Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Health Minister David Clark (Photo by Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Health Minister David Clark (Photo by Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)

The BulletinJune 18, 2020

The Bulletin: An avalanche of incompetence in quarantine system

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Health Minister David Clark (Photo by Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Health Minister David Clark (Photo by Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)

Good morning and welcome to The Bulletin. In today’s edition: Repeated blunders shake faith in quarantine system, report finds ministry was unprepared on PPE, and trade negotiations with Britain begin. 

New measures will be taken around the border quarantine system after a series of idiotic failings. Our live blog has the details, including the news that the health ministry will be relieved of some of their duties and replaced with the military, after two people who subsequently tested positive for Covid-19 were allowed an exemption to leave early. The PM described it as an “unacceptable failure of the system” in an unusually angry press conference, while National leader Todd Muller called for the health minister David Clark to be sacked over his ministry’s blunder, reports Stuff. That was the afternoon – then in the evening, a whole lot of things fell apart very quickly.

It turns out ten people were allowed exemptions to leave quarantine in Christchurch on Tuesday, reports Newshub’s Michael Morrah. They were going to a funeral, even though it came nine days after such exemptions were ruled to be no longer permitted. Meanwhile, the NZ Herald’s Isaac Davidson reports claims from attendees at a wake in Auckland were joined by a woman who had arrived from the US just a day earlier, and who was yet to be tested for Covid-19. Even though the woman reportedly wore a mask and gloves, and kept her distance at all times, the US currently has a number of outbreaks across the country that are escalating out of control. And former police commissioner Mike Bush (now in charge of the Covid operation command centre) told Newstalk ZB that a youth who had attended a funeral in Hamilton from quarantine had since absconded, and (at the time of writing) was yet to be found. That young person was one of six people who absconded from that funeral, by the way, not two people as was originally reported.

There’s more. The chief ombudsman, whose office has taken on the responsibility of inspecting quarantine facilities, says his staff were potentially exposed, and had to cancel a prison inspection as a result, reports One News. Because of the way the international arrivals were managed at a hotel, his staff crossed paths with them without realising it. But hey, maybe they didn’t even need to go into a hotel to be exposed, because as One News’ Kristin Hall reports, multiple people have been leaving their managed isolation facilities without first returning a negative Covid-19 test. People were told tests were optional, or not available. And in another astonishing episode, a birthday gathering was held with kids from a number of different flights – the birthday girl blew out the candles, and then a ministry of health worker (wearing gloves for safety, of course) handed out pieces of cake.

And remember those two Covid cases at the start? It turns out they may not actually have been so strict about self-isolation on their journey down country. The NZ Herald managed to stand up why there were concerns that they “kissed and cuddled” someone, as was alleged in parliament by National’s Michael Woodhouse. It appears that person had lent them their car to take down to Wellington, but had to meet up with them to give directions before they left Auckland. The person went to a gym session the next day for a “hands on” class – for obvious reasons, the operator of the gym has now temporarily shut it down. The health ministry put out a press release late last night effectively confirming the story.

It is staggering to see so many stories come out all at once, and many people will feel an uncomfortable sense of deja vu. I realise a lot has happened between then and now, but all of these stories feel deeply reminiscent of the incompetence shown at the border before lockdown started. Systems were theoretically in place, but weren’t being enforced with any sort of rigour or discipline, and it took media reports for those who were meant to be in charge to take notice. Readers might also remember that those blunders were arguably what necessitated lockdown in the first place. It’s not bloody good enough at all.


Just quickly, a message from The Spinoff’s managing editor Duncan Greive: 

“The arrival of Covid-19 and lockdown changed The Spinoff, transforming our editorial to focus on the biggest story of our lives, taking a small team and making it a seven day a week news operation. But it also fundamentally changed us as a business, too. Prior to the crisis, around 20% of our editorial costs were funded by our Members. Now, that figure is north of 50%. The loss of some key commercial clients meant that change has to be permanent. If you’re already a member, please know that all at The Spinoff are incredibly grateful for your help. If you’re not, and can afford to contribute, please consider doing so – it really is critically important to our ability to cover the next phase of the crisis, in all its complexity.”


In thematically related news, an auditor-general’s report has found the health ministry was deeply unprepared around PPE for a pandemic, reports the NZ Herald’s Amelia Wade. There was also criticism of mixed-messaging given by Dr Ashley Bloomfield, which then led to a rush in demand. There was supposed to be a fully stocked reserve of supplies – instituted after the avian flu pandemic of 2005 – but there had been no stocktake undertaken since 2016, which meant that when DHBs had to know what they had, it took a full five weeks to get all the information.


