

Kerre Woodham Mornings Podcast
Newstalk ZB
Join Kerre Woodham one of New Zealand’s best loved personalities as she dishes up a bold, sharp and energetic show Monday to Friday 9am-12md on Newstalk ZB. News, opinion, analysis, lifestyle and entertainment – we’ve got your morning listening covered.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 10, 2022 • 6min
Jason Walls: Critical workers no longer have to isolate
Critical business workers will no longer have to isolate if they are identified as a close contact. That's if they return daily negative rapid antigen tests. It's part of a new exemption scheme that aims to keep critical supply chains running through the Omicron outbreak. Our Chief Political Reporter Jason Walls has been at the Critical workforce announcement with Ministers Chris Hipkins and Dr Ayesha Verrall. Jason Walls joined Kerre McIvor. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Feb 10, 2022 • 8min
Nick Maling: Kainga Ora has outlined their eviction policy
Finally, Kainga Ora have outlined their eviction policy! There will be a warnings process, effectively letting them end a tenancy, if it's triggered three serious incidents in a 90-day period. It's a story we have championed for upset neighbours of Kainga Ora tenants throughout last year. Kainga Ora General Manager of National Services Nick Maling joined Kerre McIvor. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Feb 8, 2022 • 6min
Kerre McIvor: Modellers, hysteria and hyperbole
People are questioning how and why health modellers were able to influence government policy to such an extraordinary extent. Remember the 50,000 cases predicted for New Zealand by Waitangi Day? Around the world, people are questioning how and why health modellers were able to influence government policy to such an extraordinary extent when seriously, they are no more than modern-day augers. Slaughter a chicken, throw out its entrails, see how they fall and make your prediction from there. Even our own health minister, our sensible Health Minister, takes modelling predictions with a grain of salt. For those who have underlying health conditions, who fear they might be at risk of grave illness as a result of any virus, do yourselves a favour. Take advantage of the meds, and take advantage of the science. But otherwise, ignore the modellers. prepare for winter and much the same way as we always have, and let's get on with life. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Feb 8, 2022 • 10min
Terry Collins: AA Fuel spokesperson on the rising cost of petrol
About one dollar for every litre of fuel bought at the pump in Auckland is tax. 91 is currently at almost three dollars per litre, with the Prime Minister blaming the tough international market for higher prices at the pump. The National Party is calling for the regional fuel tax in Auckland to be scrapped in order to give motorists in that region some relief. Gull New Zealand Chief Executive Dave Bodger spoke to the Mike Hosking Breakfast this morning and he says excise tax is 89 cents and the fuel tax is 11 and a half cents. He says every month they write a $30 million cheque to the Government for excise and $1.5-2 million for regional fuel tax. To discuss the rising cost of fuel AA Fuel Spokesperson, Terry Collins joined Kerre McIvor. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Feb 8, 2022 • 9min
Soni Taufa: Noizy Boyz team leader on the emergence of Siren Boy culture
Residents of West Auckland are once again complaining that they are being tortured by the sound of Celine blasting through loudspeakers while they try to sleep. The reason? Siren Battles. Siren Kings is a street subculture devoted to the volume and clarity of music, channelled through emergency-evacuation sirens that are attached to cars or bicycles. Soni Taufa features in the documentary Young and Siren King and is the Team Leader of Noizy Boys, he joined Kerre McIvor. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Feb 8, 2022 • 5min
Kerre McIvor: Importance of swimming lessons
I find it remarkable 30% of Kiwis cannot swim or float in the ocean for more than a few minutes. Although, I'm a confident swimmer, I think it's far better to take my grandchildren for lessons, rather than try to teach them myself. But what happens if you don't have a spare $40 odd per week to enrol your two children into lessons? They are expensive and they deserve to be so given the quality of the facilities and the quality of the instructors. I absolutely think it's worth it, but there would be a lot of families who simply do not have that kind of disposable income. A couple of Christchurch city councillors are calling for free access to swimming pools and lessons for the city's children as a way around the financial barriers. Their request will be discussed at a Council meeting on Thursday. Somebody has to teach our kids how to swim. I grew up in a generation where we all had schools with pools, and that's where most of us had our first lessons. Now kids don't learn at school. If you have parents who cannot swim or who cannot pay for lessons, then you and your children are going to be disadvantaged. One of the best things about living in this beautiful country is the access to our beaches and rivers and it is a crying shame if we're raising a generation of children who will see them as death traps and not aquatic playgrounds.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jan 30, 2022 • 6min
