Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Nexus 4 boasts SlimPort support for tethered display sharing

Nexus 4 boasts SlimPort support for tethered display sharing

A lot of the hubbub yesterday was around the Nexus 4's support of Miracast, courtesy of Android 4.2. If you don't want to spring for a dedicated TV box or invest in a whole new set of gadgets to supersize your mobile experience, then you may be excited to hear that the handset also supports SlimPort. We haven't heard much from the DisplayPort-based standard since January, but we're happy to report it finally appears to be ready for primetime. Analogix, the company behind the tech, already has its first adapter up for sale on Amazon (at the more coverage link), which takes the Nexus 4's micro-USB port and allows you to connect an HDMI cable to it -- so long as that proposition is worth $30 to you. Eventually DVI, VGA and DisplayPort will also be added to list of output options, potentially making the this handset's charging port the most versatile micro-USB jack in the smartphone market. For more, check out the PR after the break.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/30/nexus-4-boasts-slimport-support/

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Business Closing Despite Rise In National Halloween Sales | News ...

A survey released by National Retail Federation reports the highest year-over-year increase in consumer spending for Halloween festivities during its 10-year survey history. That is not the case for a small business in downtown Bloomington that is going out of business after 33 years of operation.

Dianne Higgins owns Costume Delight and says she has seen exactly the opposite.

?This Halloween season is been probably the worst Halloween in the 33 years, our numbers are down dramatically, the flow of customer has not been what we have expected and seen over the last several years,? Higgins says.

Higgins says online buying, short-term Halloween stores and road construction on the street where her store sits have caused her business to shrink by 50 percent compared to last year.

?With the construction being here and you can go to many other locations to get Halloween items, it has affected our Halloween business drastically,? she says.

Harv Hegarty was in Higgins? store Monday and says construction didn?t discourage him from shopping.

?I spent quite a bit today because I got a lot for the future, I would say maybe $50,? He says

Higgins says the business will continue online and but will close its doors by mid-December.

Source: http://indianapublicmedia.org/news/businesses-struggling-increase-halloween-sales-39070/

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Putting All Of This ?Fanboy/Fangirl? Nonsense To Rest Once And For ...

There?s an interesting thing that happens in the technology press world, and probably throughout all of journalism land. It?s weird, and it?s become quite annoying to me. Basically, whenever someone writes something positive about a company, be it a product release or software update, the general public tends to jump to a conclusion quickly ? that the person writing the story is either a fanboy/fangirl of the company, or is in the ?pocket? of the PR team at said company.

It?s obnoxious. The sad part about it is that this behavior of simple-mindedness is starting to cross over into the journalism ecosystem itself. Other journalists at other publications are starting to call out people for ?drinking Kool-aid? or being an ?apologist.?

Even though this is very annoying and counterproductive, the sadder part is that it?s so far from the truth that it?s not even funny. For whatever reason, whether you agree with it or not, we are paid to write about technology. For the most part, we call it like we see it. At least I know I do, and can?t speak for others. Oh, and we don?t get paid by companies to write things. Ever. We?re not stupid.

My experience in Silicon Valley is a bit different than other journalists? experiences because I?ve actually worked at startups and have had a few of my own projects. I know how all of this works, and trust me, it?s work. Launching something, reaching out to the press and supporting your users is tireless work, but that?s what we get paid to do at startups.

For journalists? We?re people too. We like certain products and companies. We get called out for having a bias toward something. Well, duh. We?re human and we like what we like and we don?t like what we don?t like. It?s life and more importantly, it?s completely healthy.

Example time

So if you?re oblivious to all of this and don?t know what I?m talking about, I?ll give you a few examples. The best one that I can think of is any journalist that covers Apple heavily. Some journalists get called out for being in their ?back pocket.? Not only is that not true, but it?s quite hurtful and questions our integrity. Should we fight back? No. Sometimes we have to, though.

Another example is a journalist at a publication that covers Facebook heavily. It?s their beat, they are very interested in what Facebook is up to. Sometimes, when the company screws up, they call them out on it. Like a journalist should. But sometimes, they get really excited to tell you, the readers, that Facebook has done something quite awesome and revolutionary. As they should.

In my experience, I get called out repeatedly for covering a company that isn?t Apple. For what reason? I have no idea, other than they?re not ?sexy enough? in Silicon Valley. The heart of the matter is that all of these companies are made up of people who work very hard to create things that change your lives and in some cases, change the world.

It?s really awesome and inspiring stuff. What?s even awesomer is that we have the job to tell you all about it.

Don?t get me wrong

I love commenters and readers, so don?t get me wrong here. I love feedback and criticism. Everyone is entitled to their own opinions. That?s why the world and the Internet are great. However, lay off on attacking integrity unless you have evidence that this is really the case.

I?m not afraid to tell you that this is annoying or obnoxious, because I have no shits to give. I will not apologize for enjoying things that a company does and thus enjoying telling you about it. You can hate it. I hope that people do sometimes, because if you agree with one person all of the time, something is very wrong.

I?m a fan of Apple products, but?I hate iOS 6 Maps?and have said as much. I don?t like everything that Google does. In fact,?some of their moves baffle me, but some of them are?quite fantastic. It?s life.

Having said all of this, I just wanted to level with folks on how this all really works. We?re all very lucky to be able to find information quickly and read great publications for free. We don?t have to like what we read. We don?t have to like who wrote it. We don?t have to like who it is about. But you do have to know that we?re all people.

Just because we?re behind a computer doesn?t mean we get a free pass to be an ass. Rock on and feel free to bash me in the comments.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2012/10/31/putting-all-of-this-fanboyfangirl-nonsense-to-rest-once-and-for-all/

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ConEd prepped for big storm, got even bigger one

Streets around a Con Edison substation are flooded as the East River overflows into the Dumbo section of Brooklyn, N.Y., as Sandy moves through the area on Monday, Oct. 29, 2012. Superstorm Sandy zeroed in on New York's waterfront with fierce rain and winds that shuttered most of the nation's largest city Monday, darkened the financial district and left a huge crane hanging off a luxury high-rise. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

Streets around a Con Edison substation are flooded as the East River overflows into the Dumbo section of Brooklyn, N.Y., as Sandy moves through the area on Monday, Oct. 29, 2012. Superstorm Sandy zeroed in on New York's waterfront with fierce rain and winds that shuttered most of the nation's largest city Monday, darkened the financial district and left a huge crane hanging off a luxury high-rise. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

This photo taken Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012, shows what appear to be transformers exploding after much of lower Manhattan lost power during hurricane Sandy in New York. After a gigantic wall of water defied elaborate planning and swamped underground electrical equipment at a Consolidated Edison substation in Manhattan's East Village, about 250,000 lower Manhattan customers were left without power. (AP Photo/Karly Domb Sadof)

Consolidated Edision trucks are submerged on 14th Street near the ConEd power plant, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in New York. Sandy knocked out power to at least 3.1 million people, and New York's main utility said large sections of Manhattan had been plunged into darkness by the storm, with 250,000 customers without power as water pressed into the island from three sides, flooding rail yards, subway tracks, tunnels and roads. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

FILE -In this Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012, file photo, workers clear debris outside the Consolidated Edison power sub-station on 14th Street. After a gigantic wall of water defied elaborate planning and swamped underground electrical equipment at a Consolidated Edison substation in Manhattan's East Village, about 250,000 lower Manhattan customers were left without power. (AP Photo/ John Minchillo, File)

(AP) ? Blame a very high tide driven by a full moon, the worst storm surge in nearly 200 years, and the placement of underground electrical equipment in flood-prone areas for the most extensive storm-related power outage in New York City's history.

It's like what happened at the Fukushima nuclear complex in Japan last year ? without the radiation. At a Consolidated Edison substation in Manhattan's East Village, a gigantic wall of water defied elaborate planning and expectations, swamped underground electrical equipment, and left about 250,000 lower Manhattan customers without power.

Last year, the surge from Hurricane Irene reached 9.5 feet at the substation. ConEd figured it had that covered.

The utility also figured the infrastructure could handle a repeat of the highest surge on record for the area ? 11 feet during a hurricane in 1821, according to the National Weather Service. After all, the substation was designed to withstand a surge of 12.5 feet.

With all the planning, and all the predictions, planning big was not big enough. Superstorm Sandy went bigger ? a surge of 14 feet.

"Nobody predicted it would be that high," said ConEd spokesman Allan Drury.

At one point, nearly 1 million ConEd customers lost electricity in and near the city ? a record number for the utility. And the troubles didn't end as the storm slowly moved off. Con Ed said problems to its high-voltage systems caused by the hurricane forced the utility to cut power to about 160,000 customers in Brooklyn and Staten Island on Tuesday night.

But the signature event came when a surge of water pushed forward by the storm's winds poured over the banks of the East River near the substation on 13th Street.

As water poured into the substation Monday night, the blinding flash of an explosion lit the most famous skyline in the world. A huge section of the city that never sleeps fell into darkness.

It's exactly what a proactive ConEd hoped to avoid by shutting down three similar power networks in Manhattan and one in Brooklyn in advance of the storm surge.

However, the combination of circumstances, notably an extraordinary high tide, pushed massive amounts of water deep into the city. The underground infrastructure was suddenly vulnerable.

As the storm's predicted path zeroed in on New York City, ConEd brought on extra work crews and laid plans to shut down some underground equipment in lower Manhattan and other parts of the city.

By late Monday afternoon, the utility started to notify Manhattan customers south of 36th Street that power might be shut off if underground equipment was flooded with corrosive, destructive seawater. The company gave the same heads-up to some customers in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx.

By mid-evening, though, conditions had worsened. More than 150,000 customers in New York City and Westchester County were already off grid. The utility began turning off the power, as a precaution, to a section of lower Manhattan, including Wall Street, in an attempt to stem damage. Shortly afterward, the company began cutting electricity in parts of Brooklyn too; a total of 220,000 other customers were already in the dark.

Less than an hour later, more equipment flooded, sparks flew, and the blast boomed across the East River and throughout lower Manhattan from what ConEd believes was a circuit breaker at its flooded substation.

The flooded equipment had failed.

When live electric equipment is inundated with salt water, electricity escapes every which way, sending sparks flying and damaging equipment. "You see a huge blast just from the short circuit," says Arshad Mansoor, senior vice president for research and development at the Electric Power Research Institute, an industry-funded research group.

As day broke Tuesday, the company was busily assessing damage and fixing equipment. But downed trees and wires, as well as lingering flood waters, made it hard for repair crews to reach some areas. The utility was able to get at least 140,000 customers back on the grid within several hours.

