Mount Roskill, Auckland

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50 days ago

Hair Refrigerator

Pera from Mount Roskill

150 Ono 3monthsnold if that. Family friend has Been hospitalised and we are needing the funds to ship her things to South Waikato. Can deliver on Tuesday for a small fee.

Price: $150

50 days ago

Mother outraged as IRD takes $1000 a week from account

Brian from Mount Roskill

Lynette Davies said the $1000 the department is trying to take each week from her is an unfeasible amount of money.
RNZ reported earlier this week that Inland Revenue is taking a tougher line on recovering debt that it is owed - with 16,500 notices sent about planned bank deductions since … View more
Lynette Davies said the $1000 the department is trying to take each week from her is an unfeasible amount of money.
RNZ reported earlier this week that Inland Revenue is taking a tougher line on recovering debt that it is owed - with 16,500 notices sent about planned bank deductions since mid-June, 25 percent more than for the whole of last year.
Between mid-June and 30 September, there had been 8181 deductions completed, which had recovered $17 million. There were another 6026 deductions in progress, which had collected $5.5m.
There is an estimated $10 billion in tax debt owing, although that does not include child support, which sits at about $1 billion.
Davies said she could not afford the $1000 a week the department wanted from her account, which is to cover child support debt.
She shared concerns expressed to RNZ last week about the way that child support is calculated. There have been calls for an overhaul amid concerns about how custody arrangements are assessed and transparency around parents' income.
She said the debt arose about a decade ago, when her daughter was 15, when she moved between her care and that of her ex-husband.
Amid a dispute between the parents, Inland Revenue continued to tell her that she was liable for child support.
"I let the IRD know that I was no longer the liable parent but was the custodial one. They wouldn't believe me."
The debt grew with penalties to about $23,000. The penalties were wiped, which took it back to $16,000.
"Three weeks ago they took $1000 out of my bank account. I was pretty upset at that, I'd had no notifications. It's actually more than I have available a week to pay," she said.
She was told to submit a complaint to suspend the payments.
"At that time I thought they were talking about $1000 a month - until the next week my eftpos card was declined and I found out they're taken another $1000. They're fully intending on taking $1000 a week. The child in question is now 25."
She has started trying to block the payments and had been told too much time had passed to take the issue to court.
A spokesperson for Inland Revenue said it could not comment on the specifics of her case but it had received extra funding for compliance so there was an increase in activity.
'We look at every case's individual circumstance and consider these before we take any deductions from people's account. We also contact or try to contact customers before taking these actions."
Another man who contacted RNZ said he too had money taken without warning. "We were not notified in advance nor did we know any money was owed. This tax was for my wife who does not have an IRD login and does not need to fill in an IR3 form. Her only income is superannuation and bank interest.
"Taking the money caused our account to go into debit, costing us still more. We are outraged that they did this without first asking us to pay whatever they thought was due."
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J
50 days ago

Fish card game

Jude from Hillsborough

Fish card game.
Cards only, no storage tray.
Instructions included.

Collection is from Herd Rd, Hillsborough

Price: $5

50 days ago

Scam Alert: Refund requests targeting small businesses

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

Westpac has reported a new scam targeting businesses.

Scammers are reportedly messaging businesses with screenshots of bank statements that appear to show two identical payments to the business, and asking to be refunded for the falsified duplicate payment.

Businesses should double-check any… View more
Westpac has reported a new scam targeting businesses.

Scammers are reportedly messaging businesses with screenshots of bank statements that appear to show two identical payments to the business, and asking to be refunded for the falsified duplicate payment.

Businesses should double-check any payment details before responding to queries or processing refunds for customers.

If you receive suspicious communication regarding your accounts, contact your bank directly.

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J
50 days ago

Little house, ornament

Jude from Hillsborough

This is a little house, made from (I think), plaster of Paris

Height - 12 cm
Width - 6 cm
Depth - 4.5 cm

Collection is from Herd Rd, Hillsborough

Price: $5

J
50 days ago

Wooden safari 5 piece puzzle

Jude from Hillsborough

Wooden, simple puzzle - 5 pieces.

Made by Goki, Germany.

21 cm x 21 cm

Collection is from Herd Rd, Hillsborough

Price: $15

J
50 days ago

Wooden touch n tell matching

Jude from Hillsborough

Touch n tell
Matching the sticks to the board.
Various materials - sandpaper, mirror, cork, etc

Good for visual awareness & touch sensitivity.

Board length - 40 cm
Depth - 10 cm

Collection is from Herd Rd, Hillsborough

Price: $30

J
51 days ago

Wooden sound matching sticks

Jude from Hillsborough

Wooden sound matching sticks.
Find the two sticks that sound the same by shacking them.