Erica Stanford: National MP on Charlotte Bellis' attempt to return to New Zealand
There are renewed calls for pregnant New Zealanders overseas to be given MIQ spots.These calls come amid New Zealand-born journalist Charlotte Bellis’ attempts to come back to New Zealand from Afghanistan for her child’s birth.National MP Erica Stanford raised this issue with Covid Response Minister Chris Hipkins back in October.Erica Stanford joined Kerre McIvor.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jan 30, 2022 • 4min
Kerre McIvor: Charlotte Bellis is another example of the tragedy of MIQ
Yet again, the cruel and unnatural Hunger Games-style MIQ lottery has been in the spotlight. This time because a high profile journalist has been denied permission to return home so she can have her baby. Christchurch native and former journalist at Al Jazeera, Charlotte Bellis, has made headlines around the world after she revealed that the Taliban offered her asylum in Afghanistan - when New Zealand refused to allow her in. You can just imagine the tabloids take on that. But her’s is just another example of the hurt, the frustration, the fury, the tragedy of an unnecessary system. MIQ could be justified when Covid was an unknown. When there was no vaccine. When people didn't know what they were dealing with and when Covid wasn't in the community. It's here. Both Delta and Omicron variants are doing the rounds in this country and there has finally been an acceptance - if not from the PM, at least from Chris Hipkins and Grant Robertson - that we have to learn to live with Covid. Contact tracing is a farce - the PM found out she was a close contact of an Air New Zealand flight attendant a week after she flew from Kerikeri to Auckland. A week's a long time in politics and during that time she was out and about doing what a PM should be doing. As ACT leader David Seymour says if they can't trace the PM in a week, perhaps it's time to relax the isolation rules for everyone else. Quite right. I had a friend on that flight and I was the one who had to tell her she too was a close contact. Nobody from the Ministry had been in touch - and yet there's a passenger manifest. She's hardly the Scarlet Pimpernel - she would have been quite easy to contact. But nope. Not a dicky bird. We're a small country. We're a mobile country - when we're not locked down. Deem us all close contacts. Accept that it's inevitable that someone we know, sometime soon, will get Omicron. Understand that that is not a death sentence - most people will barely know they have it. Get on with life - and let New Zealanders come home, pregnant, not pregnant, young, old. Let this unjustifiable farce finally end.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jan 26, 2022 • 6min
Kerre McIvor: The Ministry of Health are a shambles
Finally, businesses receive approval to bring RATs into the country and they have been operating very well. Until, the ministry decides to play catch up and has consolidated orders into this country. They call it consolidate, others say, requisition. Even if there was a problem, what in the name of all that is holy makes the Ministry of Health think it can rollout Rapid Antigen Tests? Show me the evidence that the ministry could in fact see a problem and solve it. It has shown itself to be inept when it comes to the distribution of PPE, and worse than that, it refused to listen to the pleas from the people on the ground who are most at risk in that first wave of COVID, who said there isn't enough PPE. They utterly refused to listen to the people on the ground, so not just inept, but cruel. The ministry is bunkered down and refusing to listen. It refuses to take advice even from the Government's own task force that has found time and time again that there are many failings - and refuses to acknowledge them. It is incredibly slow to respond to emails and requests. Ask anybody who said any dealings with the Ministry of Health over anything. When it does, its responses and decisions are incredibly hard to rationalise and nobody will be accountable. This is yet another egregious example of an incompetent, shambolic ministry that was in utter disarray for many years. They are showing that they are out of their depth and playing catch up yet again and sensible, proactive, nimble New Zealanders who have foresight and preparedness are the ones who pay the price.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jan 26, 2022 • 11min
Liam Dann: NZ Herald Business Editor at Large breaks down inflation numbers
Annual inflation has reached 5.9 percent - the highest in more than three decades. It's the biggest movement since a 7.6 percent annual increase in the year to June 1990. However, it's lower than many economists were predicting. NZ Herald Business Editor at Large Liam Dann joined Kerre McIvor. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.


