Beehive Bulletin
For Week Ending Friday 14 February 2003
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Also Available On-Line http://www.labour.org.nz
Prime Minister's speech to Parliament
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The government begins the year very positive about the prospects for New Zealand and for its own policy programme, Prime
Minister Helen Clark told the opening of Parliament. The economy's performance has been strong and unemployment was
internationally low. Helen Clark says the government's aim is to build solid levels of economic growth and to fund good
public services ? health, education and infrastructure in particular, at sustainable levels. The year's legislative
agenda includes enabling TVNZ to implement its charter for quality public television; to control the growth of gambling;
to simplify the governance of the racing industry; to improve the Resource Management Act; to update holidays
legislation; to make the rules fairer for veteran pensioners; to set up a new Supreme Court; to implement major land
transport changes; and to amend the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act ahead of the moratorium on applications
for genetic modification expiring in October. Helen Clark says the New Zealand Government, does not support unilateral
action against Iraq. If the Security Council were to sanction the use of force, New Zealand as a United Nations member
would be obliged to uphold the resolution, and would consider what contribution it could make, most likely in the form
of humanitarian, medical, or logistic support.
Launch of Tertiary Education Commission
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It is time for New Zealanders to connect with their future, via the Government's Tertiary Education Strategy, says
Associate Minister of Education, Steve Maharey. He was speaking at the launch this week of the Tertiary Education
Commission, charged with overseeing the implementation of the strategy. Steve Maharey says New Zealanders are
participating in tertiary education in record numbers, across more diverse learning pathways than ever before. This is
encouraging but there was room for a far more strategic approach. Numbers alone will not deliver the Knowledge Society
New Zealand needs to compete successfully in the 21st century. The tertiary strategy focuses on six key goals: building
a more strategic and more capable tertiary education system, aligned to national goals; ensuring it contributes
decisively to Maori development aspirations; ensuring all New Zealanders have the foundation skills needed to
participate in our new knowledge society; stronger emphasis on higher level creative, specialist and technical skills;
do more to ensure success for Pasifika learners and communities; boost research and knowledge creation to ensure that
research and innovation are key drivers of our economy. Steve Maharey says at stake is a future where all New Zealanders
have the skills to participate in a vibrant and distinctively Kiwi knowledge society.
Changes to GM legislation
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The government has announced changes it wants to the main legislation covering genetic modification (GM) in the latest
step towards implementing the recommendations of the Royal Commission on Genetic Modification. The proposed changes are
to the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms (HSNO) Act 1996 and related Acts. They are designed to underpin the
government's overall policy of proceeding with caution with GM while preserving opportunities. Environment Minister
Marian Hobbs says the decisions will give New Zealand an extended regulatory framework to allow it to better take
advantage of the social and economic benefits of genetically-modified and other new organisms, which we may choose to
use, while ensuring potential risks are managed effectively. The changes being proposed include a new category of
approval for new organisms, including genetically-modified organisms, called 'conditional release'. Marian Hobbs says
this new category would ensure a regulatory framework is maintained for new organisms by allowing the Environmental Risk
Management Authority (ERMA) to attach controls on a case-by-case basis to any approvals to release new organisms.
Unemployment rate drops below 5 percent
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New Zealand's official unemployment rate fell to 4.9 percent, as recorded by Statistics New Zealand's Household Labour
Force Survey for the December 2002 quarter. This was down from 5.4 percent for the September 2002 quarter. Social
Services and Employment Minister Steve Maharey says there are now 123,000 more New Zealanders employed than there were
when the Labour-led government took office in December 1999. Continued employment growth, now into its tenth consecutive
quarter, has seen the official unemployment rate fall to levels not experienced since March 1988. New Zealand now has
one of the lowest unemployment rates in the OECD, where the average is 7.1 percent and now ranks ninth amongst the 27
nations with standardised unemployment rates. Steve Maharey says particularly welcome trends revealed by the survey
include a decline in unemployment for all ethnic groups over the quarter and the year, growth in full time employment
more than offsetting a decrease in the number of people in part-time employment; significant falls in unemployment in
both Auckland and Canterbury and an increase in the number of people employed in most regions.
Increasing guest nights welcomed
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Minister of Tourism Mark Burton has welcomed the results of Statistics New Zealand's latest accommodation survey. Total
guest nights for the year ended December 2002 were up 7 percent on the year ended December 2001, and up 13 percent on
the year ended December 2000. The number of actual guest nights increased 3 percent in December 2002, when compared with
December 2001. But while pleased the underlying trend in guest nights has been rising since May 1998, Mark Burton
stresses that a sustainable tourism sector depends on more than just numbers. It was essential both the industry and
Government focus on protecting, preserving and enhancing those things that travellers want to see and share?our core
environmental values and assets. Mark Burton says the challenge is to encourage people to visit at different times of
the year, to try a greater number of products, to stay longer, to explore a wider range of locations, and to spend more.
In 2001, international guests injected nearly $6 billion into the New Zealand economy and New Zealanders enjoying
domestic trips spent nearly $7 billion. Taken together, these tourism figures account for 10 percent of New Zealand's
GDP, says Mark Burton.