Latest news with #RobinMartin

RNZ News
08-05-2025
- RNZ News
New Plymouth rough sleepers using council car park as hang out
A group of rough sleepers in New Plymouth are backing a propsoal to allow them to use a council car park as a place to hang out. But they warn a police crackdown on their antics in the CBD will only push them out into residential neighbourhoods. Taranaki Whanganui reporter Robin Martin spoke to the rough sleepers.

RNZ News
05-05-2025
- Business
- RNZ News
Earthquake standards risk turning Stratford into a 'ghost town'
Notices warning dozens of Stratford buildings are earthquake prone have appeared in shop windows. Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin Businesses in Stratford say stickers slapped on dozens of buildings warning they are quake-prone risk turning the central Taranaki hub into a ghost town. But the council says it is simply following government regulations to identify compromised properties. Take a walk along Stratford's Broadway and it soon becomes apparent that every second building in the town's commercial centre has a earthquake-prone building notice prominently displayed. Louw Robeertze's family runs the Central Butchery and Slaghuis and owns the building. He said when they received a letter from the council requesting they get an engineering assessment, they ignored it. "These buildings been built how many years ago and they're still standing. I mean the old people they didn't much up, they built good stuff. "I don't see a reason why [we should get an assessment] because we'd need to get an engineer out and then you've got 40 years to get it up to standard or something and like we won't be here in 40 years." Louw Robeertze of the Central Butchery & Slaghuis didn't bother getting a engineer's assessment done. He says customers laugh at the notices because they are in every shop window. Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin He said customers scoffed at the stickers. "You get the odd one who reads it and then they laugh about it because they see every shops has one on its windows." Council director environmental services Blair Sutherland said Stratford was categorised as having a medium seismic risk which meant it was required to identify quake-prone buildings in accordance with the Building Act before 1 July 2027. Letters were sent out to 89 building owners giving them a year to get an engineering assessment done - only 30 complied. Sutherland said all those who ignored the request or failed an assessment had earthquake-prone notices put up and have until 2053 to bring their buildings up to standard or have them demolished. Notices warning dozens of Stratford buildings are earthquake prone have appeared in shop windows and on structures such as the towns famous glockenspeil. Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin Matthew McDonald of Matthew and Co Real Estate also owned his building. "We get a lot of comments from people visiting Stratford who see all these notices on the buildings and it looks like a ghost town now and it's only going to get worse. "As business come up for sale it's going to be very hard to sell a business when it's got a notice on them and it's very hard for the building owners to sell those buildings, to raise mortgages." Matthew McDonald of Matthew & Co Real Estate owns the building which houses his offi es and Scarpa's Shoes. He says Stratford is becoming a ghost town. Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin A member of the Stratford Business Association, he wanted council to push back at the government regulations. "We've just got to make sure council is working with the business and building owners to get a good outcome, but I don't believe putting stickers up all over town is going to achieve what's required. "And if it's a central government thing perhaps council needs to be pushing back harder on this." The historic King's Theatre in Stratford - built in 1916 - was the first theatre in the Southern Hemisphere to play 'Talkies" - films with sound - on 1 April 1927. An engineer's report about five years ago estimated it would cost up to $10 million to earthquake strengthen. Trustee Tony Gordon said the council notices were a bit over the top. "I mean if we were to action all this now you'd just about bulldoze the whole town, wouldn't you? Effectively Stratford would not exist apart from a couple of takeaway shops." He said moviegoers paid no attention to the stickers. "I mean how often do people read signs? They've become immune to them, they're everywhere. You just ignore them 'oh I never saw that'." King's Theatre trustee Tony Gordon says if the required standards were implemented now 'you'd just about bulldoze the whole town'. Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin Shoppers mostly agreed. "I don't take any notice of the stickers. I the buildings were going to fall down they would've done it ages ago," said Delray. Debbie was concerned. "Well yeah, have you see the state of the buildings like they look like they are going to fall down." Sonny thought the signs were a bad look. "They're silly, it's stupidest thing I've ever seen. It would tell a visitor this town is closing down soon. It's already a ghost town that's what they are saying." Veronica had a pragmatic view. "It concerned me somewhat until I read the stickers and then I thought we're not going to be around in 2050 so actually it doesn't bother me greatly." An elderly woman had sympathy for the council. "Well it is a shame, but I suppose they are just doing their job, aren't they?" Sutherland said it was a requirement for all New Zealand territorial authorities to get building assessments done. "There are almost 8000 buildings that have been identified as being earthquake prone and added to the national register. This will increase as other councils reach the end of the process." Since issuing the notices council had received three applications for building consents for earthquake strengthening work and received one application earlier. Sutherland said it was too early to say whether building and businesses would walk away from the town "It's too soon to tell at this stage because the notices have a 29 year timeframe for either strengthening or demolishing the buildings." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
22-04-2025
- Climate
- RNZ News
Government extends assistance for drought-affected farmers
Drought on a farm in South Taranaki, March 2025. Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin The government is extending Rural Assistance Payments to farmers affected by drought in the North Island and upper South Island. In a statement, Rural Communities Minister Mark Patterson and Social Development Minister Louise Upston encouraged farmers in affected areas to talk to their rural support trust to find out what help is available. Eligible farmers would have the farm as their main source of income, and be finding it difficult to meet essential living costs due to the drought. The payment amounts are equivalent to the jobseeker benefit, and can be lowered depending on earnings and any money or off-farm assets. They will be available from next Monday 28 April to 28 October, in the following districts: "We want to help eligible farmers whose income has been severely affected by drought-stricken conditions," Upston said. "Droughts often have a sting in the tail with the cold tough winter months still to come. We know how hard it can be to recover from a drought, and we are here to support farmers through it," Patterson said.

RNZ News
22-04-2025
- Climate
- RNZ News
Government extends assistance for drought affected-farmers
Drought on a farm in South Taranaki, March 2025. Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin The government is extending Rural Assistance Payments to farmers affected by drought in the North Island and upper South Island. In a statement, Rural Communities Minister Mark Patterson and Social Development Minister Louise Upston encouraged farmers in affected areas to talk to their rural support trust to find out what help is available. Eligible farmers would have the farm as their main source of income, and be finding it difficult to meet essential living costs due to the drought. The payment amounts are equivalent to the jobseeker benefit, and can be lowered depending on earnings and any money or off-farm assets. They will be available from next Monday 28 April to 28 October, in the following districts: "We want to help eligible farmers whose income has been severely affected by drought-stricken conditions," Upston said. "Droughts often have a sting in the tail with the cold tough winter months still to come. We know how hard it can be to recover from a drought, and we are here to support farmers through it," Patterson said.


CBC
14-02-2025
- Politics
- CBC
Ontario NDP candidate withdraws from Toronto riding to support Liberals
The candidate nominated by the Ontario NDP for Toronto riding Eglinton-Lawrence has pulled out of the election and is throwing her support behind the Liberals. Natasha Doyle-Merrick says in a statement that Eglinton-Lawrence is a "clear two-party contest" and she is stepping aside in the hopes of preventing another Progressive Conservative win. The Tories have held the riding provincially since 2018, when the Liberals came within about 500 votes of Progressive Conservative candidate Robin Martin, who is not running this time. The Liberals had previously represented the riding since 1999. The Liberals also lost a candidate Thursday, the day of Elections Ontario's deadline for candidate nominations, and now have no candidate in Windsor West, which is expected to be a fight between the NDP and Progressive Conservatives. The Liberals did not explain candidate Moe Chehab's withdrawal, simply saying it was "too bad" and that the party has a strong slate of candidates across the province.