Dear John,
As you know we have a new Leader of the National Party and National
Opposition, Christopher Luxon who was elected MP for Botany at the
last election in 2020.
I would like to thank all the people who have contacted me over the
months that I was Leader of the National Opposition offering their
support, their suggestions and their help. It was a great privilege
to have held the position and to have participated as Leader in the
General Election in 2020.
I have greatly enjoyed working with the excellent National Members
of Parliament who have supported me and our National party while
representing their constituents during this time of Covid-19 pandemic
response. Together we held the Government to account for its slow
rollout of the vaccination programme, its undisclosed use of the He
Puapua report, the Three Waters initiative and pushed it on
Immigration policy and MIQ. We fought back and rolled out our own
plans on many topics of concern for New Zealanders.
Mr Luxon did very good work as spokesperson for Infrastructure
while I was Leader. And now I am very pleased to have the Science and
Technology spokesperson role which is a particular interest of
mine.
I wish our new National Opposition Leader and Ms Nicola Willis the
Deputy, every success in their demanding new roles and offer my
continued support as the National Opposition continues to hold the
Labour-led Government to account.
I have already started my career as technology spokesperson as I
launched the issues paper for the National Opposition recently with
Peter Beck from Rocket Lab and Graeme Muller who is Chief Executive of
the Tech Industry body, NZ Tech. For a number of years I have been
very supportive of growing the Technology and Innovation Sector in New
Zealand because of the future opportunities it provides.
One of the issues facing the Sector as this time is finding talent
and skills especially as Covid-19 has had the effect of accelerating
demand for communications in areas like virtual meetings using
Zoom.
Therefore I will be supporting educating and incentivising our
young people in secondary and tertiary education to participate in the
areas of science, technology, engineer and mathematics (STEM). There
is a case for tertiary scholarships to be made available to urgently
encourage and assist young people into achieving STEM degrees.
I believe that technology, artificial intelligence and space are
going to make a big contribution to the economy of New Zealand in the
near future. To start with I want the ultrafast broadband network to
be available to 90 per cent of New Zealanders by 2030. For the
remaining 10 per cent of New Zealand, I want 100 megabit per second
Broadband speeds.
Problems with Social Housing
Everyone has read about the anti-social behaviour occurring
regularly in our suburbs as some tenants of Kainga Ora fail to
recognise that being part of a community and a neighbourhood requires
cooperation and consideration of others.
The social housing management agency says the Covid-19 Level 3 has
made it difficult for Kainga Ora tenancy managers to attend to their
tenants needs. However during a time when staying at home is so
necessary, surely there is also a need for new and old neighbours to
be mindful of their neighbours? These situations should not be allowed
to escalate so that Police involvement has to be called for.
My electorate team and I have worked on these problems for several
weeks in Papakura and we will continue to contact Kainga Ora about
incidents to ensure that everyone can enjoy their homes in freedom,
peace and safety.
I will be supporting calls for more Police in Auckland as well as
urgent action on providing them with resources so they can provide
urgent and better targeted mental health care at call-outs. Sadly,
many tenant and neighbour problems are linked with poor mental health
and housing insecurity.
Don’t be a victim of Cybercrime
In the three months to September reports of potential cybercrime to
the government watchdog, CERT NZ, were up 53 percent compared to the
previous quarter. Nearly
1.3 million Kiwis have experienced cybercrime during the COVID-19
pandemic and Kiwis have lost over $3million in the last
quarter.
This situation has not improved as we go into
December.
CERT NZ reports that malware attacks are on the rise, including the
recent FluBot text scam, which included a link in a text message that
people were encouraged to click on.
Phishing and credential harvesting remained the most common
reported incident overall, accounting for two-thirds of all reports
followed by scams, fraud and unauthorised access.
Financial losses are not the only damage that these attacks are
causing because people also lose data and this has psychological
impacts for people. It can damage reputations and business
confidence.
Technology scam calls are on the rise. This is where a scammer will
call, pretending to be from a telco or large tech firm, and say there
is a problem with your computer and request remote access to attempt
to steal whatever they are after, including money from your bank
account.
You can stop any damage occurring to yourself or your business by
simply hanging up on the caller.
The experts in preventing Cybercrime ask you to report scams and
other incidents, even if it is embarrassing, and they encourage people
to create strong passwords for their online profiles.
As you may know I am taking some well-overdue leave from Parliament
at this time. It is great to be able to focus on my constituents in
the Papakura Electorate and to spend time with my family and friends
in Auckland.
Best wishes and be safe as Christmas approaches,
Judith
Hon Judith
Collins http://judithcollins.national.org.nz/
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