Heather Roy's Diary
Heather Roy's Diary
More Of The Same At CCDHB
Following
a series of false starts, Labour's answer to Capital &
Coast
DHB's woes was finally announced yesterday: while
the newly elected Board
remains, previous Chair Judith
Aitken has been sacked - but stays on the
Board as an
elected member - Sir John Anderson was appointed the
new
Chair, and Dr Ian Brown given the role of Crown
Monitor.
Sir John Anderson was appointed Chair of TVNZ in
2006, after the State
broadcaster suffered a series of
difficulties; Dr Brown is an obstetrician
and
gynaecologist at Northland DHB. As the Government's new
'watchdog' at
CCDHB, he will report directly to Health
Minister David Cunliffe.
In many ways this course of
action signals that it is a case of 'business
as usual'
at CCDHB, rather than tackling the serious situation
head-on.
The Board is still in place and will, no doubt,
be reminded that its
responsibility is to the Health
Minister - with its first priority being
to implement
Government health policy.
Meanwhile, I've been calling for
the appointment of an independent
commissioner to oversee
CCDHB. The disconnect between management and
clinical
staff at Wellington Hospital is so serious that, I
believe,
someone with proven skills at turning
organisations around and the ability
to think outside the
square is needed to change the culture.
This will be no
easy task, and will certainly not happen overnight.
The
Minister has given the Board four months to do just
that - or, he claims,
he will put a commissioner in
place. This trial period may well turn out
to be a just
another delay in dealing with the real issues.
The
greatest problem will be that of political interference -
both by the
Minister and his Health Ministry. When the
governing body's first duty is
to the government of the
day - not the health needs of the local population
- the
focus is immediately wrong.
The doctors, nurses and other
health professionals working at the coalface
deserve a
well-functioning workplace. When systems are
well-organised, and
running efficiently, fewer mistakes
are made and risks for patients are
significantly
reduced.
Urgency And Dog Legislation
This week the
House went into its annual bout of year-end Urgency; this
is
my seventh year of this bizarre, and mis-appropriately
named, way of
undertaking Government business - I've yet
to find a case where a Bill
being debated could be
considered urgent for the nation. Urgency is just
a
means the Government uses to 'catch-up', and this week was
no
exception.
One Bill debated yesterday will give
territorial authorities the ability
to demand the
neutering of dangerous dog breeds. I might've
been
reassured had this been an admission that
micro-chipping had been a crazy
plan, and was to be
repealed; alas, no - apparently this is an adjunct
to
further strengthen the success of micro-chipping and
further protect our
children!
The fact that owners, not
dogs, must take responsibility has escaped
the
Government. Virtually all dog attacks involve
un-registered,
un-micro-chipped dogs. To think that
these dog owners are about to go out
and have their
aggressive dogs - usually bred specifically to fight
-
neutered is craziness. We'd have more success in
calling for the muzzling
of dragons.
Why The RMA Must
Be Fixed
A Banks Peninsula landowner contacted me this
week, telling me to get the
RMA sorted - ACT has been
trying to do that since we got to Parliament
in
1996.
He recently received a Notice of Rating
Valuation showing an increase in
the value of his
property. When purchased, 90 percent of the property
was
able to be sub-divided; houses could be built on
separate titles; a range
of activities other than farming
were all possible.
Since then, the Banks Peninsula
District Plan has steadily changed. None
of these things
are now possible: new forestry isn't allowed, and
setting
up tourism ventures - or industrial, commercial
or residential operations
- is illegal, or the costs so
high as to be prohibitive.
This landowner has effectively
had his property rights stolen and, adding
insult to
injury, he's been told his property is worth more than ever
'so
we'll have more rates, thanks very much'.
He summed
the situation: "Landowners are, in most cases, locked out of
new
possibilities because of the District Plan. Rural
land is now locked in a
time warp, but rates are
increasing at warp speed." Shame on you, Banks
Peninsula
District Council. If others have 'Red Tape' stories of
this
nature, I'd love to hear them.
Lest We
Forget
This week our 17 Skyhawks were permanently parked
outside their Woodbourne
Air Force Base hangar to make
way for the C130 Hercules that are to undergo
an
upgrading process.
If Defence Minister Phil Goff is to be
believed, the Skyhawks are due for
an almost imminent
sale - one must admire his optimism in the face
of
overwhelming evidence to the contrary. In reality, Mr
Goff is fooling no
one but himself; the Skyhawks are now
of very little - if any - value, and
will never fly again
in New Zealand.
In a bid to prevent them from
deteriorating in the weather, the jets have
been sprayed
with a latex covering. I'm told they've also undergone
an
'inhibiting' process in which fluid is drained from
all systems, and a
protective fluid then injected back in
- something of an embalming
process.
While in the US, I
visited Nellis Air Force Base where I learned how the
US
Air Force stores its Skyhawks: the jets go through the same
process as
ours, but the airframes are stored in the very
dry desert environment.
They also remove the engines and
avionics and store them indoors, because
the latex
coating does not offer them adequate protection.
While
Blenheim has great weather by New Zealand standards, it is
not as
dry as the desert. Our Skyhawks have their
engines and avionics in place,
so they too will soon be
'weathered'.
This week's storage option for the Skyhawks
signals the death of a once
proud Air Combat Force fleet.
The sale is doomed, and the 17 aircraft are
now
worthless. The Air Force could be using them to train
engineers - or a
much kinder option would be to sell them
off one-by-one to collectors and
enthusiasts, who would
take much better care of them than 'parking them
up' to
weather in the elements.
The MacDonald Douglas A4 Skyhawks
are 1960's aircraft. There are still
approximately 3,000
around the world - most still flying as
training
aircraft. They have seen combat three times:
Israel used them against the
Arabs, US used them during
Vietnam, and the Argentinians used them against
the UK in
the Falklands
war.
ENDS