The New Zealand Herald

Donor waits on new law for full pay

- Simon Collins

Aman who donated a kidney to his brother will have to wait at least two months to be paid in full for his lost pay, because of a delay in implementi­ng a new law.

Lima Fata-meafou, 42, has had to take six weeks’ leave from his job at a Hutt Valley bottling plant after giving one of his kidneys to his brother Misialofa, 45, last week.

Parliament passed a private member’s bill brought by Hutt National MP Chris Bishop last December that will pay all organ donors all the income they lose for up to 12 weeks after the donation.

But donors can’t apply for backdated pay until the new law comes into force, which Bishop hopes will happen in the next two months.

Until then, Fata-meafou and other donors are only entitled to the jobseeker’s benefit, which can be topped up to their normal wages retrospect­ively after the law change takes effect.

Fata-meafou said his partner was working, but the couple have a 2-yearold daughter and will struggle to cope on the reduced income.

“We are paying rent,” he said. “I think we probably could cope, but that will be just scraping it.” His brother Misialofa, a father of five, has been on dialysis since last year when his kidney function dropped to 7 per cent after several years of high blood pressure.

“The main symptom tiredness,” he said.

He was placed on the waiting list for a kidney transplant from a deceased donor and the family of five brothers gathered to talk about it.

“My youngest brother came forward, but he had some health complicati­ons,” Misialofa said.

“Then my second-youngest brother [Lima] came forward. It took nine months to do the tests, they do a thorough check through the body. He’s pretty healthy.” Lima said his life had changed since he and his longterm partner Julia had their daughter Eljaye, named after the initials of their first names, two years ago.

“I was the black sheep of the family. I enjoyed my life. I didn’t really care about the consequenc­es,” he said.

“But as time got on and your friends start having children and your friends become grandparen­ts, you start to think, ‘ Oh, let’s try and have a baby together’.” He said Julia cried on the day he went into Wellington Hospital to donate his kidney.

“I wanted her blessing before I went into the operation. I’ve known her for 19 years so I know that it’s something she was just scared of, but I still wanted to do it,” he said.

“I’m grateful to have done what I’ve done. It’s not just me, it’s the surgeons and everybody else who had a part to play in it.”

Bishop said he brought in the new law to boost New Zealand’s low rates of organ transplant­s. “People who donate live organs are heroes.” was

 ??  ?? Lima Fata-meafou (foreground) who donated a kidney to his brother Misialofa Fata-meafou.
Lima Fata-meafou (foreground) who donated a kidney to his brother Misialofa Fata-meafou.

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