logo
Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency Te Pūtahitanga o Te Waipounamu Farewells Staff

Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency Te Pūtahitanga o Te Waipounamu Farewells Staff

Scoop18-05-2025

Samantha Gee, Nelson Marlborough / Te Tauihu reporter
South Island iwi have been celebrating the successes of Whānau Ora commissioning agency Te Pūtahitanga o Te Waipounamu, as they farewell staff at a series of events around the South Island.
As of the end of June, the organisation will no longer provide Whānau Ora services after a change in Government direction, with Te Puni Kōkiri opening the contracts to other providers.
It means around 40 staff will be without jobs, and it's expected another 100 jobs from the partner navigator network will go.
Six poroporoaki (farewell events) have been held across the South Island, where staff and whanau have spoken of their devastation at the agency's closure, and celebrated the many success stories that resulted from its mahi.
Whānau Ora was created in 2010 by the late Dame Tariana Turia in an effort to improve social and health services for Māori.
Te Pūtahitanga o Te Waipounamu general partnership board chair Tā Mark Solomon said the agency worked on behalf of eight South Island iwi to determine the best ways to support whānau development.
Solomon recalled when he first heard about Whānau Ora, at a meeting with Dame Turia in Christchurch more than a decade ago.
"I stood up at the end and asked her, if I could get all the tribes of Te Waipounamu to come together, could we put in a bid for the Whānau Ora commissioning agency?
"She gave a bit of a giggle and said yes, if you think you can get the tribes together by all means."
Solomon said two meetings later, they were united. He said it was the first time in history that all the tribes of Te Waiponamu had come together to work collectively. They put in a bid for the contract and were successful.
An independent evaluation of the agency's direct social investment model hailed it as an "outstanding exemplar of an organisation delivering public services that actually work".
The evaluation demonstrated that the most conservative impact implied an economic benefit of $2.40 for every $1 of investment.
It also found that across 83 funded initiatives, almost 5000 Māori were positively impacted, with the value of increased life satisfaction combined put at $7.2m.
"Proud is an understatement. I'm absolutely in awe of what has been done and the good that it has brought to Te Waipounamu," Solomon said.
In the last five years, Te Pūtahitanga navigators had worked with 14,973 whanau and more than 8,000 people had been supported into employment within communities across the South Island.
The new provider, Solomon said, was working under a "totally different" framework.
"Whānau ora to me is families themselves determining what they need and what goals they need to set to change their life, it's not to be dictated by a government policy."
Te Taumata, the iwi shareholder council of Te Pūtahitanga, co chair and Ngāti Kuia representative Hina-i-te māra Moses-Te Kani said the poroporoaki in Ōtautahi on Thursday was an emotional celebration.
She said for the last 11 years, it had been given the opportunity to celebrate mana motuhake, self determination, with funding from the Crown.
It had supported countless business ideas through Tūātea, the social investment fund that gave whānau the agency to realise their own aspirations.
"Whānau would come to us with their dreams and aspirations and we had coaches and support people and champions who supported them to set up their organisations in the right way, to live the dream that they wanted to live... one of the outcomes was getting more people into jobs and we created thousands of jobs in this kaupapa."
Many of those businesses were focused on hauora, health and fitness, rongoā Māori, hospitality, art and design.
"We had a 12-year-old who wanted to be the leading poi manufacturer in the world and she achieved that at 14."
She said research showed that the agency had developed one of the most successful international indigenous commissioning models in the word, supporting whanau intergenerationally.
"It's one of the key celebrations for us - this is intrinsically kaupapa Māori all day, every day."
She was still in disbelief at the Government's change in focus, which was now directed at deprivation instead of self-determination.
"How could such a successful life-changing model - moving whanau from deprivation without even focusing on that - how could it be seen as not the right model?"
Moses-Te Kani said the iwi alliance across the South Island remained strong and the whanau ora movement created in Te Waipounamu would continue to shine through.
"I think that the legacy from Te Pūtahitanga will morph into something new and something brilliant and we won't completely disappear. What we have created here is like a beautiful flowing awa across the whole of Te Waipounamu and the next brilliant thing will turn up, maybe it'll be international money, or maybe it'll be somebody else's money that will support the kaupapa that we're doing."
Whānau Ora Minister Tama Potaka announced earlier this month that four new community-based Whānau Ora commissioning agencies will replace the three agencies that have led the scheme since its inception.
The South Island contract has been awarded to Te Tauraki Limited, a subsidiary of Te Rūnanga o Ngāi Tahu.
He said the agencies were selected to deliver on the government's focus to provide better public services, which were moving in a "refreshed direction".