Quite a lot of other news happened yesterday too, including the announcement that free trade negotiations have formally been launched between NZ and the UK. As the Guardian reports, Australia has done the same. The government particularly wants to see tariffs come down on namechecked products like kiwifruit and manuka honey, and the negotiations will also include provisions around removing non-tariff barriers streamlined customs. We’re also still waiting to see whether the UK can wrap up its own post-Brexit trade deal with the EU. This particular moment gives New Zealand negotiators a lot more leverage than they would otherwise have, and Politik reports they’re willing to play not particularly nicely in order to get better agriculture access.


Climate change is going to be hellishly expensive for the New Zealand economy, according to new research covered by Newsroom’s Marc Daalder. The findings come from studying a pair of recent droughts, which had heavy impacts on the farming sector, and were themselves seriously exacerbated by climate change. It also concluded that until now, the economic cost of climate change has been largely underestimated.


Startup businesses are struggling to make crowdfunding work for them in the aftermath of Covid-19, reports Stuff’s Anuja Nadkarni. There are currently just two equity-raising campaigns live on PledgeMe, and both are a long way away from where they need to be to succeed. While that equity area is seeing a significant squeeze, the same isn’t necessarily true for charitable causes, with Givealittle seeing a slight uptick at the moment.


Private equity company Mercury Capital has bought the magazine operations of Bauer in both Australia and New Zealand, reports the NZ Herald’s Damien Venuto. Mercury also has an investment in a printing company in NZ, which suggests they’ll be keen to relaunch at least some of the titles. I can imagine that would be very welcome for New Zealand readers – after all, they’re currently being duped by an Australian version of Woman’s Day which has been repackaged for this market. One big question for the titles explored by Venuto is whether they’ll be able to lure laid off staffers back – Metro for example saw a number of highly talented people get picked up almost immediately by other organisations.


Got some feedback about The Bulletin, or anything in the news? Drop us a line at thebulletin@thespinoff.co.nz

‘Young handsome man enjoying talking on the phone at home’ (Photo: filadendron/Getty Images)

Right now on The Spinoff: David Farrier falls down a typically deep rabbit hole searching for his stock photo doppelganger. Elodie Bertha meets a former refugee who fled Syria and became an essential worker in Dunedin. Claire Blood looks at flexibility and productivity, and whether society at large should go back to pre-Covid ways of working. Āneta Rāwiri writes about the guiding principles of iwi in Whanganui, based on the sacred river running through the region. Ron Hansen looks at the Covid-19 response in Taiwan, and asks why the country has been overlooked amid all the back-patting. We’ve republished a speech given by police commissioner Andrew Coster about examining attitudes of racial bias within the organisation. Jean Teng looks at where to eat around the new Commercial Bay mall in Auckland. Jamie Wall reviews the new show about rugby battlers 2nd Chance Charlie, and what it reveals about the flaws in professionalisation.

And in a piece that I can only describe as a pure statement of Donnellism, Hayden Donnell has investigated the mystery of an upside down tino rangatiratanga flag on the wall behind National leader Todd Muller, during his speech at the Te Puna Rugby Club.


For a feature today, a well told story about the end of a local institution in Levin. The Horowhenua Chronicle reports that the last remaining members of the RSA Bowling Club have voted to wind it up, with dwindling membership and the corresponding loss of financial security. The story is also illustrated with pictures from the first days of the club. Here’s an excerpt:

The club has a rich history. It was formed in 1945 to foster the social side of the RSA and the first Diggers Day tournament was held at the Central and Levin Bowling clubs’ greens in March of that year. The popular tournament had been held ever since.

Land for the bowling green was gifted to the RSA by the late Maude Lett (formerly Mrs Clark) in 1947 for returned servicemen to establish their own greens and clubrooms. It was named the Clark Memorial Green and an Avenue of Remembrance, dedicated to the memory of RSA members, leads to the green from the Salisbury St entrance.

The green and buildings were developed by the returned servicemen who initially formed the bowling club and then by the many hundreds of members up to the present day. The club’s survival has only been possible because of the hard work of many volunteers over the decades, Mr Kaye said.


In sport today, a look at some of the technicalities that make it more difficult to have Sunday afternoon rugby in Auckland. The NZ Herald’s Alex Chapman has reported on Eden Park’s need to make resource consent applications for night-time activities, because with a 3.35pm kickoff the games just slip over past sundown. The application for Sunday’s game ended up costing $10,000. In the end, it will have been worth it for the stadium given it sold out, but there are concerns that the cost of future applications will weigh heavily.


