logo
Clothing waste tackled: Whangārei part of recycling pilot with The Warehouse

Clothing waste tackled: Whangārei part of recycling pilot with The Warehouse

NZ Herald14-07-2025
Clothing that's still in good condition will be passed on to The Salvation Army's Family Stores, where it can be resold to support local community services.
Items that can't be reused will be recycled into products such as signage, packaging, protection mats and even acoustic panels.
Nick Garforth, area manager for Salvation Army Family Stores, said the system is designed to keep donations local.
'The product that comes in is processed through the local Whangārei [Warehouse] store, sold in the Whangārei [family] store, and the money generated goes to local mission funding.
'Ultimately, it will help this community – and there's absolutely no doubt about that.'
The pilot has been running for about three weeks and Garforth said early signs are positive.
'We're seeing some good numbers coming through. It's not breaking the bank, but people are engaging with the project and donating at the Whangārei Warehouse,' he said.
'There's no reason it won't continue to be a success.'
The pilot will also test how incentives can help encourage long-term recycling behaviours.
Asked if he was concerned about donation volumes overwhelming stores, Garforth said: 'We have very robust processing systems in place to take care of large volumes. We never close for donations.'
To encourage people to take part, The Warehouse is offering a reward through its Market Club loyalty programme. Anyone who donates clothing will receive a voucher for 10% off clothing purchases over $30, either in-store or online.
Every kilo of clothing collected will be tracked and reported, so customers can see the real impact of their donations.
Phil Cumming, general manager of sustainability and ethical sourcing at The Warehouse Group, says the initiative is part of the company's wider push to make sustainable living easier and more accessible.
The Good Drop adds to The Warehouse Group's existing in-store recycling options, which currently include electronics, soft plastics, mobile phones and ink cartridges.
'The trial is about testing how incentives can help encourage long-term recycling behaviours,' Caroline Dewstow, sustainability partner at The Warehouse Group, said.
Dewstow said The Warehouse had worked with the Salvation Army for many years and knew the power of their national scale and positive impact in local communities. It was a 'no-brainer' for the pair to partner on this initiative.
Sarah Curtis is a news reporter for the Northern Advocate, focusing on a wide range of issues. She has nearly 20 years' experience in journalism, most of which she spent reporting on the courts in Gisborne and the East Coast.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Government has 'no intention whatsoever' to close NorthTec, Northland MP promises
Government has 'no intention whatsoever' to close NorthTec, Northland MP promises

RNZ News

time03-08-2025

  • RNZ News

Government has 'no intention whatsoever' to close NorthTec, Northland MP promises