But hundreds of thousands of others hunkered down for a longer outage. ConEd said customers served by underground equipment should be restored to service in four days. Those who get power from overhead lines are expected to wait a week. That's because there are so many fallen lines.

The most densely populated parts of the city, mostly in Manhattan and Brooklyn, are served by underground transmission wires. These offer protection from wind and falling tree limbs that plague overhead wires and make the suburbs far more vulnerable to outages.

But underground wires can flood and be more difficult to repair, especially in low-lying areas. It can be harder for workers to get to the wires because manholes flood. When water recedes, it can be harder to find problems, pull out wires and equipment, dry them, fix them, and slide them back into place.

The damage assessment could take days to complete.

To engineers like Joannes Westerink, a University of Notre Dame researcher who is working on a computer model for future New York City storm surges, this was all predictable.

"You build infrastructure too low, and you run into trouble," he said. "It's a recipe for disaster."

He said it's well known that New York City had spread to ever-lower zones in modern history. He cited Battery Park at the tip of Manhattan as a dramatic example.

ConEd could likely have shut down more networks served by the 13th Street substation before the storm arrived, but that would have meant cutting power to tens of thousands of people and critical facilities like hospitals. Even though hospitals have backup power generators, they too can fail. Generators at New York University Langone Medical Center went down Monday night, and patients were evacuated.

"You have to make the decision to shut off power to a substation very, very carefully, especially if it serves critical facilities," Mansoor said. The decision can turn into a lose-lose situation.

Despite the latest damage, Mansoor called the New York City system the most reliable in the world because it's normally well protected from weather and set up with backup equipment. That protects the city from minor disruptions and helps keep major disruptions from cascading through the city.

No system, he said, can be designed to withstand every storm, no matter how severe.

Carol J. Friedland, a Louisiana State University engineer who has studied the impact of flooding on electrical systems, said more measures should be taken to protect equipment in low-lying places. For example, sea walls can be raised, and equipment can sometimes be relocated.

"My personal opinion ... is that there should be more resilience built into these types of infrastructure, because when the power goes out, it disrupts the entire community," she said.

Massoud Amin, a University of Minnesota electrical engineering professor who has studied power outages, said the storm underscores the need to improve the nation's electric grid by stringing more high-voltage wire and using modern sensor technology to spot problems sooner, isolate damage, and speed recovery from outages.

"Our electrical infrastructure system is a marvel of engineering for the last century," Amin said. "The grid operators and the power companies are doing the best they can."

It is too soon to say if anything more could have been done to keep the New York City grid working. Under state regulations, ConEd will be required to file a report on the outage to the New York State Department of Public Service within 60 days of power restoration. That agency's staff will evaluate how problems were handled and if improvements can be made for the future, according to agency spokeswoman Pamela Carter.

___

AP writer Jeff Donn reported from Plymouth, Mass. and Dave Carpenter from Chicago. AP writers Scott Mayerowitz and David Koenig contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-10-31-Superstorm-Con%20Ed/id-6d465224c8a24eb3b8494df20b74df63

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Building Equity in Your Home | Geri Reilly Real Estate

Buying a home is a great way to improve your family?s financial security. The main way this happens is through home equity.

What is equity?

The equity in your home is the difference between its market value and the balance on your mortgage. In other words, equity is the wealth built up in your home over time. If you could sell your home for $400,000 and the amount you owe on your mortgage is only $100,000, then your equity is $300,000.

Equity is built in three ways: down payment, mortgage payments, and market gains. Making a down payment is a reduction in your mortgage amount, giving you instant equity in your home. Making house payments increases your equity as well, since every payment includes a portion for interest and a portion that reduces the amount of your loan amount (called the principal). Over time the amount of your payment that goes toward the principal increases and helps to build your equity even faster.

Market Value Appreciation

You also build equity as your home gains in value over time; this appreciation in market value can mean that you build equity simply by owning your home. Of course there are no guarantees that real estate values will continue to rise, but historically this has been the case. If your home is worth $250,000 and the market appreciates by 5% each year then after just two years you could add $25,000 in equity simply by living there.

Equity doesn?t have to be an abstract concept; you can turn it into cash by applying for a home equity loan which uses the equity in your home as security and in many cases allows you to deduct the interest from your taxes, just as you do with your first mortgage. Home equity loans are usually a cheaper source of funds than other types of credit (credit cards, for example) and can be an excellent way to pay for home renovation or to consolidate debt.

Pick up more Real Estate tips at http://www.buyvtrealestate.com/geri-reilly-real-estate-tips/

Tags: building equity in your home, buy vermont real estate, equity, home buying, real estate tips

Source: http://blog.buyvtrealestate.com/real-estate-tips/building-equity-in-your-home-2/

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Should You Tell Your Mono Partner About Your Interest in Open ...

What if you?re already in a monogamous relationship now, and you feel leanings towards a more open relationship experience? Should you discuss this with your current partner or keep it to yourself? What if you aren?t 100% sure about your feelings yet? Should you wait until you?re certain?

First off, there are no shoulds. You?re free to choose whatever you like. So instead of telling you what you should or shouldn?t do, I?ll simply share some perspectives to help you make your own conscious choice here.

A common challenge in relationships is the ?grass is greener? syndrome. You know what you?ve experienced in your relationship life thus far, and you may have a pretty good idea about what you like within the realm of your past experience, but how can you evaluate completely new experiences?

In other words, how can you tell if you?d really like something before you?ve tried it?

If you?ve always been monogamous, and you ponder the idea of open relationships, how can you tell if this new path is a good fit for you? How do you determine whether you should stay monogamous or begin exploring open relationships?

The answer ? which you may not like very much ? is that you can?t tell. At least you can?t tell from where you currently stand. You won?t discover how you feel about the other side unless you actively explore the other side.

Even after you explore the other side for a while, you may still not be 100% certain. Human relationships have many variables, and just because you?ve had some good monogamous relationships thus far doesn?t mean that any monogamous relationship with anyone would work well for you. Similarly, you may explore open relationships and find that some of them work well for you and some don?t. This isn?t the kind of exploration you can completely figure out within a few weeks.

But only by exploring do you have any hope of learning what the experience is really like for you and how you feel about it. This exploration is unlikely to be simple or short-term. Exploring open relationships is like saying, ?Let me check out this Internet thing and see what that?s about.?

Should You Tell Your Partner?

Again, no shoulds here? but let?s consider the options.

How can you tell your current partner about your interest in open relationships while you?re still in a place of uncertainty? Wouldn?t it be unfair to unload that onto your partner when you aren?t even sure yet?

The Catch 22 here is: How can you ever be sure about something you?ve never experienced? You can?t. So if you want until you?re certain, you?ll be waiting forever. In order to get the certainty you desire, you?ll need to explore, and that requires beginning your exploration while you?re still uncertain.

Few people in a mono relationship suddenly wake up one day and say, ?Wait a minute? I?m really an open relationships person. What am I doing in a mono relationship now? I?d better switch formats.?

You may suspect that you?d enjoy a more open relationship style, but you can?t really be sure until you try it. So what sense does it make to tell your partner if you can?t be sure?

You could try doing your homework first. You could read books about open relationships (see my polyamory resources page for a good place to start). You could talk to people with more experience about it. You could lean into this to whatever degree feels good to you, without crossing any lines that could be considered cheating.

That isn?t a bad idea if you?re just starting out, but it probably won?t help as much as you?d like. Relationships are just too experiential. Reading about other people?s experiences of open relationships can?t give you an accurate sense of what it would actually be like for you.

I read many books on open relationships first, including those on the resources page I mentioned. At the time I thought they were mildly helpful, but looking back, the stories shared by those authors really didn?t match up with my own interests and intentions very well. While this sort of reading helped me feel like I was at least doing something to get started, it also slowed me down in some ways because I didn?t find other people?s experiences very compelling.

Real relationships are so varied and dynamic that it may be difficult to truly relate to other people?s experiences in this area. Your own exploration will undoubtedly be unique.

The question to ask yourself is this: If I go another 10 years as-is, would I regret that I never explored this path?

One of the top deathbed regrets that people have is not sharing their feelings honestly. Another major regret is not being true to themselves ? and putting too much weight on satisfying the expectations of others.

While it may seem very difficult to share your honest feelings with your current partner, I highly recommend that you do this, regardless of what you feel the consequences may be. To hold back in this way would be enormously detrimental to your growth, not to mention your sanity.

You don?t have to be certain. It?s perfectly fine to be feeling fuzzy and unclear. You don?t have to be able to explain it well. It?s okay to fumble as you spit the words out and go back and clarify again and again. You can still communicate your thoughts and feelings to your current partner as best you can. And you can do that right now.

How Will Your Partner React?

How your partner initially reacts isn?t something you control.?I?ve seen reactions all across the spectrum when people have done this.

Sometimes the partner freaks out and perceives this as a threat. Sometimes the partner is supportive or curious, even though they?re convinced that monogamy is the best choice for them. Sometimes the partner gets really quiet and becomes nearly catatonic. And sometimes the partner is just as interested, if not more interested, in what it would be like to open up the relationship.

I can?t tell you how your partner will react. Even when people think they know, they?re sometimes surprised. If you?ve been keeping this from your partner thus far, there?s a chance that s/he has been keeping similar thoughts and feelings from you as well. There?s also a good chance your partner won?t be that surprised? especially if you?ve been reading a bunch of books on open relationships, purely out of curiosity of course. ;)

But the main pattern I keep seeing is that regardless of how the partner reacts, the initiator is happier on the other side. A relationship that makes us feel like we have to hold back, even from exploring areas we aren?t yet sure about, is too much of a cage to yield long-term happiness. That sort of situation generally creates long-term ambivalence? which ultimately leads to apathy or resentment.

Does Your Partner Want You to Be Happy?

A healthy monogamous relationship will support you in your happiness and growth, even if it means exploring alternative relationship styles. Your partner may not wish to join you in that exploration, but they can still support you in what you feel drawn to explore, and at the very least, they can avoid blocking you from exploring what you?re curious about. How else are you going to learn and grow?

So when you inform your partner of your interest in exploring more openness, one thing you?ll learn is how healthy your current relationship really is. Do you have a partner who?s conscious and accepting enough to support you on this path, even if they?re sure it isn?t for them? Or do you have a more fear-based, scarcity minded partner who responds with clinginess, neediness, and desperation?

In other words, you?ll learn how healthy the friendship aspect of your current relationship is. If your friendship is strong, you?ll work through this just fine. If your friendship with your partner is weak, it will probably be messier.

