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Waikanae Watch

~ issues relevant to Waikanae people and others

Waikanae Watch

Monthly Archives: August 2019

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Mainstream Media is now telling us our children are born with lower IQ due to climate change! …no mention of fluoride

20 Tuesday Aug 2019

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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Beating the climate drum again. The peddlers of the climate change ruse are getting desperate. Lamestream is now pushing low IQs onto climate. No mention of fluoride’s part in lowering IQ. No mention either of weather manipulation aka geoengineering. If you’re taken in by the propaganda you need to listen to the Australian Senator’s recent […]

via Mainstream is now telling us our children are born with lower IQ due to climate change … no mention of fluoride — Rangitikei Environmental Health Watch

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Our Lady of Fatima Catholic church in Parata Street closes

20 Tuesday Aug 2019

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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Our Lady of Fatima

Our lady of Fatima plaque

It has been a feature of Parata Street since 1952, but the last church services were on Sunday; a consequence of the merging of the Waikanae and Paraparaumu parishes.

From now on there will be a 10 am Mass for Waikanae worshipers on Sundays at the Cedarwood Funeral Home a few doors down the street and a 9.30 am Mass on Wednesdays at St Michael’s Anglican Church, Waikanae Beach. Other services will be held in the St Patrick’s Hall at 20 Milne Drive in Paraparaumu; the intersection with Kapiti Road is not far from the ‘Ewy’ on/offramps.  Website

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unjustified attacks by the Mainstream Media on Corrections Department staff prompts yet another Jacinda knee-jerk reaction

19 Monday Aug 2019

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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In the middle of last week, Patrick Gower of Newshub went into one of his many sensationalist meltdowns on his favourite subject of “right wing extremists” after a letter from a Russian (presumably a fan) made it to Brenton Tarrant in Auckland’s Paremoremo prison and he sent a reply which was put on the 4chan website.

You can watch Gower’s over-the-top reaction here

But it was not only Patrick Gower, the rest of Jacinda’s sycophantic Mainstream Media chimed in, attacking the Corrections Department staff who run the country’s prisons.

This wasn’t the first time those who have the tough job of dealing with the country’s crims while they are incarcerated have been on the receiving end of the MSM and politicians: earlier this year the provision of flavoured slushy ice machines to make their job more tolerable in summer heat was attacked, starting with the National Party leader Simon Bridges.  Was a $1 million cost spread over all the prisons worthy of such attack?  They were for frontline workers on average pay, not boss bureaucrats on huge salaries.

Now the mail censors at these institutions have been laid into; and quite unfairly.  The letter which made it to 4chan is shown below so readers can decide for themselves if it justified these diatribes — any reasonable person will have a hard time correlating it with Gower’s description and must conclude that he and his ilk are obsessive and ridiculous.

But the Dear Leader once again has reacted the way she usually does: she’s announced she’s going to swiftly pass another law to increase censorship, presumably so that anything remotely “right wing” in correspondence is excised. Neither this case, nor the situation generally, justifies anything of the kind; the prison censor’s decision to pass this example was fine as is the existing law. Leave well alone, Jacinda.


Tarrant letter

 

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council candidate Iride McCloy condemns the Waikanae library saga

19 Monday Aug 2019

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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Iride A McCloyIride McCloy, council candidate for the Waikanae ward, says Kapiti residents are once again being used to reduce budget deficits. “As a Waikanae resident I am appalled at the neglect by council that Waikanae is continuing to experience.”

“Our present Mayor and councillors have spent considerable amounts on other localities on the Kapiti Coast, but Waikanae has largely been omitted.”

The Waikanae Library is the prime amenity of our Town Centre. “But it was not considered worthy of fixing, a completely erroneous attitude.”

“Adding insult to injury is the reduction of funds for library books which for many folks, particularly the elderly, are their back-bone to relaxation, learning, and sharing of information. The library is also a meeting place. All this shows that the present council has no heart for the welfare of the Kapiti community.”

She says the stance taken by KCDC on housing is another big indicator of a Council that has not connected to needs of the community, and its health and well-being. It also concerns her that this Council is pushing through important matters a few months prior to a new council being formed.

