Whanganui Chronicle

‘Stroppy’ we¯ta¯ more widespread than thought

Says social housing, lack of CCTV to blame for assaults, sex attacks

- Mike Dinsdale

Carnivorou­s flying insect the Australian winged we¯ta¯ is more widespread in Northland than first thought, after news broke last week it had been found in the Far North.

Doubtless Bay entomologi­st Dr Jenny Dymock said the Australian winged we¯ta¯ — Pteropotre­chus species — had establishe­d itself in the Far North. Two specimens had been found at Cable Bay this month, one in a letterbox and the other in a children’s paddling pool.

The Australian we¯ta¯, also known in Australia as the king cricket, was about 30 to 35mm long. It arrived in New Zealand in 1990, she said, but until recently had only been recorded

in Auckland, South Auckland and Coromandel.

However, since the Northern Advocate’s story was published last week, it had been viewed more than 215,000 times on the newspaper’s

Facebook page as of yesterday, with many people horrified at the thought that the “stroppy” flying insect was now living here.

Dymock said she had received plenty of interest in the winged we¯ta¯ since the story was published and it was clear the insect was in other parts of Northland, but exactly how widespread was yet to be determined.

The winged we¯ ta¯ looks just like the NZ we¯ ta¯ , except it has wings. NZ we¯ ta¯ are wingless and flightless.

However, Dymock said, confoundin­g the issue was that people may get the Australian winged we¯ta¯ confused with the olive green coastal katydid, which has been in Northland for several years now and has also reached Auckland.

Wellington National list MP Nicola Willis has issued a challenge for MPs after violence continues to escalate in the capital.

“I don’t feel safe. “I encourage any minister to walk down Courtenay Place, to walk through Manners Mall on any day of the week, at any time, and tell me they feel safe and if they don’t feel safe, they need to be doing more to ensure others can.”

On her way to caucus, Willis said she felt “really uncomforta­ble” walking through the city past “yelling”, “aggressive” patched gang members.

“It doesn’t feel like the Wellington I grew up in and it’s not the Wellington I want my kids to grow up in.”

The city’s safety has been in the spotlight recently after a string of serious assaults, including a fatal attack outside Te Papa earlier this year.

Police data shows the number of sexual assaults in Wellington has increased by nearly half in the past five years.

The number of acts intended to cause injury, including common and serious assault, has grown by 35 per cent over the same period.

Willis said part of the issue regarding increasing sexual assaults could be partly down to social housing in the central city and the Government was not putting in place enough support for people in emergency housing.

However, she believed another factor was the reduction of the use of closed-circuit cameras.

In a statement, Wellington City Council said there had been no reduction in CCTV monitoring and it had strengthen­ed the programme.

“To provide the police and Wellington City Council to have a structured and planned approach to how we respond in real-time and/or to emerging issues in the city.

“The CCTV base has a direct link (2 way-radio contact) with

It doesn’t feel

like the Wellington I grew up in and

it’s not the Wellington I want my kids to grow up in.

Nicola Willis

the police for immediate response and has been directly instrument­al in assisting with arrests.”

The City Safety CCTV team oversees 64 cameras in the city.

“I am concerned about the explosion in emergency housing, New Zealand is now spending $11 million a day putting people in motels.

“That’s not good for them, and it’s not good for the taxpayer and we’re seeing the results in central Wellington at the moment,” Willis said.

“The Government has absolutely failed.”

However, Wellington Central MP Grant Robertson said across New Zealand there are concerns about gang activity, and they have to work together to make it safer.

“We’ve invested a significan­t amount of money in wrap-around services through programmes like Housing First but also through the work of a number of NGOs that we fund.”

He said it’s important to them that those people are not back on the street.

If she were at the helm, the National housing spokeswoma­n said she would work with non-government organisati­ons, charities and the City Mission to provide more appropriat­e housing.

“I’d like to see more houses being built, the Government releasing more houses for developmen­t, and more transition­al housing.

“Supported accommodat­ion for people who frankly often have very complex problems.”

Willis said gangs were taking advantage of problems within the central city and she was hearing from people on the ground that there were more patched gang members than ever around town.

“And that’s because they know there’s now a client base, that’s vulnerable people that they know they can deal drugs. That’s a bad recipe for those vulnerable people.”

Last year the Herald revealed the number of members and prospectiv­e gang members in the region had nearly doubled since 2016.

 ??  ?? Doubtless Bay entomologi­st Dr Jenny Dymock says Australian winged we¯ ta¯ are in Northland to stay, but how widespread the biting insect is has yet to be determined.
Doubtless Bay entomologi­st Dr Jenny Dymock says Australian winged we¯ ta¯ are in Northland to stay, but how widespread the biting insect is has yet to be determined.
 ??  ?? The Australian winged we¯ta¯ has arrived in the Far North and is now believed to be in other parts of Northland too.
The Australian winged we¯ta¯ has arrived in the Far North and is now believed to be in other parts of Northland too.
 ??  ??
 ?? Photo / Mark Tantrum ?? National Party list MP Nicola Willis says she feels unsafe walking the streets of central Wellington.
Photo / Mark Tantrum National Party list MP Nicola Willis says she feels unsafe walking the streets of central Wellington.

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