The fifth one-day workshop of the McGuinness Institute’s TacklingPovertyNZ national tour was held in Kaitaia on Thursday, 15 September 2020 at Te Ahu Centre. Robert Akuhata, Māori Development Advisor at Far North District Council (FNDC), opened the workshop by welcoming participants and Institute staff to the Far North.

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Ana Mules, Community Development Advisor at FNDC and Dr Girol Karacaoglu, Chief Economist at the New Zealand Treasury at the TacklingPovertyNZ Kaitaia workshop

In the morning, six of the original 36 participants from the December 2020 TacklingPovertyNZ workshops presented the booklet they produced last year. The booklet shares what the group considered to be the role of community, employment, education and social services in tackling poverty in New Zealand.

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Participants of the December 2020 TacklingPovertyNZ workshop present their booklet – from left to right: Matthew Bastion, Lisa Jagoe, Brad Olsen, Tara Officer, Apurva Kasture and Alexander Jones

Participants then heard from the New Zealand Treasury’s Chief Economist Dr Girol Karacaoglu, who spoke about the need for integration between social, economic and environmental matters. Girol also emphasised the need for agencies to work together at the community level to implement change.

Treasury’s Chief Economist Dr Girol Karacaoglu at the TacklingPovertyNZ Kaitaia workshop

Treasury’s Chief Economist Dr Girol Karacaoglu at the TacklingPovertyNZ Kaitaia workshop

Girol was followed by Blair Peters, Kiwi Advocacy Kaimahi, Te Rarawa and FNDC Youth Council, and Ebba Raikes, FNDC Youth Council and Registered Nurse. Blair and Ebba discussed the need for more positive role models in the community to encourage young people to build brighter futures. Blair and Ebba also showed the audience a video called ‘Equity and Equality’ which can be watched here.

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Ebba Raikes and Blair Peters: ‘Fair isn’t everyone getting the same thing. Fair is everyone getting what they need to be successful.’

Deidre Otene, General Manager at the MOKO Foundation focused on three key ideas: economic development, intergenerational leadership and improving health outcomes. Deidre asked: Where do our values sit in overcoming poverty for the Far North? To answer this question, Deidre asserted that we need to ensure:

  • That we have the healthiest population in the world, where families can provide healthy, warm homes, sustenance (food, clean water) and sustainability (income) for their children.
  • That employment, enterprise and education is an aspiration and reality for our people.
  • That decision making at a national, local and iwi level is made by leaders skilled and connected to achieving the best for the Far North.
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Deidre Otene discusses the need for action around improving health outcomes in the Far North region

 

The speakers’ PowerPoint slides can be downloaded on SlideShare, or viewed below.

In the afternoon, participants separated into groups to discuss issues, challenges and opportunities specific to Kaitaia.

Participants of the TacklingPovertyNZ Kaitaia workshop share their Exercise 1 ideas with the workshop plenary

During lunch-time, economics students from Kaitaia college joined a Q & A session with Dr Girol Karacaoglu.

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Economics students from Kaitaia College joined a Q & A session with Dr Girol Karacaoglu

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Participants at the TacklingPovertyNZ Kaitaia workshop vote on the themes they should focus on for the remainder of the workshop

After the plenary voted on the key themes that were developed through Exercise 1, the participants then separated into five groups: geographic isolation, changing the poverty mindset, education, Māori and grandparents raising grandchildren. An additional group was also created that mapped the social services in the community. Each group developed ‘hows’ and then presented them to the other participants to stress-test their ideas.

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Participants of the TacklingPovertyNZ Kaitaia workshop develop their ‘hows’

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Participants share their ‘hows’ with the Kaitaia plenary

At 4.00 pm, Mayor Hon John Carter and members of the wider community gathered at the Te Ahu Centre to hear participants present their key ideas and local solutions.

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Participants of the one-day workshop and members of the wider Kaitaia community listen to the final presentation

Mayor Hon John Carter also shared his thoughts with the audience on tackling poverty in the Far North.

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Mayor Hon John Carter talks with FNDC’s Ana Mules

Thank you
We hope this initiative builds and shares ideas on how to tackle poverty both within the Far North region and in New Zealand more generally. This event would not have been possible without local collaborators Far North District Council and the ongoing support of the New Zealand Treasury. Special thanks also to those parties that have helped with the baby box initiative: Baby Box CoThe Wool Company from Utiku, Taihape; and Replete from Taupo. Please see the TacklingPovertyNZ website for more details on outputs to come as a result of the workshop series.

Background
In December 2020, the McGuinness Institute undertook a three-day workshop in collaboration with the
New Zealand Treasury. Its purpose was to explore ways to reduce poverty in New Zealand. This workshop has led to a number of outputs, one of which includes undertaking a tour of one-day workshops around New Zealand throughout 2020. The 36 participants, aged 18–25, from the 2020 TacklingPovertyNZ workshop sparked the tour of one-day workshops as they convinced us we needed a national conversation with local solutions. The first one-day workshop was held in Queenstown on 29 March 2020, and hosted by the Queenstown Lakes District Council. The purpose was to test our approach to see if a useful outcome could be achieved in one day. Discussion Paper 2020/01: A Queenstown Lakes District perspective on tackling poverty is now available online.

Next steps
We are in the process of producing a similar discussion paper from each one-day workshop, and together these papers will provide an insight into the different regional perspectives on poverty in New Zealand, in order to inform national decision-making, support local initiatives, and build and share ideas on how to tackle poverty in New Zealand. The series of discussion papers will be given to the Chief Economist at the New Zealand Treasury and made public on the McGuinness Institute website. In addition, the District Council Mayors will have the opportunity to meet with Minister of Finance, Hon Bill English to discuss the outputs of the workshops and respond to questions from the Minister. This meeting is tentatively set for early November 2020. Later this year we also hope to meet with other interested members of parliament.

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