Thames MSD staff refuse to work at mould, sewage smelling office any longer
Photo:
Googlemaps
More than a dozen Ministry of Social Development staff walked off the job over what they say is an unsafe office with a ''strong mould and sewage smell".
Staff stopped working in the ministry's Thames office on Monday, leaving 12,000 clients without a face-to-face service.
The office was supposed to be a temporary space, after the Ministry of Social Development closed its main office in Pollen Street in November 2023 due to damage.
But there's been ongoing issues with the temporary building.
Staff moved out for a period of time last year, and last month it was closed for three days for security and privacy upgrades.
The Public Service Association has now issued MSD with a Provisional Improvement Notice under the Health and Safety at Work Act, which requires the employer to address concerns about health and safety.
MSD has redeployed staff to Paeroa which was 33km away.
Thames Community Board chairperson Adrian Catran told
Checkpoint
the situation for clients trying to go to MSD was "terrible".
"Twelve thousand clients in and around Thames and in the Coromandel Peninsula are unable to have face-to-face contact with MSD in Thames."
Catran said it was "wrong" that clients wanting to visit MSD in person would have to travel to Paeroa.
"There is no actual transport available to just travel to Paeroa at the moment, so that means they have to find their own way."
MSD staff have been working in the temporary office for 18 months, despite the space originally being used as a solution for four weeks.
Catran said the temporary office has had a number of issues over a long period of time.
"The building is not really fit-for-purpose and had shortcomings anyway. Now it appears that has manifested itself to a point that staff won't work there.
"It's had other problems in terms of the space is too small for 13 staff for example, client privacy is not available within the building to the extent that a lot of clients wanted."
He said on a previous occasion the ceiling had collapsed in another room in the building.
The original building had been vacated due to black mould and water leaks, but had now reopened as a fruit shop, Catran added.
Last year local MP
Scott Simpson issued a statement saying it was unacceptable for people to have to travel to Paeroa
to see MSD staff in person, which Catran said was still relevant today.
The Ministry of Social Development told
Checkpoint
the Thames Service Centre was temporarily closed on Monday and staff were redeployed to Paeroa Service Centre. They had access to vehicles for travel.
Acting Regional Commissioner, Sharlene Horne, said MSD was working through concerns about the building in conjunction with the landlord, while also working on securing new long-term premises that met the ministry's requirements.
Horne said MSD was working to reopen the Thames Service Centre as soon as possible but many of the client conversations in Thames already happened over the phone, and she expected clients should still be able to complete their appointments.
PSA national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons told
Checkpoint
there had been long-standing issues with the working environment at the Thames office which was supposed to be a temporary site.
These concerns came to a head on Monday and health and safety representatives at the office had since issued MSD with a Provisional Improvement Notice under the Health and Safety at Work Act.
She said the PSA was working on ensuring workers were not disadvantaged by any alternative options proposed and that they would continue to support workers through this.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
More rough sleepers on Auckland streets: 'NZ doesn't have to be this way'
A makeshift shelter on Hobson St in central Auckland. Photo: RNZ / Amy Williams Makeshift shelters of cardboard and blankets - some propped up with road cones - are dotted along the street near Auckland City Mission, which is struggling to support an increase in rough sleepers. City Missioner Helen Robinson said its outreach team is in regular contact with 129 people living on the street, a big jump on the 40 almost a year ago. "The mission quite appropriately, here on Hobson Street, acts as quite a beacon. All throughout the city here in Auckland and up and down the country the prevalence of street homelessness is growing." Helen Robinson Photo: RNZ / Marika Khabazi The numbers spurred Auckland Council to ask the government for help after outreach teams recorded a 53 percent increase in homelessness between September and January - an updated tally is expected this month. Shop owners near the mission said they worry for their safety, and their business. Across the road from Auckland City Mission's Homeground on Hobson Street, a kebab shop does thriving business in felafel, fried chicken and scoops of chips. Berein Patel has worked there for six years and now owns the eatery. He has noticed an increase in people sleeping rough. "It's quite terrible, the numbers are increasing day by day so it's not good for the country," he said. "At the moment, in front of our shop there's a couple of guys always sitting [there], bothering our customers coming in." Kebab shop owner Berein Patel Photo: RNZ / Amy Williams Patel said the shop loses about $50 a day in theft. "When we try to stop them they run after us, which is not good. Sometimes we feel we're not safe. The worst part is they pee and poo on the street which is really bad for others. Normally we call the cops." A few doors down, Quest Apartment Hotels night manager James Salva said the increase in rough sleepers was affecting business. "We usually get bad reviews from our guests, especially foreign ones from