logo
Couple's plan now reality

Couple's plan now reality

A Timaru couple's generosity has seen Hato Hone St John in Timaru take delivery of a brand new, fully kitted-out ambulance.
Friends and family members gathered at the St John ambulance station on Wai-iti Rd on Friday to witness Timaru man Gordon Prowse hand over the keys to the new vehicle on behalf of himself and his late wife Robin.
The donation had links to Mr Prowse's decades of involvement with the AFS Intercultural Learning Organisation, which began as the American Ambulance Field Service, a volunteer ambulance corps that rescued wounded soldiers during both World War 1 and World War 2.
Mr Prowse spoke to the gathering, saying the AFS had saved many lives of wounded soldiers.
"St John personnel here are similarly saving lives and rescuing victims, and this will hopefully ease the fundraising that dominates so many health services in New Zealand."
He said the couple had supported their three children and a number of other charities over the years, but a combination of living thriftily, paying into insurance policies and making good investments meant he was now in a position to put the couple's long-held plan into action.
Both Mr and Mrs Prowse's names appear on Ambulance 933.
St John area watch operations manager Shelly Flintoff said the new ambulance would enable paramedics and first responders to deliver lifesaving care faster and more effectively than ever before, ensuring the right care reached the right place at the right time.
"When I first started with St John 30-plus years ago, my first ambulance was a dodgy old Bedford, with basic equipment, a back-breaking stretcher, and a heavy defibrillator.
"Today, the technology is phenomenal, but a state-of-the-art vehicle is more than steel and wheels and sirens, it is a symbol of your belief in our community.
"This is an incredible legacy to leave. On behalf of every life that will be touched, saved and uplifted, thank you for your generosity. You are making a real and lasting difference."
Mr and Mrs Prowse came to Timaru in 1972 and Mr Prowse taught for 30 years at Timaru Boys' High School, returning as a long-term reliever after officially retiring.
He also taught at Opihi College and Timaru Girls' High School.
Mrs Prowse also trained as a teacher, but her 26-year career in Timaru was as an administrator, working in the office at Boys' High and as secretary to the board of trustees for both Timaru Boys' and Timaru Girls' High Schools.
Finding himself meeting mostly other teachers, Mr Prowse became involved with AFS and learning about the origins of the organisation planted the seed of the ambulance donation.
"Robin and I both thought it was a good idea, and five or so years ago, before Covid-19, we decided that instead of giving the usual money to the usual charities, we'd pool it ... we wanted it to be local, and we picked St John.
"I went along to a men's club meeting, and Gordon Handy [St John governor] was speaking about the organisation, so I went up to him and said I'd like to buy an ambulance."
Ambulance 933 will spend two years based in Timaru and then be circulated around other areas.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Puketapu puts it in perspective
Puketapu puts it in perspective

Otago Daily Times

time13 hours ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Puketapu puts it in perspective

Hmmm... being human. Sometimes it's a right pain, isn't it? From the failure of the body to the failure of the mind. We're full of flaws and full of faulty thinking. Here's one. The temptation of tantalising leftovers, loaded with sugar, fat and flavour enhancers, can be dealt to through a quick scull down the waste disposal unit on our face. Do it quickly and it didn't happen. Problem solved. Temptation removed. Palmerston people, should they fall prey to this trap, are lucky to have instant redress in their backyard - Puketapu hill. It's steep and potentially punishing, but it's also quite dreamy. Initially, the route crosses calm farmland. Appealing green slopes entice towards the horizon, green meets blue. Puketapu and its monument are omnipresent, beckoning higher. Pretty soon, amazing views poke up. The eye follows the state highway north. There's the sound of cars on the familiar trade route but way up here we're in an escape zone. As the track circles the hill the east coast reveals itself, way back to the mouth of Otago Harbour. A final grunt and we're up there. But wait, there's more. The monument at the top has internal steps and ladders. It's like a standalone turret, complete with open slit windows. It's almost a monument to how much times have changed. It commemorates a local who became Minister of Lands, introducing the "native land" policy that alienated many Māori people from their land. There's nothing like a high-up view for a good hard think. Bring binoculars. It's a whole new perspective compared with that glimpsed from a drive-by. Palmerston is at the mouth of the triangle-shaped valley up the Pig Root. Way in the distance are the tips of Central Otago hills. Miles and miles of land host many more lives than just those in our wheeled motorised box. We're here only briefly. We don't own any of it. Humans are just tenants. But our human desires predominate, most of them aimed at the short term. We're all doing what we think's best - within the constraints of being human. Scrub on the side of the hill hosts an audible bellbird. Flitting swallows let you share their patch. It's roughly an hour up but everybody's different. An annual race up the hill has clocked a record run of 20 minutes. The race commemorates a World War 2 policeman who would run up looking for enemy ships. Back to earth, all the normal farm-crossing rules apply and the track's closed for lambing from September to November. In parts, rocks are camouflaged by long grass.