That’s it for The Bulletin. If you want to support the work we do at The Spinoff, please check out our membership programme

Keep going!
The director general of health, Dr Ashley Bloomfield speaks to media during a press conference at the Beehive (Photo: Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)
The director general of health, Dr Ashley Bloomfield speaks to media during a press conference at the Beehive (Photo: Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)

The BulletinJune 17, 2020

The Bulletin: Two new Covid-19 cases, serious questions about border

The director general of health, Dr Ashley Bloomfield speaks to media during a press conference at the Beehive (Photo: Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)
The director general of health, Dr Ashley Bloomfield speaks to media during a press conference at the Beehive (Photo: Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)

Good morning and welcome to The Bulletin. In today’s edition: Failings around Covid-positive visitors who were allowed to travel, massive new report on health reform unveiled, and police executive redesign proposed.

There are two new cases of Covid-19 in New Zealand, breaking a long streak of zero days. Our live updates page from yesterday has the details of what happened: basically, both people arrived in New Zealand from the UK on June 7, and had been in managed isolation, before being granted an exemption to drive from Auckland to Wellington to be with a dying relative. They say they didn’t use any public facilities on that trip, and adhered to the rules. But particular questions are being raised about the exemption as one of the people had symptoms, which they put down to a pre-existing condition, and why they weren’t tested before hitting the road. Contact tracing efforts are now underway, and hotel staff who came into contact with them or their room have been temporarily stood down.

It has led to immediate changes, with compassionate exemptions for border arrivals suspended indefinitely, reports StuffSimply put, this isn’t the first time the quarantine system has looked decidedly leaky. There was a story run by One News last week about guests at a quarantine hotel mixing with new arrivals, and comment from epidemiologist Michael Baker who said the problem wasn’t the protocols – it was whether or not they were actually being applied properly. A case was also revealed yesterday in which two teenagers ran away after being granted an exemption for a funeral, before being located again, reports the NZ Herald.

Should we be panicking about new cases? It’s definitely not good of course, but we should also keep it in perspective. This article on The Conversation gives useful context – to the best of our knowledge, we haven’t had any community transmission for a long time now, and that’s a much more important question compared to whether cases turn up at the border.

And yet, in this instance it is theoretically possible for community transmission to have taken place, which is a huge failing. Justin Giovannetti, who has first hand experience of how quarantine works if done properly, writes that “it came as a surprise on Tuesday afternoon when director-general of health, Ashley Bloomfield, said one of New Zealand’s now two active cases of Covid-19 left managed-isolation despite mild symptoms, and without being tested.” The NZ Herald’s (paywalled) Derek Cheng has looked at the political angles of this, writing that it is hugely embarrassing from the government and health officials, and that the PM “should be livid” about the failings.


Just quickly, a message from The Spinoff’s managing editor Duncan Greive: 

“The arrival of Covid-19 and lockdown changed The Spinoff, transforming our editorial to focus on the biggest story of our lives, taking a small team and making it a seven day a week news operation. But it also fundamentally changed us as a business, too. Prior to the crisis, around 20% of our editorial costs were funded by our Members. Now, that figure is north of 50%. The loss of some key commercial clients meant that change has to be permanent. If you’re already a member, please know that all at The Spinoff are incredibly grateful for your help. If you’re not, and can afford to contribute, please consider doing so – it really is critically important to our ability to cover the next phase of the crisis, in all its complexity.”


A massive doorstopper of a report into the health system was delivered yesterday, after being commissioned two years ago. Here’s a cheat sheet on what is being proposed, and Josie Adams has reported on what those in the field say about the proposals. In short, among the big changes being mooted is an end to DHB elections along with a reduction in the number of DHBs, the creation of both a new crown entity called Health NZ to oversee DHBs and a Māori Health Authority, changes to the way health budgets move with population growth, and an overall shift to put a greater emphasis on population health and reducing fragmentation.

One reaction out of it all is a sense of positivity around the potential for greater equity across a system that currently delivers very unequal outcomes. That comes through from this explainer by Stuff’s Cate Broughton, who writes that “the review authors are confident the experience of health services would improve across the board, but particularly for Māori and disabled people.”

