24-02-2024, 10:19 AM
It seems this govt simply cannot wait in their rush to make things worse. 
https://www.msn.com/en-nz/health/other/c...9ca1&ei=15
"M─üori health campaigners say the Crown acted in bad faith when a last-minute date change to disestablish Te Aka Whai Ora M─üori Health Authority put their chances of a Waitangi Tribunal inquiry in jeopardy.
Lady Tureiti Moxon and Janice Kuka were granted an urgent claim by the tribunal whether axing the agency went against treaty principles of tino rangatiratanga.
The hearing was previously set to begin on February 29, in recognition of the governmentÔÇÖs plans to bring the legislation in by March 8.
But a memo from Crown lawyers on the night of February 22 alerted claimants the legislation could be tabled in Parliament as soon as Tuesday of next week ÔÇô potentially cutting the hearing off at its knees. If a Bill is before the House, the tribunal is prevented by law from conducting an inquiry into it.
ÔÇ£Notwithstanding the recent events that have impacted Parliament, counsel is instructed that introduction of the Bill could occur as early as 27 February 2024,ÔÇØ wrote Crown Law.
A Friday hearing was assembled quickly to determine whether the claimants could make their case before this new deadline, with Waitangi Tribunal Judge Kaiwhakawaa Damian Stone directing the Crown to give an update on whether the date can be delayed.
ÔÇ£I acknowledge that these matters may be out of the CrownÔÇÖs hands and veer into the political sphere, especially given that the order that Government bills are introduced into the House is determined by the Office of the Leader of the House,ÔÇØ he said.
ÔÇ£However, to enable the Government to have the benefit of the outcomes of the TribunalÔÇÖs inquiry, and any associated findings and recommendations, the Crown may consider deferring the introduction of this legislation until the week ending 8 March 2024.ÔÇØ
Judge Stone said he was concerned the shorter timeframe could negatively impact the hearing process.
ÔÇ£I am concerned that any further effort to truncate the hearing process in order to release a final decision by 27 February 2024 would risk the inquiryÔÇÖs ability to conduct a reasonable and just hearing process.ÔÇØ
ÔÇ£There is no good faith in what the Crown has done,ÔÇØ she said.
ÔÇ£The Crown were asked by the Waitangi Tribunal in its directive as to when they anticipated that the Bill would introduced to Parliament.
ÔÇ£The Crown basically said anytime between now and 8 March, so they didnÔÇÖt indicate it was imminent at all, or give the Tribunal a courtesy heads-up until last night right on the eve of giving evidence due today, when they sent the memo saying that it will be┬áFebruary 27.ÔÇØ
She said there had been no transparency from the Crown despite the tribunal being open in its communication.
ÔÇ£I believe that theyÔÇÖve been very dismissive of the whole claim from day one and they havenÔÇÖt really provided the information that the Waitangi Tribunal have asked for,ÔÇØ she said.
The National-led GovernmentÔÇÖs intention to disestablish Te Aka Whai Ora was outlined in the 100-day plan released by the coalition Government on November 29, 2023. The GovernmentÔÇÖs first 100 days in office ends on March 9, a day after the initial deadline it set itself to axe Te Aka Whai Ora.
ÔÇ£ThereÔÇÖs no justice, thereÔÇÖs no good faith, thereÔÇÖs no transparency,ÔÇØ Moxon said.
ÔÇ£This whole process has engendered distrust in the Government. TheyÔÇÖre just going ahead, irrespective of what anybody else thinks, yet we are their treaty partner, and they need to be reminded of that and shouldnÔÇÖt be just ignored.ÔÇØ

https://www.msn.com/en-nz/health/other/c...9ca1&ei=15
"M─üori health campaigners say the Crown acted in bad faith when a last-minute date change to disestablish Te Aka Whai Ora M─üori Health Authority put their chances of a Waitangi Tribunal inquiry in jeopardy.
Lady Tureiti Moxon and Janice Kuka were granted an urgent claim by the tribunal whether axing the agency went against treaty principles of tino rangatiratanga.
The hearing was previously set to begin on February 29, in recognition of the governmentÔÇÖs plans to bring the legislation in by March 8.
But a memo from Crown lawyers on the night of February 22 alerted claimants the legislation could be tabled in Parliament as soon as Tuesday of next week ÔÇô potentially cutting the hearing off at its knees. If a Bill is before the House, the tribunal is prevented by law from conducting an inquiry into it.
ÔÇ£Notwithstanding the recent events that have impacted Parliament, counsel is instructed that introduction of the Bill could occur as early as 27 February 2024,ÔÇØ wrote Crown Law.
A Friday hearing was assembled quickly to determine whether the claimants could make their case before this new deadline, with Waitangi Tribunal Judge Kaiwhakawaa Damian Stone directing the Crown to give an update on whether the date can be delayed.
ÔÇ£I acknowledge that these matters may be out of the CrownÔÇÖs hands and veer into the political sphere, especially given that the order that Government bills are introduced into the House is determined by the Office of the Leader of the House,ÔÇØ he said.
ÔÇ£However, to enable the Government to have the benefit of the outcomes of the TribunalÔÇÖs inquiry, and any associated findings and recommendations, the Crown may consider deferring the introduction of this legislation until the week ending 8 March 2024.ÔÇØ
Judge Stone said he was concerned the shorter timeframe could negatively impact the hearing process.
ÔÇ£I am concerned that any further effort to truncate the hearing process in order to release a final decision by 27 February 2024 would risk the inquiryÔÇÖs ability to conduct a reasonable and just hearing process.ÔÇØ
ÔÇ£There is no good faith in what the Crown has done,ÔÇØ she said.
ÔÇ£The Crown were asked by the Waitangi Tribunal in its directive as to when they anticipated that the Bill would introduced to Parliament.
ÔÇ£The Crown basically said anytime between now and 8 March, so they didnÔÇÖt indicate it was imminent at all, or give the Tribunal a courtesy heads-up until last night right on the eve of giving evidence due today, when they sent the memo saying that it will be┬áFebruary 27.ÔÇØ
She said there had been no transparency from the Crown despite the tribunal being open in its communication.
ÔÇ£I believe that theyÔÇÖve been very dismissive of the whole claim from day one and they havenÔÇÖt really provided the information that the Waitangi Tribunal have asked for,ÔÇØ she said.
The National-led GovernmentÔÇÖs intention to disestablish Te Aka Whai Ora was outlined in the 100-day plan released by the coalition Government on November 29, 2023. The GovernmentÔÇÖs first 100 days in office ends on March 9, a day after the initial deadline it set itself to axe Te Aka Whai Ora.
ÔÇ£ThereÔÇÖs no justice, thereÔÇÖs no good faith, thereÔÇÖs no transparency,ÔÇØ Moxon said.
ÔÇ£This whole process has engendered distrust in the Government. TheyÔÇÖre just going ahead, irrespective of what anybody else thinks, yet we are their treaty partner, and they need to be reminded of that and shouldnÔÇÖt be just ignored.ÔÇØ
in order to be old & wise, you must first be young & stupid. (I'm still working on that.)