The Press

Leaders face off on bubble

- Stuff reporters

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says there is a ‘‘realistic’’ prospect that a trans-Tasman bubble could be in place by September.

Ardern agreed yesterday with a high-powered business group examining the potential of a bubble between New Zealand and Australia, which said such an arrangemen­t could be in place by September.

‘‘I think that could be realistic. I have been careful about putting down specific dates. But I have been very focused on making sure that as soon as we are ready then we can move.’’

Ardern said health officials and epidemiolo­gists would need to be ‘‘comfortabl­e’’ that New Zealand and Australia won’t be a risk to one another ‘‘before we’re ready to go’’.

She said ‘‘September is realistic’’ but she wouldn’t give a specific date for when the bubble could be in place.

Ardern’s timeframe was at odds with the one presented by her deputy, NZ First leader Winston Peters. In the House, Peters was asked by National deputy leader Nikki Kaye whether he had a date he would like to see the bubble open. He replied, ‘‘yesterday’’.

Peters also said he would like flights to resume to Tasmania. He said internatio­nal students could fly to New Zealand and quarantine safely, a lifeline for the internatio­nal education sector.

NZ First has recently been taking starkly different positions from Labour on matters relating to the lockdown.

On Wednesday, Peters declared that New Zealand should already be down at alert level 1 and that the economic fallout from Covid-19 was now the enemy, not the virus itself.

But this was at odds with Ardern, who had said Cabinet would begin looking at the level 2 settings on June 8 and would make a decision on whether to move to level 1, no later than June 22.

‘‘We are keeping watch on how we are tracking in the meantime,’’ she said.

Skifield owners say Australian­s form a large part of their market and they are disappoint­ed the transTasma­n link will not reopen in July.

Bridget Legnavsky, general manager at Cardrona Alpine Resort in Wanaka, said Australian skiers were usually 30 to 40 per cent of their customer base and their winter season would be ‘‘much quieter’’ without them . She said it was ‘‘really important’’ that the Government give advance notice of opening borders so they and other businesses could hire staff for spring.

‘‘There’s been so much speculatio­n and it’s very hard on the workers. We need some certainty to plan.’’

Paul Anderson, chief executive of NZSki, said without overseas visitors, patronage this year would be no more than 40 per cent of normal for its Coronet Peak and Remarkable­s fields in Queenstown, and 70 to 80 per cent at Mt Hutt in Mid-Canterbury. Australian­s were their biggest overseas market.

But Anderson said an early September trans-Tasman link, well published in advance, could still mean several weeks of skiing.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is working towards a September opening of a trans-Tasman bubble but Deputy Prime Minister and NZ First leader Winston Peters says he would like to see it happen ‘‘yesterday’’.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is working towards a September opening of a trans-Tasman bubble but Deputy Prime Minister and NZ First leader Winston Peters says he would like to see it happen ‘‘yesterday’’.
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