logo
Newmarket unit owner fined $7000 for feeding birds outside apartment

Newmarket unit owner fined $7000 for feeding birds outside apartment

NZ Herald27-04-2025

Rental appraisals were provided from mid-August, showing a reduced prospective rent return from his unit without the bird droppings being cleaned away.
His evidence was that the property manager providing the appraisals would not rent the premises with access to the balcony because of the droppings.
The evidence suggests similar concerns being expressed by other unit owners, the tribunal decision says.
The body corporate arranged extensive cleaning last April that improved the condition or presentation of the building somewhat.
But the neighbour said Watt's bird feeding had continued and the problem with accumulated bird droppings increased once again.
The neighbour was unable to comment on the cleaning work Watt recently had done, which she says shows the bird droppings could be removed quite quickly and easily.
Watt was told she had breached the apartment owners' rules by feeding birds, leading to an unsightly and unhygienic condition of the building and causing damage to common property paintwork.
The body corporate wrote to her, although Watt told the tribunal because she was not conversant with email, she received only one of those notices, which she believes was in September.
She was unable to recall whether that was a notice from the body corporate or its lawyers.
Watt says after receiving that notice, she did modify her habit for several months by feeding the birds only outside the property on the berm, and she was told on good authority this was not a breach of the rules.
She acknowledges, though, that after becoming concerned for the birds' wellbeing, she resumed her practice of feeding them in her courtyard.
Watt must pay $5900 in legal costs leading up to the tribunal hearing, $575 for that hearing and a further $500 filing fee, resulting in the total award against her of $7031. The money was due immediately.
The Herald has reported on bird deterrent system Symterra Pulse being used in New Zealand prisons and Auckland railway stations.
Australia-based Peter McCarthy said birds damaged roofs and left droppings, causing problems for the owners.
Inmates at some New Zealand prisons were feeding birds in the yards out of boredom or loneliness, McCarthy said.
He cited the character Brooks in the film The Shawshank Redemption, who kept a pet crow.
Auckland lawyer and ex-Kaipātiki Local Board member Nick Kearney has invested in Symterra Pulse, previously marketed as Flock Off.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kiwi porn site founder accused of sex trafficking pleads guilty in US
Kiwi porn site founder accused of sex trafficking pleads guilty in US

1News

timea day ago

  • 1News

Kiwi porn site founder accused of sex trafficking pleads guilty in US

A New Zealand man who founded a California-based porn empire that recruited women with false modelling offers pleaded guilty to sex trafficking charges in a federal court, authorities said. Michael James Pratt pleaded guilty Thursday (local time) in federal court in San Diego, according to the US Department of Justice. He faces a possible life sentence when he is sentenced September 25. Pratt, 42, was on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list when he was arrested in Madrid in 2022, three years after he fled while facing sex trafficking charges. Federal prosecutors said Pratt and his co-defendants used force, fraud and coercion to recruit hundreds of women, many of whom were in their late teens, for their adult videos. A New Zealand native, he founded the now-defunct GirlsDoPorn website in San Diego. In 2019, he and others were charged in San Diego with sex crimes after being targeted in a civil lawsuit by 22 women who claimed they were victimised by fraud and breach of contract. ADVERTISEMENT Where to get help for sexual violence. (Source: 1News) The women said they were plied with alcohol and marijuana before being rushed through signing a contract, which they were not allowed to read. Some said they were sexually assaulted and held in hotel rooms unwillingly until adult filming had ended. A judge in 2020 found in favour of the women and handed down a US$12.7 million (NZ$21 million) judgment against Pratt, Matthew Isaac Wolfe and adult producer and performer Ruben Andre Garcia. Wolfe, who handled day-to-day operations, finances, marketing and filming for the website, pleaded guilty in 2022 to a single federal count of conspiracy to commit sex trafficking. He was sentenced last year to 14 years in federal prison. The other co-defendants also pleaded guilty. Garcia was sentenced to 20 years in prison and cameraman Theodore Gyi received a four-year sentence. Valorie Moser, a former bookkeeper for the website, also pleaded guilty last year. She's scheduled to be sentenced September 12.