NorthTec has campuses in Whangārei, Auckland, Kaitāia, Kerikeri and Ngāwhā, near Kaikohe (pictured). Photo: Peter de Graaf Northland MP Grant McCallum says the government has "no intention whatsoever" of closing down the region's polytechnic - despite being listed among institutes facing potential closure or merger as part of the break-up of mega-polytech Te Pūkenga . Revelations last week about NorthTec's uncertain future, as well as a fresh round of course and staff cuts, sparked concerns among tutors, students and industry. The news also drew more than 100 people to a public meeting at the main campus in Whangārei, but McCallum told RNZ closure of NorthTec was not on the cards. "Northland needs vocational training and NorthTec's got an important part to play in that, but it's got to be able to stand up on its own two feet and be credible," he said. "That's our goal. "It's just taking a bit longer, because it's got a chequered past and we've got to work through all that." McCallum said the exact form NorthTec would take was not yet clear, but it would still include satellite campuses in places such as Kaitāia and Kaikohe, which were essential for the widely dispersed Northland region. Northland MP Grant McCallum says he will fight to keep NorthTec open. Photo: RNZ / Peter de Graaf He said Vocational Education Minister Penny Simmonds understood the importance of regional training facilities such as NorthTec, because of her long association with the Southern Institute of Technology. NorthTec would not say how many courses and jobs were included in the restructuring proposal, saying the final numbers had yet to be determined. However, according to the Tertiary Education Union, courses facing the chop included forestry, primary industries, pest control and apiculture (beekeeping). McCallum said that was an operational decision for NorthTec management. "As a local MP, what I would be expecting is sectors like the primary sector, which is one of our biggest in Northland, will have courses available. We just have to make sure they're the right ones." At the public hui, it was claimed the forestry industry had been blindsided by the proposal to drop forestry courses. McCallum said the government was conscious of those claims and NorthTec would be in touch with the affected sectors. While the final decision was the minister's, McCallum said he would fight to keep NorthTec open. "What it looks like going forward and the courses it offers, that has yet to be determined, because it has to be a sustainable, credible organisation." NorthTec operations lead Derek Slatter said the organisation was currently consulting staff over proposed changes to teaching and support roles. "The number of positions impacted will be dependent on the final decisions made following the full consultation process," he said. "The proposed changes are designed to address issues of financial sustainability and to forge a pathway towards financial viability for NorthTec, enabling us to continue delivering high-quality education and training." Slatter acknowledged staff had been through a prolonged period of change and uncertainty, and that would continue, as NorthTec became financially viable. "However, I am confident that viability is within our reach," he said. Slatter said enrolments for semester two were higher than this time last year and applications for 2026 were also up. Earlier, Minister Penny Simmonds said the government's aim was to build a vocational education system that was "locally led, regionally responsive and financially sustainable, including for Northland". Ten of the institutes merged by the previous government into Te Pūkenga would be returned to standalone, regionally-governed polytechnics. The future of polytechnics in four regions - Northland, Taranaki, Wellington and the West Coast - would be decided in the first half of 2026. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Fears grow for NorthTec as more cuts loom amid break-up of Te Pūkenga
Fears grow for NorthTec as more cuts loom amid break-up of Te Pūkenga

