The New Zealand Herald

Price of car registrati­on set to drop tomorrow

Pay rises for care workers and Pharmac subsidies among other measures coming

- Isaac Davison

Motorists, in particular electric car drivers, will pay lower registrati­on fees as part of a raft of changes that come into force tomorrow.

July 1 is the implementa­tion date for a range of Government policies, including ACC motor vehicle changes, new Pharmac funding, and other payments.

Most significan­tly, it marks the point at which 55,000 low-paid workers in women-dominated industries will get a pay rise.

Under a historic pay equity settlement in April, up to 55,000 people in the aged residentia­l care, home support and disability service sectors will get up to $100 more a week.

The 20,000 workers on the minimum wage of $15.75 will have their income lifted to at least $19 an hour.

The cost of car registrati­ons will fall from around $130 to $113 per vehicle from tomorrow, the third consecutiv­e annual decrease.

The drop is much more significan­t for electric car registrati­on, which will fall from around $100 to as low as $17 a year. Motorcycle registrati­ons, on the other hand, will stay the same.

The new rates will apply for the next two years and motorists will save a total of around $113 million.

Military veterans with permanent injuries will get around $18 more a week, while childcare support for soldiers killed in conflict zones will also rise. There are understood to be about six families of dead soldiers who are eligible for this entitlemen­t.

The drug-buying agency Pharmac’s latest round of subsidised medicines and treatments will become available on July 1.

The latest drugs to be funded include melatonin, a drug which is given to children or teenagers whose neurodevel­opmental disorders affect their sleep. There are also new treatments for people with hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and lung disease.

The Government increased Pharmac funding by $60m in this year’s Budget, taking its total annual funding to $870m.

As announced earlier this week, Pharmac will also fund the chickenpox vaccine, making if free for children aged 15 months.

Around 60,000 children are born each year in New Zealand and all of them will be able to get the vaccine. It will also be extended to children turning 11 from July 1 who have never been immunised against, or infected by chickenpox.

New Zealanders living in Australia will get access to a new pathway to citizenshi­p from tomorrow. It is available for expatriate­s who arrived in Australia between February 26, 2001, and February 19, 2016, and earned more than A$53,000 a year for five consecutiv­e years.

As of tomorrow, the countdown will begin for earthquake-prone buildings to be assessed and upgraded, following law changes last year.

Wellington building owners have five years to get their buildings assessed, and 15 years to bring them up to code. Auckland buildings owners have between 15 for assessment and 35 years for upgrades.

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