She asks, “Whose agenda is being used in these instances?”

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Library woes — a big Kapiti election issue

19 Monday Aug 2019

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girl student with-books

At least 16 years of leaks and months of staff health concerns preceded the closure of a Kapiti Coast Library because of a dangerous mould. —Dominion Post, 21 February 2019 

The value of libraries

by Roger Childs

Libraries are key social and cultural hubs in all communities and the reduction of these facilities and their resources is a major issue. The fiasco involving the Waikanae Library is a cause for major Council shame. The budget for magazine purchases was cut some years ago, and now the budget for new books has been slashed.

Many readers will have seen Christchurch’s new TURANGA library which is a great source of civic pride in the garden city. The Council there decided that building a new library following the destruction of the earthquakes was a high priority — but what value does the KCDC place on libraries? 

Toxic resources

Mould, leaks and contaminated books had been issues at the ‘old’ Waikanae Library for over a decade, but why was nothing done?  Staff made numerous complaints. Where were the engineers, health experts and building inspectors? What advocacy over the problems was done by Waikanae Ward Councillor Michael Scott and the Waikanae Community Board?

Of major concern were the health risks of toxic mould, which can cause cancer, and infants and the elderly are particularly vulnerable. How many borrowers have handled contaminated books and magazines in recent years?

A recent report has rightly condemned the Council and their predecessors for dereliction of their responsibilities.  (See Salima Padamsey’s article of 13 August)

Library users will suffer to pay for the debacle

The book budget was cut from $402,427 in the precious financial year to the current $211,073, the council’s Group Manager, James Jefferson, said in a statement on Tuesday. –-Kapiti Observer, 9 August  2019

As Waikanae people know, the Waikanae Library has been closed for several months and a small pop-up library has opened in Mahara Place. To pay for this, the book budget for all four Kapiti libraries has been slashed.  But successive Councils were the ones who were negligent, so why should library users suffer?

One present councilor has observed that there is not the room in the Paraparaumu Library for a lot more books, but one wonders when she last visited it.

A big issue for voters

Voters have the opportunity in October to choose Kapiti’s Mayor, Councillors, their local Community Board, the Greater Regional Wellington Council Kapiti Representative and the Hospital Board. The first three of these have been in office while the library problems have mounted.

Among other issues, their appalling stewardship of the libraries should be a key consideration of who should be elected / unseated this year.

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Kapiti Historical Society — August 2019 Newsletter

19 Monday Aug 2019

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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In this issue–

  • The Society’s programme – Kapiti history and more
  • Feedback on Larry Keim’s talk last month
  • The August session – Mike Alexander on conservation in South Kapiti
  • The programme for the rest of the year
  • Further down the track
  • Suggestions and help
  • A varied programme

The Society is based in Kapiti, so logically we have most sessions based on a local theme or topic. Six of our nine talks so far have been, and this month we shift to the environment and the changing scene in the South Kapiti area.

The session is on Tuesday 27 August at 7.30 pm

Down the track we will be offering plenty of variety:

  • Visiting the Western Front
  • Coastlands 50 Years in the making
  • Sailors’ Salty Language
  • The Hadfield legacy

We have over sixty people on the mailing list, but we haven’t seen a number of you — so come along and bring your friends!

Thanks to our July speaker: Larry Kime

US Marines KapitiLarry spoke to an audience of about 30 about the U.S. Marines’ love of New Zealand. He set the friendly invasion in context with an explanation of what was happening in the Pacific in late 1941 and early 1942.

Then he elaborated on how there were some mixed feelings among New Zealanders about the newcomers and even some minor clashes in Wellington and Auckland. However, the vast majority of local people, especially women, were very happy to see them here in our hour of need and acceptance of their presence grew. Many New Zealand women married Marines.

The talk generated some interesting questions and plenty of discussion over supper.

Next Talk – Mike Alexander

A History of Environmental Conservation in South Kapiti

Tuesday 27 August at 7.30pm
Kapiti Uniting Church
10 Weka Road
Raumati Beach
Gold coin koha. Thanks

Enter via the main door of the church at the top of the driveway off Weka Road.