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Left bloc could turf coalition out of power: poll
Left bloc could turf coalition out of power: poll

Otago Daily Times

time7 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Left bloc could turf coalition out of power: poll

By Russell Palmer of RNZ After the Budget and pay equity changes the left bloc would have the support to turf the coalition out of power, the latest RNZ-Reid Research poll shows. The preferred prime minister and leadership ratings are also bad news for the government, with the exception of Winston Peters who has seen his highest result since 2017 - and ratings of the government's general performance have also continued to slide. With Labour, the Greens and Te Pāti Māori all gaining compared to the previous poll taken in March, they would have a majority with 63 seats between them, compared to the coalition's 57 - again, New Zealand First was the only coalition party to see a boost. The poll was taken in the seven days following the release of the Budget and in the wake of the $12.8 billion pay equity changes - which RNZ's polling also shows attracting more opposition than support. National continued a downward trend from the March survey, dropping 2.2 percentage points to 30.7 percent of the party vote - and overtaken by Labour, which gained 0.9 percentage points to 33.2 percent. The Greens' 1.6 percent increase brings them back to their election-night result of 11.6 percent, while Te Pāti Māori's 0.5 percentage point boost lifts them clear of the 5 percent threshold and - presuming they held all Māori seats - nets them a list MP. ACT dropped 2.8 points to 6.6 percent - the largest shift in party polling - while New Zealand First gained 1.9 points to 9.1 percent, upending the trend facing their coalition partners. Undecided or non-voters made up 6.5 percent of those polled - up from 6.1 in the previous poll. For parties outside Parliament, TOP (The Opportunities Party) gained 0.4 points to 2.2 percent, New Conservatives fell 0.3 points to 0.8, and all others combined were at 0.3 points, a 0.1 point increase on the last survey. More New Zealanders polled say the country is going in the wrong direction (46.6 percent) than in the right direction (37.8 percent), giving a net negative result of -8.8, a substantial decrease on March's 2.9 result. Little surprise then to see National leader Christopher Luxon's net favourability ratings drop further into the negative, from -3.9 percent in March to -9.8 percent, with significantly more respondents (45.5 percent) saying he performed poorly or very poorly, than said he performed well or very well (35.7 percent). That compared to Labour's Chris Hipkins on net 5.1 percent rating (34 percent negative, 39.1 percent positive) - though Hipkins also saw a steeper fall of 7.1 percentage points. The survey shows New Zealanders' preferred prime minister as Hipkins (23.2 percent, up 2.3), taking the lead over Luxon (18.8 percent, down 3.1). NZ First leader Winston Peters at 8.9 percent (up 1 point) recorded his highest result since 2017. Chlöe Swarbrick in fourth was at 6.9 percent (up 0.8) - a personal best and just ahead of ACT's David Seymour on 6.4 percent (down 0.4). The next highest ratings were former PM Jacinda Ardern (3.7 percent, up 0.1), Te Pāti Māori MP Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke (1.7 percent, up 0.5), Finance Minister Nicola Willis (1.1, up 0.3) and Education/Immigration Minister Erica Stanford making her first appearance at 1 percent. 'I don't recognise the numbers' - Coalition plays down poll Luxon simply rejected the poll results. "Look, I mean, I don't recognise the numbers. There's lots of different polls and frankly I'm just not going to comment or focus on the polls. Frankly what we're focused on is we were elected in '23 and people get to decide again in 2026. "We've done a good job, and that's why we've got to focus on the economy, law and order, and health and education." He said New Zealanders had "responded really positively" to the government's Budget, and saw the economy turning a corner. "There's a sense of optimism that, you know, we actually have had to manage some very difficult things economically to get our books back in order. But we're doing that job, and it's all about growth, growth, growth." Seymour said the numbers would continue to "bounce around" but it was still a tough time for New Zealanders - and the numbers were not a reflection on the Budget. "Different voters will have different reasons for their choices ... so long as people are voting for the economy, it's going to be tough for parties that are tied closely to economic management," he said. It was possible the pay equity changes were changing some voters' minds, he said, "but I also think doing what is right is what is politically popular in the long term, and even if I'm wrong about that, good policy is worth it anyway". "The fact that ACT is close to where it was on election night 18 months into a government with 18 months to go is a good foundation. We have to prove ourselves on election night, and we've got lots of time to do that." Peters refused to comment on whether his coalition partners were suffering from the handling of the pay equity changes. The next 18 months leading up to the election would show the "critical need for stability", he said, and having ruled out working with Chris Hipkins he was "comfortable and confident in our prospects" because the Greens and Te Pāti Māori in government would be "a nightmare". The 80-year-old Peters said economies internationally were in trouble as a result of "unprecedented times for the last, say, 80 years", and the party was looking at New Zealand's fundamentals: asset values, and the need to increase wages and decrease business tax. "We're out there to ensure over the next few months that we can show enough improvement in the economy from what we're doing to make the prospects of an improved tomorrow possible." 'Nice to be popular' - Opposition Hipkins was also not counting his electoral chickens, but was happy to point out the effect of the Budget, saying New Zealanders were "disillusioned" with the government overall. "New Zealanders can increasingly see that this government is taking the country backwards," he said. "I don't think anyone expected the government to cancel pay equity as a way of balancing its books. Nicola Willis and Christopher Luxon told New Zealanders before the election that they knew their numbers, that everything all added up. It's clear that their numbers didn't add up." He said he did not pay much attention to small shifts from the minor parties or his personal ratings in the polls. "It's nice to be popular, but I'm really focused on making sure I win as many votes as possible for Labour at the next election." Swarbrick said New Zealanders wanted a sense of hope. "Things are feeling pretty bloody bleak. You know, we've got 191 New Zealanders leaving every single day, three quarters of them between the ages of 18 to 45, it's not a recipe for a flourishing country. "We had dozens and dozens of folks turn out to talk to us about our Green budget and the sense of hope that they feel that they need - the kind of building blocks that we can have for a fairer society." She said polls did not mean the writing was on the wall, but she was hearing from people that they were exhausted and fatigued - something she suggested was a deliberate strategy from the coalition. Te Pāti Māori's co-leader Rawiri Waititi said the poll numbers showed the party's policies and rhetoric around the government's actions were appealing to new supporters. "The kind of anti-Māori, anti-wāhine, anti-woman, anti-worker, anti-climate, anti-rainbow, anti-woke type agenda that this government is pushing at the moment also is not appealing to the people who are trying to find a place to put their political support and trying to support those who fiercely advocate for them." He said their internal polling showed even higher support for the party and its style of politics - but the decreased support for ACT and increase for NZ First was a zero-sum game. "You've got a hard-right type voter ... I think they think that National is a little bit weak, which I agree [with] because they're allowing ACT to kind of run the show ... they will use Te Pāti Māori as their political football to kick us in the guts the hardest to garner the support of their voters, but at the end of the day the enemy for ACT is New Zealand First, and the enemy for New Zealand First is ACT." Explore the full results with RNZ's interactive charts. This poll of 1008 people was conducted by Reid Research, using quota sampling and weighting to ensure a representative cross section by age, gender and geography. The poll was conducted through online interviews between 21-27 March 2025 and has a maximum margin of error of +/- 3.1 percent at a 95 percent confidence level. The report is available here.

