Nelson schools in lockdown as police respond to incident
Photo:
RNZ / Nate McKinnon
Schools are in lockdown and a road is closed in Nelson following what police are describing as an incident.
Police have provided few details of what has occurred, but say they're responding to an incident in the Nayland Road area.
Some of the nearby schools are in lockdown as a precaution, police say.
Nayland Primary School says on Facebook that all students are safe and asks people not to contact the school or come to the school.
Updates will be provided via email and Facebook, it said.
Songer Street and Whakatu Drive have cordons in place.
Police say they do not believe there is any threat to public safety at this time but the public is asked to avoid the area.
Hashtags

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

RNZ News
18 minutes ago
- RNZ News
MSD criticised by Family Court Judge for legal appeal ‘distraction'
Photo: RNZ / Angus Dreaver A judge has chastised a government agency for wasting public money and the court's time trying to recall her judgement criticising the living conditions of an autistic man held at Auckland's Mason Clinic. The man, who has been detained in near-isolation for 19 years, lives in noisy conditions despite his extreme sensitivity to loud sounds and a belief he should be moved. The man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, last year became so distressed by construction noise next door he twice stuffed paper into his ears , requiring doctors to remove it. In a September judgement, Family Court Judge Penelope Matalavea (formerly Ginnen) criticised the man's "untenable" situation, stating the Health Ministry's inadequate funding hindered his quality of life. The man has been detained under the Intellectual Disability Compulsory Care and Rehabilitation Act since 2006. His care order has been extended 11 times as experts have repeatedly assessed him as being too dangerous to release, and he has spent the past five years mostly in seclusion at the Mason Clinic. The Supreme Court heard an appeal from the man's mother in August arguing his detention is unlawful. Ten months on, the court has yet to issue its decision. Auckland's Mason Clinic, where the man at the centre of the legal argument is held. Photo: RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly In November, the Ministry of Social Development made an application to recall Judge Matalavea's September decision, saying the court had been "misinformed". It said there had been 14 "notifiable incidents" that had occurred regarding the man's behaviour that had not been reported to the ministry by the Mason Clinic until weeks after they had occurred. The ministry said the failure to include these incidents at the hearing may have led to Judge Matalavea misunderstanding the constraints and limitations around the care provided to the man. In a decision released today, Judge Matalavea called the recall application a "distraction" and questioned the amount of public resource being put into it. "I noted public funds are constrained, and it is all public funds that would be applied to the two-day hearing. Everybody, from me as the Judge, to the litigants and the lawyers and the district inspector is publicly funded." In May, the ministry proposed an alternative, seeking permission to withdraw its recall application and instead file affidavits with the court to ensure its evidence sat on the file. In her decision, Judge Matalavea supported that idea, giving the ministry leave to file the evidence, though she conceded such action was unlikely to have any impact because her decision had already been issued. "This is an unorthodox approach, but a pragmatic resolution to a complex situation." Given the complexity of the case and the fact that all parties were publicly-funded, Judge Matalavea gave no order for costs. Human rights lawyer Tony Ellis, who was counsel for the man's mother, told RNZ he would be appealing the no costs ruling. "I'm not publicly funded, I've been doing this work for eight years for free." Ellis said he had told the court several times that he received no fee at all. He was also disappointed that while this legal stoush had been going on, there had been no change in the man's living situation. "And ten months after the Supreme Court hearing we are still waiting for the decision. It's not a very satisfactory result for the man or his mother," Ellis said.

RNZ News
an hour ago
- RNZ News
Health agencies criticised by Family Court Judge for legal appeal ‘distraction'
Photo: RNZ / Angus Dreaver A judge has chastised government agencies for wasting public money and the court's time trying to recall her judgement criticising the living conditions of an autistic man held at Auckland's Mason Clinic. The man, who has been detained in near-isolation for 19 years, lives in noisy conditions despite his extreme sensitivity to loud sounds and a belief he should be moved. The man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, last year became so distressed by construction noise next door he twice stuffed paper into his ears , requiring doctors to remove it. In a September judgement, Family Court Judge Penelope Matalavea (formerly Ginnen) criticised the man's "untenable" situation, stating the Health Ministry's inadequate funding hindered his quality of life. The man has been detained under the Intellectual Disability Compulsory Care and Rehabilitation Act since 2006. His care order has been extended 11 times as experts have repeatedly assessed him as being too dangerous to release, and he has spent the past five years mostly in seclusion at the Mason Clinic. The Supreme Court heard an appeal from the man's mother in August arguing his detention is unlawful. Ten months on, the court has yet to issue its decision. Auckland's Mason Clinic, where the man at the centre of the legal argument is held. Photo: RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly In November, the Ministry of Social Development made an application to recall Judge Matalavea's September decision, saying the court had been "misinformed". It said there had been 14 "notifiable incidents" that had occurred regarding the man's behaviour that had not been reported to the ministry by the Mason Clinic until weeks after they had occurred. The ministry said the failure to include these incidents at the hearing may have led to Judge Matalavea misunderstanding the constraints and limitations around the care provided to the man. In a decision released today, Judge Matalavea called the recall application a "distraction" and questioned the amount of public resource being put into it. "I noted public funds are constrained, and it is all public funds that would be applied to the two-day hearing. Everybody, from me as the Judge, to the litigants and the lawyers and the district inspector is publicly funded." In May, the ministry proposed an alternative, seeking permission to withdraw its recall application and instead file affidavits with the court to ensure its evidence sat on the file. In her decision, Judge Matalavea supported that idea, giving the ministry leave to file the evidence, though she conceded such action was unlikely to have any impact because her decision had already been issued. "This is an unorthodox approach, but a pragmatic resolution to a complex situation." Given the complexity of the case and the fact that all parties were publicly-funded, Judge Matalavea gave no order for costs. Human rights lawyer Tony Ellis, who was counsel for the man's mother, told RNZ he would be appealing the no costs ruling. "I'm not publicly funded, I've been doing this work for eight years for free." Ellis said he had told the court several times that he received no fee at all. He was also disappointed that while this legal stoush had been going on, there had been no change in the man's living situation. "And ten months after the Supreme Court hearing we are still waiting for the decision. It's not a very satisfactory result for the man or his mother," Ellis said.

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
Napier pharmacy owner considers closing after being raided three times in 10 weeks
Life Pharmacy in Napier. Photo: Google Maps Street View A Napier pharmacy owner says he's contemplating shutting up shop after his store was raided for the third time in just 10 weeks. Police say they responded to a burglary at Life Pharmacy in Napier at 2.30 am on Monday, where thieves had smashed through the stores front door in search of expensive perfumes. Pharmacy owner Peter Bailey has worked at the store for 45 years. He said the stores front door had to be replaced three times since the break-ins started 10 weeks ago, costing him an estimated $30,000. "Our insurance company isn't going to be very happy, I can see our premiums going through the roof - it just makes it tougher in a tough environment." He said the thefts left him "a bit stressed and emotional", but was thankful for the Napier community that had supported him and other staff members. "We've got some amazing customers who have been into see us in the last couple days," Bailey said. "We had a gentleman drop in a $50 coffee voucher for the staff." He said pharmacies were already a struggling businesses, and he had already seen them start to disappear from the city. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.