in the 19 years I have been a teacher, and even more so in the last six years.


National came into government with the catch cry of a Brighter Future.  Well I think they failed the standard on that one.  The only futures which have gotten brighter in my opinion are those who already had a financial advantage and have taken further advantage with National's policies.

Paula Bennett, the Social Development Minister, seems to have some large blinkers on when it comes to poverty.  Being blinded to an issue that is a key part of your portfolio seems somewhat arrogant to me. 


Paula Bennett is the woman who was a solo mother at a young age; took advantage of the housing loan scheme provided by the government of the day to purchase her own home; when being a working mum was too tough went on the DPB; used the training incentive allowance to get her tertiary education (at which time she slagged off that National government for putting her in debt with a student loan); and who then became a National Party MP and the Minister who pulled up the ladder behind her so others could not have the same success as her and then tells us that children slide in and out of poverty on a daily, if not hourly, basis and that she has no statistics on poverty.






And it really doesn't look like National's attitude is changing either.  This is how a growing number of people see John Key and his National led government.  They don't see National as having their best interests at heart or that of the country.

So is New Zealand really ready to do something about it?  What are the alternatives?


This link will take you to the policies which Labour has announced so far.  They have policies addressing housing, health, education, food in schools, employment and more that aim to improve the life of families, children and the wider community.  There are many links to choose from on the page the link above connects to, and all these policies interlink as there is no one solution to poverty.  Each major policy area has its own comprehensive manifesto.  Links to the full manifesto for that area can usually be found at the bottom of the page of the issue you click on.


This link will take you to the policies which the Green party has announced so far.  Their key pivot for addressing child poverty is their Schools as Community Hubs policy, which I have written about in a previous post, Kids at the Heart of Education Nationwide Tour - Hamilton Public Library.


This link will take you to the policies for New Zealand First and what they have announced so far and to their 2014 manifesto which is 101 pages long!  The first of their fifteen principals is to put New Zealanders first and Winston is always adamant that his policies are for all New Zealanders and that those New Zealanders who find themselves in genuine and deserving need are looked after.

FYI: Georgina Beyer, former Labour MP, is standing for Mana in Te Tai Tonga in 2014.
This link will take you to the separate policies of the Mana and Internet parties that have been announced so far.  One of the key kaupapa stated on the Mana website is it "will promote policies that allow all New Zealanders to lead a good life".   And since the Internet Party is such a new entity I believe it is still developing it's core vision, but it seems to be attracting a lot of disaffected voters.  Sadly I missed the Mana Internet roadshow as it travelled through the Waikato.  I would have been interested to go along and hear all the hub hub.


This link will take you to the policies the Maori Party have announced so far.  Essentially their policy hinges on Whanau Ora, which they have enacted through their support for the National led government.  Some may argue that Whanau Ora has been in play and despite it poverty in New Zealand has increased.  I am going to put this argument out there: how much worse would poverty have been if it wasn't for Whanau Ora being put into practice?  I think we can say, without a doubt, that Whanau Ora is not in the full form that Tariana Turia would truly have wanted it to be implemented in; that National and ACT and United Future, as the other partners in government, have all watered it down somewhat.


This link will take you to the policies of United Future which have been announced so far.  Peter Dunne will, in my opinion, be lucky to still be in parliament after 20 September, but I've included his party anyway.  United Future is the party that has almost consistently been in government, having been a coalition partner to both National and Labour since soon after its formation.  Even though it seems less likely that he'd jump into bed with Labour after the 2014 election, Peter Dunn could work with them if it meant he got a ministerial portfolio.


I'm not going to bother putting up links to the other parties.  It's not just that I'm philosophically opposed to the other parties, but I have some clear reasons:
  • National - despite it being just under six weeks until election day, National still hasn't released any policy, and Lindsay Tisch (MP for Waikato) told a meeting I was at last Monday that the policies for 2014 were yet to be released.  So I'm not putting in a link to the 2011 policies.  I think National will put most policy out in the last 3-4 weeks before the election, after it has seen everyone else's policy, but then do a whole pile of stuff they did not tell you if they get into government again - just like they did in 2009 (e.g. National Standards and putting up GST) and 2011 (e.g. Charter Schools).
  • ACT - they really don't see that there is a poverty issue in New Zealand.  Their philosophy is so orbiting another planet it isn't funny.  I am hoping that Epsom voters do not allow themselves to be led by the nose to vote for David Seymour because he comes across as arrogant and entitled and their leader, Jamie Whyte, has no bloody idea what he's talking about.  Whyte's comments earlier this year in regards to incest as well as his having no idea what Whanau Ora was on Maori TV's  Native Affairs last Monday makes him a laughing stock of politics.  Combined with seeing their Hamilton East candidate, Dr Ron Smith, in action last week, I have come to the conclusion they are all a bunch of loonies.
  • Conservatives - I can't take Colin Craig seriously.  Here is a guy that is sinking all his money into his dream of getting into politics, but who has self-sabotaged with his theories of the moon landing and chem trails, not to mention threatening everyone with a law suit/tantrum if he doesn't get his way!!  Yep, another bunch of loonies circling a distant moon.

So that is what you can do election wise.  But what practical measures could you take?
  • buy an extra can or dried goods from the supermarket and pop it in those food bank collectors they have at the check outs.
  • or deliver some extra goods or a money donation directly to your local food bank.
  • volunteer at the homeless shelter to cook for the homeless.
  • if you know a family who would struggle to buy clothes, have a clear out of the kids clothes that no longer fit them and drop them off to that family.
  • there are some people in various towns that are running their own initiatives to help the homeless or struggling.  Campbell Live has covered some of these groups.
  • make a donation to your local school towards the kids whose families can't pay for the extras like camps or visiting performers or to be in a sports team.
And I would recommend that if you haven't watched Nigel Latta's programme on poverty, you really should.  The link is at the top of this post.