Fear school zone will affect Māori community
Fear school zone will affect Māori community

Otago Daily Times

time9 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Fear school zone will affect Māori community

The Māori community at a Dunedin secondary school says its looming enrolment zone will diminish the roots of an important cultural partnership. Queen's High School has turned its roll around so drastically, the Ministry of Education is proposing an enrolment zone to limit its growth. One of the reasons for that growth has been the success of the combined Queen's and King's High Schools' kapa haka group, He Waka Kōtuia, which has drawn Māori students from across Dunedin. Now, group leaders Komene Cassidy, Cherie Ford, Angelina Kiore and Paulette Tamati-Elliffe fear Māori students outside the enrolment zone will miss out on a cultural experience they cannot experience elsewhere. Mr Cassidy said no other school could presently provide the culturally informed experience the group offered. Queen's had a strong connection with Ōtākou Marae and a lot of Māori peninsula whānau wanted to send their children to the school. If the proposed home zone came into effect, it would take away an option Ōtākou Rūnaka whānau had had for years, Mr Cassidy said. "That then becomes an issue for mana whenua and for us, and our ability to continue to support." There was a concern that the relationship between the Ōtākou Rūnaka and the school was being overlooked and not valued as it deserved. A line had been drawn in the sand that did not fit with the existing relationships between the school and its community, Mr Cassidy said. "There's a lack of forethought about what the effects are going to be." Mrs Ford said North Dunedin Māori whānau were also concerned their children would not be able to continue their learning down a te ao Māori pathway in a mainstream setting. She had two sons who had grown up attending the bilingual classes at North East Valley School and Dunedin North Intermediate School. "[Families] are very concerned that the students have had eight years in a te ao Māori-focused setting and then where do they send them from there. "For many of them, they already have connections to He Waka Kotuia and they would like their students to come out this way." Queen's High School Māori prefect Jade Taani stands centre stage in front of He Waka Kōtuia as they pūkana. Photo: Peter McIntosh The support from the school for the He Waka Kotuia programme had enabled it to grow and be successful, she said. The school had one of the biggest Māori rolls in Dunedin, with 142 enrolled Māori students in 2024. Queen's High School Māori prefects Jade Taani, 17, and Mahinārangi Maihi, 18, both chose to go to Queen's because of He Waka Kōtuia. Mahinārangi said growing up, it had been a goal for her to go to Queen's and be a part of the group. "If it didn't work out I would be like extremely upset." The connections the students in the group made with each other were different from the ones they made in class, she said. "It's more than just a kapa haka group. "It's a safe space to be Māori." During her time at Queen's the group had grown into a big family, Mahinārangi said. "If I didn't have this I wouldn't be who I am today." Jade said the group had helped her stay in school and stay connected to her culture. She used to attend a bilingual class with Mr Cassidy every Tuesday and he helped her develop a passion for kapa haka. The group helped her understand what was happening in politics from a Māori perspective, she said. It would be a lot harder for her to connect with the Māori side of her identity without being a part of the group.

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