We appear to have a bureaucracy that is not reading the room. They are “the lads” here, not the public who are funding them.
An attitude change is overdue.
Barry Watkin, Devonport.
CBD money-grabbing
Mayor Wayne Brown seems helpless when asking/telling AT to not charge night rates to inner-city residents for parking.
He says he is “unhappy” with the proposed changes. He is not the only one who is unhappy.
Many workers on the lower pay scales will be adversely affected, costing them thousands more a year to park. It seems to me that AT is money-grabbing; Brown cannot just keep saying “I’m sick of it, they’re not listening...”
Chris Blenkinsopp Beach Haven.
Manipulating justice
Reading “Three Strikes is Government putting victims first” (NZ Herald, May 13), I agreed with Associate Justice Minister Nicole McKee until I read the following: ”We are proposing a reduction of up to 20 per cent below the mandatory sentence for a guilty plea at a third strike.”
How can a victim feel they are being put first when they see a violent offender on a third strike getting a reduction in their sentence by pleading guilty? Victims need to see justice is being done, not the offender taking advantage of, or manipulating, the system.
And advising those who wish to avoid a lengthy prison sentence to “stop committing violent and sexual crimes” will go in one ear and out the other.
Lorraine Kidd, Warkworth.
Energy user pays
Surely it’s in the Government’s best interests financially to not invest in additional power sources if Transpower can get away with running the grid system right on maximum capacity.
That way they can keep the power price right up there as they do now with power cuts simply being a part of the risk model that is factored in. The same idea as airlines do in overselling seats on a flight.
If the opposite were to be the case, with an over-supply of power, then there would be a valid argument to lower the price - which would not be in their interests. In short, make the consumer pay.
Paul Beck, West Harbour.
Rooftop solution
Thanks Ian Summerfield for your letter (NZ Herald, May 13) on the lack of support from Government and our power producers for rooftop solar energy generation. Even the Greens have been silent on this.
A forward-thinking government would recognise the opportunity that locally-generated solar power presents to our country. Flying into any of our large towns and cities, we see enormous warehouse roofs which could be used to power much of a community’s daytime needs, saving the hydro batteries for peak demand and periods of no wind or sunshine.
Money would be well spent subsidising solar on public and private buildings plus new builds, making solar an overwhelmingly positive option. Pressure also needs to go on the power generators to provide more reasonable buy-back prices to rooftop solar providers.
Does the Government not maintain a majority shareholding in these companies?
Every kilowatt of solar used is a kilowatt of storage that remains in the dams. There’s your battery.
The amount of rooftop solar power that could be generated in a region is proportional to the population/usage in that region - so there are minimal transmission costs.
Increasing populations need more roofs, private and public, which means more power - so it is future-proofed.
Am I missing something here?
Nick Rowe, Greenlane.
Training teachers
The Education Review Office has revealed the vast difference between theory and practice. The pattern of the past decades to base primary teacher training on university degrees is proving far less effective than the old style of teacher training colleges, where the emphasis was on hands-on experience in the classroom.
Even that was a change from my mother’s days when - in the 1920s - you did not even start at training college until you had spent at least one year as a “pupil teacher”, assisting a full teacher in the classroom. This meant that those unsuited to the job were weeded out before time and money was not wasted on trying to train them.
Jeanette Grant, Mt Eden.