Hundreds rally in Brisbane, Sydney over deaths in police custody
Hundreds rally in Brisbane, Sydney over deaths in police custody

RNZ News

timea day ago

  • RNZ News

Hundreds rally in Brisbane, Sydney over deaths in police custody

By Molly Slattery and Carly Williams , ABC Photo: ABC News/Molly Slattery Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains the name of an Indigenous person who has died, used with the permission of their family. Protesters have gathered in Brisbane's King George Square and Sydney's CBD to "demand justice" over the death of 24-year-old Kumanjayi White, who died in police custody in the Northern Territory last month. White died last Tuesday after he was restrained on the floor of a Coles supermarket in Alice Springs. Police have said two off-duty officers detained him after an alleged altercation with a security guard who accused him of shoplifting. Organiser Sam Watson. Photo: ABC News/Molly Slattery Brisbane rally organiser Sam Watson expressed anger that White's death came more than three decades after the royal commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody . "These deaths are happening all over the country, and they have been for the 30 years since the royal commission," he said. The statements were met with shouts of "shame" from the crowd gathered. Raelene Nixon, whose 27-year-old son Steven Lee Nixon-McKeller died in police custody in Toowoomba in 2021, joined protesters. "I feel my spirit ache from the injustice of it all," she said. "We do this not for those we've lost but for those who are to come; we have a responsibility to our future generations. "One third of the deaths in custody have been Aboriginal people, but we make up just three percent of the population. "When we ask for justice, they give us silence and more violence." Raelene Nixon's son died while in police custody in Toowoomba in 2021. Photo: ABC News/Molly Slattery Wakka Wakka man and South Sea Islander Kevin Yow Yeh called for more community support from the crowds gathered. "Solidarity means action; you've come here today but there's so much more we need to do," he said. "This story is unfortunately not a unique one. "This is our opportunity to mobilise and active, do something, because they're killing us." Kevin Yow Yeh says action must be taken. Photo: ABC News/Molly Slattery In Sydney, the rally started with people gathering on the steps of Town Hall. ACT Commissioner for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children and Young People Vanessa Turnbull Roberts spoke first, before Aboriginal man Alistair Flanders officially opened the event with a traditional smoking ceremony, inviting protesters to the front to take in the smoke. The rally in Sydney was started with a traditional smoking ceremony. Photo: ABC News/Carly Williams Lawyer George Newhouse, who is representing White's family, spoke to the crowd on behalf of Warlpiri people. "I've just come back from Alice Springs and Yuendumu, I'm angry there are mothers grieving there tonight," he said. "I am angry there was a disabled young man calling out for his mother in Coles last week." The Sydney rally took place at Town Hall. Photo: ABC News/Carly Williams Newhouse read a statement from the family stating that White was deeply missed and loved. He added that White's family had a deep mistrust of the NT Police and wanted an independent investigation, saying the family was asking for the officers involved to be stood down while the investigation took place. Dunghutti man and Sydney rally organiser Paul Silva urged the crowd to "stand up and take a stand with First Nations people". "We're going to scrutinise the system, scrutinise the government, stand with the Yuendumu community until they can find justice and accountability," he said. Protesters made their way down George Street to the Surry Hills Police Station after the speeches. Photo: ABC News/Carly Williams "This won't be the first action happening here within Sydney and around the nation." Malyangapa Barkindji rapper Barkaa performed live before the crowd made its way down George Street to the Surry Hills Police Station. They follow rallies held across the nation, including in Alice Springs, on Friday. - ABC

Memorial, vigil for missing Bundaberg teenager Pheobe Bishop as community unites in grief
Memorial, vigil for missing Bundaberg teenager Pheobe Bishop as community unites in grief

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • RNZ News

Memorial, vigil for missing Bundaberg teenager Pheobe Bishop as community unites in grief