If you?re in the weak friendship situation, then you?ll learn an important relationship lesson that applies to both mono and open relationships: Relationships between great friends tend to work out well. Even if you decide to break up in some fashion, the friendship can often still be preserved.

If your partner supports your exploration, that?s great. You can begin discussing how you?ll lean into this and what you?d like to explore, either on your own or together as a couple.

But what if your partner objects?

First, you can continue discussing this. Some people are initially stunned and surprised, but as they have more time to think about it, they realize they can be okay with it.

If your partner continues to object, even a week after you?ve shared this interest, then you have to question the quality of this relationship and ask yourself whether it?s worth maintaining. Why is your partner unable to support your path of growth in this area? What happened to your friendship?

In this case your partner has put you in the difficult position of choosing between them and your path of growth. Any partner who does that is ultimately putting themselves in a losing position. They?re not only threatening your relationship as a couple; they?re also threatening your friendship. What kind of friend would try to block another friend from learning, growing, and exploring on a path with a heart?

If you choose to drop your interest in open relationships and stay with your partner, resentment will surely build. You?ll begin to notice other areas where this partner is expressing neediness and scarcity-mindedness. You?ll notice when they try to manipulate you with fear, shame, and guilt. The part of you that wants to grow and explore ? the part that took the risk of sharing the truth with your partner ? is going to want to continue that exploration, and it?s not going to be happy being stuffed back into a box. This relationship will eventually self-destruct. The friendship just isn?t strong enough.?If you aren?t conscious about what?s happening here, you could drag this out for years. Please don?t do that to yourself. Just let it go. Set your partner free to find a better friend, and set yourself free to do the same.

If you choose to explore your path of growth and let go of your objecting partner, you may not feel so great about this at first. It?s a tough decision emotionally, and you may have a lot of uncertainty even as you move forward, especially if you?re married and/or have kids. But in the long run, you?ll feel much better that you didn?t hold back and that you explored what your heart called you to explore. And you?ll attract much better matches in terms of friendship, which makes for much better lovers too.

What You Can?t See Yet

The thing is? when you?re in a closed relationship, you have some blind spots regarding what life would actually be like on the other side.

There are actually a lot of people with very flexible attitudes towards relationships, and many of them would be delighted to connect with you, but they?re not telling you this now. In fact, they?re actively hiding this from you.

What I?m saying is that there are people in your life right now who might love to get more involved with you, but they?re keeping this interest from you because they respect your choice to be in a closed relationship, and they?re not interested in messing with your existing situation. So instead, they?ll connect with you only in a limited fashion, reserving their deepest intimacies for those who are clearly open and available.

This was a big shocker for me when I first began exploring open relationships. People who were already in my life while I was married suddenly began expressing interest, first in fairly subtle ways and then a bit more overtly as time progressed.

These days I probably have more friends who are into open relationships than closed ones, and I see this fascinating dynamic play out all the time. When my open friends are together, they tend to connect very freely with each other. But when a closed relationship person is in the mix, it?s like the open people go into secret society mode, at least partly. They respect the closed person?s choices and have no desire to flaunt their openness, which might make the closed person feel uncomfortable.

There are countless variations on this dynamic, so this is definitely an oversimplification, but the basic idea is that people in closed relationships are simply not seeing the full spectrum of what?s possible. And they?re especially not seeing how others would relate to them if they advertised a more open posture. Other people are definitely responding to the vibe you?re putting out.

With marriage in particular, the common pattern is to assume it?s a closed relationship. So if you wear a wedding ring, you?re actively advertising your lack of availability, at least to certain people. Take off the ring, and you may find that people start relating to you differently. Again, this is an oversimplification; I recognize that some open people are actually more attracted to married partners. But more often than not, I find that open people will take the advertisement of a closed relationship as a sign that the person isn?t interested in connecting in certain ways.

Even when someone initially steps into the open relationship waters, other open people may be a bit cautious with them at first. Partly this is because people who are truly open don?t want to step into the potential minefield of dealing with a pseudo-open person who might experience discomfort, jealousy, shame, or other negative feelings about being open. So don?t expect the full bounty of potential partners to present itself to you just because you announce your decision to be open. The more you shift your vibe towards openness and become comfortable with it, the easier it will be for other people to approach you.

Generally speaking, human beings are exceptionally good at reading each other?s vibes. You just have to accept that you?re putting out a certain vibe when it comes to your degree of openness, and other people are reading you like a book. Others can tell if you?re tense about your relationship posture or if you?re relaxed and at peace with who you?ve become.

Don?t Be Fake

This is not a situation where I?d suggest ?fake it till you make it.? There?s absolutely no need to be fake. As you lean into open relationships, please accept wherever you are on this path, and be willing to share that honestly with others. You don?t have to pretend that you?re shamelessly brave or free of jealousy while you?re actually feeling that the whole experience is a bit beyond your comfort zone.

Instead I recommend that if you?re a newbie engaging in this type of exploration, go ahead and broadcast that. Post on your social media pages that you?re leaning towards open relationships and want to learn more about this. That?s a great thing to do.

Sure, some people may freak out and unfriend you, but so what? That?s a sign that those were weak friendships to begin with. You?ll make new friends who will support your path of growth.

The benefit is that once you advertise what you?re getting into, you invite support from others who are a little further along than you are.

I?ve been on this path for about 3 years now. I?m far enough along to feel comfortable with it, I know that I like it, and I want to keep living this way for the foreseeable future. But I?m not so far past the newbie period that I can?t remember what it was like to get started. This year I?ve been feeling a special fondness for people who are just beginning on a similar journey.

When I learn that someone is leaning into a more open relationship posture, I enjoy hanging out with them and discussing it. I like talking about the reality of what it?s actually like and dispelling myths about it. I like introducing them to open friends that would be positive influences for them. And if it seems appropriate, I may enjoy giving them the opportunity to dabble in some exploration with me, at a pacing they control, so they can see what it feels like without having to make any sort of commitment to it.

Partly I enjoy connecting with people who are just starting on this path because it helps me understand the progress I?ve made, and I also gain clarity about what I?d like to explore next.

I?m certainly not the only one who enjoys welcoming people onto the open relationships path. Lots of open people are like this. But how will they notice you if you hide your interest, or if you pretend you?re an expert when you?re just starting out?

If you really want to explore open relationships, and you want more personal help doing so, then it helps a lot if you stop hiding and raise your visibility. The people I know who are happiest on this path are surrounded by friends who all know what they?re into. They aren?t in hiding.

My Exploration

When I transitioned out of my marriage in 2009 and began earnestly exploring open relationships, I sought a lot of counsel from people who?d been on this path for years, even decades. That was helpful in the beginning since I quickly dropped some limiting beliefs and invited new experiences as a result of these connections. But over time I found that I really had to evolve my own relationship style. I couldn?t model other people very much. I could appreciate that their styles worked for them, but I didn?t find anyone whose style of relating felt totally congruent for me.

The most helpful part of learning from other people was seeing that instead of wanting, they were enjoying having. It was nice to see how they turned their desires into reality. This made me think more deeply about my own desires, and I realized I had to gain more experience just to figure out what I really wanted. Now I have a lot more clarity about what I like, so it?s easier for me to create that. It?s tough to create what you don?t quite understand.

When I think back to what it was like to be mono, it?s hard to remember how I thought and felt back then. Staying receptive to new connections seems so normal and natural now that it?s hard to imagine I didn?t always feel that way. If I tried to go back to mono now, it would feel cold, heartless, insensitive, and uncaring? like turning down the volume of love in my life till it?s nearly muted.

Deeper Friendships

The outsider?s perspective on open relationships is to overplay the sexual aspect. They often see this path as being all about the sex ? being open means having more sex with more partners. To these people, an open relationship is synonymous with sleeping around.

But the insider?s perspective is different. Perhaps the best way I can explain it is that it?s about creating deeper friendships. You already have multiple friends right now, don?t you? Well, what if you started getting more emotionally and/or physically intimate with some of your friends? And what if you added new friends that you could connect very deeply with? Can you imagine what that might add to your life?

So whereas an outsider tends to think of opening their relationship as a process of adding more strangers to sleep with, the insider?s perspective is about creating a deeper and more intimate friendship network.

You can still try the path of sleeping with a bunch of strangers, and I know some people who do that, but I don?t currently know anyone who seems genuinely happy living that way. The happiest people I know are the ones who have lovers that are also their friends. If someone wouldn?t make a good friend, they probably won?t try to turn that person into a lover. This is a bit of an oversimplification, but it?s a decent way to explain the difference between the misperception and the reality of successful open relationships.

Sleeping together increases the intensity of the social bond between two (or more) people. This is a great way to deepen a friendship. But you don?t have to go that far if you don?t want to. I find that just cuddling with a woman will deepen the friendship we share. Or we might sleep together but not have sex. Or we might have oral sex but not intercourse. The idea is to take the friendship to a deeper place that both people feel good about, but don?t go past the point where someone isn?t feeling good.

Since I get asked this often, I?ll clarify again that I don?t do anything physical or sexual with men. It?s not my thing. But I have found that deepening my friendships with women in this way also deepens my friendships with men.?One way this happens is that my male friends and I help each other improve our relationships with women. In some open relationship circles, you?ll find a really nice sense of community evolves where everyone helps everyone else improve their relationship lives, sometimes very directly.

For example, one guy might encourage one of his female friends to connect with another of his male friends. It can be fun to play matchmaker, which is pretty easy to do when everyone has an open posture about receiving new connections. When you treat people well, word gets around, and you?ll get more referrals to new potential partners through your friends. But if you treat people poorly, you won?t get any referrals this way.

One friend recently helped me connect with a woman, believing we?d be a very good match for each other. He was right. She and I had a wonderful time connecting together, and hopefully we?ll be able to reconnect again in the future (we live in different cities). Isn?t that a nice thing for guys to do for each other? I sure think so.

Even if a woman turns out not to be a good match for me, I may know someone that would be a better fit for her, and so if she seems friendly and open, smells good, and isn?t a psycho, then I may refer her to someone else I know if I think they?d be compatible.

If you?re the jealous type, you may not even be able to imagine people sharing relationship partners like this, but with a group of non-jealous people who enjoy plenty of social abundance, it feels very natural and normal to do so. After all, if you have a friend that you know treats people very well, and you can expect that anyone you refer to them will probably have a good time, then you?re doing everyone a favor by encouraging these matches. Both people you connect will appreciate what you did for them.

