Red Alert

Posts Tagged ‘Jim Anderton’

Good luck Jim

Posted by Chris Hipkins on May 8th, 2010

Jim Anderton is expected to announce tomorrow that he will be running for Mayor of Christchurch in this year’s local body elections. Jim has a wealth of experience and is a hardened campaigner. It will be a two horse race between him and Bob Parker and my money will be on Jim. Substance trumps celebrity.

I think had I been involved in the Labour Party back when Jim left to setup the NLP I would have struggled to stay too. I’m proud of the fact that Labour has come a long way since the divisive days of Rogernomics. We’re now a unified team committed to the progressive values upon which the party was founded and it was great to see so many former NLP members welcomed back into the party at our conference in Rotorua last year.


ACC surgery declines

Posted by Grant Robertson on April 7th, 2010

Even as a relatively new MP I get a feeling when a pattern is developing in dealing with government agencies.  Four cases coming to the electorate office on one topic in a short space of time is a sign. That is definitely the case with ACC declining surgery on the grounds  of a “pre-existing condition”.  One of the cases has had a run in the media, but the others are just the same.  In all cases the patient’s doctors argue that surgery is required as a result of the accident, but ACC has denied the surgery.

Jim Anderton raised this in Parliament last week, and at the time I thought he had got an unequivocal answer from Nick Smith that there had been no change in policy.  Reading the transcript again I am not so sure.  Smith talks about no change in the “legislative cover.“  But this does not eliminate a policy change, and I think that is what we are seeing.

In the exchange with Jim Anderton, Nick Smith does acknowledge that more cases are going to appeal, but he also says ” it is critical that these decisions are made on medical and not cost grounds.”  That is something we can all agree on, but when doctors are saying that the surgery is required as a result of the accident, but ACC is finding ways around this, that is not meeting the Minister’s test.

The view of all those involved in the cases is that they feel as people who have paid their taxes and ACC levies over the years, they thought the system would be there for them when they needed it.  They are feeling cheated, and they have every right to do so.   I am supporting them to appeal the decisions, but that is wasting a lot of  time for all concerned.