About 230 jobs at New Zealand’s largest paper mill are at risk after an Oji Fibre Solutions proposal to halt paper production at Kinleith Mill in mid-2025. Now, a community-led campaign, “Save Our Jobs! Save Our Mill!” has launched to spotlight the cost potential job losses could have on Tokoroa. Maryana Garcia sat down with community advocates to talk about the mill’s importance to the town and their hopes for the campaign’s first event, which Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters is expected to attend.
When Kinleith Mill employee Kyle Pourau found out his job was at risk in a proposal to cut paper production, his first reaction was shock.
“What? How am I going to feed the kids? How am I going to put food on the table? How am I going to pay the mortgage? How am I going to clothe people?
“All that sort of stuff goes rushing through your head straight away.”
But there was another question at the top of Pourau’s mind.
Pourau, 35, has worked in and around the timber industry his whole professional life, first as an auto electrician servicing mill vehicles and logging equipment, then as a production operator for 13 years.
He knew instantly that the effects of the potential 230 job losses would ripple through the town of Tokoroa.
“We’re not just workers. We’re people in the community, too,” he told the Herald.
“Our workers are the volunteers for the sports clubs, the people on the boards of trustees at schools. A majority of the volunteer firefighters in this town are Kinleith workers.
“It even goes down to the people we buy our energy drinks off in the morning, the people who clean our overalls.”
South Waikato YMCA general manager Julius Daniels said in Tokoroa “everybody knows somebody” directly connected to Kinleith Mill in the past or the present.
“We’re all reliant on each other.
“When you think of Tokoroa, you think Timbertown. Tokoroa was built on New Zealand forest products.”
Daniels is a third-generation Cook Islander born in Tokoroa after his great-grandparents migrated to New Zealand to work at what is now known as Kinleith Mill.
“All the families that work there, I know. More than enough of the people who work out there are directly related to me.”
“This is going to be the beginning of the end if we don’t do anything about it.”
Pourau and Daniels are two of the Tokoroa community members on the core team helping to organise the Save Our Jobs! Save Our Mill! campaign.
The campaign and community event have also been supported by Tokoroa-raised Green Party MP Tamatha Paul.
In a social media post promoting the Save Our Mill community event, Paul said Tokoroa could become an inspiration to industrial towns everywhere.
“The entire future and survival of our hometown relies on the Mill.”
An Oji Fibre Solutions spokesperson said the company was “very supportive” of the community’s efforts and acknowledged the mill’s importance to the region.
“We have made every effort to ensure we continue operating at the site.
“We have a proposal at this stage, and we want input from our employees, or anybody else with good ideas.
“However, paper production at Kinleith faces some big challenges, with dramatically increasing input costs and declining production,” the spokesperson said.
Maryana Garcia is a Hamilton-based reporter covering breaking news in Waikato. She previously wrote for the Rotorua Daily Post and Bay of Plenty Times.