ACT Party Leader vows to bring back immigration at pre-Covid levels Monday, July 26, 2021 Sandeep Singh
ACT Party Leader David Seymour has made a bold announcement today of bringing immigration levels back at pre-Covid levels through careful border management.
He was speaking at the launch of the third discussion document this morning in Fraser eatery in Mt Eden, Auckland.
The Party released the third in its series of Honest Conversations documents, this one about the economy.
“Kiwis want a fair go. If you work hard, you should be rewarded, but under the Labour Government it feels like people are rewarded for doing nothing while hardworking taxpayers are being punished,” says ACT Leader David Seymour.
He served 19 months of his sentence before he was paroled. After his release he found work in the finance sector, and formed associations with brokers, car dealers and vehicle repairers. He helped set up WeCare Finance in 2015 and was employed as its managing director since May 2015, and was also a director and shareholder of the company. The determination said Dewar would charge customers who made a successful loan application a fee, usually $600, which would be held in his personal loan account with the business and later paid to the broker who referred that customer. Customers who applied directly to the company were also charged this fee, which would go into Dewar’s account and later be used to pay cash to brokers or referrers for bringing other customers to the business, it said.
University of Canterbury lecturer awarded nearly $200,000 for unfair dismissal stuff.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from stuff.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Non-Disparagement Clauses and How They Hamper Academic Freedom
Commentary
Australian universities have reportedly been slow to implement the “Model Code for the Protection of Freedom of Speech and Academic Freedom in Australian Higher Education Providers.”
Principle 2 of the Code, prepared by former Chief Justice of Australia, Robert French, states that, “a person’s lawful speech on the university’s land or in connection with a university activity shall not constitute misconduct nor attract any penalty or other adverse action by reference only to its content.”
By the end of last year, only nine out of Australia’s 42 universities had completely adopted the Code.
The business argued it was better to give staff a quick decision so they could find new jobs, rather than prolonged uncertainty. The authority disagreed. Isaacson went on to found Monarch Ear Care in Palmerston North, with many former Triton customers following her there. The latest authority decision in the saga involved settling legal costs. Isaacson wanted Triton to pay $5500, while Triton wanted costs to lie where they fell. Much of authority member Michele Ryan’s decision focused on offers Triton and Isaacson made to try to settle the case, known as calderbank offers. The two most important offers were made by Isaacson in May 2020 and Triton in December 2020.