News
People winning cases but losing money at Employment Relations Authority
Most people will recover less than half of their legal costs after winning their case before the Employment Relations Authority, a survey has found.
NZ left behind as Australia seeks post-Brexit access - Peters
Australia has got the jump on New Zealand in pushing for more access to post-Brexit Britain, New Zealand First says.
Corrections stands by performance measures despite Mt Eden case
The Corrections Department is defending its prison performance measures, even though they ranked Mt Eden as exceptional when the jail was unsafe for inmates and staff.
Nick Evans' family plans to sue Corrections
The family of a man spear-tackled at Mt Eden jail has labelled a prison inspector's report into his death a whitewash. Audio
Record damages raises questions about Employment Court payouts
The record damages payout in the Colin Craig employment case has reignited debate that workers are being shortchanged by the Employment Court.
NZers getting cut from Medicare in Australia
Some New Zealanders are being cut off from free public healthcare in Australia despite being eligible for it.
National pulling fundraising show in college
The National Party has pulled a fundraising show out of a Northland college hall after some parents accused the college of playing politics.
Cost of sex offender's supervision kept secret
The Corrections Department is refusing to say how much it has spent supervising a repeat child sex offender 24 hours a day, for the past 12 years.
Hair-pulling officer acted 'unprofessionally', police inquiry finds
Police say they remain proud of the actions of officers during February's TPP protest, despite one being found to have acted 'unprofessionally'.
MPI officials back-tracked on fish dumping case
Top MPI officials were intent on prosecuting fishermen for dumping but ditched the case over concerns they would be embarrassed in court, an email trail has revealed.
Education agent on fraudster list given NZ licence
Government officials put an Indian education agent on a list of fraudsters - then officials from the same ministry gave him a licence.
Facebook used to recruit illegal migrant workers
A human trafficking scam that's been running for years is allegedly using Facebook to lure migrants into jobs paying less than $10 an hour in New Zealand.
Migrant workers scammed thousands for fake jobs
RNZ has uncovered evidence of migrant workers being scammed thousands of dollars by three unlicenced agents who've been investigated for years by Immigration New Zealand. Audio
'My life, my dream, everything collapsed'
Pithani Dugraprasad is a newly married, 32-year-old pipefitter, who lives near Viskanapatnam on the east coast of India.
Payments made for NZ job offer letters
Eight welders from India who were keen to migrate to New Zealand came across Srinivas Chamakuri in Singapore in 2008.
'Supremely confident' mesh won't threaten lives
A structural engineering leader is "supremely confident" that steel mesh floors in houses won't fail in a life-threatening way.
NZ asked to help save detainee from deportation to Syria
A Melbourne woman is begging the New Zealand government to grant her partner a visa to save him from being deported to Syria.
No Aus-NZ correspondence over Christmas Island
The New Zealand government says it has not been consulted by Australia about any plans to close the Christmas Island immigration detention centre.
Sludge tank steel certificates not up to scratch - watchdog
Steel-test certificates for a huge Auckland sludge tank have been rubbished by the country's watchdog for laboratories, which says they are not acceptable for any regulatory purpose.
Australia using alternative legal way to detain NZers
Another legal avenue used by Australia to indefinitely detain New Zealanders has come to light.
Family still waiting for Mt Eden jail fight club report
The family of an inmate whose death triggered the Mt Eden jail fight club inquiry hopes its long-awaited report will hold someone accountable.
Aust welding expert urges action on defective steel
A welding inspector turned whistleblower across the Tasman has got the Australian government's attention over defective steel imported from China.
Short-term job offers 'not helping' forensic pathologist shortage
Job insecurity appears to be undermining attempts to shore up the country's chronically pressured forensic pathology services.
Forensic pathologists say stress on system 'unsustainable'
The country's forensic pathologists are warning the service is on the brink of collapse, with families waiting months to bury loved ones.
Number of NZers on Christmas Island 'doubles'
The number of New Zealanders held at Australia's Christmas Island detention centre has reportedly doubled and conditions are getting worse, a detainee says.