out of Auckland," he said. The hotel has more than 300 customer reviews on TripAdvisor, with an average three-and-a-half stars. "They usually say that the hotel is nice, very convenient because it's in the city centre but after that the negative reviews we've got are many people loitering outside, sheltering at night, especially women are afraid at night to go out." There is no night shelter in Auckland and social services report emergency housing is hard to get . Last year, the Ministry of Social Development introduced stricter entry criteria for emergency housing, and new requirements that make it more difficult to stay. The City Mission is a magnet for those with nowhere to go, offering one free meal a day to those in need and outreach teams that link people to support services. Robinson said they were working with more first-timers on the street. She understood shop owners' dilemma but said moving people on was not the answer - she wanted access to emergency housing restored. "Our job is not to move people on, if we are we're moving them onto a house and a home and support services that are really appropriate. I think the madness about moving people on is where are we moving people on to?" Homeless shelters outside the City Mission on Hobson Street in Auckland. Photo: RNZ / Amy Williams Robinson said there was a lack of public amenities in the city, something the council was trying to address. "In the bigger picture you move someone on who has no home, no place to stay, no place to sleep and no place to go to the bathroom... what do they do? "People are moved on to another place but then it's actually just the same story again. We will have rough sleepers who talk about being moved on multiple times in any one day or week, which is totally understandable and madness." Rough sleepers often stayed awake at night to keep safe and warm - during the day, the mission's busy lobby has half a dozen people sleeping on the floor or bench seats. "The mission stands to be a refuge for people and we will always be a refuge. Very honestly though, my heart breaks every day when I go down and see people sleeping in our laneway. New Zealand doesn't have to be this way." At the end of this month, Auckland Council's community committee is due to table a report with updated numbers on the city's rough sleepers. It also has a team that works with the city's homeless, doing morning rounds to wake and move people from doorways. Council head of community impact Dickie Humphries said they also relied on the public to alert them to any concerns about a rough sleeper, including the vulnerable person's safety. "We have seen a steady flow of traffic to our community safety and support page online and through our contact centre, where people can find information on how to report a safety issue, or contact the various support agencies that help those experiencing homelessness," he said. "The council continues to receive reports of homelessness at council-run spaces, like libraries. However, as awareness grows, we are aware that more people are contacting social service providers and community organisations involved in these responses directly." Shop owners, including Berein Patel, would like to see more support for the city's homeless. "There's not a proper solution for this, the council people are getting rid of them but usually they're back here in an hour," he said. "I think the government should work on the problem and provide them shelter and food." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


Otago Daily Times
5 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
IT experts developing revolutionary technology
Two New Zealand-based IT experts are working on a ground-breaking technology that promises to revolutionise computing by creating a computer inside a computer memory chip. The innovative project, known as SADRAM (Symbolically Addressing DRAM), is being developed in Oamaru and could dramatically change how data is processed worldwide. Dr Robert Trout and Nicolas Erdody bring more than a century's combined experience in information technology to the ambitious endeavour. Dr Trout is the original inventor of SADRAM, a new type of memory chip architecture that can organise, access and even process data internally — without relying heavily on traditional central processing units (CPUs) to micromanage operations. "This is a paradigm shift," Dr Trout said. "Instead of the CPU managing every step of data processing, SADRAM moves computing power closer to the memory itself." Nicolas Erdody, director of Open Parallel and a key partner on the project, elaborated on the current state of computing technology. "Multicore processors, with multiple CPU cores on a single chip, have been the norm in phones, laptops and supercomputers for decades," he said. "But this architecture has barely changed in 50 years, and CPUs have hit a performance wall." Mr Erdody said designers could no longer extract significant improvements or better efficiency using the old designs. "SADRAM's architecture addresses these limitations head on." The new "information architecture and concept" behind SADRAM was designed to boost performance, reduce energy consumption and streamline the computing processes that modern technologies demanded. By embedding computation directly within the memory chip, the technology could reshape everything from artificial intelligence to data centre operations. Mr Erdody's company, Open Parallel, was selected in 2012 by the New Zealand government to help design software for the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), the world's largest radio telescope project. The company worked on SKA until 2019. He also directs the annual Multicore World Conference held in New Zealand, which attracts leading global