09:05 Students call for more help

High school students with laptops and digital tablets

Photo: 123RF

Some students outside Auckland say they need more help to recover from the impact of Covid on their learning.   NCEA exams have been delayed two weeks, and students who have missed 20 days of school or more are eligible for Learning Recognition Credits, and a lower threshold for University Entrance. Ethan Reille is a Year 12 student at Waitaki Boys High in Oamaru and the chairperson of the Waitaki District Youth Council. He’s written to NZQA asking for other options to be considered for students outside of Auckland, including so-called “Covid credits”.

09:20 Saliva tests for workers crossing Auckland border from Friday

Sample bottle for collecting saliva specimens at a Covid-19 testing station in Hong Kong.

Sample bottle for collecting saliva specimens at a Covid-19 testing station in Hong Kong. Photo: AFP

From Friday, 3000 essential workers who cross Auckland's borders will be subject to weekly covid saliva testing. The government says it is close to striking a deal with a provider to roll this out. Truckies and others in the freight industry say they still don't have clarity around what the rules are and how they'll comply with them. Saliva testing of border and MIQ workers has been in place for several weeks now. The contract for that work was awarded to Asia Pacific Healthcare Group, which tests around 830 workers. Dr James Ussher is a Clinical Microbiologist with one of APHG's labs -  Southern Community Laboratories, and also Associate Professor at Otago University.

09:30 Solar suitable: the economies of installing home solar power

44317184 - solar panel cells on the roof of a new house agains blue sky.

Photo: lighthunter/123RF

Does installing solar power at home eventually pay for itself?  According to Consumer New Zealand, it all depends whether you are "solar-suitable".  Factors include: how much sun your house gets, the pitch of your roof, how much and what time of day you use power, and how much you sell back to the grid.  Also, factors such as how much power prices and buy-back rates fluctuate, and the lifetime cost of your system, including repairs. Electricity and gas price comparison service Powerswitch manager Paul Fuge has has done the research for Consumer NZ.  He tells Lynn Freeman he also had solar installed on his own house the week before lockdown.

09:45 Covid cases rise, as Scott Morrison is criticised for Father's Day trip to Sydney

Australia correspondent Bernard Keane joins Lynn to talk about the increase in cases in New South Wales, Victoria and the ACT, as Victoria is critical of a federal government decision to allocate more vaccines to New South Wales. And Prime Minister Scott Morrison is facing criticism of a weekend trip to Sydney, which incorporated Father's Day, against Covid travel restrictions.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison. Photo: AFP

10:05 Catherine Raven: an unexpected friendship with a fox

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Photo: supplied

Catherine Raven lives in a remote mountain valley in Montana. She has lived more or less alone since leaving a troubled home aged 15.  She was a National Park ranger for 20 years, and gained a PhD in biology from Montana State University. One day, a wild fox turned up at the door of her remote cabin. He came again the next afternoon - and the next. Catherine began reading to him, and the pair began taking walks together. They became friends, and it was a vital connection in her life. Catherine Raven has written a memoir about the unexpected bond. It's called Fox & I: An Uncommon Friendship. She talks with Lynn Freeman from home in Montana.

10:35 Book review: The Dark by Emma Haughton

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Photo: Hachette

Bronwyn Wylie-Gibb of University Book Shop, Dunedin reviews  The Dark by Emma Haughton, published by Hachette

Bronwyn says: "The Murder. The Suspects. The Isolation… Not so much a locked room as a locked continent mystery, this is a compelling, atmospheric, well-written chiller set in an Antarctic research station during the long dark winter. The darkness is not just outside…"

10:45 The Reading

 Gods and Little Fishes, episode 3. Written and told by Bruce Ansley. 

11:05 Music with RNZ's Yadana Saw 

Music reviewer Yadana Saw shares some springtime tunes that have caught her ear from local artists Age Pryor, MĀ and UK hip hop darling Little Simz. 

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Photo: RNZ, wikipedia, supplied

11:20 Seeing the wood for the trees: Forester of the Year Paul Millen

Marlborough-based Paul Millen has been named Forester of the Year, by the New Zealand Institute of Forestry, for his work over 18 years researching eucalypts. Initially to he was keen to develop durable untreated posts for his region's vineyards, as a replacement for pine.  Today Paul is project manager of the New Zealand Dryland Forests Initiative , which  has more than 30 stands from Northland to north Canterbury, providing quality hard timber to regional industries, including furniture makers. Paul has been granted $9m in research funding, and over a few decades has worked with the University of Canterbury's School of Forestry and the Ngai Tahu owned seed producer Proseed on a state-of-the art propagation nursery. Paul lives on a forestry block in the Marlborough Sounds, which he planted with his brother Ash.

11:45 Science commentator Siouxsie Wiles

Vaccination against Covid-19. 
Paris, France (Photo by VOISIN / Phanie / Phanie via AFP)

Photo: VOISIN/PHANIE

Siouxsie joins Lynn to talk about a new study that's good news for 'highly allergic' people who are worried about getting vaccinated against Covid 19,  and answers listeners questions about the pandemic.

Associate Professor Dr Siouxsie Wiles is the head of Bioluminescent Superbugs Lab at the University of Auckland.

 

 

Music played in this show

Track: Family

Artist: Jordan Rakei

Broadcast time: 10:37