Alternative Alert System ‘Mothballed' Despite Benefits
Alternative Alert System ‘Mothballed' Despite Benefits

Scoop

timea day ago

  • Scoop

Alternative Alert System ‘Mothballed' Despite Benefits

Article – RNZ The founder of an alternative alert framework says officials never gave it a look-in when they were setting up the under-fire Emergency Mobile Alert system. The founder of an alternative emergency alert framework says officials never gave it a look-in when they were setting up the under-fire Emergency Mobile Alert system. And he reckons his was better, proving its worth during the aftermath of the Christchurch quakes. The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) is investigating glitches in the current system following the magnitude 8.8 earthquake off Russia on Wednesday. Some Kiwis say they received up to 50 alerts, while some did not receive any at all. Matthew Nolan founded an alternative system, Readynet, which was used during the Christchurch Earthquakes and to mobilise volunteers cleaning up the Rena oil spill. 'I think that the NEMA system – which costs them the best part of $20 million – has miscued for them, and it's certainly not the first time,' he told Morning Report on Friday. 'There is a record of it waking people up at night for messages that were text messages only, and as well as circumstances where people did not get the alert that they should have got.' NEMA spokesperson John Price told Checkpoint on Thursday there were many reasons for the differences. 'It could be different providers and different cell towers. There's a lot of possibilities, but this is something we're working through. We'll look into it, absolutely.' Nolan criticised the NEMA system as being 'one-way' only, and unable to tell if people had actually received the message as no information was sent back. 'Whereas other systems and a better system, and yes, our system was interactive, and we could see where the messages had been received. 'So for example, you send a message out into an area where there's a big river and cell towers have been wiped out. Our system would tell you that all the people in that river have not received the message – all the people in that river valley have not received the message. You can deduct from that, that in fact, the cell phone towers are out.' He claimed the Emergency Mobile Alert system 'can't target messages'. 'It's a modern equivalent of a World War 2 fire siren. It alerts people that something's happening and it gives them a brief message, but it can't target messages. 'So for example… people in Upper Hutt got no message. In Lower Hutt, lots of people got the message. So, you know, why is there a difference between one area and another?' According to the NEMA website, the current system can 'broadcast to all capable phones from targeted cell towers to areas affected by serious hazards'. 'You may not receive an alert if you are out of mobile coverage, mobile phone towers are damaged, or there is a power outage.' Price said the variation in coverage 'could be different providers and different cell towers, there's a lot of possibilities'. Nolan suggested the system was not working as well as it could because it was now owned by 'a banking conglomerate out of New York'. New Zealand's system was provided by Dutch company one2many, which is now a division of Everbridge Public Warning, an American software company that specialises in alert systems. 'Now, those sorts of companies are chasing the big markets, the multi-million markets, and I think New Zealand is a very small end of that market,' Nolan said. 'There is no office of that organisation in Wellington to work alongside emergency services in New Zealand… 'I think that a New Zealand-owned, developed, supported, helpdesked system is the best, and that's what we had built, and our system is now mothballed.' He said he asked officials to look at using Readynet for the national system, but 'they never ever fully examined what we had, even though it was used during Christchurch to communicate after the Christchurch earthquake, to communicate with all the residents and contractors left inside the cordons. 'And that was, information such as, well, 'The cordon will be open on the corner of such and such street at four o'clock this afternoon to allow people in and out for shopping there.' That's the sort of stuff you can't put on Facebook.' As of Friday morning, a tsunami advisory remained in place. Pacific nations emerged relatively unscathed.

'I said no, it was my brother': The Hare and Bubbles' prankish air force days
'I said no, it was my brother': The Hare and Bubbles' prankish air force days

