Saturday 26 October 2019

SDHB - is it because of culture, or funding, or management?

The whole ODT article hasn't a word about WHY they are striking. 
Perhaps this is the achievement of April Strategy  - see Zzhuzhing up the culture, first SDHB now OU  - "improving the culture". By decreasing visibility?
I had to find the reason at Stuff.co.nz 


SDHB prepares for technologists' strike


https://www.odt.co.nz/news/dunedin/sdhb-prepares-technologists-strike

 *  *  *  *  *  *

Wait times to increase at Southern DHB as radiographers go on fifth strike



https://www.stuff.co.nz/southland-times/116912927/wait-times-to-increase-at-southern-dhb-as-radiographers-go-on-fifth-strike


....APEX Southland MIT delegate Shahn Smith said the removal of backpay and higher wages for more advanced positions were the two issues that were not resolved in last round of negotiations.
Those who work in CT or MRI or nuclear medicine have a more stressful job than someone working on X-rays and under negotiations they are not being rewarded for the larger workload, Smith said....

Zzhuzhing up the culture, first SDHB now OU


I'd have picked the stream of media revelations about nastiness, muddles and XOS egos damaging all the hard-working people within a clapped-out workplace running on the smell of an oily rag got a few people to pull their heads in and fingers out. 

Perhaps a few bum-kickings took place. Them's my thinks

Yet possibly it was due to a squad of imported consultants improving the culture.

Me, if I wanted some culture improved I'd look at SDHB and go, "Nah, I want heaps more improvement than that for the money." But then, I'm looking at it from the point of view of someone spending their own money.




The University of Otago has engaged a UK-based consultancy firm previously hired by the Southern District Health Board in a bid to improve its culture.



odt.co.nz
 The University of Otago has engaged a UK-based consultancy firm previously hired by the Southern District Health Board in a bid to improve its culture.
April Strategy is involved in an exercise branded "Shaping Our Culture, Together - He Waka Kotuia", led by the university's HR department....

...[T]he Tertiary Education Union (TEU) has said the mood at the university is at "a low ebb" following that review and others, with both academic and general staff worried about job security....

...TEU Dunedin organiser Phil Edwards said staff had experienced a period of "constant change and disruption" in recent years.
A TEU survey had found the support services review had entailed "three years of considerable uncertainty about the future ... and a significant loss of organisational knowledge caused by redundancies, redeployments and workload and workflow changes".
Other university reviews in recent years have involved humanities, physical education, human nutrition and the centre for material science and technology, and the current review into the Department of Marine Sciences.

https://www.odt.co.nz/news/dunedin/campus/university-of-otago/university-hires-uk-firm-improve-culture




Wouldn't the culture be more effectively enhanced by not continuously 
reducing education  provided, by not restructuring services such that the most 
effective experienced support staff were replaced by less experienced 
appointed to roles above their competence level? 

Is hiring a firm to improve the culture, after mishandling the basics of respect 
for people and education brought the mood to "a low ebb", not so much
a problem-solver as a mission to put lipstick on a pig? 

Aurora: "Reverse Midas" Steve Thompson Chairs both Aurora Energy & Alpine Energy

One day - don't hold your breath - there will be a special news item. 

"Aurora has been certified SNAFU-free!"

"To celebrate, 25000 biodegradable balloons tied to Royal Gala apples are being released for the benefit of the flying pigs in both provinces."


Steve Thompson is the Chair of both Aurora Energy and it's South Canterbury counterpart Alpine Energy. It's becoming clearer to me by the day that his management style has produced the same results for both sets of ratepayers - total disaster.
Read this piece and the attached report. It seems to me that this man has the reverse Midas touch - everything he touches turns to crap. FIFTY PERCENT lopped off the value of Alpine in just a couple of years.
Could this be the reason that the Office of the Auditor General recently spent a month and a half in the Alpine offices? I hope the people of Timaru are smarter than the people of Dunedin when it comes to wrenching back control of their floundering power company.
This could have massive consequences for Aurora and Dunefin. What is the true "fair value" of the company? One thing is for certain, no one at the DCC has a clue.
 

