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Questions of math destruction 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.
Education Review Office warns of 'slippage of expectations' in maths teaching 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.
Shame on those questioning who eats a free school lunch 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.
Stuff has lodged an Official Information Act request seeking numbers about the scale of uneaten school lunches across the country, but opposition MPs have already waded into the bunfight. Act Party leader David Seymour has called the lack of rigour “irresponsible” while National’s Paul Goldsmith says the programme is “poorly targeted”. Christel Yardley/Stuff Left over Ka Ora, Ka Ako cheese and mayonnaise sandwiches at the Western Community Centre in Nawton, Hamilton. The community centre told Stuff it can receive between 100-500 lunches per day. But Education Minister Chris Hipkins has pushed back, maintaining the programme is necessary, and not “wasteful”.
Week in Politics: Reserve Bank told to help with house prices rnz.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rnz.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Analysis: The government wants the Reserve Bank to curb house prices, Parliament passes the Māori wards bill, and an MP gets away with a rude word in the House.
SUPPLIED Hendrik Wentzel with his wife Sunel, his parents Nicolette and Jannie. The family's finances are threatened by a proposed law that would make Nicolette and Jannie wait 10 more years for NZ Super. Migrants who have made New Zealand their home are protesting over “inhumane” proposals that would make older migrants wait 10 more years for NZ Super. African-born Hendrik Wentzel, an engineer with Ballance Agri-Nutrients, says his parents Jannie and Nicolette Wentzel enable him and his healthcare worker wife Sunel to make their contribution to the economy of their adopted home. Wentzel, born in Nambia, moved to New Zealand in 2007 from South Africa, and were joined in 2015 by his parents, who are now in their 70s.