Nine To Noon for Friday 10 March 2023
09:05 Stronger vape regulation urgently needed: public health researchers
A teenager vaping an e-cigarette. Photo: 123RF
A group of health professionals and educators is calling for New Zealand to follow Australia's lead and make vapes prescription only. According to a study by the anti smoking group ASH, over 250,000 New Zealanders vape daily. Another survey of 19 thousand secondary school students, by the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation, found that more than a quarter of them had vaped in the last week - nearly 20 per cent vaping daily or several times daily - and the majority with high nicotine doses. In Australia vapes are prescription only - for people trying to quit cigarettes. However experts there say the system has many loopholes and further regulation is urgently needed. Kathryn speaks with Curtin University Professor of Public Health Jonine Jancey, whose latest research looks at the slick marketing tactics and claims by online vape retailers; and University of Sydney School of Public Health associate professor Becky Freeman who leads the Generation Vape research project. The interview discusses this article in The Lancet.
09:30 Should Auckland let its hidden waterways see daylight?
The unprecedented rainfall that hit Auckland on January 27 was, for many, a shock introduction to the city's old streams and waterways. Before urbanisation Auckland was a complex system of streams, rivers and wetlands - and the January flooding brought some to the surface with a vengeance. With climate change likely to bring more severe rain events, is now the time to think seriously about building up rather than spreading out into more green space, and daylighting more of the city's streams? Matthew Bradbury is a landscape architect, an associate professor at Unitec and author of Water City: Practical Strategies for Climate Change.
Photo: Supplied
09:45 Pacific correspondent Koroi Hawkins
Fiji's former prime minister Frank Bainimarama is taken into the Totogo Police remand centre in Suva on March 9, 2023. Photo: AFP / Leon Lord
Former Fijian prime minister Frank Bainimarama is due to appear for a special hearing in a Suva court this morning after spending the night in a police cell alongside the suspended police chief Sitiveni Qiliho.The pair were charged with one count each of abuse of office following the sanctioning of charges by the Public Prosecutions director (DPP) Christopher Pryde yesterday. The two are alleged to have interfered in an active investigation into a financial mismanagement case involving former staff of the University of the South Pacific almost four years ago. Also, the initial estimate of the recovery cost following Vanuatu's twin cyclone disaster is estimated at six billion vatu, or just under $US50 million. And after four years of disruption, Polyfest has kicked off, with live audiences, in Tāmaki Makaurau.
Avondale College students performing at Polyfest 2022. Photo: RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly
RNZ Pacific Journalist Koroi Hawkins
10:05 Awe: transforming minds and bodies - Dacher Keltner
Photo: Penguin Random House/www.psychology.berkeley.edu
Awe is one of the least-studied emotions. It's that tingling, compelling moment psychologist at the University of California, Berkeley Dacher Keltner describes as "the feeling of being in the presence of something vast that transcends your understanding of the world". Dacher's new book is Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life. In it he explores how emotions such as awe, compassion, desire, and pride shape our relationships, physical environment, mental health and sources of pleasure. It's science and it's history. And it's also a deeply personal inquiry. Dacher Keltner tells Kathryn cultivating awe in our everyday life can be life enhancing.
10:35 Book review: Cursed Bread by Sophie Mackintosh
Photo: Hamish Hamilton
Martene McCaffrey of Unity Books Auckland reviews Cursed Bread by Sophie Mackintosh, published by Hamish Hamilton
10:45 Around the motu: Mary Argue in Wairarapa
Tinui School temporarily runs out of the community hall and playgroup after Cyclone Gabrielle damaged the school building. Photo: Supplied by Mary Argue
The Tinui community was hard hit by Cyclone Gabrielle and the local school is still operating from playcentre and community hall amid talk of managed retreat. Carterton council has unanimously decided to name a road in a new development 'Georgina Beyer Way' after the former MP and mayor died this week. And Mary has a wrap of local events including the just held Golden Shears.
Golden Shears final showdown, 2023. Joel Henare open woolhandling final Photo: PETE NIKOLAISON
Mary Argue is the Chief reporter at Wairarapa Times Age
11:05 Music reviewer Grant Smithies
Photo: album covers
Electrified is a spanking new double album of new and collected tracks by mighty French psych-rock duo, The Liminanas. We'll hear two tracks from that today, plus something from a new EP from Auckland's Leonard Charles and a freshly reissued gem from De La Soul.
11:30 Sports commentator Sam Ackerman
England's Harry Brook is run out without facing a ball. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz
Sam breaks down the Black Caps latest headache against Sri Lanka - spoiler alert, it’s quite similar to their last one - and we look at the weekend sporting forecast for the Warriors, Breakers and mens and women’s Super Rugby
11:45 The week that was
Photo: Supplied / Uber Eats
Comedians Elisabeth Easther and Donna Brookbanks with a few laughs
Music played in this show
Track: Finger Tips
Artist: Stevie Wonder
Time played: 10:32am
Track: Buffalo Stance
Artist: Neneh Cherry
Time played: 10:35am