If you?re in a closed mono relationship right now, you probably have friends in your life right now who?d be happy to sleep with you if they knew of your interest. Or maybe they?d be up for cuddling. Or oral sex. Or some really intimate conversation. But if you keep quiet, they keep quiet. If you began advertising your openness, you might find that they start dropping hints about their availability. If you sense that someone is dangling bait in front of you, that?s because they are. :)

The truth is that people really enjoy connecting with each other. People want to enjoy deeper and more intimate friendships. Quite a lot of people are open to enjoying sexual connections with multiple partners too. It often feels good to do so when the friendship and the chemistry is there. Sure, some people have various blocks and fears and hold themselves back in this area, but many are very open to this kind of exploration.

If you keep hiding, then most of the other open people will remain hidden from you too. But if you?re willing to come out and express interest in this path, even before you have much certainty about it, then at least you?ll be able to see some of what?s been previously hidden from view, and this can encourage you to lean into it more.

Lean Into It

You can?t answer experiential questions without exploring, and open relationships are very experiential. The truth is that if you don?t explore this way of relating, you?ll never know what it?s really like.

Some people can handle not knowing what open relationships are like. Maybe they?re disinterested, or they?re certain they prefer something else, or their curiosity can be easily dismissed. And that?s perfectly fine. If you don?t feel drawn to explore this, there?s no need to explore it.

But if you?re the type whose curiosity keeps coming back, and it can?t simply be swept under a rug, and you feel drawn to explore this path eventually (even if you still have doubts about it), then based on that, I?d predict that it?s probably going to work out well for you if you lean into it. You?ll most likely be happier on this path and more fulfilled by it than you would be in a mono relationship. You may have a lot to learn initially, but if this is calling to your heart, please don?t ignore that call.

Don?t confuse the potentially chaotic transition period with the long-term exploration. Transitioning from a mono relationship to a more open posture can be quite disruptive. Not wanting to deal with that initial explosiveness is a block for many people, but try not to let it dissuade you. If the long-term exploration of this path appeals to you, then focus on the joys of exploring that path, and do the best you can to navigate through the transition period. It may be difficult at first, but it?s worth it.

Remember that if you have an interest in exploring open relationships, you?re certainly not alone. If you?re surrounded by mono friends and family members, you may feel like the freak of your social circle, but in other circles you?d be the tame one who still has much to learn. As you lean towards whatever path inspires you, you?ll invite new sources of social support to welcome you. That?s a really fun time as you realize that there are lots of people out there just like you, and many of them had to go through similar transitions. To you this transition may seem like a very big deal, but to them it?s just a memory, and someday that?s how you?ll feel about it as well.

If you feel yourself leaning towards a more open relationship posture and you want to ask me more about it, or if you?d like some introductions to others you can learn from, feel free to drop me an email?about it. Sometimes I get busy and can?t always reply, but lately things have been fairly calm communication-wise. Exploring open relationships has been a major growth experience for me, and I especially enjoying connecting with others who are leaning into this.

Source: http://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2012/10/should-you-tell-your-mono-partner-about-your-interest-in-open-relationships/

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I'm Struggling to Become A More Submissive Wife! | Black and ...

Photo Credit: Iofoto

OK, my tongue is about to start bleeding. I?m biting down on it, trying not to say anything ?flip?, especially in front of the kids. You see, I?m practicing submission. Yes, I said ?practicing? because I haven?t always been generous in this aspect of my marriage. If you recall in one of my first BMWK posts, I shared with you some magical things that happened for me and how I overcame my blended family blues when I began to take this wifely responsibility of submission more seriously. As with many biblical principles, believing is one thing, but doing is a whole ?nother story.

Something that helped me, was breaking this thing down and understanding exactly what was needed in order to be a more submissive wife. We all know the definition of submission, but do we really understand the principles and the importance? I personally know how hard this is to do sometimes, but try not to think of it as being inferior or ?less than? to your husband, but quite the contrary. Instead, look at is a necessity for your marriage and for the welfare of your family. Like me, you may be struggling with submission, because you are a strong-willed and strong-minded individual. After all, he married you because he saw and loved your strengths, right?

First, lets break the word down. Simply put, the prefix ?sub means under?. Think of ?under? as the wind beneath his wings to help him soar and support his needs. Think of ?under? as foundation. We know that foundation is the absolute necessity upon which things are built. Without legs, the table will fall. Without solid foundation, even the most beautiful and extravagant homes will collapse. Hmmm?think about (worth repeating) without foundation, the home will collapse.

Ladies ? on a lighter note, think about that moment when you see another female without proper ?foundation? underneath her clothes and her body parts are shaking all over the place. You shake your head in disgust and your lips are turned up. Well, its the same thing. You seem and feel more ?together, in order and ?under control? being that foundation for your husband and family.

Now to the ?mission? part of submission. Mission is the goal and purpose of a plan in which the result is success. Who doesn?t want success for their marriage and family? Hopefully, the head of your household takes his role seriously and understands that his family depends on him. From personal experience, the mission of my husband and for our family is fluid. It can change at any given time, from getting ahead financially to focusing on family dynamics and anything in between. So, it should be important for you (the strong wife) to ?support the goal of success? for your family.

Disclaimer: This is by no means a suggestion to say yes to everything our husbands say or do, but to just simply serve as reminder of one of our duties as a Godly wife. When there is discord, you may want to check yourself to see if you?re being the foundation that he needs to make wise and sound decisions for your family or are you causing weakness in your foundation?

BMWK ? do you struggle with being a ?submissive? wife? ?What does it mean to you?


About the author

Sheree is a Christian, wife, WAHM of three, nurse, blogger and speaker, who is forever drawn to all things health-related. You can find her blogging about marriage, family, health tips and more as Smart & Sassy Mom. Sheree is committed to helping blended families and keeping marriages strong, healthy, fun and SPICY!

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Source: http://blackandmarriedwithkids.com/2012/10/im-struggling-to-become-a-more-submissive-wife/

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China Finally Cracks Apple's Secret iPhone 5 Cable: Here Come the Cheap Clones

Apple doesn't want you buying cables for your iPhone 5 (or new iPads) from anyone other than Apple, because it charges a fat $20 for each one. Luckily, we can now confirm a flood of cheap knockoff cables are real. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Uegh0EK0pYU/china-finally-cracks-apples-secret-iphone-5-cable-here-come-the-cheap-clones

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Florida Mug Shots: Oct. 23

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Source: http://www.wesh.com/news/central-florida/mugs/-/14140362/17097134/-/3mhlt6/-/index.html?absolute=true

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Questions and Answers ? October 24 ? Parliament Today

QUESTIONS TO MINISTERS

Economic Programme?Support for New Zealand Families

1. DAVID BENNETT (National?Hamilton East) to the Minister of Finance: What measures has the Government taken to support families through the global financial crisis?

Hon BILL ENGLISH (Minister of Finance): Over the past 4 years the Government has introduced a balanced economic programme to help protect New Zealanders from the sharpest edge of recession. This has ensured we are getting the Government?s books back in order, building a more competitive economy, at the same time as improving our support programmes for families. Despite running large deficits, we have retained Working for Families and maintained its value, maintained universal New Zealand superannuation, maintained most other welfare programmes, maintained interest-free student loans, and maintained the value of these with regular adjustments.

David Bennett: How much will the Government invest this year in programmes that support New Zealand families?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: In addition to the large-scale welfare programmes paying benefits, the Government will spend around $4.5 billion this financial year across a range of programmes that specifically support families. This is up from $3.7 billion in 2008?an increase of $800 million over the last 4 years. This includes $1.4 billion in early childhood education subsidies, $2.1 billion for the family tax credit, $570 million for the in-work tax credit, and a number of other miscellaneous expenditures adding up to $250 million to support children in other ways.

David Bennett: As part of its wider programme to support New Zealand families, how much does the Government invest each year in paid parental leave?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Mr Speaker?[Interruption]

Mr SPEAKER: Order! Order! I want to hear the answer. It is a fair question.

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Despite one of the more significant recessions in a generation, the Government has maintained the current provision of 14 weeks? paid parental leave, which in the year to June 2012 will cost $156 million. As I have pointed out, this is just one small part of the $4.5 billion of support targeted at New Zealand families. The annual cost is likely to rise to $176 million by 2015-16. These figures are based on existing entitlements, before tax, with an estimated 3 percent increase in the average ordinary-time weekly wage each year.

David Bennett: What reports has he seen of alternative approaches to paid parental leave, and what impact would they have on the Government?s finances?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: As I have pointed out, the top priority for the Government has been to increase the value of the Working for Families payments because that affects over 400,000 families. On 1 April this year Working for Families was increased by?

Rt Hon Winston Peters: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I thought it was fair to give the Minister of Finance time, but he was asked what reports he had received. He is well into his answer and he has got nowhere near answering the question that he was directly asked.

Mr SPEAKER: The member has actually raised quite an interesting point, I must concede, because if I heard the question correctly it asked what reports the Minister had received on paid parental leave. The Minister has proceeded to talk so far about Working for Families, which is a totally different issue. Just in case the Minister did not hear the question, I invite David Bennett to repeat his question.

David Bennett: What reports has he seen of alternative approaches to paid parental leave, and what impact would they have on the Government?s finances?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: Well, that is a much better question! The Government?s alternative to increasing paid parental leave, as proposed by the Opposition, has been to make a higher priority of increasing the value of Working for Families payments. These affect around 400,000 families, and on 1 April this year they were increased by 5 percent. I have seen propositions to double paid parental leave from 14 to 26 weeks. When fully implemented, this would cost another $150 million per year, and it is not our highest priority.

Hon David Parker: Does the Minister accept that his tax cuts went disproportionately to the highest income earners and that for middle and low income earners?over half of all New Zealanders?earnings have not kept pace with the cost of living?

Hon BILL ENGLISH: No, I do not accept that, and I am surprised, if the member is worrying about it, that he is advocating policies like printing money, which around the world advantage the highest earners. So I do not know why he is advocating that policy.

State-owned Assets, Sales?Progress

2. DAVID SHEARER (Leader of the Opposition) to the Prime Minister: Does he stand by his statement on asset sales ?It?s a minor delay, but in the overall scheme of things, sometimes the longest way home is the fastest way home?; if so, is he still confident that his asset sales schedule is on track?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY (Prime Minister): Yes. The Government?s share offer programme is completely on track. Between March and June next year we intend to offer shares in Mighty River Power while still holding at least 51 percent of the company. We always expected legal action from the M?ori Council and, in fact, it is better that this is happening sooner rather than later.

David Shearer: Has he read any reports to his Government about the progress of asset sales and privatisation plans of other Governments?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: No, from memory.

