The Southland Times

Record repairs for cars hit by hail

- Anan Zaki of RNZ

An Australian-based team of hail damage repairers has set up a base in Timaru to fix cars damaged in a recent hailstorm.

Thousands of vehicles were hit in the November storm, which brought golf ball-sized hail.

Queensland-based company Hail Response Team flew out to Timaru about two weeks ago.

Its managing director, John Ashton, said the company chased hailstorms all over the world and had set up a temporary shop in Timaru.

He said the company was helping insurers, panel beaters and individual­s, and it expected to repair thousands of damaged cars.

AA Insurance said the number of claims was the largest it had ever dealt with for car insurance, with about 1000 claims so far.

Ashton said repairing haildamage­d cars in Timaru would take at least six months.

‘‘New Zealand, and certain places like Timaru, don’t really get hailstorms too often,’’ Ashton said.

‘‘So once we heard and saw what was going on, we kind of put one and two together – like it didn’t quite sound like it was going the way that Australia handled it.

‘‘I have spent probably seven months in South Africa, a couple of seasons in different parts of Europe, Germany, France, Czech Republic, parts of Turkey, different parts of America, Canada,’’ he said.

However, this was his first time in New Zealand.

Ashton said as most of Hail

‘‘When these sorts of events occur anywhere in the world, there are specialise­d teams of hail repairers – they are kind of a bit like storm chasers if you will – that tend to follow these events.’’ Neil Pritchard

Collision Repair Associatio­n general manager

Response Team’s staff were Australian, they used the special category visa to work in New Zealand, but workers from other countries were on temporary work visas.

The national body representi­ng panel beaters said it was not unusual to bring in overseas workers for hail damage, as local businesses could be under pressure.

Collision Repair Associatio­n general manager Neil Pritchard said New Zealand did not have the kind of resources to be able to repair all those vehicles in a timely fashion, because such hailstorms were so infrequent.

‘‘When these sorts of events occur anywhere in the world, there are specialise­d teams of hail repairers – they are kind of a bit like storm chasers if you will – that tend to follow these events,’’ Pritchard said. – RNZ

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand