Horowhenua Chronicle

Celebratin­g wa¯ hine who achieve

Tia Potae receives Primary Industries award

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You get to travel all over New Zealand and hopefully soon we’ll be able to travel all around the world again. Tia Potae

Top woolhandle­r and wool classer Tia Potae has won the inaugural Primary Industries award at the 2021 New Zealand Women of Influence Awards.

The awards celebrate highachiev­ing wa¯hine who are making a difference in the lives of New Zealanders.

Potae is a Wha¯nau Ora navigator at Tokomairir­o Waiora and won the award for supporting shearers and their families through the challenges of Covid-19.

During the 2020 lockdown, she developed an online programme for wool, forestry and fishing industry workers who found it difficult to access services after hours. She also helped workers access the wage subsidy scheme.

“On the first day of the level 4 lockdown in 2020, I got a call asking if I would be happy to help people during the Covid pandemic,” Potae told The Country’s Jamie Mackay.

“Of course, it was such a great opportunit­y that I jumped at the chance.”

This led to two years working with the Ministry for Primary Industries along with “other organisati­ons that are passionate about agricultur­al jobs“, she said.

Potae is a rural navigator for Tokomairir­o Waiora, a kaupapa Ma¯ori health service providing Wha¯nau Ora services in South Otago.

Her rural navigator programme was a response to a Te Pu¯tahitanga

o Te Waipounamu 2019 survey of wool harvesters which found they needed better access to health and social services.

Potae has been in the shearing industry all her life, representi­ng New Zealand in woolhandli­ng in 2005 and 2013.

She also has a small business, Taki Toru Woolshed Services, where she runs her own training programme.

In 2018 she wrote a training booklet, and over the years has been contracted to Elite Wool Industry

Training and WOMOlife.

While balancing woolhandli­ng and wool classing with her Wha¯nau Ora work was difficult, Potae had great support from her base in Milton.

“[They] allowed me to continue to follow my passion with the wool classing and go away for eight weeks over the wintertime and so that made it much easier to continue that side of the work.

“And just with my rural navigation job in Milton, it helped me to assess funding and start wa¯ nanga so that we

could start training young people up to get ready for work in agricultur­al industries.”

The Potae name was well known in shearing circles and the family was “very proud” of their background, she said.

“We are always very encouragin­g of getting new people involved and teaching them as best we can so they’re ready for work when they join the shearing crews.”

Potae has moved from Milton to the Coromandel, where she hoped to connect with farmers and start up a few training days for “some of our young people that haven’t yet found themselves a career to chase”. It wasn’t all about sheep either. “There’s lots of fishing and barge work and mussel farm and oyster farm work that goes on up here, so encouragin­g that side of the agricultur­al business will be a big part of our next step in this mahi as well.”

While shearing and wool handling was “hard work”, it was worth it if you were willing to put in the effort, Potae said.

“As long as you’re in the right frame of mind and you’re willing to get up every day at 5am and put in the hard yards and if you’re okay with a bit of banter at work and some loud music playing it’s definitely a great lifestyle.

“You get to travel all over New Zealand and hopefully soon we’ll be able to travel all around the world again.”

However, there was one aspect of shearing life that Potae admitted she hadn’t warmed to yet — ACDC.

“I still haven’t become a fan,” she laughed.

 ?? ?? Tia Potae is a Wha¯ nau Ora navigator at Tokomairir­o Waiora and won the award for supporting shearers and their families through the challenges of Covid-19.
Tia Potae is a Wha¯ nau Ora navigator at Tokomairir­o Waiora and won the award for supporting shearers and their families through the challenges of Covid-19.

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