David Shearer: Mr Speaker?[Interruption]

Mr SPEAKER: Order! I want to hear the question of the Leader of the Opposition.

David Shearer: Has he seen advice that shows that in Portugal, Ireland, Greece, and Spain, where asset sales are required as part of bailout packages, sale processes have largely stalled because anticipated revenue was not raised?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: I cannot talk too much about the economics in Greece, other than to say that I am pretty convinced that Labour, the Greens, and New Zealand First would probably turn us into Greece. But what I can say is just because there has been a global financial crisis, which the Opposition seems to remember now but never remembers when it is asking every other question about what has been happening in the last 4 years, actually the Dow Jones?

David Shearer: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. That was a pretty straight question, I have to say.

Mr SPEAKER: The member?s point is reasonable. The Prime Minister was asked whether he was aware of certain asset sales programmes in a range of countries. Just to refresh the Prime Minister?s memory, I invite the Leader of the Opposition to repeat his question, if he could.

David Shearer: Has he seen advice that shows that in Portugal, Ireland, Greece, and Spain, where asset sales are required as part of bailout packages, sale processes have largely stalled because anticipated revenue was not raised?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: Well, the answer now is maybe, because Clayton Cosgrove is holding something up. I think it was his application to become leader.

David Shearer: Is the Prime Minister aware that Kurdistan recently postponed selling its Stateowned mobile network, Russia recently cancelled three State privatisations, Hungary is preparing to renationalise a gas company, and Croatia has cancelled selling off its State bank?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: No, but now it is all starting to become clear where Labour is getting its economic policies from!

Michael Woodhouse: Why is it important that the share offer programme goes ahead?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: It is important, firstly, because the Government can use the proceeds of the share offer to invest in new public infrastructure without having to borrow so much to do so. This is exactly the same situation as in 2005 when the previous Government took $600 million from the sale of publicly owned asset Southern Hydro and used it to invest in roads. The share offer also gives New Zealand savers the opportunity to invest either directly or indirectly in big New Zealand companies, and being publicly listed will be good for the companies themselves.

David Shearer: Has the Prime Minister seen the Privatization Barometer report that noted in 2011 that at least 215 initial public offerings totalling a record $44 billion were withdrawn worldwide?most either cancelled or delayed until some time in 2015?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: No, but what I have seen is a report?I cannot recall whether it is from the IMF or the World Bank?that basically looked at countries that over the last 20 or 30 years had involved themselves in partial privatisations or the mixed-ownership model, and what it showed was that there was literally tens of thousands of them, and by the way, if the argument of bringing a company to the market is such a bad idea in New Zealand, why did it work so well for TradeMe?

David Shearer: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. That was also a specific question about 2011, not some ancient history?

Mr SPEAKER: I think the Prime Minister did actually answer the question. He went on to add a little more information that was reasonable for a while, but then it got unreasonable at the end.

David Shearer: Is he comfortable being in the company of Spain, Greece, and Portugal, the only countries still contemplating sell-offs, or does he think that now is the right time to sell off New Zealand?s assets?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: I do not believe that the member is correct. I do believe bringing these companies to the market through the mixed-ownership model is a good, sound economic approach, and actually I think it will deliver a better result for New Zealand without having to borrow more money. I know the member?s policies are to print money and borrow money but?

Mr SPEAKER: Order!

David Shearer: Is it his aim in selling off assets to maximise return to the New Zealand taxpayer or, given that the value of shares is likely to slump as result of the sales, is it to give enormous bargains to those buyers rich enough to buy shares?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: The member will be aware, because of the Securities Act, that I cannot offer a comment on whether the share sales are likely to be successful or not. What I can say is that if one goes and looks at TradeMe as an example, they will see it was brought to the market under what can really only be described as the mixed-ownership model, and that has proven to be very successful. I think if one also looks at the number of KiwiSaver accounts, the New Zealand Superannuation Fund, the other pension funds in New Zealand, and mums and dads looking for investments, they will find those to be attractive investments. We know that Labour was happy for them to pour their money into finance?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! The Prime Minister has no responsibility for Labour.

Hon Trevor Mallard: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I ask the Prime Minister to table the advice that indicates?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! The member knows he cannot do that.

Michael Woodhouse: What reports has he seen on any alternative approaches to paying for new public infrastructure?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: I am aware of a couple of approaches. One is simply to go out there and print money in the misguided belief it will make a country wealthy. Today I have with me actually a $500 million Zimbabwean note. Members might be interested to know that when this was issued in May 2008, you needed 100 of these to buy?

Rt Hon Winston Peters: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. The Prime Minister did that same trick the other day. It was not relevant to the answer then and it is not now.

Mr SPEAKER: Order! On this occasion the Prime Minister was asked what reports he had seen of alternative approaches to paying for State assets and the Prime Minister answered that the printing of money was one such proposal, and was giving an example of the possible outcomes of that. I do not see that as being?so long as he does not go on too long?out of order in respect of the question asked.

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: As I say, one option is to print money, and you would have needed 100 of these when it was printed, 100 $500 million notes, to buy an egg?poached, boiled, fried, scrambled, or any other way. The other option?

Kevin Hague: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. How long is too long?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! I think in fairness the Prime Minister had just finished. The Prime Minister was asked what reports he had seen. He may continue as long as he is not going to go on too much longer?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: The second approach I have seen is to go out and borrow $5 billion to $7 billion, at a time when countries around the world are trying to reduce their debt. We know that that policy belongs to the big spending, big promising Labour Party.

Mr SPEAKER: Order! That is sufficient.

Te Ururoa Flavell: T?n? koe, Mr Speaker. Kia ora t?tou. Has the Prime Minister had any positive responses at all from iwi M?ori to indicate satisfaction with the consultation process over asset sales, and can he provide examples of that to this House?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: I have not directly asked that question, but what I have seen are reports that state, as part of the consultation that was undertaken, the belief of some iwi that if ?shares plus? had been adopted, it actually would have been a negative step for M?ori.

Economic Growth and Jobs?Progress

3. KANWALJIT SINGH BAKSHI (National) to the Minister for Economic Development: What is the Government doing to encourage businesses to invest, and grow jobs?

Hon STEVEN JOYCE (Minister for Economic Development): The Government is doing many things to help improve the environment for businesses to invest and grow. I recently released the Business Growth Agenda report Building Skilled and Safe Workplaces. This report highlights the Government?s actions to materially lift labour productivity, drive sustained growth, and deliver higher wages and living standards to New Zealanders. It brings together 62 specific actions in a comprehensive programme to encourage skills development across all age groups and lift our productivity. Initiatives include a starting-out wage to help young people into the workforce, a new skills and employment hub for better job-matching in Christchurch, and an annual Occupational Outlook report for parents and students, to give them industry guidance on careers in demand.

Kanwaljit Singh Bakshi: What reports has he seen of alternative programmes?

Hon STEVEN JOYCE: I have seen various alternative proposals regarding encouraging investors to grow businesses and add jobs in New Zealand. One, purported to be pro-growth tax reform, is a capital gains tax, which would slap a tax on every single New Zealand business and

farm. Another, in relation to the proposed takeover of Fisher and Paykel, suggested Government Ministers should be able to veto the sales of shares in publicly listed companies. Both of these suggestions, if there were any chance of them happening, would no doubt greatly reduce the likelihood of investors wanting to invest in New Zealand and grow jobs. Far from a recipe for encouraging investment, these policies promoted by Mr Shearer and his understudy, Mr Cunliffe, would deter investment.

Hon David Parker: I seek leave to table reports from the OECD, the IMF, Treasury, and the Reserve Bank favouring a pro-growth capital gains tax.

Mr SPEAKER: Before I seek the leave of the House, would the member please identify the reports?

Hon David Parker: Yes. They are the latest periodic report of the OECD into the New Zealand economy, the same from the IMF, and the briefing to the incoming Minister from Treasury. The Reserve Bank document I cannot put a date to, so I will not pursue it.

Mr SPEAKER: We seem to be a bit sort of excited about this. The last two documents, I think, are available to all members?briefings from Treasury and the Reserve Bank. However, the first two documents were the latest periodic publications of both the IMF and the OECD. Leave is sought to table those two documents. Is there any objection? There is objection.

Kanwaljit Singh Bakshi: Has the Minister seen any other reports of alternative programmes?

Hon STEVEN JOYCE: In fact, I have. Another such alternative calls for cranking up the printing presses and printing money, in a vainglorious attempt to stop the world economy so that we can all get off. Of course, it would have the immediate effect of whacking up the cost of living for every single New Zealander, and discourage investment in New Zealand. I have also seen a call for a blanket ban on deep-sea oil drilling, shutting down the fishing industry, and closing the West Coast to further mining development, all of which would undermine local jobs and growth. These particular proposals come from the Greens, and depending on which day it is, the Labour Party as well.

Mr SPEAKER: Order! I think the Minister?s had enough time. He has no responsibility for those parties? policies.

Hon David Cunliffe: I seek leave for the Minister to be able to table a copy of his most recent glossy brochure?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! Under what Standing Order is the member doing that? I am unaware of any such Standing Order. If the member can point it out I am very happy to assist. It is just that I am not aware of it.

Hon David Cunliffe: The Minister referred in his previous supplementary answer to the release of his latest Business Growth Agenda paper on skills. Mr Speaker?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! Order! If the Minister was quoting?[Interruption] Order! I am on my feet. If the Minister was quoting from a document, indeed the member can under a point of order ask for it to be tabled, but the Minister was not. There is no provision for what the member is trying to do.

Social Development, Ministry?Security of Private Information

4. JACINDA ARDERN (Labour) to the Minister for Social Development: Does she have confidence in Work and Income?s approach to privacy and the security of information?

Hon PAULA BENNETT (Minister for Social Development): Given what we all know and in reference to the kiosks, I have very serious concerns. The incident that has come to light today is someone who has made a mistake. They are always disappointing, as mistakes are, but one cannot always mitigate against human error.

Jacinda Ardern: Will her independent investigation into Work and Income?s privacy breach be broadened to include the at least 10 other incidents reported in the media this year alone, including a

ruling from the Human Rights Review Tribunal that found sustained and systemic Privacy Act breaches?

Hon PAULA BENNETT: As I have said, the investigation that is going on is twofold. One is into the current situation with the kiosks. It is then expected that that will be broadened out into looking at IT and other areas. What I would say to the member, though, is that mistakes have happened for years. They happened under Labour. They happened under this Government. I mean, we certainly have seen mistakes with other things being leaked?things happen. I do not expect it; it is not the kind of quality we expect, but actually human error and mistakes can be made.

