With 600 000 needing food banks each month – Labour Day is a sick sad joke of a public holiday

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Cost of living crisis: More than half a million people rely on food charity each month

Findlay said post COVID around 450,000 people were using their services each month, but now they’re seeing around 600,000 people – nearly 11 percent of the population.  

“It’s not endemic and it’s not every day, all the day. A number of people may only be coming four, five or six times a year. But the numbers of people that are doing that are growing and growing.” 

He said the number of people who need very regular support is relatively stable, but the number of people, especially working people, needing occasional support is increasing.  

Findlay said working parents are being forced to prioritise housing and petrol and are finding themselves having to forgo food to get by.   

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He said families who have been struggling to get by have exhausted all their resources and are now relying on food banks. 

The 600000 fellow kids forced o use Food Banks weren’t mentioned once during th election, it was all the rights and privileges of Landlords.

We had the biggest class war in NZ history and none of the language to articulate it because middle class woke activists stole all the political vocabulary!

That fact of 600 000 needing food banks monthly makes this years Labour Day an even bigger joke as the propertied class stack up the 4x4s to drive their jet skis to their Long Weekend batch.

Labour Day became a national holiday in New Zealand in 1899. It was to commemorate and celebrate the rise of worker powers and how the earliest Pakeha settlers coming to New Zealand fought to create a fair balance of power between the boss and the worker.

Samuel Duncan Parnell came to New Zealand on the ship Duke of Roxburgh in 1839. He was a carpenter who was deeply impacted by the arguments of the day that people should be allowed 8 hours sleep, 8 hours to live their lives and 8 hours to the boss to work. He refused to join his Union in England because they refused to make an 8 hour working day a priority.

Once in New Zealand, Parnell refused to work for anyone who wouldn’t accept his 8 hour working rule and actively went and met new workers coming off the ships arriving in NZ to tell them of the 8 hour working culture he was trying to create.

The bosses tried to resist and tried to force workers to work later, but it became standard working hours in NZ after workers began simply walking off the job if a boss tried to force longer hours.

Fast forward to the NZ working environment of today and we see that Parnell would weep at how workers have been beaten into neo-feudalism. Kiwi workers work an average of 43.5hours a week with no penal rates. Many workers are over worked and many others are under worked. Many have a precarious working arrangement and have zero job security while health and safety in this country remains one of the worst in the developed would.

There have already been 54 deaths last year and the shadow of the Pike River Mine disaster hangs over industrial relations.

The Right wings war on Unions in NZ have successfully crushed most into irrelevance and this has happened while worker rights and safety has gone backwards.

When we ‘celebrated’ Labour Day weekend this year, there really wasn’t a hell of a lot to praise.

The disgusting right myth spread by right wing liars is that NZ is an over taxed, over regulated economy when that is total bullshit!

In a recent column, Max Rashbrooke highlighted the horror of NZs under regulated market

The bad news is that, to investigate 200,000-300,000 terrible rentals, the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) has employed a frontline inspectorate numbering … 37. Each inspector will have to check somewhere between 5000 and 8000 rentals.

…there is only 37 inspectors of rental properties for 300 000 terrible rentals?

Similar poorly funded regulation is apparent in the 82 labour inspectorates who are supposed to police hundreds of thousands of migrant worker exploitations!

Time and time and time again in New Zealand we see an old boy matrix of vested interests who occupy market dominance and act like a monopoly, duopoly or oligopoly raking in vast wealth while leaving the local small and medium sized operators outside the cosy relationships!

Up and down NZ, small and medium enterprises are unable to compete because of the lack of basic regulation in the market!

We’ve seen it with the Supermarket duopoly, the medicinal cannabis oligopoly, the Gib Board monopoly – each time under regulated and poorly regulated capitalism continues to screw over us the consumers at a time of a cost of living crisis!  

Frustration inside the drainage industry has reached boiling point recently with anti competitive practices and crony capitalism that would make your average South American Drug Cartels blush.

We are not an over taxed, over regulated economy!

Our top tax rate is the 39th highest in the world behind all the Scandinavian countries plus Germany, the United Kingdom, Ireland, France and South Africa!

Australia’s top tax rate is 47cents!

Our GST rate doesn’t even get us into the top 50 and our corporate tax rate is 40th while Government spending against GDP ranks 56th!

And we are voted easiest to do business by the World Bank!

I’m not looking for socialism here folks, just basic garden variety regulated capitalism!

The fact that rich companies can bypass the regulations because of their power, and then when they damage workers don’t have to look after them is a fucking outrage!

The scheme is used by some of the country’s most recognisable businesses and entities, including Police, Air New Zealand, Fonterra, Fletcher Building, Foodstuffs and the Ports of Auckland, as well as multiple universities, banks and councils.

1News highlighted the programme earlier this year as part of an investigation intoTalley’s Group, one of the country’s biggest employers using the programme.