Heavily redacted Alpine Energy valuation report 'almost meaningless'

 
 
 
A report which provided part of the basis for the proposed sale of lines company Alpine Energy has finally been released - almost a year after it was requested - but most of the information it contains has been blacked out.
The report was commissioned by EY (formerly Ernst Young) for Timaru District Holdings Ltd - the Timaru District Council's holdings company - which owns a 47.5 per cent share of Alpine Energy.
The other shareholders are Lines Trust South Canterbury (40 per cent), Waimate District Council (7.54 per cent) and Mackenzie District Council (4.96 per cent).
Business commentator Rod Oram says the heavily redacted EY report is "almost meaningless".
Business commentator Rod Oram says the heavily redacted EY report is "almost meaningless".
The EY report says "our assessment of the Fair Value of 100 per cent of the equity in Alpine Energy Ltd lies in the range of $182.4m to $206.1m with a mid-point of $194.1m".
READ MORE:
Timaru District Council spent $89k on Alpine Energy consultation
HC Partners slam Alpine Energy sale proposal as irresponsible
Pressure mounting on council to abandon Alpine Energy share sale proposal
In 2017, Deloittes valued Alpine Energy at $362m-$423m.
Economist Shamubeel Eaqub says the extent of the redactions of the EY report were "farcical".
Joseph Kelly/Supplied
Economist Shamubeel Eaqub says the extent of the redactions of the EY report were "farcical".
However, the EY report is so heavily redacted that it does not give much of an indication as to why there is such a big discrepancy in the values.
Stuff asked the Timaru District Council for a copy of the report under the Local Government Official Information and Meetings Act (LGOIMA) in November 2018 - a request which was initially declined by the council at the request of Alpine Energy. 
Stuff then complained to the Ombudsman's office in December 2018 arguing that the information was in the public interest, as the company was publicly owned. This week a heavily redacted version of the report was finally released. 
Newsroom journalist Bernard Hickey says 'commercial sensitivity' is often invoked for political means.
Supplied
Newsroom journalist Bernard Hickey says 'commercial sensitivity' is often invoked for political means.
Alpine Energy chief executive Andrew Tombs would not be drawn into what was blacked out, other than to say it was "commercially sensitive" information. 
When approached for further comment, he said he had "nothing else to add". 
In a letter to Stuff, released this week, council chief executive Bede Carran explained that the EY report was originally withheld "at the request of Alpine Energy".
"We have been liaising with the officials from the Ombudsman's Office on the matter, and have also consulted with Alpine Energy," the letter says.
"We are comfortable that the attached redacted version balances the interests of disclosure of information with protecting the legitimate commercial interests of Alpine Energy." 
However, business commentator Rod Oram says the heavy redactions "make the report meaningless."
"It's difficult to tell what is genuinely 'commercially sensitive' and what isn't, because the report is so heavily blacked out," Oram said.
Last year, the Timaru District Council proposed to sell down TDHL's 47.5 per cent share in lines company Alpine Energy, but this was abandoned after a major public backlash, with hundreds of submissions against it. 
"The council says the business is no longer up for sale. Even if it was, potential buyers would do their own valuation anyway, so to invoke commercial sensitivity is a bit of a stretch," Oram said. 
Oram said the appendices of the EY report, which were not redacted, listed a series of 'comparable companies' and 'comparable transactions'. These, though, would have been of little if any use to the council or TDHL. 
"EY are not comparing apples with apples. They're mentioning huge international electricity companies alongside smaller lines companies.
"Likewise, their comparisons of New Zealand lines company transactions range from $2.7m to $2.7billion in value, with a wide range of price to earnings multiples across those acquisitions. What the council got out of the report is really hard to determine."
Economist Shamubeel Eaqub said the extent of redaction was "farcical - but common in my experience"
"It speaks to some bigger issues in terms of how council staff appear not to understand where the boundaries are between public interest and confidentiality," Eaqub said. 
Newsroom journalist Bernard Hickey said the level of redaction signalled that the LGOIMA was "broken".
"The information shouldn't be secret but commercial confidentiality is often used and abused for political ends," Hickey said.

 

 

Monday 21 October 2019

Welcome to the Punch and Judas Show

When you look at how the electorate's No 1 choice for mayor was overtaken at the last minute by transferred votes, and from whom those crucial votes came, it's hard to avoid cynicism at best, suspicion of ethically dodgy-as practice by ODT + Cull is another viewpoint option.

https://kleinefeldmausorgnz.files.wordpress.com/2019/10/down-the-drain-council-v3.jpg?w=640
Klleinefeldmaus



Cull backs Garey, Hawkins



"Dunedin Mayor Dave Cull has thrown his support behind two of the candidates vying to succeed him, but now faces criticism from those on the outer.
Mr Cull said yesterday he supported two incumbent city councillors - Aaron Hawkins and Christine Garey - in the mayoral race, although he would not pick between the pair.
Cr Hawkins thanked Mr Cull for his support, while Cr Garey said she was also ''humbled by the confidence Mayor Cull has shown in me''....."