Jacinda Ardern: Does the case I received this afternoon of a Work and Income client who was given a list of jobs to take home, only to find that the papers included a document with the personal details of another Work and Income client, constitute human error or a systemic failure?

Hon PAULA BENNETT: I have had that incident brought to my attention, but only just recently, so I would need to look into the details of it. But you can go back and look at other incidents. For example in 2004, when Ruth Dyson was Minister, her office released?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! The question asked whether this was just a mistake or a systemic error. If the Minister wants to go back, the Minister should, in her answer, then make it clear she is not just attacking the other party but pointing out that in fact she believes this might be systemic. If the Minister wants to do that, I will hear the Minister.

Hon PAULA BENNETT: No, I am not going back and saying this is systemic. What I am saying is that human errors occur. I would take it that when Ruth Dyson released the private information of 1,354 Department of Child, Youth and Family Services children, via a written question, that was a mistake and a human error, and not actually something that was systemic.

Jacinda Ardern: Does the fact that a Work and Income staffer raised concerns about the security of the Work and Income kiosks a year ago but had these concerns dismissed by a local manager constitute human error or a systemic failure?

Hon PAULA BENNETT: I think there is absolutely no doubt that we have very serious problems with the kiosks, how they were networked in, and the access that people had to that information. The fact that it was brought to the ministry?s attention and was not acted on is simply not good enough. That is why there is an investigation that is going on. I expect it to be answered; I expect it to be fixed.

Jacinda Ardern: Does she consider that the Integrity Week that was held by the Ministry of Social Development in March, according to its annual report, to put ?a spotlight on information security? was a success, given Work and Income?s recent privacy breaches; if so, will she be running another one next year, with the use of more of what the ministry calls ?scenario cards??

Hon PAULA BENNETT: What I would say is that this actually proves that the Ministry of Social Development takes security seriously. It has made mistakes, and it is the first one to stand up and be counted for that. But there are also things like human error. I find it ironic that the member wants to hang a case manager or a worker out to dry, when that is actually not the case; it is simply a human error.

Question No. 3 to Minister

Hon STEVEN JOYCE (Minister for Economic Development): I seek leave to table a personally autographed copy of the Building Skilled and Safe Workplaces report, for the benefit of Mr Cunliffe.

Mr SPEAKER: The author of this report?

Hon STEVEN JOYCE: It is personally autographed by yours truly, Mr Speaker, for Mr Cunliffe?s benefit.

Mr SPEAKER: Before I seek leave from the House I need to know the source of this document.

Hon STEVEN JOYCE: This is the Building Skilled and Safe Workplaces report, with its personal autograph from the Minister for Economic Development.

Mr SPEAKER: Who produced the document?

Hon STEVEN JOYCE: I have just produced it now, in my own hands.

Mr SPEAKER: Leave is sought to table that document. Is there any objection?

Hon Annette King: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker.

Mr SPEAKER: We will deal with this first.

Hon Annette King: There is one more question?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! The member can object, if she wishes.

Hon Annette King: No, I just want to?this is a point of order.

Mr SPEAKER: Well, I will hear the Hon Annette King.

Hon Annette King: There is one more question you usually ask, and that is whether it is publicly available, and if it is, you then usually do not allow the document to be tabled.

Mr SPEAKER: The member is quite correct. On this occasion I was assuming members would probably object. Can the Minister indicate whether this is publicly available.

Hon STEVEN JOYCE: Not this particular version. This is a one-off.

Mr SPEAKER: Order! I am afraid that does not suffice. If it is publicly available, we will not be seeking leave to table it.

Oil and Gas Exploration?Deep-sea Oil-drilling

5. Dr RUSSEL NORMAN (Co-Leader?Green) to the Prime Minister: Does he stand by his statement, ?We?re not environmental bandits. If we don?t believe drilling can take place in a way that is environmentally sustainable and wouldn?t put at undue risk the environment, we wouldn?t go with it.?; if so, why?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY (Prime Minister): I stand by my full statement, which included that we want to balance our economic opportunities with our environmental responsibilities; because it is true.

Dr Russel Norman: How is deep-sea drilling not putting the environment at undue risk, when just this month Dayne Maxwell of Maritime New Zealand said about the Government?s oil response equipment: ?Most of the response equipment that we have is designed for near-shore sheltered conditions, and really there isn?t available internationally any equipment specifically designed to operate in the rough kind of conditions offshore that we have in New Zealand.??

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: Well, that is one person?s view. I think it is also worth remembering that if somebody gets a permit to go and undertake these activities in the exclusive economic zone, not only would this Government be filling a gap that was previously left open but also there would no doubt be conditions on that. Finally, as I said yesterday, there have been 50,000 wells drilled in the Gulf of Mexico. Is the member arguing that all of those wells were a high risk and should have been closed up?

Dr Russel Norman: How is deep-sea drilling not putting the environment at undue risk, when the head of the Petroleum Exploration and Production Association said in April 2011: ?You know, there is no absolute guarantee that disasters won?t happen, and if you had a major catastrophe, it would be just as bad as you have in North America.??aka Deepwater Horizon?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: Firstly, I mean, the member asked me yesterday about the head of Anadarko. One of the things he did say to me in the meeting was that there were a lot of learnings that had come out of that situation, and that they can be applied so that those things do not happen again. Secondly, if the member is reflecting on a comment by an individual that basically says there are no guarantees in life, well, actually, that is true, but, on the same basis, the member will never get on a plane again, never get in a car again, never get on a train again, never do a lot of things he does, because the risk is that something very bad can happen.

Dr Russel Norman: How is deep-sea drilling not putting the environment at undue risk when a leak at 2.5 kilometres under water cannot be fixed by divers, and companies are forced to rely on

robots and relief rigs, and this is diametrically different from operating in shallow water, like the case in Taranaki, where the deepest production well is only 125 metres deep?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: All of those issues in mitigation of any risk would have to be considered as part of an application to drill in the exclusive economic zone.

Dr Russel Norman: How is deep-sea drilling not putting the environment at undue risk, given that the Gulf of Mexico disaster was stopped only when a second rig drilled a relief well, and this Government will not require a relief rig to be on site during deep-sea drilling operations in New Zealand?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: The member is jumping to conclusions. He does not know what conditions will be set. But, in the end, I mean, this is really the fundamental problem, is it not, with the Green Party. What Green members are arguing is that everything contains some risk, so they do not want to do anything, except that they want to give lots and lots of money away, which is why they come up with the only solution that that person could come up with?print it!

Dr Russel Norman: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. That was not a question about the Prime Minister?s former job as a currency speculator. It was about deep-sea oil production. [Interruption]

Mr SPEAKER: Order! Order! I think we will consider it a draw at that point.

Dr Russel Norman: Given that the Prime Minister is putting enormous weight on this new piece of flimsy legislation, the exclusive economic zone Act, how does he think that this particular piece of legislation will plug an oil leak at 2.5 kilometres under water? Does he plan to shove the legislation in the hole? Does he think that might work?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: I think it is unlikely a couple of bits of paper will work. But let us cut to the chase here. We are a Government that is actually filling a gap that has been missing from our environmental protection. That member has been in the House for how long? And how many members? bills has he put in about this issue? Oh, that is right?none. What he is focused on is printing money. That is his focus of attention.

Dr Russel Norman: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. My question was not about the Prime Minister?s currency speculation?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! Order! [Interruption] Order! On this occasion I invite the member to reflect on the question he asked. It kind of invited the sort of response he got.

Dr Russel Norman: Why has this Government taken a major anti-environmental turn since the 2011 election; is it because of the rising influence of Steven Joyce and others?environmental bandits within the National Party?who now dominate Cabinet and the Prime Minister?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: Shock, horror! It is Steven Joyce?s fault. No. It is because this is a Government that wants, in an environmentally sensible and considered way, also to grow the economic opportunities for New Zealanders. That member wants to go down to the West Coast and say it is really bad that people are losing their jobs, potentially, at Spring Creek, while at exactly the same time he is stopping them getting a job down the road. I call that hypocrisy.

Mr SPEAKER: Question No. 6, the Hon Nanaia Mahuta. [Interruption] I beg the member?s pardon. Point of order, Dr Russel Norman.

Dr Russel Norman: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. On other occasions when members have accused others of hypocrisy you have ruled?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! [Interruption] Order! The member?s question invited a pretty robust response from the Prime Minister. That kind of question is always going to elicit a robust response. As Speaker, I cannot allow a questioner to get away with all sorts of allegations in their question, and prevent the Minister answering it from making a few in return. Where the member keeps his questions objective, I will sit on the Ministers answering them, but with that sort of question there is no way I can stop the Prime Minister having a fair old go in return.

Dr Russel Norman: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. Just to be clear, you are now saying that members can call other members hypocrites if there is enough provocation. Is that what you are saying?

Mr SPEAKER: There was so much noise I did not actually hear the final word the Prime Minister used. I did not hear that word. I will check with the Prime Minister whether he actually said the member was a hypocrite.

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: No.

Mr SPEAKER: The Prime Minister says he did not. [Interruption] Order! No, no. Order! I have not called the right honourable Prime Minister. I am not inviting him to say any more. I did not hear that word used. I have checked with the Prime Minister and he says he did not say the member was a hypocrite. Therefore, that is the end of the matter. I have to take the Prime?[Interruption] Order! I am on my feet. I must take the Prime Minister?s word for that.

Metiria Turei: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. Could I ask you, then, Mr Speaker, to check the Hansard at a later stage today and to come back tomorrow or later this afternoon with a clear ruling as to whether or not members are now allowed to accuse another member of hypocrisy in this House if there is sufficient provocation according to you.

Mr SPEAKER: The matter is very simple. As I understand it the Prime Minister was saying that a position represented hypocrisy. That is not accusing a member of being a hypocrite. It is the same issue we have had in this House the last few days over whether members provide false information to the House?that kind of thing. This is a robust place. The member in asking his question accused certain Ministers in the Government of all sorts of things. I am not going to prevent Ministers from using pretty robust language in return. I am satisfied the Prime Minister did not accuse the member?s co-leader of being a hypocrite. And I will check the Hansard just to make sure that is correct. But the matter is?[Interruption] Order! The matter is very simple. I do not want to see this House ruling out more and more words. It is crazy that we should do that, but I do not want members to be accusing other members directly of being hypocrites. I do not want that to be happening. I do not believe that happened.

Hon Trevor Mallard: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. Could you explain to the House how someone could hold a position with hypocrisy?a policy that is hypocrisy?and not be a hypocrite?