But what will actually be delivered? Right now, health minister David Clark is only making supportive noises, rather than giving his full backing to implementing recommendations – to quote, “Cabinet has accepted the case for reform, and the direction of travel outlined in the review” and to follow that up, “that means we are committing to an ongoing programme of reform”. As anyone who reads a lot of government press releases knows, this is absolutely not the same as a promise to implement all the recommendations – even if they have been delivered to be politically manageable, as Politik reports. Stuff’s Henry Cooke has made this point, noting that this government has strong form when it comes to commissioning massive reports, and then not actually doing much with them. Very little is likely to happen before the election – we’ll see if anything comes of it afterwards.


New police commissioner Andrew Coster has proposed a redesign of the organisation’s executive levels, reports Radio NZ. The details include a reduction in the number of members on the executive leadership board, the establishment of a new role within that, and has the aim of increasing the coordination between local and national levels of policing. But that’s all from the official press release – some real tea was spilled by the NZ Herald’s (paywalled) Jared Savage last week, who analysed the various moves at the top from the lens of personality clashes and differences in policing philosophy, while hinting that a redesign would soon be announced.


Facebook has announced that only New Zealanders will be able to post political ads to the platform in the runup to the election. Justin Giovannetti has reported on the range of measures that have been unveiled, with the intention of limiting the spread of misinformation. Facebook has also contracted fact checking services from wire service Australian Associated Press, who have a small staff of journalists in New Zealand.


Like it or not, we’re heading towards a world of increasing protectionism in trade. Interest’s Guy Trafford has analysed the events of last week around the European Union free trade agreement negotiations, with government ministers calling out the Europeans for bringing a paltry offer to the table. But then again, it’s the general direction many countries are travelling in, and European governments also have strong protest movements against trade liberalisation to contend with.


The pay of ministers is in the spotlight after it was revealed that the self-imposed Covid-19 pay cuts still haven’t gone through. The NZ Herald reported that PM Ardern is frustrated by the delay, which appears to have been caused by a “complicated and lengthy” bureaucratic process. I’m not sure on the actual numbers, but it seems fair to assume that if the process does get completely followed through, the pay cuts could end up costing the taxpayer more money in public servant hours than they end up saving in MP salaries. Just get all the ministers to make a charitable donation and call the rest of it off, honestly.


Got some feedback about The Bulletin, or anything in the news? Drop us a line at thebulletin@thespinoff.co.nz

(Photo: Getty Images)

Right now on The Spinoff: Andrew Geddis gives a complex and thoughtful analysis of the government’s ‘Unite for the Recovery’ ad campaign, and the opposition’s opprobrium about it. Elodie Berthe meets a real Kiwi legend – an emergency nurse and cancer survivor who came here first as a refugee from Afghanistan. Michael Andrew has a comprehensive guide to where small and medium businesses can find out about financial support from the government. And Catherine Woulfe reviews the calming loveliness of Wendyl Nissen’s new book A Natural Year.


For a feature today, a thoughtful re-reading of the work of Katherine Mansfield, in light of living through a global pandemic. Writing on the Pantograph Punch, Monica Macansantos has explored themes around the stillness of lockdown life being interspersed with the terror and uncertainty of a spreading disease. Here’s an excerpt:

Katherine Mansfield was diagnosed with tuberculosis near the end of World War 1. Her doctor advised her to give up her writing so that she could live a longer life, thinking it was best for her to reserve her bodily strength for fighting the disease. Her writing took up much of her energy, but it was something she was unwilling to surrender in order to live. Giving death full control over her life was a kind of death in itself, and it wasn’t the kind of life she wanted.

In her earlier work, death hovers at the corner of one’s eye, a constant yet peripheral presence in the lives of her characters, who have grown indifferent to its shadows despite its occasional and brief intimations. Most of the time, the brightness of life is an overwhelming presence in itself, especially for the children in her stories, who are just beginning to come into cognisance of the world in which they live. Death is a part of this world, but life, in its infinite brightness, simply outshines it.

By the way, the Pantograph Punch website was recently redesigned by my wonderful partner and her team, and I don’t think it’s crossing too many personal/professional lines to say I think it looks excellent.


It shouldn’t be overly surprising, but Cricket Australia is starting to warn that the T20 World Cup scheduled for October is unlikely to go ahead, reports the NZ Herald. 16 teams are meant to be taking part, and getting them all into Australia without also bringing a bit of Covid-19 with them is considered to be “unrealistic”. A decision on cancellation or alternative plans is likely to come next month.


That’s it for The Bulletin. If you want to support the work we do at The Spinoff, please check out our membership programme