Top ag scientist to advise PM
A highly experienced agricultural scientist with specialist knowledge of the dairy sector is the Prime Minister's new Chief Science Advisor.
The graduation of 23 new quarantine officers will help protect New Zealand and relieve peak-time congestion at the country’s main international airports, says the Ministry for Primary Industries.
The new officers are among more than 40 MPI frontline staff that graduated in Auckland this week following nearly seven weeks of operational training.
The new staff were employed as part of MPI’s annual intake to ensure it can run its operations at maximum capacity, says Steve Gilbert, MPI’s border clearance director.
The new quarantine officers will work at the border to halt risk goods that have the potential to carry pests or diseases.
Gilbert says the new staff will help reduce waiting times at airports for arriving international passengers by providing more help to search baggage for biosecurity risk goods.
"The tourism boom is bringing in more travellers who are unfamiliar with New Zealand’s strict biosecurity requirements. That means we are undertaking additional baggage searches, and this is having an impact on queues during peak times.
"The new staff will help alleviate the congestion, as will the introduction of a new queue line at Auckland Airport this summer. The queue line will allow low-risk Australian and New Zealand passport holders to pass through MPI’s biosecurity controls more quickly.
"It’s going to be another busy summer for our frontline biosecurity staff and travellers. There is likely to be record numbers of visitors arriving in New Zealand.
"We're very conscious of the increasing fruit fly threat from Australia and parts of the Pacific. We are also on the lookout for threats like the brown marmorated stink bug, which has invaded the United States and parts of Europe."
In addition to the quarantine officers, the new frontline graduates include four biosecurity detector dog handlers and 12 compliance staff.
To celebrate 25 years of the Hugh Williams Memorial Scholarship, Ravensdown caught up with past recipients to see where their careers have taken them, and what the future holds for the industry.
Among this year’s Primary Industry NZ (PINZ) Awards finalists are a Southlander who created edible bale netting and rural New Zealanders who advocate for pragmatic regulation and support stressed out farmers.
Rockit Global has appointed Ivan Angland as its new chief operating officer as it continues its growth strategy into 2025.
Nominations are now open for the Horticulture New Zealand (HortNZ) board.
A Mid-Canterbury dairy farmer is bringing a millennial mindset to his family farm and is reaping the rewards, with a 50% uplift in milksolids production since he took over.
OPINION: People have criticised Christopher Luxon for the time he’s taken to appoint a new chief science advisor.