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  1. #2921
    Guru
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
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    3,957

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    Quote Originally Posted by Daytr View Post

    The condition doesn't dictate the tone or opinion, just that there is coverage of Maori issues.
    Delusional.

  2. #2922
    Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2020
    Location
    Lower Hutt
    Posts
    491

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    No - I didn't present that.
    Funding can help promote - that very clearly indicates that while not set as a condition it is possible that a well funded media can promote a wide variety of views. I said and nothing I posted said it MUST or that it SHOULD.
    By all means if a media outlet wishes to promote that content because it's seen as pertinant, relevant and within wider publics interest.

    Maybe you are getting confused with countries that do think it's ok for governments to influence their media? You know the ones? the ones we are very lucky not to live in?

  3. #2923
    Membaa
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Paradise
    Posts
    5,354

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    Quote Originally Posted by thegreatestben View Post
    No - I don't have any issue with the fact it's Maori.
    The problem is that there ARE conditions, not the flavour.
    A refresh on what those conditions (obligations) were for media to conform to in order to obtain PIJF funding. Some of these conditions are extraordinary and have been severely criticised ever since.

    https://d3r9t6niqlb7tz.cloudfront.ne...es_updated.pdf

  4. #2924
    Dilettante
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    Down & out
    Posts
    5,442

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    Quote Originally Posted by Bjauck View Post
    I don’t know what you mean by News Media as I don’t know from where you get your news. However how would you amend this article on Mussel Spat from December 2022.

    https://www.nzherald.co.nz/northern-...NN2ARHD2NSOCA/
    Something along these lines for example:

    In the Far North, the flow-on effect of the unlawful actions of local iwi are now threatening the mussel farming industry.

    Every year between August and November – the breeding season for green-lipped mussels – seaweed covered in mussel spat is dislodged by rough seas and washed ashore. Once beached, the spat dies, so commercial harvesters scoop up the seaweed from shallow water, load it into refrigerated trucks and transport it to mussel farms all around the country.

    The spat is then farmed for up to two more years, before the fully grown mussels are exported to more than 70 countries around the world.

    Such is the global demand for green-lipped mussels, that this $350 million industry with 2,500 jobs, has the potential to become a $1 billion enterprise.

    Mussel spat has been harvested from 90 Mile Beach since the ’70s. The mechanical harvesters that have been used for decades are essentially raised tractors with scoops and wide tyres.

    The number of spat harvesters is strictly controlled by the quota management system, and the collection methods follow a long-established code of conduct set by Aquaculture New Zealand that requires the mechanical harvesters to avoid shellfish beds, limit time on the beach, and steer clear of areas of high public and cultural importance.

    But in 2019, local iwi decided to disrupt the industry.

    Without proof they claimed mechanical harvesting was damaging toheroa beds and leading to a decline in numbers.

    This is at odds with NIWA research from 2007 that showed the impact of mechanical harvesting on the toheroa beds was minimal. This was later confirmed by Fisheries New Zealand research in 2020.

    In 2015 a Waikato University report on the decline of toheroa identified poaching as the problem: “Illegal harvesting of toheroa is widespread and frequent. The customary take is probably out of control in some places… Based on our recent observations in Northland, illegal harvesting of ‘protected’ toheroa is widespread, frequent and has in some cases resulted in the reduction and disappearance of adult toheroa beds.”

    The iwi, however, pointed their finger at mussel spat collectors. To avoid conflict, the industry agreed to hand harvesting in the area of concern – where most of the spat lands. As a result, collectors with butterfly-style nets are forced to battle heavy surf as they attempt to scoop up the seaweed. It is difficult and dangerous work that is severely limiting their harvest to only a fraction of what’s needed to sustain the domestic mussel industry.

    The flow-on effect is that mussel lines are operating at less than capacity and employment numbers are down. The industry is being held to ransom, starved of its major resource because of fabricated claims being made by Far North iwi.

    Is this situation a foretaste of what’s in store once iwi control the coast?

    There is talk that the disruption is part of a long-term strategy by iwi to gain control of spat supply.

    Iwi already control marine mammal watching operations. By choking off the supply of spat, are they angling for control of mussel farming as well?

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