Letters to the Editor: Campaign spend, pay equity, rabbits and rail

A feral rabbit. PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY
A feral rabbit. PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY
Today's Letters to the Editor from readers cover topics including campaign spending, pay equity, rabbits and KiwiRail.

Meaningful ideas beat enormous ad budgets

In response to Mr Bill Southworth’s letter (ODT 26.6.25) suggesting that both I and Future Dunedin hold an unfair advantage in the upcoming Dunedin City Council local body elections due to our ability to run a campaign.

While the current rules permit each candidate to spend up to $55,000 on campaigning, Future Dunedin’s actual budget is well below that limit. What sets us apart is not the scale of our spending, but the strength of our vision - a vision grounded in genuine change, practical ambition, and a deep commitment to the future of our city.

We look forward to sharing that vision with the people of Dunedin and inviting their support.

Mr Southworth may find reassurance in the fact that, in 2022, the candidate who invested the most in their campaign was ultimately unsuccessful. This underscores a fundamental truth in local democracy: meaningful ideas resonate more deeply than advertising budgets.

Future Dunedin has also made a principled decision not to accept any external donations. We are not aligned with any political party, nor are we funded by outside interests.

Should we be elected, our councillors will answer only to the people of Dunedin.

Andrew Simms
Mayoral and council candidate for Future Dunedin

 

Pearl clutching

‘‘Hipkins said he had changed his position on the appropriateness of the column because of the distraction it was causing, which was ‘taking away from what is a very fair issue’.’’ (RNZ 15.5.25).

This was the moment Chris Hipkins showed his complete inability to lead and be the next prime minister. Instead of recognising the juicy open goal presented by the most outrageous egregious pearl-clutching episode ever seen in Parliament and treating it with the kind of derision that Helen Clark would have revelled in, he bottled it, conceding weakly to the disingenuous framing of Brooke van Velden and certain media commentators, and threw Jan Tinetti under the bus. The late Bob Jones once called Bill Rowling the ‘‘shiver in search of a spine’’: Hipkins owns this now. Pay equity was and is the issue.

Andrew Nichols
Kew

 

Freight hub

What I consider very good news is the proposed freight hub is to be located at Milburn. This is an ideal location and must result in fewer heavy vehicles coming through Dunedin and using SH88 to and from Port Chalmers.

The CEO of Port Otago, Kevin Winders, is very supportive and has indicated this hub will not be in competition with the one to be fully developed in Mosgiel. I suggest Calder Stewart start doing it immediately before all the naysayers get together and act against this plan.

John Neilson
Ravensbourne

 

Oi. Shhh.

Southland Hospital’s ban on its staff chatting to each other for more than 5 minutes a day, and never in the afternoon, is brilliant. The management is well aware that talking about the performance of the All Blacks, the Kardashians or Meghan and Harry takes up far too many valuable minutes, and patients may die as a consequence.

To have a taciturn but kindly and efficient staff is clearly the aim, and will surely save the taxpayer many millions.

Mark Stocker
Christchurch

 

We are making rabbits run run run - KiwiRail

I was surprised to read comments highlighting issues with feral rabbits in the rail corridor in Otago, and suggesting that land occupiers and Otago Regional Council staff have had limited success engaging with public agencies to enable effective control of rabbits (ODT 21.5.25).

KiwiRail is committed to controlling rabbits on its land and has been carrying out targeted rabbit control annually since 2019 throughout sections of the rail corridor in Balclutha, Moeraki, Waihola, Milton and Henley.

This has been undertaken in collaboration with both the ORC and the local community.

Pests do not respect boundaries, so pest control is a responsibility of all landowners. KiwiRail is absolutely playing its part.

Ruth Brittain
National vegetation contract manager, KiwiRail

 

Recognition sought

Please could the current government at the very least acknowledge the economic cost that the Labour government had to bear with the four disasters it had to finance during its terms.

Kay Hannan
Weston

 

Somehow not sighting the causal nexus

If the Otago University Staff for Palestine group (Letters ODT 26.5.25) are so blinkered by their prejudice against Israel that they do not see the significant causal nexus between the Hamas attacks of October 7, 2023 and the present situation in Gaza, then there is little hope that the group’s efforts can actually make any contribution towards their ostensible aims of improving the plight for Palestinians.

Before October 2023, 18,000 Palestinians from Gaza held work permits allowing them to cross the controlled border between Gaza and Israel for work each day. After October 2023, all of these permits were revoked.

Before October 2023, there were no settlers, settlements, or permanent Israeli forces within Gaza, although Israel still controlled the borders. After October 2023, the idea that Israel should not continue to control its borders is ridiculous.

Malcolm Moncrief-Spittle
Dunedin
[Abridged - editor.]

 

Happy happy people

In 2025 Israel has advanced from seventh to fifth-happiest country in the world, just behind the Scandinavians, with ‘‘caring and sharing with others’’ a high component of the study.

Happiness is normally associated with peace, prosperity and security but Israel is at war, with people being killed every day. Bombing, shooting and death every day. So how can this be? They have killed 55,000 already and every day more.

It would appear that the concept of caring and sharing held within Israel doesn’t extend beyond their borders but perhaps if sharing of the land had been organised within the last 70 years, none of this tragedy would have occurred.

However the question remains, after World War 2, what kind of society of people have they become that they are extremely happy, the fifth-happiest in the world, in this circumstance?

Mark Hammond
Dunedin

Address Letters to the Editor to: Otago Daily Times, PO Box 517, 52-56 Lower Stuart St, Dunedin. Email: editor@odt.co.nz