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571 days ago

Cyclone Gabrielle

The Team from New Zealand Police

Police continue to pour staff and resources into the Eastern District to assist local staff responding to Cyclone Gabrielle.

In addition to approximately 100 extra staff, Police have deployed the Police Air Support Unit (known as Eagle helicopter) along with 12 4x4 utes and 10 other Police vehicles.

Police SAR teams are working to determine which homes have not yet been assessed and who is still cut off in remote areas of the East Coast.

Police staff are also assisting health teams to conduct welfare checks on people with acute needs.

Police have set up a specialist team to reconcile reports of uncontactable people in Cyclone Gabrielle with those who have reported themselves safe.

This includes cross referencing with people reported safe through evacuation centres, and in person reports to Police stations.

There have been 80 Police staff members working on this today, and this number will extend to 100 in the next few days.

The priority for Police is to filter out duplicate reports made of uncontactable people, reconcile those reports with those who have reported themselves as safe, and prioritise this information for District staff on the ground.

This will help Police staff and other agencies identify those most in need of a welfare check.

Communications in areas most affected by Cyclone Gabrielle are slowly coming back on, and we are urging people who have not yet reported themselves as safe to do so as soon as possible via the Registering I’m Alive online form, here forms.police.govt.nz...

Anyone who has not yet been able to contact someone following the cyclone is also encouraged to make a Person Inquired For report, here forms.police.govt.nz...

People who have now been in touch with someone previously reported uncontactable are now urged to update their report via the same link, so we can prioritise those who need the most urgent checks.
Register here

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More messages from your neighbours
1 day ago

Poll: Is it rude to take a full trolley to self-checkout?

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

Luckily self-checkout is being pretty common in supermarkets these days and we generally use it to quickly buy a few things without the long lines. But perhaps it's appropriate to head there with your full trolley to skip the lines?

What are your thoughts? Is that rude?

Share in the comments below if this has ever happened to you.

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Is it rude to take a full trolley to self-checkout?
  • 53.5% Yes!
    53.5% Complete
  • 43.7% Nah, it's okay
    43.7% Complete
  • 2.8% Other - I'll share below!
    2.8% Complete
759 votes
8 days ago

Poll: Have you ever had a scary flight?

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

A plane flying from Christchurch to Wellington on Sunday had smoke billowing out of the engine and upon landing, passengers had to open the emergency exit and jump out. Have you had any scary flying experiences?

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Have you ever had a scary flight?
  • 54.6% Yes!
    54.6% Complete
  • 45.4% No, it's always been smooth flying
    45.4% Complete
835 votes
2 days ago

Q&A: Ask a question about...Online Safety

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

Continuing with Neighbourly's online Q&A with experts in their field, this week we are tackling online safety with Jandy Fiske from Netsafe.

Jandy Fiske has been with Netsafe for nearly 8 years. Starting on their helpline, she's now Netsafe's Community Engagement Advisor. Jandy says: 'I'm passionate about online safety because I strongly oppose bullying and want to support those affected by it.'

Jandy is passionate about protecting vulnerable communities and is promoting online safety to ensure no one falls prey to online scams. She can answer your questions about any type of online scams, and also about online harm such as online bullying.

↓ Ask your question below now and she'll be online on Wednesday, 11th September to reply to you ↓

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