The story revealed an ACC monitoring report in February 2020 found “consistently inaccurate” payments by the Talley’s Group to workers hurt at its meatworks.

So a special scheme that allows the powerful and wealthy to get away with damaging their workers and not looking after them?

How charming.

Samuel Duncan Parnell would be ashamed of how we’ve allowed the bosses to rule with such impunity.

Personally, I’ve always believed that public holidays should be mandatory.

I think that it is incredibly important for the fabric of our society for us all to put down tools as citizens on specific days and all of us venture out into our amazing public spaces and be friendly with one another.

The importance of our civility in public towards each other, the importance of being tolerant while sharing the same space and the importance to actually stop working and enjoy doing nothing but spend time with our family, friends and whanau would do more to building that sense of nationhood than any other thing.

As citizens, we have earned the right to have days off, and we need to hold onto this right and understand it through its universal application that is so important. It’s the need to share our beaches and out door spaces together on these days that builds bonds between families and groups of people who would never otherwise meet in their busy 9-5, 5-9 plus the odd late shift lives.

For those public servants forced to work while the rest of us play, the media should be full of ‘spare a thought for’ type stories so that our public servants who must continue to staff essential services while the rest of us relax are given the respect and admiration they deserve for their selfless functions.

I would even go as far as demanding a new holiday – New Zealand Volunteers day. The idea being that there is one day a year we all universally have off to help volunteer in society all on the same day. It could be a mass planting, or cleaning up, or helping reach out to the elderly or migrant communities or anyone whose a bit different so we can all feel included.

I would also suggest that we make the date of the election a Wednesday and also make it a public holiday. We bitch so much in this country about not having a day we can celebrate as NZers because Pakeha feel so guilty about Waitangi Day, so why not search for that which binds us and celebrate that? Election Day should be a celebration because we are one of the few privileged countries around the planet that allows political leadership to change minus violence and repression. Our exercising of the right to vote peacefully is celebration in itself and making it a mid week public holiday would do more for participation rates than easily hacked online voting.

That sense of self identity and nationhood that we always whine about not being present during Waitangi Day takes effort and can’t simply be left up to the ‘free market’. The space where that national identity can take shape has to be universally applied in the form of mandatory public holidays and not left to be traded in by unscrupulous employers who if given half a chance would make ‘Hi Ho, hi ho, it’s off to work we go’ the new National anthem.

The thousands of different interactions generated by us all respectfully sharing the same space together on set days would do more for our understanding of each other than a million disagreements ever could.

What is the point of being a citizen in a democracy if we can’t enjoy the leisure of spending time outside in this glorious country? Are we really all wage slaves? Is that what a modern democracy has been denigrated too?

‘I have a dream to work every hour of the day by a boss who is screwing me over’ isn’t particularly inspirational is it?

If we appreciated the importance of actually resting for the sake of our mental, emotional and physical health, we could hold our heads up on Labour Day once again with some pride.

Unfortunately a National/ACT/NZ First Government will gut every regulation (ACT want to take January 2nd as a Public Holiday, National will revoke Fair Pay Agreements and NZ First are just crooks) and allow the rich to concrete in their privilege and Labour Day will remain a weeping wound for at least 3 more years.

Happy Labour’s Day.

 

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17 COMMENTS

  1. It won’t change until the labour movement press is revived. The public are fed a steady diet of lies and omissions from the press barons, and are brainwashed into a kind of national inferiority complex. Anyone who sees through it simply leaves the country for good.

  2. Excellent Martyn,an excellent overview the comparison between NZ and rest of world regarding our tax
    “burden “ always makes me laugh.Where does the Tory’s expect us to pay for everything from.
    Could you please publish comparable data on our “over regulated “ with rest of world as this also puts us way down the list .Guess this is why we still have high work place deaths.
    Just watched Uproar we have not progressed one little bit since 1981 .

  3. Malcolm Evans – that’s the way you do it – introduce ideas with humour – but who to? Those with active minds and a sense of the ridiculous also ironic? What percentage of the NZ public would that apply to? Anyone like to have a reckon?

    • Comment from humourists firstly needs to pass MSM’s political filters, which are designed to whitewash anything that challenges the neoliberal and US geopolitical paradigms. Ask Mr Evans about that.

  4. Maybe we have to degrade the importance of the middle class woke activists enough so we can concentrate on getting the class
    Narrative back to those who need it(the working class). Is that not more important?

  5. and Labour Day will remain a weeping wound for at least 3 more years.

    Perhaps not. Seymour might choose Labour Day over January 2.

  6. I see shoplifting rates are now rife in Australia NZers who were dumb enough to vote for so called changed echoed my National need to wake up we aren’t the only western country suffering from high inflation. I also see a lot of our Māori whanau are returning home perhaps the grass is not as green as we all seem to think.

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