Maungakotukutuku

Mike will be looking at how the environment has changed through time in the areas which now include Queen Elizabeth Park, Whareroa and the Maungakotukutuku Valley.

He will also set the importance of conservation in the context of the world’s current environmental problems.

The next four months

SEPTEMBER – Waikanae resident, and former NZ Army Engineer, Howard Chamberlain on his visit to the Western Front.

OCTOBER – Paraparaumu Beach resident, and former Commander of HMNZS Canterbury, John Granville on “Sailors’ Salty Language”.

NOVEMBER – A talk on Coastlands as it celebrates 50 years of operation. (To be confirmed.)

DECEMBER – David Hadfield on an aspect of the Hadfield family story.

2020 – some possibilities for sessions: 

  • The Kapiti Coast Museum (Allan Carley)
  • Paraparaumu’s First Retirement Village – Seven Oaks (Wendy Houston)
  • The history of Paraparaumu airport
  • Long term service on the Kapiti Coast District Council
  • Gallipoli – Myth and Reality
  • Kapiti’s Changing Coastline
  • Key Kapiti figures in the early-mid 19th century

We would like to explore for 2020 the possibility of a group effort to bring together and present information on major historical events and personalities, with a particular emphasis on Kapiti personalities whose actions impacted on the national stage.

Three such, who knew one another, and helped establish peace here, are Tamihana Te Rauparaha of Otaki, Wiremu Kingi of Waikanae and Rev. Octavius Hadfield (who was brought to Kapiti by Tamihana and came to support Wiremu in his actions at Waitara, which Tamihana condemned).  Tamihana was an early supporter of the King movement before becoming strongly opposed; Wiremu was initially opposed to the Waikato kingites before welcoming their support.

One question that deserves attention is why Tamihana Te Rauparaha returned from attacks on South Island tribes with his father, the warrior chief Te Rauparaha, to become a Christian – in a remarkable cultural change.  What were the key influences on him as he grew up?

Suggestions and assistance

If anyone has ideas for particular speakers and topics, let us know. Also if people would like to assist with the overall organisation – present speakers, do votes of thanks, help with suppers etc .. – we would be delighted to hear from you.

We will probably have an organisational meeting at the end of the year to set things up for 2020.

Roger Childs and John Robinson

Coordinators, Kapiti Historical Society

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Margaret Stevenson-Wright is part of our team these council elections

19 Monday Aug 2019

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Margaret Stevenson-WrightLike Geoffrey this time, Margaret is running for a seat on the Waikanae Community Board, which she also did in 2016.

She says: “I was born in Central Wellington and throughout a grandparental upbringing enjoyed freedom to voice opinions within a mutual understanding that opinions voiced had to have a basis in substance rather than speculation and carried with them accountability.

“My family has had a presence on the Kapiti Coast since the 1930s. I recall many a school holiday perched high in a pine tree endlessly sketching Kapiti Island or sitting in the dampest part of my uncle’s boat as we traced the coastline and circled the Island.

“I have lived in Waikanae for six years – drawn by the richness of cultural history, talented artisans and bird rich land and seascapes.

“Recreation-wise, I am a former competitive pistol shooter and currently poised to dust off my croquet mallet and rediscover the joys of golf croquet.  I enjoy playing a lively game of 500 with a skilled group of locals among whom I am the novice.

“As an active environmentalist and a lifelong ‘four legs and a heartbeat person’ – I am actively committed to the welfare of sentient creatures.

“While living in Northern Germany I worked for four years on a U.S. Special Forces base (Army, Airforce, Navy and Marines) where I held the liaison role with the local city leaders in a place the size of Wellington. I then spent two years in the United States within the management team of a War Veterans Hospital.

“These early roles and latter senior roles within Central Government Agencies and the Tertiary Sector, honed my commitment to consultation, collaboration, advocacy and evidence-based decision making — attributes critical to those privileged to be elected to Community Boards and to participatory decision making.”

