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Hi Friend,
With the Reserve Bank cutting interest rates this week, there's no
more important time for the Government to cut wasteful spending to
ensure Adrian Orr hasn't jumped the gun and to ensure the scourge of
high inflation is dealt with.
Of course, your humble Taxpayers' Union has suggestions on
just the place to start...
ACC spends $10.7 million praying away injuries 🙏🤨
ACC is the organisation tasked with providing financial
compensation, support and rehabilitation for people when they get
injured.
You'd think that any treatment they provided would be based on
sound science, right? After all, they're spending your money and it's
you that wants to recover.
This week we
revealed that ACC has spent $10.7 million on rongoā Māori
treatments since 2020.
What is rongoā Māori? Here's
what the ACC website has to say:
It's traditional Māori
healing with many different techniques including:
- mirimiri (bodywork)
- rākau rongoā (native flora herbal
preparations)
- karakia (prayer), and more.
Now I'm not here to tell you what kinds of treatments you should or
shouldn't use, but if there's no scientific evidence to demonstrate it
works, why should taxpayers be footing the bill?
Jordan
spoke to Sean Plunket on The Platform about the issue.
When we asked ACC for the evidence, this was the response we
got:
ACC does not hold any
clinical, peer reviewed or journal evidence that we have funded.
Therefore, this part of your request is refused under section 18(g)(i)
of the Act.
In terms of other evidence, it appears officials have
panicked. They appear to have collated anything and everything they
could find on Google Scholar that vaguely mentions rongoā Māori.
We got back a laundry list of humanities and
[checks notes] environmental studies about how these
practices make people (at best) "feel" better. Nothing double-blind or
scientific, and many were just patient or staff self-selected
surveys.
Put another way, ACC is funding treatment based
on opinion polling. 🤦
(and if anyone loves a poll, it's the Taxpayers'
Union...)
Some illustrative examples (our
emphasis).
Perceptions of Te Rongoā Kakariki: green
prescription health service among Māori in the Waikato and Ngāti
Tūwharetoa rohe. Mai Journal, 4(2), 118-133.
Koea, J., & Mark,
G. (2020). Is there a role for Rongoa Māori in public hospitals? The
results of a hospital staff survey. The New Zealand
Medical Journal (Online), 133(1513), 73-6.
This one isn't even about healing people. ACC
"for the land" now?
Mark, G., Boulton,
A., Allport, T., Kerridge, D., & Potaka-Osborne, G. (2022). “Ko Au
te Whenua, Ko te Whenua Ko Au: I Am the Land, and the Land Is
Me”: Healer/Patient Views on the Role of
Rongoā Māori (Traditional Māori Healing) in Healing the
Land. International Journal of Environmental Research and
Public Health, 19(14), 8547.
If these practices work, great! Maybe they do. But let's wait to
see the evidence to back them up before spending millions subsidising,
among other things, prayer.
Are you aware of any other treatments ACC (or Te
Whatu Ora, Health New Zealand) are funding that aren't grounded in
evidence? Our
research team would love to hear from you.
Film festivals on the taxpayer dime? Great work
if you can get it ✈️🎥
As if forking out millions in film-subsidies for
Hollywood bigwigs wasn't enough, it turns out taxpayers are paying for
their overseas holidays too!
They might not have won Lotto's $44 million jackpot, but
ten lucky players C-grade "film producers" embarked on
a taxpayer-funded jaunt to the French Riviera for Cannes Film
Festival. The luxury getaway cost $5,000 a pop (except for poor
Carthew Neal who only got $2500 😢) totalling $47,500.
[Editor's note: the irony is that Carthew
Neal looks to be the only one with any talent!]
This is the same Film Commission that the Taxpayers'
Union exposed
last week for spending $16,000 on leaving parties, and $500,000
golden goodbye for the CEO. Oh, and lest
we forget the alcohol-fueled jaunt to the Oscars costing taxpayers
$58,000 (also snuffed out by.... the Taxpayers'
Union).
This trough just keeps getting deeper.
Our research team has it on good
authority that the Film Commission also sent two of their own
staff, Annie Murray and Philippa Mossman. No doubt they were sent
there to tell other film producers about all the free money up for
grabs in New Zealand...
Bureaucrat salary growth faster than the rest of New Zealand –
growth the highest since records began 🚀💸
Not only are these bureaucrats getting luxury
trips abroad, but it turns out they're also getting bigger pay rises
than the rest of us!
New data from Stats NZ shows that while average New
Zealand wage growth has pulled right back, the salary increases in the
public sector are sky-rocketing up by 7.1% – almost twice that of the
private sector. For the
bureaucrats in Wellington, this
is the fastest wage growth since 2002 when they first started keeping
records. You're the one paying for it.
Shortly after the figures were released, Nicola Willis
(as Minister responsible for the Public Service) rushed out her 2024
Workforce Policy Statement that outlines her new "expectations"
for bureaucrat pay and getting the public sector under control.
It's six months later than what we'd have preferred, but
otherwise we can't complain. It outlines expectations that pay of
Chief Executives needs to start being tied to delivery of improved
outcomes, and that future pay increases should not be backdated (those
outside of the self-entitled bureaucracy will be surprised to learn
that's the norm in Wellington!) and that they should be funded from
existing baselines, (i.e. through finding new savings within
departments).
The proof of the pudding will be in the eating
when the next figures are released by Stats NZ later this year.
Amalgamation is not the magic bullet for rising rates 📣🗳️
While Central Government seeks to find further savings, it seems
Councils are looking for a magic bullet.
With double-digit
rate hikes plaguing the country, some
mayors have suggested amalgamating councils as a way to find
efficiencies and drive down expenses.
It may make sense for councils to combine some of their operations,
but full amalgamation should be a
decision for local ratepayers who are ultimately the ones who will be
paying for a new structure.
We have cautiously warned against diving headfirst into
amalgamations without first thinking it through. We've seen what
happened with Health
NZ and the
polytechnics when Labour tried a centralisation experiment – it
doesn't always go as planned.
And one does not need to know much about the so-called "Super City"
that when it has come to Auckland Council, bigger has not meant
cheaper!
As
these ideas spread around the country, it is vital that we make clear
early that there should be no amalgamations without referendums in the
affected communities first.
Taxpayer Talk – MPs in Depth with ACT Party MP
Parmjeet Parmar🎙️🎧
This week on Taxpayer Talk, I
sat down with ACT Party MP, Dr Parmjeet Parmar.
Parmjeet has a PhD in Biological Sciences, is a businesswoman and
former broadcaster and was also formerly a National Party MP from 2014
to 2020. In 2023 she ran for ACT at the General Election and was
successfully elected to Parliament.
In this podcast we discuss Dr Parmar's upbringing and background
before politics, why she changed her political allegiance and her
excellent member's bill that would require unions to collect their own
fees rather than the status quo which forces employers to do it on the
unions' behalf.
Listen
to the episode on our website | Apple
Podcasts | Spotify | iHeart
Radio
Enjoy your weekend.
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Connor Molloy Campaigns
Manager New Zealand Taxpayers’
Union
|
Media
Mentions:
The Platform Taxpayers'
Union's Jordan Williams on ACC’s $10.7m Spend on ‘Rongoā Māori
Healing’
The Post David
Seymour's new Ministry of red tape hiring a $168k-a-year spin
doctor
531 PI Pacific Mornings David
Farrar, Political Pollster
Newstalk ZB Heather
du Plessis Allan Drive Full Show Podcast: 15 August 2024
[42:30]
Local Matters Lengthy
delay for Penlink bridge
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