Dear John --
Goldsmith Update - Lockdown Edition
These extraordinary times have a surreal quality in Auckland. On a
personal level, being confined to home with my family during a period
of golden weather is providing a special time. I spend most of my day
(and evening) on the phone or Zoom; it’s amazing how productive we can
be without having to travel around and when most meetings are
eliminated.
And yet, we wake each morning with a deep knot in the pit of our
stomachs about what’s happening to our country. There is the great
health threat, which mercifully hasn’t yet fully broken on our
shores. But more immediately, our jobs and livelihoods are being
ravaged by the lock down.
Thousands of people are facing unemployment and an uncertain
future. Countless other men and women have spent years, or decades,
building businesses and social enterprises – investing financially and
emotionally in them – relying on their value for their retirement, and
out of the blue, for no fault of their own, they are seeing all that
work washed away, like a castle in the sand. There is deep anxiety
across the community.
I’ve spent much of the week on the Epidemic Response Committee, a
virtual select committee set up to retain a measure of Parliamentary
oversight while Parliament isn’t sitting. It was an excellent effort
by Simon Bridges, the PM and the Speaker to agree on this
structure.
If you're interested, you can tune in
to the livestream of the committee (next sitting at 10am on Tuesday)
and watch the previous meetings at the link below.
https://www.parliament.nz/en/pb/sc/scl/epidemic-response/news-archive/watch-public-meetings-of-the-epidemic-response-committee/
This morning I also did an interview on
Radio New Zealand. Check it out if you have five minutes.
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/413353/national-says-getting-out-of-lockdown-a-priority-for-nz-economy
The overwhelming conclusion for me is obvious, but we need to
concentrate on it – it is critical that we get out of the lock down as
quickly as we safely can. The burden, in terms of overall wellbeing,
of a long lock down would be unbearable.
So, from there, the focus must be on ensuring the current lock down
is effective, in getting on top of the virus.
On Tuesday we heard from Professor Sir David Skegg that we need to
be doing much more testing. Specifically we need to test across the
community, to understand its spread across the community. Currently,
we’re in the dark.
The other critical thing is to stop lock down leakage. Most of the
cases have come from overseas, New Zealanders returning. And yet our
arrangements at the border have been loose for a long time. Even now,
people are arriving at the border and if they’re not showing symptoms,
they’re sent off home to self-isolate.
We know from the health officials, that people may be carrying the
virus without yet showing symptoms.
The Prime Minister says those recent arrivals in self-isolation
will get a visit from Police. We had the Police Commissioner before
the committee yesterday. We were staggered to learn that those visits
hadn’t taken place. The plan, going forward, is for a text
message.
When we’re putting so much strain on the country to be in lock
down, surely we can close the barn door more effectively at the
border. Simon Bridges has said all new arrivals should go into
quarantine. It’s no fun, but we have to make this work, so we can get
out of lock down as soon as we can.
Meantime, the focus has turned to the wage subsidy and various
other efforts to help otherwise healthy businesses get through a
period with zero revenue.
We’ve supported the government’s efforts and said they will
probably have to go further. We can’t save every business, but we
need to remember this has come about because of government decisions,
for public health reasons. The task is to reduce the number of
otherwise sound businesses that fail, so that people stay in jobs and
we are in the best position to bounce back.
We have also asked for more transparency about the state of the
economy. We know that more than 6 million people have become jobless
in the US; we have no idea what the figure is in New Zealand. The
Minister of Finance has refused to release anything from the
Treasury. The Government is very quick to release worst case
scenarios in the health sphere, but leaves us in the dark on the
economic consequences. This can’t carry on.
We’ll be back at the committee next Tuesday and will do our best to
test the government constructively, as we search for the best
solutions.
Wishing you and your bubble the very best through these
extraordinary times.
Regards,
http://paulgoldsmith.national.org.nz/
|