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the Waikanae eye

19 Monday Aug 2019

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Waikanae eye

It’s nothing huge like the London Eye, but the building housing WaikanEye optometrists at the east end of Te Moana Road.

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local politics activist Dale Evans

18 Sunday Aug 2019

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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Dale Evans 2

Dale at a café on 4 July. (supplied)

With the council election campaign now underway, we had lunch with Dale Evans to get his take on the state of affairs in local politics.

Dale, born in 1947, was at one point on the Paraparaumu-Raumati Community Board, but is best known for his visual protests against the council, the most publicized of which was when he showed up to a council meeting in 2008 wearing a KKK outfit followed by his removing the hood to reveal his face blackened. This was done to object to “hoody day” promoted by then mayor Jenny Rowan with posters of her wearing one. Dale contended, as most would, that hoodies are worn to obstruct views of faces for dubious reasons and are a no-no when driving a car.  It worked, as the promotion was abandoned. Another protest over the airport runway extension in Wellington saw him putting an airplane on a car and having it towed around Wellington.

In Kapiti, taunting Jenny Rowan, followed by Mayor Church, was regularly done — including by billboards and banners with satirical slogans, the most memorable of which, in reference to Jenny Rowan, was “Kapiti needs a dam, not a dike.”

He says he was a friend of Mayor Guru, but isn’t now; a consequence of Guru not keeping his election promises.

Dale also paid for a weekly advertisement in the Kapiti News entitled “Dale’s Caring Column” listing what he considered to be bad decisions by councilors and encouraging people not for vote for the councilors who made them.  But the present Kapiti News editor, David Haxton, declined its continuation this last triennium. Dale took it to the Media Council, but it sided with David Haxton: a newspaper is deemed to be a private business and not a public utility, even if it is distributed free.

He was also responsible for the visual protest against the bizarre Political Correctness culture that the KCDC has when in 2017 he placed female mannequins on the street outside the Council HQ carrying satirical statements around their necks.  It prompted a reaction inside: a purple-haired woman came out and screamed at him, followed by Mayor Guru’s PA, Sue George who told that person to be quiet and go back inside.  David Scott also came out and told Dale to take his mannequins away as they weren’t helpful to him.  Nevertheless, the then council boss Dougherty and Ms Accomplice seized upon them to falsely accuse David Scott of being responsible. The falsehood was recently repeated by a certain local Stuff reporter.

Dale is a descendant of the Evans Drapers of Wellington on his father’s side and Prestons liquor on his mother’s side: she owned the Grand Hotel on Willis Street along with her younger sister and brother, this was one of the many Wellington buildings that was demolished in the 1980s.  He grew up in Eastbourne, but has lived in Paraparaumu Beach for many years. A childhood accident which affected his jaw was later substantially rectified by using parts of two ribs to replace parts of the jawbone. Like many seniors, he also doesn’t walk very well. He’s softly spoken; although says when he has talked about issues in council around the table they have told him he either talks too loudly or too softly. He believes in Karma; he likes to help those who need it.

So, his thoughts of the present council?  Not surprisingly, his opinion is a poor one: they are not interested in being accountable and the majority including Guru are basically there to massage their own egos.  He thinks all sitting councilors should be replaced by fresh blood.

He’s regularly submitted Official Information requests to the council about various matters and promises to share them with both us and Nigel Wilson of KC News.

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cultural Sunday — 3. Library Friends session on a new book about the Expressway

18 Sunday Aug 2019

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Peatby Jennifer Ramshaw

An invitation

Friends of Kapiti District Libraries invite you to hear Lynn Jenner speak at 

  • Paraparaumu Library meeting room 
  • 2 pm, Sunday 18 August.

Refreshments will be served.  Entry by Koha.

Our Land and the Expressway

The Kapiti Expressway passes near Lynn Jenner’s house. She wonders: 

  • How did it come to be built? 
  • What will be its impact on the local environment? 

Readers say that her book Peat (Otago University Press) is ‘haunting, fearless, and utterly compelling’. See more: https://www.otago.ac.nz/press/books/otago714791.html

Please forward this invitation to everyone you think will be interested. We hope to see you there. 

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

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