Tuesday: Verdict on Winston Peters by Privileges Committee; US to begin free trade talks with P4 group; children playing in a creek containing human waste.
NZ Herald
Under the heading "damned by his peers", The New Zealand Herald says Parliament's Privileges Committee has found that Winston Peters knowingly filed a false return to Parliament when he failed to declare a donation of $100,000 from Owen Glenn.
A Chinese milk lolly found to be tainted with melanine and banned overseas is being sold in New Zealand: there are no plans to recall it.
The Dominion Post says the dairy sector could be the big winner from a move by the United States to negotiate a free trade deal with Brunei, Chile, New Zealand and Singapore.
John Key is struggling to explain why he did not disclose he was trading in TranzRail shares while he was seeking official information about them as an MP.
The Press reports Mr Peters faces censure by Parliament after being found guilty of knowingly misleading the House.
Preschools are sending notes home ticking off parents over the contents of children's lunchboxes - and the paper says that could become the norm.
Helen Clark has accused Fonterra of seriously mishandling the poisoned milk scandal. She says the dairy company had inadequate supply-chain management procedures and was been too slow to speak out.
TheOtago Daily Times says children have been playing in a creek containing human waste for up to 18 months after a plumbing error in a Dunedin subdivision.
Judge Kevin Phillips is warning drunk drivers that he may impose tougher penalties after being appalled by the high number of cases coming before the Queenstown District Court.
Hip-hoppers M-Slaks who won a school aerobics and dance competition, are pictured. They had never performed in a competition before.