Box - 11 cm x 8 cm

Collection is from Herd Rd, Hillsborough

Price: $30

J
51 days ago

Wooden shape stacking puzzle

Jude from Hillsborough

Wooden shape stacking puzzle.

4 shapes
4 colours for each shape.

Base - 12 cm x 12 cm

Collection is from Herd Rd, Hillsborough

Price: $20

J
51 days ago

Wooden threading apple

Jude from Hillsborough

Wooden toy.
Apple with a worm on a string that threads through the holes.

Great for hand eye coordination & fine motor skills.

Height - 10 cm

Collection is from Herd Rd, Hillsborough

Price: $15

51 days ago

How many job hunters are there for each job ad?

Brian from Mount Roskill

Finding work may not be as easy as "getting off the PlayStation": data shows there are many times more potential job hunters than jobs advertised.
The Rotorua Daily Post reported Prime Minister Christopher Luxon told local business leaders that unemployed school leavers needed to … View more
Finding work may not be as easy as "getting off the PlayStation": data shows there are many times more potential job hunters than jobs advertised.
The Rotorua Daily Post reported Prime Minister Christopher Luxon told local business leaders that unemployed school leavers needed to "get off the couch and stop playing PlayStation".
And he told Morning Report on Monday there were employers "crying out" for young people.
But data shows in almost all parts of the country, there were more people unemployed than there were jobs available.
Using just the number of people on Work Ready JobSeeker benefits, not including those who are on the benefit for sickness or disability reasons, there are just under four people for every job ad, nationwide.
A Hamilton woman says her ten year search for work has uncovered employers bad attitudes to disabled job hunters.Professor Matthew Roskruge, from the Massey Photo: 123rf
That's down from about nine in 2020 but about twice the rate of 2021 and 2022 and the number has stayed relatively constant since then.
The number of unemployed per job ad is five, which is not as high as the 2010 peak but higher than the 2020 number.
Luxon said Hawke's Bay and the South Island were particularly keen on workers but Hawke's Bay had 7359 jobSeekers and 568 jobs on Seek.
Based only on Trade Me jobs data, Kawerau had the highest ratio of jobseekers to jobs, at 228.
Queenstown-Lakes was the only area in balance by that measure.
Unemployed people per job ad.Unemployed people per job ad. Photo: SUPPLIED
Professor Matthew Roskruge, from the Massey University school of economics, said it was an "incredibly difficult" time to be looking for a job.
"Especially where they don't have really specific experience or certification… the regions from what we have seen have been hit particularly hard. Public service cuts look like they've hit regions hard and we've seen manufacturing go, too."
He said policies designed to push people off the benefit would work better when the labour market was stronger. "It might make sense if there was demand out there for employees but if we increase supply they have got to have somewhere to go."
Craig Renney, policy director at the Council of Trade Unions and previously an adviser to former Finance Minister Grant Robertson, agreed it was a tough market. "We're seeing more and more people want more work and can't get it."
He said the number of unemployed per job ad would understate the real picture because about 400,000 people were underutilised - not working as much as they would like to.
"We still appear to be shedding work, we see on a weekly basis at major plants and in particular manufacturing sites closing across the country."
He said the situation was worse in the North Island then the South.
He said many job ads were for temporary positions or commission-based roles that would not give security.
He said young people had been particular hit by the downturn. The number of unemployed 15 to 19 year olds had risen by 10,000 in two years, to 37,200.
Simplicity chief economist Shamubeel Eaqub said jobhunters without experience would be "at the back of the queue".
Shamubeel EaqubSimplicity chief economist Shamubeel Eaqub. (File photo) Photo: Supplied
He said people should be careful about comparing regions because the boundaries could be arbitrary.
"People travel across territorial authority boundaries all the time."
But he said there were some localised areas of pain such as Tokoroa where there had been major employer closures.
"That means those local job opportunities are further reduced."
He said young people trying to enter a workforce during weak economic times could feel the effect for a long time.
"They miss out on that entry into the job, the career pathway. And then by the time the economy recovers, there's a new cohort of people who are competing for those positions."
Massey University Dean's Chair in Management Professor Jarrod Haar said it did not help anyone to have young people on benefits.
But he said it would be better to use the money that would have been spent on teenagers' benefits on encouraging businesses to hire them.
"The reality is there's just no jobs, you know, or let's be honest, there'll be the few jobs out there, but there'll be hundreds of young people wanting them, applying for them. And it'll be the case that demand outstrips supply in a big way."
Meanwhle, An orchardist says the horticulture industry is not crying out for workers.
Yummy Fruit Company chief executive Paul Paynter, who grows apples and stone fruit in Hawke's Bay, said the industry wasn't short staffed right now.
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51 days ago

