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Canterbury Mornings with John MacDonald

Canterbury Mornings with John MacDonald

著者: Newstalk ZB
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Every weekday join the new voice of local issues on Canterbury Mornings with John MacDonald, 9am-12pm weekdays.

It’s all about the conversation with John, as he gets right into the things that get our community talking.

If it’s news you’re after, backing John is the combined power of the Newstalk ZB and New Zealand Herald news teams. Meaning when it comes to covering breaking news – you will not beat local radio.

With two decades experience in communications based in Christchurch, John also has a deep understanding of and connections to the Christchurch and Canterbury commercial sector.

Newstalk ZB Canterbury Mornings 9am-12pm with John MacDonald on 100.1FM and iHeartRadio.2026 Newstalk ZB
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  • Simon Levy: INATI Chef and co owner on winning a Michelin star
    2026/07/01

    Chef and co-owner of Christchurch's popular fine-dining restaurant INATI Simon Levy joined Canterbury Mornings after his restaurant won a Michelin star on Tuesday evening.

    He told John MacDonald about his beginnings as a young chef under Gordon Ramsay, and what he reckons won over the judges when they anonymously visited his central city restaurant.

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    11 分
  • John MacDonald: Maybe old school lunches would be better
    2026/07/01

    Can we all just accept now that David Seymour’s school lunch programme is a dog’s breakfast?

    With this report out from the Auditor-General saying only 50 percent of the lunches are up-to-scratch on the nutrition front and about 20,000 meals a day aren’t being eaten.

    The Associate Education Minister has hit back of course, using his usual tricks of discrediting the report and going on about how much money he’s saved.

    Tell that, though, to all the people who have been vindicated by this report.

    People like Christchurch principal Peggy Burrows who ended up in a tit-for-tat spat with Seymour over mouldy lunches, and who was to blame.

    The Auditor-General’s report paints a pretty shambolic picture. It says last year only 50 percent of the school lunch collective’s meals met the ministry of education’s nutrition standards.

    That improved a bit later in the year.

    I’ll come back to the nutrition part. Because I think a re-think is needed on that front, but I reckon the biggest concern has to be how much food is being wasted.

    Not that that’s a major surprise. because we’ve seen plenty of reports of food being fed to pigs and principals getting into trouble for letting their staff take uneaten food home.

    Now I’m a big supporter of the government providing school lunches.

    But I can’t support that level of waste. 20,000 meals a day.

    I’m a big supporter because, as anyone will tell you, it’s no use sitting a hungry kid in front of a teacher.

    You know what it’s like trying to do something yourself when you’re hungry, hopeless, and that’s why we just can’t have hungry kids at school.

    And if that means the government feeding these kids at lunchtime, then I’ve got no problem with that.

    But I can’t turn a blind eye to 20,000 meals a day being chucked out. Which brings me to the criticism in this Auditor-General’s report that the school lunches aren’t nutritious enough.

    I’ve always said that we can go on as much as we like about our school lunches when we were kids being pretty basic.

    And I guarantee my school lunches would never have met these nutrition standards the ministry of education has these days for the lunch programme.

    The difference is, though, I didn’t go to school hungry in the first place. I had breakfast and I had dinner at night.
    Some kids these days don’t, but aren’t we defeating the purpose if the kids themselves aren’t even eating the lunches because they don’t like them?

    Which is why I think the ministry of education needs to accept that it's got things wrong. It needs to go back to what you might call the basics and serve up something the kids will actually eat.

    And if that means something basic like a cheese sandwich, then do it. Because eating something has to be way better than eating nothing.

    LISTEN ABOVE

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    5 分
  • John MacDonald: Piecemeal housing a good reason for change
    2026/06/30

    I think the people at the NZ Initiative thinktank need to have an away day in Christchurch

    Then they would understand why I’m poo-pooing this claim they’re making today that having multiple local councils in close proximity to each other is a good thing.

    Because if there’s one thing that proves how wrong they are, it would be the disjointed situation we have with housing developments in Christchurch, Selwyn and Waimakariri.

    A situation I would sum up as the left hand having no idea what the right hand is doing.

    So what the NZ Initiative is saying, is the government is wrong reducing the number of local councils. It thinks that having multiple councils in close proximity to each other is a good thing, because it allows them to keep an eye on each other.

    I think he’s wrong. And I don’t think our three councils have any idea what each of them is up to.Because we have the Christchurch council flat out consenting townhouses and apartments to get more people living in the central city.We have Selwyn building homes too fast for the infrastructure to keep up. And, in Waimakariri, we’ve got that 850-home development proposed for Ohoka.Not to mention the Pegasus golf course development.

    If these three councils were keeping an eye on each other, as the NZ Initiative guy seems to think they are, we wouldn’t have this piecemeal approach to housing developments.

    But we do.

    Christchurch city council has been signing off any townhouse or apartment development that comes across its desk, meaning all the people wanting to build or live on a full section in a 3- or 4-bedroom house are flocking to Selwyn and Waimakariri. Selwyn, especially.

    So much so, that the infrastructure in Selwyn isn’t keeping up

    You might have seen the reports about developers striking problems with sewerage capacity.

    Selwyn council’s executive director of building, planning and regulatory services, Robert Love, says the systems in Selwyn are definitely under pressure.

    He says: “The scale and speed of growth in Selwyn is among the highest in the country, which creates ongoing pressure on all infrastructure networks. While significant investment is being made and major infrastructure upgrades are under way or planned, including working with Selwyn Water, our treatment plants and networks are currently nearing capacity.”

    And that, right there, is proof that the three councils in the greater Christchurch area are not keeping an eye on each other - as the NZ Initiative claims - and is proof that we desperately need one council. To get a much more co-ordinated approach to where homes get built.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    4 分
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