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Monday, November 30, 2015
Mike Butler: RMA adds first dibs for iwi
More than six years ago the new National-led Government announced the Resource Management (Simplify and Streamline) Amendment Bill 2009. This intended to boost economic development by removing vexatious objections, streamlining processes for projects of national significance, creating an Environmental Protection Authority, improving planning and resource consent processes, and streamlining decision-making.
However, a much watered-down Resource Legislation Amendment Bill that was finally introduced by Environment Minister Nick Smith on Thursday includes an unexpected requirement that tribal authorities be consulted at an earlier stage of planning applications.
Sunday, November 29, 2015
Ron Smith: Climate Change and the Imperial Wardrobe
In 1837 Danish writer, Hans Christian Anderson wrote a short
tale for children called ‘The Emperor’s new clothes’. In this a pair of enterprising weavers
undertake to provide a magnificent new suit for his majesty, which will have
the interesting characteristic of being quite invisible to those of his court
who are ignorant, or incompetent, or otherwise, unfit for their position.
The story is apparently based on a 14th
century version of a myth that goes back to classic times.
Saturday, November 28, 2015
Brian Gaynor: Liveable city faces some tough choices
The Ernst &Young (EY) and Cameron Partners reports on Auckland Council’s long term $18.7 billion capital expenditure programme raise a number of important issues. These include:
- Should rates increases be used to fund these projects?
- Can the council rely primarily on debt funding?
- Should the capital expenditure programme be partly funded through the sale of council assets?
Richard Rahn from Cato: A Bounty of Good News
Your Thanksgiving dinner is going to be less expensive. This
year the average person will need to work 2 hours, 21 minutes and 57 seconds to
pay for all the items in a standard Thanksgiving dinner for 10 people — a work
reduction of one minute and 8 seconds from last year.
Back in 1986, the average
person needed to work 3 hours, 12 minutes and 27 seconds to pay for the same
dinner, or 50 minutes and 30 seconds longer than a worker today. This is the
great beauty of the capitalistic system — in real terms, as measured by the
time necessary to work to buy most anything, the price falls year after year.
Matt Ridley from the UK: The rise of humanism
Fifty years ago, after the cracking of the genetic code, Francis Crick was so confident religion would fade that he offered a prize for the best future use for Cambridge’s college chapels. Swimming pools, said the winning entry.
Today, when terrorists cry “God is great” in both Paris and Bamako as they murder, the joke seems sour. But here’s a thought: that jihadism may be a last spasm — albeit a painful one — of a snake that is being scotched. The humanists are winning, even against Islam.
Sunday, November 22, 2015
Karl du Fresne: We don't know how lucky we are
I spent much of the weekend mowing lawns and raking up
leaves and other garden debris that had accumulated while my wife and I were on
holiday in the United States. The only thing disturbing the peace – that is,
once I’d turned the mower off – was the barking of a neighbour’s dog.
Meanwhile, a world away, the residents of Paris were locked
indoors, reluctant to venture outside for fear of another terrorist attack.
There could hardly have been a more striking reminder of how blessed we are,
living in this remote and serene corner of the globe.
Saturday, November 21, 2015
Ron Smith: Postscript on Paris
What follows are comments on some of the issues raised in
my 15 November posting (‘There is a war on’), which dealt with the ISIS attack
on Paris.
Last Tuesday (17 November), there was a soccer match in
Istanbul between Turkey and Greece. Just before the kick-off an
official call was made for a moment of silence for the victims of the terrorist
attack in Paris, on the previous Friday. It was greeted by whistling
and shouts of ‘Allahu Akbar’ (‘God is great’). They were
celebrating!
Frank Newman: Licensed Builders and continuing education
The leaky homes debacle has given rise to some pretty seismic changes in the building industry. A fair chunk of the blame was, rightly or wrongly, put on so-called Cowboy builders. The upshot is a Licensed Building Practitioners (LPB) scheme that is intended to ensure those who are doing "restricted" building work (i.e. building more than a rabbit cage) are suitably skilled.
As it happens there are seven different LBP classes: Design, Carpentry, Roofing, Brick and blocklaying, Site, External plastering, Foundations, and All. Practitioners in each class must gain between 12 and 18 points within a specified time frame to retain their license.
Sunday, November 15, 2015
Barend Vlaardingerbroek: Fortresses Under Siege from Within and Without
“… they
thought that their fortresses would protect them…”
- from an Islamic State press release after the Paris attacks
One of the African delegates at the Malta conference addressing
illegal migration into Europe last week made a disparaging reference to
‘Fortress Europe’.
Ron Smith: There is a war on
There should be only one question on the lips of French
citizens today and that is: are we really going to allow Islamic terrorists to
continue to kill us without hindrance?
If, as I suppose, the answer
is ‘no’, then we should expect decisive action against ISIS by France and the
other states which are similarly at threat. If nothing else is
plain, it must surely be beyond doubt that passive defence, which depends on
security measures and intelligence-gathering, is not working, and neither is
the pin-prick aerial assault on the Islamic state, itself, by various NATO and
other forces.
