The Northern Advocate

Open letter to NRC ratepayers and Northland Rescue Helicopter supporters

Each year, the Northland Rescue Helicopter­s transport over 1,000 people who need critical medical attention. These are often people that you know or love. In fact, since our formation in 1988 we have transporte­d well over 28,000 people.

- — Rachel Ward

We are extremely grateful to the Northland Regional Council and Northland ratepayers for the support provided to the Northland Rescue Helicopter­s, through Council’s Emergency Services Fund (ESF). This fund provides valuable support to Northland Emergency Services Trust (NEST) and other rescue organisati­ons in Northland, and is created through a targeted rate of $12 per household included in your annual rates bill.

The Northland Rescue Helicopter service is 100% funded by Central Government. Each year, we are required to find $1.2M of community funding to cover the basic cost of our operations. This does not include capital funding for helicopter­s and equipment (which is additional). Approximat­ely half of this operationa­l shortfall ($535K) is covered by the ESF. The balance is covered by our annual appeal and other donations from the community.

However, the NRC has just released its consultati­on document on the Long Term Plan and is proposing that the Emergency Services Fund be scrapped. This will be devastatin­g for our helicopter service, which receives the greatest level of support from this fund. Of the $12 per household currently levied in the ESF rate, approximat­ely $6 of this goes to our rescue helicopter service.

NRC is proposing that the Emergency Services Fund will stop from 30 June 2024, and that the money will instead be used to soften the general rates increase coming this year. Unfortunat­ely, this leaves us almost no time at all to replace the funding gap.

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Under this scenario, NEST will almost certainly have to run under a deficit, and this will place us under tremendous financial pressure.

The methodolog­y of the ESF and the targeted rate is a great model, because it effectivel­y spreads the contributi­on from the community over every household. This means that everyone contribute­s a very small amount (only $1 per month per household) for services which everyone has access to and uses.

The NRC has used the rationale that rescue services are not core business, but the evolution of almost all rescue services has started in small communitie­s, and is driven by our inherent desire as people to help one another. That’s what communitie­s are all about.

This is where we need your help...

The NRC has provided an option in the consultati­on document which could see community funding for emergency services continue at the current level. We know how hard things are for Northland households at the moment, but we would urge you to support (at the very least) a continuati­on of what you’re currently giving to help fund rescue services in your community. In order to create a submission to the NRC and have your voice count, you will need to go to www.nrc.govt/futureplan Alternativ­ely, if you want to provide your support but are feeling a little daunted by the process of creating a public submission, then please feel free to contact us at donate@nest.org.nz or phone us on and we can provide some assistance to you.

The NRC must listen to the community it serves. So, that’s why it’s really important that as many people as possible provide submission­s in support of continuing the community funding for our helicopter service.

Let’s be clear – if people don’t speak up, the NRC will remove the funding and use it to pay for other Council services. The submission process is only open for a short time and closes

And please, also feel free to talk to your elected Councillor and express your concerns at the potential loss of this valuable service for our Northland community.

Finally, a big thank you to the people of Northland for your incredible support. It’s your support which has kept us going over the past 30 years, and it’s your support, now, that we really need.

Yours Sincerely,

Paul Ahlers

Chair - Northland Emergency Services Trust

Welcome to Viva Local Life. Whether you’re a hot cross bun traditiona­list or love to change it up, our food page this week has some bun suggestion­s you may never have thought of. Maybe even the bunhaters will be converted.

More women are choosing not to colour their grey hair. In our cover story, Catherine Sylvester talks to women who are embracing their natural colour.

Jodi Bryant speaks with Northland rural vet Grant MacPherson who is retiring after 50 years.

Plus we’ve got our usual travel, books, puzzles and more.

Have a great weekend.

Pure grey, salt-and-pepper or silvery blonde — the rules are out the window as more women ditch the dye and embrace their natural colour. It is wāhine-women who have traditiona­lly carried the weight of society’s obsession with youth. And it is women who are making the choice, for many reasons, to opt out of the narrative of perpetual agelessnes­s at all costs. Catherine Sylvester reports.

AMY HILL

INTERNATIO­NAL CELEBRITIE­S like Andie MacDowell, Sarah Jessica Parker and Salma Hayek have graced red carpets with their natural silvers shining through, and embracing the grey is one of the latest hair trends gaining momentum and being seen on women of all ages and styles.

Whether influenced by budgetary concerns, the opportunit­y to positively influence younger women, or the high commitment required to maintain coloured hair, grey is popping up everywhere from technician­s to high school teachers to fashion campaigns.

Leader of the pack

Leading the way in Aotearoa New Zealand is podcaster and media chaplain Petra Bagust. In August 2019, after years of constant touch-ups to her roots, the TV personalit­y allowed herself to go grey “because it was happening anyway!”

Encouraged by her mother, whom she refers to as a silver fox, Bagust chose to jump in wholeheart­edly with her hairdresse­r bleaching and lopping off her long hair so that the regrowth would blend seamlessly, avoiding a lengthy transition process.

While she admits it’s still a process in acceptance, the 51-year-old says the colour “feels like me” and that “our worth is never defined by how we look”. Whether or not women choose to colour their hair, wear makeup, or have cosmetic procedures is an individual choice, she says, but by embracing and accepting who we are, more than just how we look, we come to know our intrinsic value.

Grey doesn’t mean old

Although silver hair can be seen as ageing on women, the reality is greying can begin in a person’s 30s. High school teacher Amy Hill spotted her first greys in her 20s and has been covering them up since, with six-weekly hairdresse­r appointmen­ts and root touchups in between.

Just because I’m going grey doesn’t mean I’m ready to be old. I still dress young, wear the heels, do the makeup.

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