RNZ News

time28-07-2025

  • RNZ News

Fears grow for NorthTec as more cuts loom amid break-up of Te Pūkenga

Te Pūkenga only opened a new NorthTec campus at Ngāwhā, near Kaikohe, in 2023, but it's now scaling back courses as part of a de-merger. Photo: Peter de Graaf Fears are growing for the future of Northland's biggest vocational education provider as it scrambles to break even amid the break-up of mega-institute Te Pūkenga. A 'Save NorthTec Hui' was called at short notice at the main campus in Whangārei on Friday as the institute starts consulting on a new round of cuts. It comes as the government returns 10 polytechnics around the country to standalone, regionally-run institutes, reversing the previous government's 2020 merger. However, polytechnics in four other regions - including Northland - have been given until next year to prove they can be financially viable. Those that can't balance the books face possible closure or a merger with the Open Polytechnic. Tertiary Education Union (TEU) rep Sharlene Nelson told the hui the restructuring proposal could see the axing of courses in forestry, primary industries, apiculture, pest control and creative writing, as well as the closure of the Auckland campus. Adding to staff concern was the uncertainty around whether NorthTec would exist in a few years' time, she said. "Morale is pretty low ... it just creates anxiety, because you don't know if you've still got a job. Do you put that effort in? And where are students going to go if we don't exist?" Nelson said she'd been shocked by revelations in an RNZ report last Thursday that polytechnics around the country expected to cut about 550 courses, up to 900 full-time equivalent staff and 30 delivery sites. "We knew it was happening, but we never saw the magnitude of it. It's quite scary." Another tutor and TEU rep, Jim Hutchinson, said the proposed cuts were devastating for staff. "That's their livelihood, and they love to teach." Hutchinson said the potential closure of NorthTec was especially concerning for students in the Far North, who would have to travel long distances to pursue other training options. Poor connectivity in some parts of Northland made online learning impractical, he added. Nelson said the cuts also threatened Northland's future economic growth. "Without education, how do you grow? If you decide to cut back to next to nothing, then what is the future for Northland?" Former NorthTec student, tutor and director Hūhana Lyndon – now a Green MP – called the Save NorthTec Hui on Friday amid concerns for the institute's future. Photo: RNZ / Peter de Graaf The public hui was called with two days' notice by Hūhana Lyndon, a former NorthTec student, tutor and learner support director, now a Green MP. She said she organised the meeting after news emerged last Wednesday that Northland would not necessarily retain a polytechnic following the dis-establishment of Te Pūkenga. That was followed on Thursday by revelations of the scale of course and job cuts nationwide. Lyndon said uncertainty over the 46-year-old institute's future was "hugely concerning", even if some courses needed "a rev-up". "It really leaves us vulnerable in terms of powering up the economy, and being able to educate our young people and those that are transitioning between jobs." The timing was "awkward" because just last Wednesday, Northland's biggest businesses made a presentation to Parliament about the region's potential to expand from an $11 billion-a-year economy to $60 billion by 2050. The same presentation explained Northland's current under-performance was due to long-term under-investment in infrastructure, a skills shortage and poor educational outcomes. Lyndon said the answer to the skills shortage was "industry-relevant, credible training options". She was pleased with the turnout of more than 100 people at the hui given the short notice. Lyndon planned to raise her concerns with NorthTec's interim leadership, as well as industry, hapū, iwi and councils. Vocational Education Minister Penny Simmonds said the government was committed to helping NorthTec work towards long-term financial viability. "A committed group of community leaders are working alongside the government in Northland to ensure this happens. NorthTec is a valued polytechnic and will remain within Te Pūkenga over the next few months as it works with specialist advisors on a pathway toward viability, with decisions due in the first half of 2026." Simmonds said the government had set up a $20 million annual fund for the next two years to support "strategically important provision" in smaller, rural regions. Tutors and Tertiary Education Union reps Sharlene Nelson and Jim Hutchinson address a Save NorthTec Hui called at short notice last Friday. Photo: RNZ / Peter de Graaf That would help ensure learners in regions such as Northland were not disadvantaged while the government worked through longer-term funding plans. As part of the new "blended learning" model, regional institutions would have autonomy to choose the right mix of online, work-based and in-person learning to meet local needs. Regarding NorthTec's current cuts, Simmonds said she was not privy to polytechnics' operational decisions. "However, I'd suggest it is important for NorthTec, as it is for all polytechnics, to be taking appropriate actions to ensure their overall viability and maintain their relationships with local industries and communities," she said. Simmonds said the government wanted to build a vocational education system that was "locally led, regionally responsive and financially sustainable, including for Northland". The three other regions where polytechnic survival is uncertain are Taranaki (Western Institute of Technology), Wellington (Whitireia Community Polytechnic and Wellington Institute of Technology) and the West Coast (Tai Poutini Polytechnic). NorthTec was founded as Northland Community College in 1978. Its main campus is in the Whangārei suburb of Raumanga but it has satellites in Kaitāia, Kerikeri, Ngāwhā and Auckland. The brand-new campus at Ngāwhā, just east of Kaikohe, only opened in 2023. The Rāwene campus closed in 2017 but the buildings remain in use as a community-run education hub. NorthTec has been contacted for comment. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

When big companies face criminal charges, what does it actually mean?
When big companies face criminal charges, what does it actually mean?

The Spinoff

time27-07-2025

  • The Spinoff

When big companies face criminal charges, what does it actually mean?

