Alright. So this is what I’m going to use my voice for today.
Let me tell you a story.
I grew up in Papakura, in a single-parent family.
My Mum, partly because of the unrelenting cruelty of trying to navigate the WINZ system, couldn’t sustain a full-time job.
I got a job at 14.
This is not unusual.
When I was 16 I was going to leave school. A teacher who liked my writing urged me to stay, urged me to go to university. She’s the sole reason I kept working part time to help support my Mum, as well as going to school.
I was privileged in that support.
I am privileged in that I have steady income.
That I don’t have to navigate a system that gives me no choices.
That I don’t have to regularly deal with people who dehumanise me, minimise my value, prevent me in innumerable ways from living life fully.
My Mum is still on WINZ.
She is stuck in a freezing house that isn’t required to have heating until 2024
She can’t move because WINZ doesn’t factor in the astronomical price of living in Auckland.
She doesn’t have additional funds to do anything, & has to plan weeks in advance to get things like clothes.
In 2020, kids are once again leaving school, compromising their schooling to help support parents who are seen by a cruel and antiquated system as just a number.
These kids don’t have the privilege of someone helping them to stay in school. They are caught in a repeating pattern.
It’s not their fault.
But it is our fault.
It’s our fault because in almost 20 years, nothing has changed.
We don’t know how to treat beneficiaries with the respect that they deserve as human beings -with the same respect that business owners continue to receive.
It’s shameful.
WINZ isn’t getting reviewed until “mid-term”.
There’s no firm or detailed commitment to change.
My teenage years would have been vastly different if I’d had a parent who was allowed to thrive within a system that was designed to see her as a person, rather than just a number.
“We’re getting there” isn’t good enough when we know what the fix is.
I am not sure why it appears to be politically risky to ensure that every single one of us is cared for, and valued as a fundamental, basic tenet of our society.
Why don’t our kids deserve that? I don’t get it.
Most of us are very conscious that 2020 is and continues to be what we can mildly describe as a horror movie.
Climate change, this pandemic, the rise of multiple conservative movements that are sexist, racist and homophobic will all absolutely serve to deepen inequity further.
We talk about values a lot, about valuing people.
I’d like to see that we’re concerned about people sitting in cold homes who are at risk from vindictive landlords.
I’d like to be damn sure we’re watching out for those parents - & those kids, who are struggling to make ends meet.
I’d really like to vote for radical change.
2020 has been a deeply unsettling, radical year.
Are we really seeing policy that meets this moment?
I hope so, because this moment requires us to be brave, radical and hopeful.
And it requires us to see each other as people. /
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A hypothetical.
In about six months, under a new government in New Zealand, a new Covid variant comes into play.
Its primary symptom is severe muscle pain - enough to prevent work.
Additionally, people seem to recover for a few days, only to get worse again as time goes on.
(🧵)
There’s no masking requirements, and no isolation required, so the spread is quick, and within three weeks case numbers are well over 20,000 a week - according to wastewater results, because tests are no longer available.
Emergency Departments are having to triage who gets seen.
People quickly use up their sick leave.
Employers, not having provisions for chronic conditions, quickly start to terminate employment.
The number of people applying for the work and income benefit grows.
They encounter murky & inconsistent rules, & minimal financial assistance.
Our advice is hard to find and is part of a video transcript on the Covid-19 website saying “COVID-19 is generally a mild or even asymptomatic illness in children.”
There’s plenty of evidence to support that even mild illness can have profound impacts.
👇 phcc.org.nz/briefing/longe…
Cc @nzlabour, @NZGreens - it would be great to have focused comms on this please. @NZStuff, @nzherald, etc I think it’s newsworthy that the US CDC has updated its advice in regards to children.
Given this, it’s also relevant to ask why we are not moving rapidly towards clean air.
Just noting also this is a group of volunteers who are doing the job of public health - educating communities, talking about what the next focus should be in pandemic mitigation and preparedness (clean air) and ensuring that schools and workplaces have the tools to get there.
About a month ago a leader tried to talk about the violence of cis white men & every single man with power shut her down.
What would the justice experience of these women have been like if men in power acknowledged violence?
Would it have taken 5 years to convict John and Steve?
"The statistics out there don't tell the whole story because... it's working within a system that favours Pākehā men."
They tried to silence her because she is right - and that threatens the status quo that allows the activity in the news this week.
Calling it out threatens a status quo that is embedded in our culture - New Zealand is very comfortable with violence against women.
We dismiss it, minimise it, joke about it, enable it with overt & implicit acceptance - & by silencing those who speak up. i.stuff.co.nz/opinion/131648…
“Poor ventilation, the committee heard, was a major factor in the spread of the coronavirus.
It recommended the establishment of an advisory body… to develop new national air-quality standards.”
Clean air should be a focus for anyone in business or school leadership who wants a healthy place for employees to work & for kids to learn.
It is baffling that whoever the “business lobby” are, this clearly isn’t being pushed - clean air means better productivity & bottom line.
For all the reasons clean air is vital in Aotearoa, listen to experts:
Increasingly so concerned about how winter is going to go. We’ve got so much clear, unequivocal data about the long-term effects of Covid.
It shouldn’t just be “does this land us in hospital?”
It should be “what is this doing to our quality of life?”
Why aren’t we asking this?
The few masks I am seeing are the old surgical ones.
We’re not communicating how to protect ourselves.
We’re not pushing for better ventilation.
We’re not acting to support workers with long term impacts.
We’re not acting to support those who can’t work because they had Covid.
Surely there’s someone responsible for this who should be actively looking at recommendations?
If so I’d really love to connect with them, because the lived experience is that this isn’t actually happening.
Ignoring the pandemic means ignoring those impacted - now and in future.