Retire in comfort and security

Greenview Park Village

Premium care is just meters away from our village. Join our caring community, where passion thrives. Trust Terrace Kennedy House for exceptional care and meaningful connections. Find out more

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51 days ago

The most powerful passports for 2025

Brian from Mount Roskill

Arton's Global Passport Power Rank 2025 puts the United Arab Emirates in the top spot, with a visa-free/visa-on-arrival score of 179. Second place is held by Singapore and Spain, each with a score of 175.
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1 Singapore (193 destinations)
View more
Arton's Global Passport Power Rank 2025 puts the United Arab Emirates in the top spot, with a visa-free/visa-on-arrival score of 179. Second place is held by Singapore and Spain, each with a score of 175.
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1 Singapore (193 destinations)
2 South Korea (190)
3 Japan (189)
4 Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, Spain, Switzerland (188)
5 Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Ireland, Netherlands (187)
6 Greece, Hungary, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Sweden (186)
7 Australia, Czech Republic, Malta, Poland (185)
8 Croatia, Estonia, Slovakia, Slovenia, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom (184)
9 Canada (183)
10 Latvia, Liechtenstein (182)
11 Iceland, Lithuania (181)
12 USA, Malaysia (180)
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51 days ago

Afterschool Netball Skills

Marketing Co-Ordinator from Auckland Netball Windmill Road

Grow your child's netball skills and grow their confidence at our Afterschool Netball Skills Clinics.

Located at Windmill Park
6-week programme
Monday afternoons, commencing 20 October
Year 1-4: 4pm - 5pm
Year 5-8: 5.15pm - 6.15pm

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53 days ago

Kiwis are still leaving New Zealand in record numbers

Brian from Mount Roskill

New Zealand’s annual net migration rate fell to 10,600 for the year to August 2025.
There was a record net migration loss of 47,900 New Zealand citizens in August 2025.
Overall migrant arrivals dropped 16% to 138,600, while departures increased 13% to 127,900.
View more
New Zealand’s annual net migration rate fell to 10,600 for the year to August 2025.
There was a record net migration loss of 47,900 New Zealand citizens in August 2025.
Overall migrant arrivals dropped 16% to 138,600, while departures increased 13% to 127,900.
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New Zealand’s annual net migration rate has fallen again, according to new figures from Stats NZ.
At just 10,600 for the year to August 2025, the net number of additional migrants in the country appears to be a reversal from a return to growth in the year to July.
The August 2025 year provisionally saw two annual records for New Zealand citizens, Stats NZ said today.
There were 73,900 migrant departures, exceeding the previous record of 73,300 in July 2025 year.
That led to a record net migration loss of 47,900 Kiwis, exceeding the previous record of 47,100 in the July 2025 year.
For New Zealand citizens, the net migration loss of 47,900 in August 2025 is compared with a net migration loss of 44,900 in the August 2024 year.
Compared to a year earlier, overall migrant arrivals continued to fall at 138,600, down 16%.
Migrant departures were up 13% at 127,900.
The past two years have seen a massive drop-off in net migration numbers as large numbers of New Zealand citizens have departed and fewer migrants have arrived.
Annual migrant arrivals peaked at 234,800 in the year ended October 2023.
Annual net migration also peaked in the year ended October 2023, with a gain of 135,500.
The long-term average for August years (2002 to 2019) before Covid-19 is 119,900 migrant arrivals, 91,700 migrant departures, and a net migration gain of 28,200, Stats NZ said.
On a monthly basis, migrant arrivals were down 4% in August at 10,500.
Migrant departures were flat at 8900 (down less than 1%).
Monthly net migration represented a gain of 1600 compared with a gain of 2000 in July.
New Zealand’s weak labour market had driven migrant departures higher, said ASB senior economist Jane Turner.
It was now at a level consistent with the relative outperformance by Australia’s labour market (as measured by relative unemployment rates), she said.
“Meanwhile, we continue to see a fall in migrant arrivals as employment prospects in New Zealand remain weak relative to other migration destinations.”
The sharp decline in net immigration over the past two years had been a strong headwind for retail spending and for the demand for new housing construction, Turner said.
“We expect this trend will be slow to turn around and any lift in net immigration may be fairly limited by historical standards,” she said.
Citizens of India, China, the Philippines, and Sri Lanka drove net migration gains in the August 2025 year.
For migrant arrivals the largest groups were citizens from New Zealand at 26,000, followed by India (18,900), China (18,400), the Philippines (10,700) and Sri Lanka (6100).
For migrant departures the largest groups were citizens of New Zealand at 73,900, China: (7600), India (5500) and the UK (5100).
More citizens of the UK left the country than arrived in the year to 2025.
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