By Nikki Sorbello and Grace Whiteside , ABC Flowers, photographs and notes at the end of Airport Drive in Bundaberg, in memory of missing teenager Pheobe Bishop. Photo: ABC Wide Bay / Scott Lamond Flowers, photographs and handwritten messages line a busy street at the entrance of Bundaberg, a coastal city known for turtles, sugar cane, and rum. It's not a welcome to the town, 350km north of Brisbane, but the focal point of grief of a community mourning the loss of 17-year-old Pheobe Bishop. Flowers, photographs and notes at the end of Airport Drive in Bundaberg, laid in memory of missing teenager Pheobe Bishop. Photo: ABC Wide Bay / Scott Lamond For three weeks, Pheobe's smiling face has saturated social media and missing posters throughout the region after she went missing on 15 May, propelled by a family desperate for answers. As the memorial grows in the last place it was believed Pheobe was seen, a candlelit vigil is planned for Sunday night in Gin Gin, where Pheobe lived, 50km south-west of Bundaberg. Photo: ABC News The outpouring of grief and support for Pheobe's family comes as police confirm they found human remains in thick bushland more than an hour's drive south-west of Bundaberg. The discovery on Friday came after Pheobe's former housemates, James Wood, 34, and Tanika Bromley, 33, were both charged with one count each of murder and two counts each of interfering with a corpse. They were not required to appear in court or enter a plea when the matter was mentioned in Bundaberg Magistrates Court on Friday. Both matters were adjourned until 11 August. The Bundaberg memorial sits at the end of Airport Drive, the first location police searched for Pheobe. It was here that Wood and Bromley told police they had dropped the teenager on the morning of 15 May for Pheobe to catch a flight to Western Australia via Brisbane. But she never made it inside the terminal. Bundaberg Mayor Helen Blackburn says the community is 'reeling'. Photo: ABC Wide Bay / James Taylor Bundaberg Mayor Helen Blackburn said the Bundaberg community was "reeling". "It's important for the community to come together, it's important for them to know that they are there for one another and it's certainly important for them to grieve," Blackburn said. "It's a very, very sad time for the family and for the community but we are resilient and we are going to get through this, but we will only do it if we do it together." Wide Bay Burnett Detective Inspector Craig Mansfield said forensic examination on Saturday confirmed remains found at about 2.30pm on Friday were human, with further work needed to confirm the identity. "We always wanted to bring Pheobe home and we believe this is the first step in that process," Mansfield said. Detective Inspector Craig Mansfield says police will continue searching for Pheobe. Photo: ABC Wide Bay / James Taylor Mansfield said the body was found unburied in bushland 9km from the initial Good Night Scrub National Park search area that police scoured for five days. Cadaver dogs were bought in, with telecommunications data leading police to the revised search area. Earlier on Friday, Mansfield described the three-week investigation as "complex and protracted" with more than 100 police officers involved. Police have received more than 200 calls from the public. Police and SES searched Good Night Scrub National Park for five days. Photo: ABC News / Lawrence Jeffcoat "We believe Pheobe was murdered and her body was moved," he said. "We will allege that Pheobe was moved more than once." Mansfield confirmed police had seized Wood's four-wheel-drive vehicle on Thursday night. Police initially focused their search on the Bundaberg area, specifically near the airport, as they tried to locate Pheobe or the luggage she was believed to have been carrying. One of two crime scenes established six days after Pheobe Bishop went missing. Photo: ABC Wide Bay / Grace Whiteside It was not until Wednesday, 21 May - six days after Pheobe went missing - that police declared her disappearance suspicious and announced they were looking at two crime scenes. The first was the Gin Gin house where Pheobe was living with Wood and Bromley, where a number of deceased dogs were also found. The second crime scene was Bromley's car, a grey Hyundai ix35 in which Pheobe was believed to have been travelling to Bundaberg. Two days later, on Friday, 23 May - eight days after Pheobe was last seen - police started what would be a five-day search of the Good Night Scrub National Park. Mansfield said "telephone data" led police to search the dense bushland, more than an hour's drive southwest of Bundaberg. "It is evidence enough to say that we believe that the accused and Pheobe were there," he said. Human remains detection specialist dog Rio was involved in the search at Good Night Scrub National Park. Photo: ABC Wide Bay / Grace Whiteside For five days, police used drones, police divers and cadaver dogs - trained to detect human remains - to search the area. Pheobe's body was not found, but items of interest were collected from the bushland and sent for forensic testing. Police also believe some items were removed from the area before their search began. Pheobe's disappearance was described as out of character from the outset. Pheobe Bishop's family have kept the case in the public eye. Photo: Supplied / Queensland Police Service Through statements via police and daily social media posts, the teenager's family has begged the community for information relating to the disappearance of their beloved "Phee Phee". Posting on social media, Pheobe's mother, Kylie Johnson, said that their world had been "shattered". "I didn't think my heart could break any more than it did when you went missing, or when charges were laid, but this! "This is ripping me apart." Pheobe's sister, Kaylea Bishop, spoke to the media outside the court on Friday. Pheobe Bishop's sister, Kaylea, spoke outside court on Friday. Photo: ABC Wide Bay / Grace Whiteside "She was loved; she is missed dearly," she said. The police investigation is still ongoing, with police still appealing for information about the movements of the grey Hyundai ix35, registration 414 EW3, around the greater Gin Gin area between 15 and 18 May. - ABC News

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store