Mr SPEAKER: I think there is a difference, just as in recent times we have had issues of members providing false information being distinct from being a liar. I think a position can appear to be a position of hypocrisy without accusing the member directly of being a hypocrite. I just think we have go to be?for goodness? sake, we are grown up. We use robust language. I do not want to be ruling out endless words in this place. Enough have been ruled out long before my time, I think, to last us for many, many decades, and I am not intending to rule out any more.

Hon Trevor Mallard: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I would like to refer you to previous Speakers? rulings where using the word ?hypocrisy? in relation to another member has been ruled out. It applies regardless of whether the term is used in reference to an individual or to a group of members. Mr Speaker, you might like to have a look right back as far as Guinness in 1905. I have heard it constantly?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! I have heard sufficient. Look, that might be the case. I am not going back on my ruling, though. You know, I am not. For years we have heard members getting all upset over words of very little serious damage to members, and yet the other language they use and the way members attack each other at times have been totally derogatory. This is a robust place. You know, sometimes we should toughen up a little bit. The member raising the point of order is not unknown for being fairly tough. I am not going to allow members to accuse each other of being hypocrites, but a position of hypocrisy is not something I am going to rule out. For goodness? sake, if I was accused of that I would not lose too much sleep over it. People are entitled to all sorts of views. This place is a place where robust debate happens. But I will not have members accuse each other directly of being hypocrites, or liars.

Hon Trevor Mallard: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker.

Dr Russel Norman: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker.Mr SPEAKER: I have dealt with that matter, so I will go to Dr Russel Norman.

Dr Russel Norman: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. I support your ruling, actually. I think ?Fair enough.? So what you are saying is that it is OK for us to say ?The Government says it cares about the environment but actually destroys it. That?s hypocrisy.? That is a fair statement for us to make now?

Mr SPEAKER: The only thing is in asking a question it would be unwise?in asking a question?because it invites a very robust answer. The member has seen today that asking provocative questions sometimes delivers answers the members do not like. The incentive is always there. Members need only look at recent history. Where members ask the toughest questions for a Minister to answer?I know from years of experience in answering them?they are the simple, direct questions. They are by far the hardest questions to answer. If members want to hold the executive to account, ask simple, tough questions. Do not make fancy, provocative political statements instead of asking a question. We have seen it in recent weeks in this House, where Ministers have been held to account where simple, tough questions have been asked.

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. It may be appropriate, given your ruling, which I am not challenging, that you then advise your Deputy Speaker and Assistant Speakers, because they have ruled exactly the opposite way from you, as others have since 1905.

Mr SPEAKER: Order! We do not need to take this matter any further. For goodness? sake, we are all grown-ups in this place. I do not want to see language that is common-use language ruled out in this House. I just ask members to use a little bit of common sense?a little bit of common sense. Accusing someone of being a hypocrite is not acceptable. If members in question time wish to put provocative language into questions, do not ask the Speaker to protect them from the answers given. If members want to hold the executive to account, ask simple, tough questions without any opinions in them, and the Speaker will make sure you get answers.

Hon Trevor Mallard: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. Just to confirm your position now: it is all right to suggest that you act with hypocrisy but not that you are a hypocrite?

Mr SPEAKER: There is a difference between accusing a member of acting with hypocrisy and a position appearing to be a hypocritical position. I just ask members to be reasonable. You know, it is not that difficult. There are actually important issues being debated in this House, and this is so pathetic that we get all worked up over whether or not a position might appear to be hypocritical. That is just childish stuff. I would like to think we are actually a bit more grown up than that.

Hon Clayton Cosgrove: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. With respect, I think all members, and, I suspect, on both sides?no one is getting worked up; they are simply asking for some clarity and consistency from you.

Mr SPEAKER: Order! I thank the member for that. I think I have given reasonable clarity to people with reasonable intellect. Question No. 6, the Hon Nanaia Mahuta. [Interruption] Order!

Teachers?Problems with Novopay Payment System

6. Hon NANAIA MAHUTA (Labour?Hauraki-Waikato) to the Associate Minister of

Education: How many teachers and support staff were incorrectly paid in the latest pay cycle and what is the total amount of outstanding pay still owed to teachers and support staff due to errors in the Novopay system?

Hon CRAIG FOSS (Associate Minister of Education): I am advised that the Ministry of Education is aware of fewer than 100 non-payments or underpayments for the last pay cycle. In the past 5 days it has also been informed of approximately 390 overpayments. In terms of outstanding pay, I am informed that 41 support staff or staff have received advances, and 23 have indicated they are willing to wait to be paid at the next pay cycle. In regards to the total amount outstanding, I am advised that it is not possible to extract this information from Novopay at this time, but I can assure

the member that every non-payment or underpayment that has been brought to the ministry?s attention is being addressed.

Hon Nanaia Mahuta: What specific action has he taken to assure relief teachers that the reported problems with inaccurate deductions, payslip, timesheet, and leave error provisions will be fixed, given the ministry?s own website says the time frame for resolving these issues are ?TBC??

Hon CRAIG FOSS: I fully acknowledge the frustration that some of the issues on implementation?particularly on the service centre, and particularly those issues relating to Talent2 as opposed to Ministry of Education staff?have caused for some relief teachers and various non ? full-time salaried staff. I note the commitments that they have, the communication from the Secretary for Education, and, in fact, the commitment that 350,000-odd pay transactions have been made accurately and correctly over the last four pay cycles, but I fully acknowledge there are some outstanding issues relating to the first two pay cycles.

Hon Nanaia Mahuta: What response does he have for a teacher returning from maternity leave at P?mare School, who received full pay for the first and second pay periods only to find that the third and fourth pay period botched by Novopay, leaving her $2,000 short, unable to pay the mortgage, and reliant on the school having to write a cheque from the operations grant, rather than the Government?s pay system sorting the matter out in a timely way?

Hon CRAIG FOSS: I acknowledge the angst that that caused that particular staff member. But I also acknowledge that we were acutely aware and put in place machinery or a process so that an individual, if, in fact, for some reason their pay was not accurate or they missed completely, were able to be paid from the operations grant from the school so that the individual did not suffer penalty. If that individual does suffer penalty for the mortgage payment, for example, I suggest they get in touch with the payroll officer and the ministry, and the ministry will do what it can to investigate to make good.

Hon Nanaia Mahuta: Did the Ministry of Education?s contract with Talent2 to provide the Novopay system include penalties for poor performance; if so, does he intend to use such provisions in response to the incorrect payment of hundreds of teachers and support staff?

Hon CRAIG FOSS: When the Labour Government signed the contract with Talent2 in 2007 or 2008, I am sure it put clauses such as that in there, but, yes, in any such contract of course there are key performance indicators. I will repeat for the House that I am very frustrated and disappointed in Talent2?s service centre performance, which has led to much angst and difficulty. Ministry of Education staff have had to bear the brunt of that, and they are doing a great job, but Talent2 does need to improve its service centre actions immediately.

Hon Nanaia Mahuta: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. The question was direct and it was simple. It asked if the Minister was going to put into action the provisions of the contract with regards to the Talent2 system, and whether he was going to enact penalties for poor performance. He did not attempt to answer that, at all. It was a very straight and simple question.

Mr SPEAKER: The Minister said that undoubtedly the provisions are in there. He did not indicate in his answer whether he would pursue those provisions.

Hon CRAIG FOSS: Excuse me. The Secretary for Education has had discussions with, and commitments from, the head executives and chair of Talent2 to discuss the enforcement of exactly those matters.

Question No. 5 to Minister

Hon TREVOR MALLARD (Labour?Hutt South): Mr Speaker, I am doing this in order to give the Government some notice. I am seeking leave of the House for members? notice of motion No. 1 to be set down in lieu of the general debate for debate and vote, in light of your comments to the Hon Clayton Cosgrove.

Mr SPEAKER: Leave is sought for that course of action. Is there any objection? There is objection.

Kim Dotcom?Residence

7. Rt Hon WINSTON PETERS (Leader?NZ First) to the Prime Minister: When did he first learn of a German resident living in the Chrisco mansion in the Prime Minister?s electorate?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY (Prime Minister): It was some time in 2011, but I do not have a record of the specific date.

Rt Hon Winston Peters: Bearing in mind that the Prime Minister told the media on 24 January of his being aware earlier of the German resident in the Chrisco mansion, how was the German national initially described to him?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: Just that there was a German living in the Chrisco mansion.

Rt Hon Winston Peters: Is it not?[Interruption] Do not worry, we will get there, sunshine?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! I want?[Interruption] Order! I want to hear the question. The member has every right to ask his question.

Rt Hon Winston Peters: Is it not extraordinary that the issue of a new German resident living in possibly the most expensive mansion in New Zealand, which he had himself seen, and within the Prime Minister?s electorate as well, would not have had him as Prime Minister and local MP asking questions as to who he was?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: No, and it is probably worthwhile noting for the member?s knowledge that in the 2006 census there were 10,700 people born in Germany living in New Zealand.

Rt Hon Winston Peters: All in the Chrisco mansion?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! [Interruption] Order!

Rt Hon Winston Peters: Why does the Prime Minister expect New Zealanders to trust him on his statements to do with discussions with Hollywood, the Government Communications Security Bureau, and communications with the Hon Simon Power, the Hon Maurice Williamson, and the Attorney-General, and yet on this issue?on his knowledge of Kim Dotcom?he expects the public to believe that he remembers virtually nothing?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: Because they are accurate.

Rt Hon Winston Peters: Does this not mean that where serious issues of State and international relations are concerned he has demonstrated a serious lack of curiosity and interest, if any? [Interruption]

Mr SPEAKER: Order! The member has a right to ask his question. [Interruption] Order! Order! Members can see that if they interject unnecessarily during a member?s asking of a question, they are likely to get time-wasting, I guess.

Rt Hon Winston Peters: Does this not mean that where serious issues of State and international relations are concerned, to quote from an MP in the investigation to do with the BBC last night on the case of the BBC, he has demonstrated a serious ?lack of curiosity? and interest, if any of his protestations of a lack of knowledge of Kim Dotcom are to be ever believed?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: I do not know why the member would make that statement, because, from memory, when I was told in 2011 that there was a German living in the Chrisco mansion, that was well and truly before there was a raid on Kim Dotcom. To the best of my knowledge, the first I heard of Kim Dotcom was on 19 January when the Solicitor-General told me his name. [Interruption]

Mr SPEAKER: Order! Is this a further supplementary question? The member?I beg your pardon.