Christine Garey appointed deputy mayor



Christine Garey
Christine Garey
Councillor Christine Garey  has been appointed Dunedin's new deputy mayor. Mayor-elect Aaron Hawkins announced the appointment, and committee chair positions for the Dunedin City Council this afternoon.

Runner-up in the mayoral elections Lee Vandervis will not be heading up any committees on the new council.....

 "Well, that's a surprise!" said nobody who was awake during Cull's reign as mayor.
 Image






SDHB election result - 3 excellent choices


Oncology separation criticised

https://www.odt.co.nz/news/dunedin/oncology-separation-criticised






The Cumberland Street Oncology pushalong, by Kleinefeldmaus


DoC's role - a land fit for tourists?

DoC used to be about conservation, keeping NZ's plants and animals safe for NZers. Pressure to become a tourist attractions provider is resulting in an awfully muddled mission message.



 
The Department of Conservation stands accused of a “blast now and think later” approach in a West Coast national park.
In July, a four-tonne sandstone block sheared off, coming to rest at the bottom of a set of stairs from a viewing platform on the Truman Track, part of the Paparoa National Park. The track, just north of Punakaiki, funnels more than 35,000 walkers a year to a spectacular coastline with cliffs, caverns, a blowhole, and waterfall.....

....Geotech’s managing director Ant Black has some sympathy for DoC, having to look after “bloody nutty”, mainly urban, foreign tourists, who often wear jandals and have no sense of self-preservation. These popular, easily accessible areas of the front country he calls “Muppetland”.....


 https://www.newsroom.co.nz/2019/10/18/859472/doc-under-fire-for-blast-now-think-later

 David Williams is Newsroom's South Island correspondent and investigative writer.

Friday 18 October 2019

Hitch hiking mayor Aaron Hawkins


No plans to stop hitching

https://www.odt.co.nz/news/local-body-elections/no-plans-stop-hitching



Dunedin mayor-elect Aaron Hawkins says hitchhiking to work from his Port Chalmers home is more efficient and gives him a better understanding of community views. Photo: Peter McIntosh

https://www.facebook.com/OtagoDailyTimes/posts/10158844143399691

  • Gerard Hyland Once the cycleway Port - Dunedin is completed I suspect he'll be one of the first users, along with another new Councillor.
  • Simon Short Gerard Hyland unless he's not a cyclist. Not everyone is comfortable on a bike.
  • Daniel Procter Gerard Hyland will be years before that happens. The way the council lowball contractors and minimise the room for funding on variations, there isn’t any money in it for them. The last section from Maia - St Leonard’s lost the contractors nearly $400,000. This was all down to the low starting price just to get council work, lack of additional funding for variations and complications that they encountered, and then getting daily fines for being past the unattainable deadline

    Gerard Hyland Daniel Procter NZTA, but not wrong otherwise! Just look at the proposed design to go over the hill to Sawyer’s Bay - huge expensive concrete monstrosity that blew the budget. Need designers with the proper experience to do the work, then realistic contractors.

Sunday 13 October 2019

Kleinefeldmaus: "Dunedin goes green"

https://kleinefeldmausorgnz.files.wordpress.com/2019/10/arran-hawkins-new-mayor-.gif?w=640

Twitter - working out where the mayor votes went

Twitter:


So a funny thing happened in the mayoral poll Dunedin. It seems like 28% of people didn't want *either* Hawkins or Vandervis, and ranked neither. (I need to check this). But at Iteration 1, there were 42000 votes, and only 30000 at the end. 
 
 Image
 
  
Replying to
Wonder if that’s a lack of understanding of STV. Only 1 position so only rank 1.
 
 
Possible. Would be worth checking against other cities. I'm off to bed, so can't verify now. It's also perhaps obvious here, because there were neck and neck for so long. I get the impression other cities may have had an outright winner sooner.
 
 
But I'm pretty confident there is an ABV camp, an ABH camp, but also possibly a bunch of people that like neither?