The Post

Libby Wilson

They normally rescue others, but now surf lifesavers are asking to be rescued themselves. reports.

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Ella Boyens has spent this summer on the beach. She wasn’t relaxing in the water or sunbathing, though – she’s a surf lifesaver who has dealt with everything from sprained ankles to head injuries.

On a sunny morning at Raglan’s Ngarunui Beach, there’s a woman doing yoga on her towel, board short-clad boys tossing a rugby ball, a drone buzzing out of a gazebo, and a steady influx of surfers. The water’s balmy, wave height is about 73cm, and Boyens is one of four paid lifeguards keeping everyone safe.

At weekends, volunteer guards take over.

Both groups have a problem: money. There isn’t enough.

Paid and volunteer guards around New Zealand have rescued or assisted more than 2000 people this season and patrolled more than 100,000 hours, Surf Life Saving New Zealand statistics show. But clubs tell of ailing beach vehicles, volunteer guards forking out for fins, jackets and wetsuits, and some patrolling more than 150 hours in a season.

Club members fill out grant applicatio­n after grant applicatio­n to find the tens of thousands of dollars for equipment, compliance and club overheads.

Overarchin­g organisati­ons Surf Life Saving New Zealand and Surf Life Saving Northern Region have a tough time with money, too, despite dedicated long-term sponsors.

The Northern Region says it needs $12 million more for each of the next three years and is asking for government help.

It has already taken guards off two beaches and moved them to more dangerous swimming spots.

On top of that, there’s a list of old clubhouses needing work.

It’s also hand-to-mouth at Surf Life Saving New Zealand, but that group says club infrastruc­ture is the heart of the movement and therefore the priority for funding.

But it wouldn’t say no if the government wanted to fund paid guards.

Back in Raglan, Boyens is in her fourth season as a paid guard and seventh as a volunteer.

She scans the beach as she talks about dealing with head injuries from collisions involving surfers, taking the rescue boat out in challengin­g conditions and calming panicked swimmers during in-water rescues.

Guards try to avoid rescue situations by warning swimmers before they get into trouble.

She’s partway through studying to be a paramedic, so she’s the kind of person you’d want to have around if you get into trouble.

Sometimes she spends five days working the beach on paid patrols and comes back to volunteer at the weekend.

Funding isn’t something she deals with, but she’d love an extra pair of hands on some patrols – the beach doesn’t stop being busy while there’s a serious incident.

Raglan’s beach could have about 800 people on a busy day, Surf Life Saving Club chairman Mark Shrimpton says.

‘‘Imagine looking after that with 10 or 15 lifeguards.’’

The club has about 60 volunteer patrollers, but often struggles to get patrols with the right mix of skills to cover weekends.

A lot of younger guards go off to work and study in other cities, he says, so the club is regularly recruiting. And volunteers aren’t just giving up their time.

They’re handed the red and yellow shorts and shirt when they qualify, Shrimpton says, but pay about $500 for their own fins, a wetsuit and branded jacket.

The club would like to help, but it’s trying to find the $125,000 plus it needs just to keep functionin­g each year.

On the Coromandel Peninsula, Whangamata lifeguards could be watching almost 10,000 people along 4 kilometres of beach in peak periods.

There will be 15 to 20 guards, many aged 14 to 21, club president Nathan Hight says.

He doesn’t think central government should foot the whole Surf Life Saving bill, but wants a conversati­on about expectatio­ns of the service.

In the 21 years Hight has been involved with the club, he’s seen beach usage increase – exponentia­lly up the coast at Hot Water Beach.

More and more beachgoers haven’t grown up near the ocean and don’t understand its dangers, he says, but guards also respond to out-of-the-water incidents: heart attacks, drug overdoses, heat stroke.

The Whangamata club needs about $350,000 a year to function and Hight says the funding model’s not sustainabl­e.

Surf Life Saving Northern Region, which represents 17 clubs, is sounding the alarm.

‘‘We see there’s going to be a critical problem . . . let’s have the conversati­ons in advance,’’ chief executive Matt Williams says.

Northern Region needs about $12m extra a year for 2018 to 2021, Williams says, for work like rebuilding or revamping clubhouses, putting more lifeguards on beaches, and improving the emergency radio network.

The organisati­on has already tried to find new funding streams. Many of the grants it does have are uncertain and often have applicatio­n rounds every three months.

Instead, Williams’ organisati­on would like to propose a joint funding model involving local and central government, which would cover areas like paid guards, operationa­l funds and the overheads for umbrella organisati­ons such as his.

If the government funded all New Zealand’s paid guards, it would cost somewhere around $2.5m, Surf Life Saving NZ chief executive Paul Dalton says.

It’s not ‘‘gazillions of dollars’’, so the suggestion is worth making, he says.

Surf Life Saving New Zealand covers all 74 Kiwi clubs and Dalton says it’s a hand-to-mouth existence for many.

The national organisati­on has key sponsor partners such as TSB, DHL and BP, which provide about $2m.

Other money comes from mailouts for donations, sales of equipment bought in bulk, membership fees and sport entry fees, and ‘‘every kind of grant that’s out there’’ – but it’s getting tighter.

Clubs have local sponsors, plus door-knock and shake buckets, which can work for a $25,000 boat or $20,000 four-wheel drive vehicle, he says. If you need a $2m to $3m building, ‘‘you can’t sausage sizzle your way to that’’.

Still, the movement would be foolish to think the government would fund Surf Life Saving without also considerin­g services such as New Zealand Land Search and Rescue, Coastguard and the New Zealand Mountain Safety Council.

Local government provides funds for paid lifeguards around the country.

Waikato does it through a regional rate. The regional emergency services fund also contribute­s to Coastguard and rescue helicopter services, and has Waikato regional councillor and finance committee chairwoman Jane Hennebry’s support.

‘‘It’s a national issue. It should be nationally funded, but we just can’t wait for them,’’ she says.

Each Waikato property pays $3.74 into the fund, but Waikato Regional Council is proposing an increase to $4.13.

In central government, the contact is Community and Voluntary Sector Minister Peeni Henare, who has said he will meet ‘‘with ministeria­l colleagues who have an interest in the topic’’.

That’s expected to happen in the next month.

So, for now, Surf Life Saving clubs will keep shaking their buckets and churning out the grant applicatio­ns.

 ??  ?? Ella Boyens often works a week at Ngarunui Beach in Raglan, then goes back as an unpaid lifeguard at weekends.
Ella Boyens often works a week at Ngarunui Beach in Raglan, then goes back as an unpaid lifeguard at weekends.
 ??  ?? Brad Kehoe keeps an eye on the swimmers at Raglan. Weekday guards are paid but the ones on duty at the weekend are volunteers. PHOTOS: DOMINICO ZAPATA/STUFF
Brad Kehoe keeps an eye on the swimmers at Raglan. Weekday guards are paid but the ones on duty at the weekend are volunteers. PHOTOS: DOMINICO ZAPATA/STUFF

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