The Northland Age

Making a difference

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Our Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern, made some big announceme­nts when she attended the Waitangi Day celebratio­ns last week. Each of those announceme­nts will have a positive impact on both Northland, and the rest of the country, and are amongst the latest initiative­s being supported by the Provincial Growth Fund.

Te Ara Mahi is an $82 million programme that will help get my nephews — and possibly yours too — off the couch and into productive work. Te Ara Mahi will support people who are at risk of long-term unemployme­nt throughout the country, but it will have a much bigger impact in the North, especially the Far North, because of our high rates of unemployme­nt.

It will also help employers who are struggling to find workers, or who need help to support new employees who have been unemployed for some time or never acquired the skills to hold down steady work.

Too many of our young people have fallen through the cracks, leaving school without qualificat­ions or many of the basic life skills needed to make a living. Te Ara Mahi will support people to remedy those deficits in a dignified and positive way.

In Northland we also have a lot of Ma¯ori land that isn’t being used to its full potential. Top-class horticultu­ral land may be used for grazing sheep and cattle. Or sheep and cattle or dairy farms are perhaps not being run efficientl­y because of a lack of investment. With multiple land owners and a different legal structure, it can be hard to get finance from traditiona­l lenders to invest in this land.

Supporting Ma¯ori economic developmen­t is a key focus of this government’s regional developmen­t efforts. That’s why we have establishe­d the Whenua Ma¯ori Fund, which will provide $100m from the Provincial Growth Fund to partner with Ma¯ori and help unlock the potential in their land.

Also announced was investment to help some Northland and Far North communitie­s to grow and connect with the wider world.

In Kaipara the PGF is investing more than $20.3m in upgrades to the roading network, wharves and water transport. This will support local industry and make the roads safer for all residents.

Just under $1m will be used to support Kaipara Kai, a project to look at possible new crops, stock types and aquacultur­e for the region.

Another $21m is being invested nationally to improve digital connectivi­ty, by connecting marae to fast internet and establishi­ng Regional Digital Hubs to provide people and businesses with access to digital services. Two Northland marae, Oramahoe, near Moerewa, and Te Houhanga, at Dargaville, are among the first to be connected.

These investment­s won’t make up for years of neglect from successive government­s on their own, but they will make a difference.

I look forward to making more announceme­nts from the PGF that help to close that gap, both in Northland and other neglected parts of our country.

"In Kaipara the PGF is investing more than $20.3m in upgrades to the roading network, wharves and water transport."

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