Archive for May, 2009

Ladies?

Saturday, May 30th, 2009
Briton wants to develop wash-dry-iron invention in NZ
4:00AM Saturday May 30, 2009

A British inventor is trying to get to New Zealand to develop a machine he has designed which washes, dries and irons clothes.

Oliver Blackwell, 23, who designed the WashDryIron, hopes the machine will become sought-after because it saves about 10 days a year in ironing time, the BBC reported.

"The science works; however, the prototype has to be re-formed to make the project commercially viable," said Mr Blackwell.

"To do this I need to visit two businesses in New Zealand," he said. "One is a manufacturer of component parts, and the second is a large commercial laundry.

"The information I need can’t be done over the phone or email: I’ve tried."

The machine was his final degree project at Plymouth University.

"I knew I had to come up with a damn good product idea to pass my finals," he said. "A washing machine seemed quite obvious and almost everyone uses one."

The machine washes, dries and irons clothes in separate compartments and is said to eliminate colour runs and shrinkage. It can tackle up to 16 items at a time, including king-size bed sheets.

More here.

Yorkshire Again

Saturday, May 30th, 2009
Hi All,

I am looking at moving and trying to sell my house:cry: :Titter:

My Sister is already there and loves it.

I am interested to know if it is possible to go over there as a self employed person as from what little I have read it is far from certain that people can find permanent work?

Also is there a brief overview somewhere about self build over there, is it allowed?

I intend being over in September with my family to make sure we like it before the big move, I am sure we will.

18A condition attached on my visa or not

Thursday, May 28th, 2009
Hello Everyone

Greetings!

I need your valuable advice.

I have submitted my EOI in July’2008 scoring a total of approx 200 points with a current job in hand and I worked for the same company for approx 8-9 months , I received & applied ITA in Jan 2009 & still waiting for the outcome of the application, my query is at the time of outcome of my application, would i be having the section 18A condition attached on my visa or not… keeping fingers crossed.

Thanks for your valuable advice.

Tax Return

Thursday, May 28th, 2009
Hi guy’s me and my wife has returned from Nz back to the UK from spending 7 month’s out there on a WHV, what I wanted to know what form do I need to feel out and how do they send the money when I am back in the UK

The Budget

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009
English dampens Budget hopes
By TRACY WATKINS - The Dominion Post
Last updated 05:00 27/05/2009

Finance Minister Bill English is damping down expectations that there will be something in tomorrow’s Budget for everyone, as the first National Budget in a decade rolls off the presses.

"People won’t be finding a lot of money in their bank account after this one," he said.

A $330 million insulation scheme is likely to be the centrepiece of the Budget. Up to 900,000 homeowners will be eligible for $1500 insulation grants.

But promised tax cuts seem certain to be axed.

Labour’s last Budget delivered the first significant personal tax cuts in more than a decade but it also signalled the end of a long run of Budget surpluses. Labour finance minister Michael Cullen thought he had a $3.1 billion surplus to play with, but recession has turned it into an $8b-plus deficit.

Mr English conceded yesterday that it would be five years or more before any government got its books back into the black again.

He insisted that it would be a "no surprises" Budget. "It is a predictable Budget and the focus is on getting debt under control."

The austerity measures appear to have affected plans for a Treasury party on Friday: communications manager Mike Munro said staff would pay their own way at a Bollywood-themed lunch.

Yesterday Mr English met bosses from ratings agency Standard & Poor’s, whose threats of a credit downgrade if debt is not brought under control have sparked fears of a flow-on effect to business and homeowners. A downgrade would raise borrowing costs.

But Mr English batted off suggestions that ratings agencies were dictating the shape of the Budget. He said it was not unusual for ratings agencies to be briefed before a Budget and it had happened last year.

"They have just said to us, as they have to every other government, they want to see a credible management of public debt."

WHY RATINGS MATTER

A credit rating downgrade would lift the interest rate the Government pays to borrow, which flows through to interest rates on mortgages and business borrowing.

A lower rating can also cut the number of investors willing to lend to us, increasing the risk that banks cannot roll over funding.

Treasury has warned that, based on Ireland’s experience, a rating downgrade would add $600 million a year to our current interest bill.

Three agencies rate New Zealand’s creditworthiness: Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s and Fitch.

Ratings have two components:

1. Rating strength The agencies have different ways to express this but it ranges from triple-A (the highest quality) down to triple or double-B ("junk") ratings.

2. An indication of how likely that is to change: stable, negative or positive outlook. Each country gets a domestic and, more important, foreign currency rating.

From here.

Awaiting registration

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009
Hi

I have submitted my application for inclusion on the dental registration in NZ. This won’t be a problem as I already have a job offer and suitable references.

Do I need for this to be completed or is it ok to submit an EOI whilst it is being processed

I have a UK degree that is recognised by the registration board

Francis

certifying documents

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009
Hi

Is it the same professions that can countersign your passport application that can certify documents for immigation application?

eg Doctors, accountants

Francis

Govt to introduce boy racer car crushing bill

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009
Govt to introduce boy racer car crushing bill
Updated 12:43PM Tuesday May 26, 2009
By Patrick Gower and NZPA

Police Minister Judith Collins says boy racers should fear legislation being introduced to Parliament today because "every new offence will bring them closer to the crusher".

The legislation will also allow by-laws to be passed that prevent vehicles "cruising" city streets, and demerit points to go on driver’s licences for boy-racer offences.

The two bills will provide a range greater powers to tackle illegal street racers and crush their vehicles as a last resort.

Ms Collins - who has earned the nickname "Crusher" since first proposing the measure - said the Vehicle Confiscation and Seizure Bill aimed to take the worst illegal street racers off the road by taking cars away permanently.

More here.

Which job?

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009
Hi guys,
Got an application form from Burger King, McDonald’s and New World. Which might be the best job in terms of salary? Anyone who’s working at any of these?

Moving in NZ

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009
Does anyone know what it costs to move house once in NZ?

We’re considering downscaling but need to factor in the possible moving costs to see if it would be worth it.

Its an average sized 3 bedroom house and we’d be moving locally (within 15km’s)