Noel Leeming is the latest big retailer to be criminally prosecuted by the Commerce Commission. But what do the charges actually mean, and will they make a difference to uncompetitive or unfair behaviour? Last week, the Commerce Commission announced it was filing criminal charges against Noel Leeming in the Auckland District Court. The government's consumer watchdog claimed the electronics chain, which is owned by The Warehouse, had breached the Fair Trading Act, particularly in its 'price match' guarantee; often, according to the commission, products from other companies will not be matched, despite Noel Leeming advertising that they will. 'It's crucial that businesses promoting any price match offer factor in the overall impression of the claims they make, and that all information is clear to customers,' said Anne Calliman, the deputy chair of the Commerce Commission, in a press release. It's not the first time the commission has filed criminal charges against retailers: Woolworths NZ, and some specific Pak'n'Save supermarkets (which are operated under a franchise model) were served with criminal charges last December for alleged breaches of the Fair Trading Act, while civil proceedings were filed against Foodstuffs North Island and Gilmours last week for alleged cartel conduct in breach of the Commerce Act. But what punishments can really be handed out? And does being served with criminal charges make a difference to how companies operate? What is the Commerce Commission? Great, starting with an easy one. The commission, also known as the CommComm (cute!), is New Zealand's competition, consumer and regulatory agency. An independent Crown entity, it's responsible for enforcing a few different laws. Under the Commerce Act, the commission can conduct market studies into competition, investigate mergers between businesses which may reduce competition and harm consumers, and recommend that particular goods or services are regulated if there is little competition. If people have been engaging in cartel conduct (ie price fixing or bid rigging), the commission can bring civil charges under the Commerce Act, with penalties including fines of up to $500,000 for an individual and $10 million (or more) for a company. As of 2021, it can also bring criminal charges under this law which could lead to imprisonment of up to seven years for individuals. Under the Fair Trading Act (FTA), the commission can investigate and prosecute companies and individuals for misleading pricing, including contract terms and pyramid schemes. It can file criminal charges through the District Court, with fines of up to $200,000 per offence for individuals and $600,000 per offence for companies. The commission also enforces some parts of the Telecommunications Act (how people are charged for internet and phone services), the Dairy Industry Restructuring Act (how Fonterra charges for raw milk) and and the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act (money lending). People can report companies for suspected breaches of these acts, and the commission can respond by investigating and potentially filing civil or criminal charges. So the Commerce Commission can't investigate or prosecute 'high prices' – it has to have a specific example of someone breaking the law? Yeah, exactly. It might feel wrong that butter costs $11 – but a breach of the Fair Trading Act would be a misleading special, like butter being advertised as on special for $11 if that was actually the standard non-discounted price, or a shopper being charged $11 when the price tag said $10. Examples of this gathered by independent organisation Consumer and submitted to the ComCom led to Pak'nSave and Woolworths receiving criminal charges. What's the difference between civil and criminal charges? Whether civil or criminal charges are brought will depend on the particular legislation and all the circumstances of the conduct. Where there is a choice between the two, the commission will consider a range of factors including the standard of proof required (civil cases must be proved on the 'balance of probabilities' standard, but criminal cases require proof 'beyond reasonable doubt'), the seriousness of the conduct and its consequences and whether the conduct was deliberate or especially blameworthy. Are there any recent examples of companies actually having to pay big fines? Several. Last year, Kiwibank was found to have overcharged 35,000 customers by more than $6.8m, in breach of the Fair Trading Act. Kiwibank found the issues in its system and turned itself into the commission, which brought 21 criminal charges and the bank was fined $1.5m, as well as repaying the customers $9.2m to remediate. In a civil case last year, meanwhile, Foodstuffs North Island was fined $3.25m under the Commerce Act for using land covenants to block its rivals, and in 2023, One NZ copped a $3.6m fine under the Fair Trading Act for misleading customers about fibre broadband. Has the Commerce Commission ever actually sent someone to prison? Not yet, but in December last year, the High Court handed down its first criminal sentence for charges brought by the Commerce Commission under the Commerce Act, to Manesh Kumar, who rigged bids for NZTA projects. He received a sentence o f six months of community detention and 200 hours of community service. Despite the term 'criminal charges', this doesn't usually lead to lawyers yelling at each other across a courtroom, holding up different pictures of price specials available at supermarkets. Many Commerce Commission cases are settled, with the company at fault agreeing to pay a fine and not engage in the bad behaviour again. I've lost count of the articles I've read about how unfair and expensive the grocery sector is. Can the Commerce Commission make much of a difference to the fact that getting a few things for dinner always ends up costing $80? After a market study in 2022 showed that New Zealand needed more competition in the grocery sector to get better prices, the Grocery Industry Competition Act was passed by the government. Since 2023, the Commerce Commission has had a specific grocery commissioner. Yet the high prices, and the depressing headlines, continue. The commission has said that the grocery sector is one of its priorities for 2024/25. It hasn't just focused on supermarkets, but also alternatives, like filing criminal proceedings under the FTA against meal subscription company Hello Fresh for not telling customers that accepting a voucher meant they were resubscribing to the service. It's said the rules need to change so that smaller companies that sell groceries have more alternatives. But because there is so little competition in the sector, all these court cases and call-outs have made little difference. The Commerce Commission can only regulate the commercial sector as it is, not change the system as a whole. Finance minister Nicola Willis has said that breaking up the duopoly of Woolworths and Foodstuffs might be an option. 'Significant action may be required to foster genuine competition,' she said in March. For now, however, criminal charges or otherwise, the status quo remains.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store