Otago Daily Times

timea day ago

  • Otago Daily Times

'I said no, it was my brother': The Hare and Bubbles' prankish air force days

Identical twins Bob and Rolly Janek arrived in New Zealand as refugees with their family. They went on to serve in the air force, despite their father's harrowing wartime experiences. Geoff Sloan speaks to the brothers about survival, service, and a fair bit of mischief. After their family fled Europe to escape the Russians after World War 2, identical 67-year-old twins Robert 'Bob' and Roland 'Rolly' Janek were determined to serve their new country, enlisting in the air force as soon as they could despite what their father had been through. Their Hungarian father, Joseph Zolten Janek, had been a pilot before the war and was conscripted into the Luftwaffe, Germany's air force, serving in France, Germany and Russia. 'He had no choice. He would have been shot otherwise, and his family taken away,' Bob said. Janek flew Junkers Ju 88 bombers and Ju 87 Stukas before switching to the Messerschmitt ME109 fighter plane. 'He did a lot of his fighting in Stalingrad as a 109 fighter pilot and was shot down twice. The first time was from anti-aircraft guns fired by his own side.' The second time Janek was shot down, he was captured by the Russians and imprisoned for six months before escaping. 'He flew from the start of the war right through until the end. He was very lucky to survive,' Bob said. When the war ended, Janek was one of about 2000 men rounded up by the Russians and forced to clear minefields, digging up the explosives by hand. 'He had to do that for five years. A lot of his friends got blown up – he was one of about 700 who survived,' Bob said. After being released, Janek took part in the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to free the country from Soviet control. The 15-day uprising was crushed by Soviet tanks and troops, killing or wounding thousands of Hungarians. After the revolution failed, the Janeks joined the 250 million Hungarians fleeing the country. 'Unfortunately my dad's brother was shot and killed by the Russians as they made their escape through swamps to reach the Austrian border,' Bob said. Joseph and Maria Janek successfully made it to Austria where Bob and Rolly were born. Bob said his dad never felt safe, always looking over his shoulder for the Russians, so in 1961 the construction engineer and his family were accepted by New Zealand as refugees. 'It would have been hard for mum and dad when they arrived in Auckland with two three-year-olds, two suitcases and only £6. 'I honour him for doing what he had to do to survive, and look after his family,' Bob said. Growing up in Point Chevalier, Auckland, the twins watched military aircraft coming and going from the airbase at Whenuapai, both deciding to join the Royal New Zealand Air Force when they turned 18. Bob, who had always wanted to be a firefighter, joined the Crash, Fire, Rescue Unit, while Rolly became a military police officer. The pair said their father was upset when they enlisted in 1976. 'He didn't talk to us for a year. He didn't want us to go through what he did, but eventually he came around,' Rolly said. The new recruits were flown to RNZAF Base Wigram to start their training. 'As soon as we got off the aircraft we heard one of the general service instructors say 'Oh no, f***ing twins'.' Rolly said they gave the instructors hell. 'We got away with blue murder. They couldn't tell us apart, and we also had the same initials – RJ,' he said. Bob said one night he was spotted visiting a 'wee lassie' in the women's barracks. 'I jumped out of a second-storey window and escaped. The instructors tried to charge me but I said no, it was my brother. But he denied it and said it was me.' The investigation was dropped because they couldn't identify which twin was responsible. Bob's quick footwork earned him the nickname 'The Hare', while Rolly's fondness for champagne earned him 'Bubbles'. However, there were occasions when the mischievous pair came unstuck. 'One of our instructors was a corporal called Digby Bentley. One night we both snuck off the base into town and got t-shirts made up saying 'Digby Bentley: Public Enemy Number One'. We got into a lot of trouble for that,' Rolly said. The twins had to clean toilets and scrub floors for two weeks as punishment, Bob said. Rolly was posted to RNZAF Base Ohakea after completing his military police training, while Bob remained at Wigram. Three years later, Bob was transferred to the air force base at Ohakea, only to find Rolly had just been posted to Whenuapai. 'We were never allowed to be on the same base together. I think we were too much trouble,' Rolly said. Even when they did catch up, things didn't always go smoothly. Said Bob: 'I was visiting the base at Whenuapai where Rolly was stationed, and he was on gate duty instructing all the vehicles to reverse into the car parks. 'I told Rolly to f*** off and parked nose first.' Rolly said Bob just wanted to be stubborn. 'He thought because I was his brother, he could push it, but I was a corporal and he was still a trainee. 'Bob kept mouthing off so I threw him in the back of the Morris Minor police van, and bounced him around in the back a bit as we drove to the cells where he cooled off overnight,' Rolly said. When the military police disbanded in the late 1980s, Bob suggested Rolly join him in the Crash, Fire, Rescue Unit. 'But they still never let us serve together,' Bob said. Over two decades in the RNZAF, Bob responded to 17 plane crashes, some of them fatal. 'I saw some pretty bad stuff. To deal with it, I just (mentally) put it in a bag, and froze it.' After his stint with the air force, Rolly joined the firefighting crew at Hamilton Airport, before becoming maintenance co-ordinator at Waikato University. Bob retired from the air force in 1996 and shifted to Christchurch where he spent nine years loading aircraft for Air New Zealand before becoming a steward. However, his aviation career was halted when he was badly hurt in the February 2011 earthquake. Bob now volunteers as a guide at the Air Force Museum in Wigram. He works alongside Chris Checketts, the son of World War 2 fighter ace Johnny Checketts, who also flew in Europe during the war. 'We haven't been able to find any records of my dad's forced service with the Germans. But it's possible our dads may have met each other in combat,' Bob said. Every Easter, Bob spends about $1200 buying 600 chocolate Easter bunnies to give to children and staff at Christchurch Hospital's cancer ward. 'I'll never stop doing that. They shouldn't be in there, us oldies should be,' Bob said. He said he has always tried to give back. 'When we came to New Zealand we didn't know anybody, and people helped us.' With Rolly living in Hamilton and Bob in Christchurch, the twins try to meet up every month, but claim their mischievous, trouble-making days are over. 'We're good boys now.'

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