Rt Hon Winston Peters: Do not worry, we are on track. If and when it is proven that the Prime Minister?s knowledge of Kim Dotcom was far earlier than he has said, will he step down from his role as Prime Minister; if not, why not?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: No, and the reason is that?

Rt Hon Winston Peters: Why not?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: Well, because the member makes up lots of things as he goes along. To the best of my knowledge, the first I heard of the guy?s name was on 19 January.

Child Poverty, Abuse, and Neglect?White Paper for Vulnerable Children

8. Peseta SAM LOTU-IIGA (National?Maungakiekie) to the Minister for Social

Development: What changes will the White Paper for Vulnerable Children make to better support professionals working with children?

Hon PAULA BENNETT (Minister for Social Development): Absolutely central to the White Paper for Vulnerable Children will be the local Children?s Teams. These teams will break down the current silos and get all the professionals working with vulnerable children round the same table. There are some teams that are working very efficiently now; we can build on that and make it stronger and a more consistent practice across the country.

Peseta Sam Lotu-Iiga: How will the local Children?s Teams work in the community to support those children most at risk?

Hon PAULA BENNETT: The focus of the children?s directors and the local Children?s Teams will be on those vulnerable children. They will have real power, and be mandated to assess a child?s needs and coordinate and oversee a single integrated plan for a vulnerable child. This will enable Child, Youth and Family to focus on those most needy children who have been very seriously abused or neglected.

Peseta Sam Lotu-Iiga: What new requirements will be introduced for those professionals working with children as part of the children?s workforce?

Hon PAULA BENNETT: We will be introducing minimum standards to ensure everyone working with children has consistent quality of practice. New standards and competencies tailored to different roles and sectors will be introduced for workers to identify, assess, and respond to vulnerable children. These common minimum standards, core competencies, and training requirements will be developed across the sector by the end of next year.

Schools, Canterbury?Effect of Proposed Closures and Mergers

9. CATHERINE DELAHUNTY (Green) to the Minister of Education: Will any newly merged or reopened schools in Christchurch be expected to use some community facilities that are ordinarily provided on-site at a school?

Hon CRAIG FOSS (Associate Minister of Education) on behalf of the Minister of

Education: This is currently the case. Schools across the country and, of course, in Christchurch already do use community facilities. In fact, the schools themselves are community facilities.

Catherine Delahunty: Can she confirm that some schools in Christchurch have been told by her ministry that they may not have a school library on site under the new school structure?

Hon CRAIG FOSS: No.

Catherine Delahunty: Does she consider it acceptable that if a school did not have a library on site, children may need to walk a long distance or take the bus to town in order to borrow a book?

Hon CRAIG FOSS: There is an opportunity in Christchurch for the communities of Christchurch to not only rebuild schools but build better schools and better facilities to be used by themselves and the community.

Catherine Delahunty: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. It is very interesting to hear the story, but my question was about whether it was acceptable that if a school did not have a library on site, the children may need to walk long distances, etc. He did not address anything to do with libraries or acceptability or distance, which is what my question was about.

Mr SPEAKER: The member?s question actually asked for the Minister?s opinion?whether he considers that acceptable. What the Minister indicated in his answer, when he gave his opinion, was that much was going to be invested in these new schools and facilities for Christchurch. He was implying, I think?but it is up to the Minister to clarify that?that that sort of thing would not be happening. But the Minister had better clarify his answer in relation to the question asked. I realise it is an opinion being sought, but if he could assist.

Hon CRAIG FOSS: I agree with your answer, Mr Speaker.

Rt Hon Winston Peters: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. That is my very point. Now we have got a Minister having the effrontery to rise and say he agrees with your answer, and that is what the very issue that has been moot in this place for a long time has been about. That cannot be a way to conduct parliamentary question time in this House.

Mr SPEAKER: The member makes a reasonable point and I accept that. I took the Minister?s response as meaning that that was what he intended with his answer. The dilemma is that the member asked him for an opinion, and there is no particular answer when an opinion is asked. That is my dilemma. I try to be helpful to members, but if members seek Ministers? opinions, it is difficult then when they ask the Speaker to intervene when they get an answer that is a little different from what they expected.

Catherine Delahunty: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. Can you clarify. I understand what you said about opinions, but if there is no relationship between the answer and the topic, is that simply because I asked him whether he thought something was acceptable? He did not even relate it to the question in any way.

Mr SPEAKER: What it would actually, I would hope, mean to the member is that there is a different way of asking that question that turns the question into seeking facts from the Minister. By asking ?Will children have to travel this far to get books from the library??, then the member can get an answer. But asking an opinion?whether the member?s statement is acceptable?I cannot ask the Minister to be very precise in answering it, and that is the dilemma.

Catherine Delahunty: Will she guarantee that there will be a library and a librarian on site at each school?

Hon CRAIG FOSS: I am looking forward to the recommendations from the consultation from clusters. They may include libraries; they may not include libraries. They may include new learning environments. They may include internet learning, with ultra-fast broadband across the world, which is, obviously, a fair distance to walk.

Catherine Delahunty: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. It was a very simple, specific question on?

Mr SPEAKER: It asked whether the Minister would guarantee, and clearly?[Interruption] Order! Clearly, from the answer the Minister gave, he is saying that he cannot?he is not guaranteeing that at the moment because he is saying he will listen to the consultation. That is one way of saying that he is not guaranteeing that. That is not an unreasonable answer to the question.

Nikki Kaye: How much is the Government spending on improving community facilities in greater Christchurch?

Hon CRAIG FOSS: Thank you; what an excellent question. The Government is spending $1 billion building brilliant schools in greater Christchurch. A large proportion of these new facilities will become valuable community assets. We do not want to only rebuild schools; we want to build them better for better educational outcomes. That is why we are investing $1 billion over the next decade in Christchurch schools.

Gareth Hughes: I raise a point of order, Mr Speaker. That was a good example of very clear question, which asked, if I can read off the transcript, how much the Government is spending. I heard lots of answers but no dollar figure. [Interruption]

Mr SPEAKER: Order! I?

Hon CRAIG FOSS: Mr Speaker.

Mr SPEAKER: Is the member wishing to speak to the point of order?

Hon CRAIG FOSS: I can clarify the question.

Mr SPEAKER: If the Minister is wanting to be helpful to the House.

Hon CRAIG FOSS: It is such a good and large number?$1 billion will be spent by this Government in Christchurch on schools over the next 10 years.

Catherine Delahunty: I seek leave to table a commentary written by the president of the School Library Association of New Zealand, a September 2012 newsletter, that highlights the concern about falling writing skills and the importance of free access to books?

Mr SPEAKER: Order! Leave is sought to table that document. Is there any objection? There is no objection. Document, by leave, laid on the Table of the House.

Government Communications Security Bureau?Inquiry into Unlawful Interception of

Communications

10. CHARLES CHAUVEL (Labour) to the Prime Minister: When will he be informed of the Inspector-General?s findings concerning the three cases where the Government Communications Security Bureau has been unable to assure him that its actions have been lawful, and how will he communicate those findings to the House?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY (Prime Minister): I expect to be informed of the Inspector-General?s findings when his review of the case is complete. Any decisions regarding the communications of those findings will be made then. However, I would note that my own public statement on 3 October said that the Government Communications Security Bureau would issue a further public statement when legal work has been concluded.

Charles Chauvel: Will he ensure that the New Zealanders who were the subject of the surveillance will be informed if it is found that the surveillance of them was unlawful; if not, why not?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: I cannot guarantee that. I would have to take advice on whether that is a sensible course of action to follow.

Charles Chauvel: When he told the Leader of the Opposition last Tuesday that he had seen the paperwork on which the bureau relied to support its belief that it had ?acted legally? in conducting surveillance on Mr Dotcom and his associates and that this material had formed the basis of the bureau?s request to the Acting Prime Minister for a ministerial certificate, what was the nature of that paperwork?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: Possibly the way I should have phrased that is ?some of the paperwork?. I am sure there is more paperwork that the Government Communications Security Bureau has, but, amongst other things, I have seen email correspondence from the legal team at the bureau that supports the view that Mr Dotcom was not protected.

Charles Chauvel: Is he now satisfied that the correspondence to which he has just referred was incorrect in substance?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: I think by nature we admitted that was the case, because that was the view formed by the Government Communications Security Bureau?s legal team after it did the review in the middle of February of this year. But, of course, later on, after the affidavit was signed, it was presented to the court by Paul Davison QC on behalf of Kim Dotcom on 7 September 2012. A further review was undertaken, and it was at that point, some time after that, that the bureau formed the view that it had, in fact, applied the wrong legal interpretation at that point.

Charles Chauvel: Is it normal practice for him not be informed promptly by the Government Communications Security Bureau or by his deputy that in his absence the bureau has sought, and his deputy has granted, a ministerial certificate to prevent a court from considering the bureau?s activities in a particular court case?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY: I could not possibly ask for information on something that I was not aware was taking place. I think I have said in this House a number of weeks ago that, in fact, the failing, I think, was on the Government Communications Security Bureau?not to have informed me that it had asked the Minister to sign a ministerial certificate. I might add, though, had I seen all of the

information that the Acting Prime Minister saw, without doubt and without hesitation I would have signed the same documentation.

Child Health Services?Under-sixes and Accidental Injuries

11. Dr JIAN YANG (National) to the Minister for ACC: How will the Government improve accidental injury outcomes for under-six-year-olds?

Hon JUDITH COLLINS (Minister for ACC): I am very pleased to announce that free afterhours doctors? visits for under-6-year-olds will be extended to visits covered by ACC. Parents should not be put off taking an injured child to the doctor because of the cost. Free after-hours visits for accident care will also enable families to seek the urgent medical care they need when they need it.

Dr Jian Yang: What are the benefits of free after-hours accident care?

Hon JUDITH COLLINS: ACC received claims for about 80,000 children aged under 6 in the last year alone. Today?s announcement will make a big difference for those families who may have waited until the next day before seeing their general practitioner. From December this year they will no longer have to. Free after-hours accident care visits will also help reduce the number of young children presenting at our busy hospital emergency departments with an injury that a general practitioner could have treated.

Hon John Banks?Compliance with Cabinet Manual

12. GRANT ROBERTSON (Deputy Leader?Labour) to the Prime Minister: Has Hon John Banks satisfied the Cabinet Manual requirement of upholding the highest ethical standards in his political and personal capacity?

Rt Hon JOHN KEY (Prime Minister): Yes.

Grant Robertson: How is John Banks? refusal to release his witness statement to the police upholding the standards of ministerial beh

Source: http://parliamenttoday.co.nz/2012/10/questions-and-answers-october-24/

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