Mike Butler: End tribunal’s permanent lobbying
If Treaty Negotiations Minister Chris Finlayson thinks the Waitangi Tribunal is going into areas outside its scope he could introduce a bill to disestablish it.
News of an urgent hearing into whether the Crown has failed to reduce high Maori imprisonment and re-offending rates prompted the Minister's comment that he didn't know whether they're a permanent commission of inquiry or some kind of imperial senate.
Saturday, November 14, 2015
Professor Calestous Juma: What Africa Can Learn from China about Growing its Agribusiness Sector
The World Bank projects that agriculture and agribusiness in Africa will grow to be a US$1 trillion industry in Africa by 2030. To promote this outcome, the continent must review its incentive structures.
Agriculture averages 24% of GDP across the continent. With post-harvest activities taken into account, agriculture-related industry accounts for nearly half of all economic activity in sub-Saharan Africa.
Karl du Fresne: The enigma that is American politics
As you read this, I’m in the United States. It’s a country I’ve visited several times, but it remains an enigma to me.
The people I meet here are friendly, courteous and helpful. I see no trace of the crazy America that we read about in the headlines: the mass shootings, the religious fundamentalism, the overheated patriotism, the rabid political views, the nasty outbursts of apparently racist police violence. I find it hard to reconcile these with the Americans I encounter.
Friday, November 13, 2015
Richard Rahn from the Cato Institute: Squandering Economic Freedom
There was good news for Argentina last week. It was expected
that Daniel Scioli, the Peronist candidate and political heir of Cristina Fernandez
de Kirchner, would win the presidential election. Much to most people’s
surprise, Maurico Macri, the more free-market-oriented mayor of Buenos Aires,
won almost as many votes as Mr. Scioli, forcing a runoff, which Mr. Macri has a
good chance to win.
The Peronists (named after former dictator Juan Peron) have
had political control much of the last 70 years, and it has been a disaster for
the country.
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Viv Forbes: Don’t Break our Food Chain
Napoleon once said: “Only a foolish horse fights with
his nose bag”.
But today we have many foolish people fighting their nose bag. They are weakening Earth’s food chain with a war on carbon.
Carbon is the building block of life. “Organic” means “containing carbon” and every bit of plant and animal life is built around the carbon atom.
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
Matt Ridley: The western environmental movement's role in China's one-child policy
The abolition of China’s one-child policy brings to an end one of the most futile and inhumane experiments in top-down social engineering the world has seen.
I say futile because it did not work. China’s birth rate roughly halved in the decade before the policy was introduced, then fell not at all in the next decade. A less coercive policy would probably have slowed China’s population growth just as much, if not more — as it did that of other countries in Asia.
Saturday, November 7, 2015
Brian Gaynor: What is the future of television?
What is the future of television? Will television experience a similar dramatic downturn in revenue as the newspaper, music and book retailing sectors?
Television’s future is in the spotlight following the publication of Alan Wolk’s book “Over the Top: How the internet is (slowly but surely) changing the television industry” and the release of Television New Zealand’s 2015 annual report.
Friday, November 6, 2015
Mike Butler: Opera House could be used as-is
The life risk of the Hawke’s Bay Opera House is very low and there is no legal requirement to leave the building empty so it could be used now, risk specialist Ian Harrison said on Monday.
Mr Harrison, who is chair of Evidence Based Seismic Strengthening, addressed more than 70 people at the Havelock North Function Centre.
Mike Butler: Nursing the Parihaka grudge
The Catholic Church this year used a song by Tim Finn and Herbs to teach forgiveness and reconciliation in its schools to mark November 5 as Parihaka day. But church leaders do not see that Parihaka is rooted in staunch opposition to white settlement.
November 5, 1881, was the day that government troops evicted 1600 people from a village built on confiscated land between Mount Taranaki and the Tasman Sea.
Thursday, November 5, 2015
Mike Butler: Same-sex marriage two years on
The demand for same-sex marriages by New Zealand residents has decreased by over 10 percent over the past year while traditional marriage has slightly increased in the same time period, according to statistics released this week.
Civil Unions and Marriages: September 2015 quarter shows that there were 19,659 traditional marriages, up from 19,266, while there were 450 same-sex marriages, down from 504. (1)
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
Barend Vlaardingerbroek: Syria – Putin’s geopolitical coup
It’s the stuff of an
Orwellian political satire.
A sovereign nation is faced with a massive insurrection
that is largely orchestrated by hostile outside forces who bring in thousands
of foreign fighters. Third parties who don’t like the government of that nation
arm and train other rebel groups but they also feel threatened by the principal
usurper, so those rebels are supposed to take on both at once.
Sunday, November 1, 2015
Mike Butler: Gisborne resource co-governance
The Gisborne District Council became latest local authority to adopt a co-governance arrangement with local tribe Ngati Porou on notified resource consent applications, on planning documents, and on private plan changes.
The agreement between Te Runanganui o Ngati Porou, a trustee company, and the Gisborne District Council, passed at a council meeting October 8, includes heavily criticised aspects of co-governance involving tribal appointees with full voting rights.