thinkers in computing innovation. Originally from Uruguay, Mr Erdody has lived in Oamaru for over two decades with his family. He met Dr Trout earlier this year at the Multicore World Conference in Christchurch, where the two "like-minded" experts decided to collaborate on further developing SADRAM technology from North Otago. "We're jamming like musicians in a band — when like-minded people come together, ideas flow naturally," Mr Erdody said from their shared office space at the Business Hive in Oamaru's Thames St. Dr Trout, who hails from Palmerston North but now lives in Hamilton after decades in the United States, holds the worldwide patent for the SADRAM concept. Over his career, he has built several tech companies and pioneered novel computing architectures. As founder and president of Pico Computing Inc (2004-15), he developed FPGA (field-programmable gate array) products widely used in cryptography, genetic analysis and CPU acceleration. "FPGAs can outperform conventional CPUs in many specialised tasks," Dr Trout said. "The real revolution in computing came in the 1970s when the industry shifted from discrete components to printed circuits, separating design from fabrication. This enabled exponential growth in computing power for the past 50 years." But he warns: "We are now hitting physical and quantum limits. We cannot keep squeezing more performance from the same old CPU-centric design." The pair are focused on designing cost-effective technology to overcome these challenges. Their plan includes creating a company, hiring experts and developing hardware kits — either manufacturing them or licensing the design to major industry players such as Samsung. "The big picture is to build a design centre in New Zealand that proves cutting-edge tech can be developed anywhere. We want to inspire future generations to innovate locally with global impact," Mr Erdody said.

RNZ News
13 hours ago
- RNZ News
Thames MSD staff refuse to work at mould, sewage smelling office any longer
The temporary Ministry of Social Development office operated out of the Wintec Building in Queen Street, Thames until Monday. Photo: Googlemaps More than a dozen Ministry of Social Development staff walked off the job over what they say is an unsafe office with a ''strong mould and sewage smell". Staff stopped working in the ministry's Thames office on Monday, leaving 12,000 clients without a face-to-face service. The office was supposed to be a temporary space, after the Ministry of Social Development closed its main office in Pollen Street in November 2023 due to damage. But there's been ongoing issues with the temporary building. Staff moved out for a period of time last year, and last month it was closed for three days for security and privacy upgrades. The Public Service Association has now issued MSD with a Provisional Improvement Notice under the Health and Safety at Work Act, which requires the employer to address concerns about health and safety. MSD has redeployed staff to Paeroa which was 33km away. Thames Community Board chairperson Adrian Catran told Checkpoint the situation for clients trying to go to MSD was "terrible". "Twelve thousand clients in and around Thames and in the Coromandel Peninsula are unable to have face-to-face contact with MSD in Thames." Catran said it was "wrong" that clients wanting to visit MSD in person would have to travel to Paeroa. "There is no actual transport available to just travel to Paeroa at the moment, so that means they have to find their own way." MSD staff have been working in the temporary office for 18 months, despite the space originally being used as a solution for four weeks. Catran said the temporary office has had a number of issues over a long period of time. "The building is not really fit-for-purpose and had shortcomings anyway. Now it appears that has manifested itself to a point that staff won't work there. "It's had other problems in terms of the space is too small for 13 staff for example, client privacy is not available within the building to the extent that a lot of clients wanted." He said on a previous occasion the ceiling had collapsed in another room in the building. The original building had been vacated due to black mould and water leaks, but had now reopened as a fruit shop, Catran added. Last year local MP Scott Simpson issued a statement saying it was unacceptable for people to have to travel to Paeroa to see MSD staff in person, which Catran said was still relevant today. The Ministry of Social Development told Checkpoint the Thames Service Centre was temporarily closed on Monday and staff were redeployed to Paeroa Service Centre. They had access to vehicles for travel. Acting Regional Commissioner, Sharlene Horne, said MSD was working through concerns about the building in conjunction with the landlord, while also working on securing new long-term premises that met the ministry's requirements. Horne said MSD was working to reopen the Thames Service Centre as soon as possible but many of the client conversations in Thames already happened over the phone, and she expected clients should still be able to complete their appointments. PSA national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons told Checkpoint there had been long-standing issues with the working environment at the Thames office which was supposed to be a temporary site. These concerns came to a head on Monday and health and safety representatives at the office had since issued MSD with a Provisional Improvement Notice under the Health and Safety at Work Act. She said the PSA was working on ensuring workers were not disadvantaged by any alternative options proposed and that they would continue to support workers through this. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.