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News > Budget 2007 invests in young New Zealanders
Budget 2007 invests in young New Zealanders
18 May 2007
Budget 2007 shows this Labour-led government’s continued commitment and investment in young New Zealanders says Youth Affairs Minister Nanaia Mahuta.
“Improving the lives of young New Zealanders today is important, but it
is also critical that we invest in their future to ensure that they are
able to reach their full potential. After all, they are the
future innovators, employers, employees, parents and leaders of our
community and our economy,” says Nanaia Mahuta.
"In Budget 2007, we're continuing to make important investments in the
education and skills of young New Zealanders. We're investing
over half a billion in schools, industry training, tertiary education
and other initiatives over the next 4 years.
"We've also expanded allowances and scholarships for an extra 12,000
students, primarily from low-income backgrounds to make tertiary
education and training more affordable.
"We're investing in the physical, mental and sexual health of young New
Zealanders. There are funding initiatives to tackle obesity,
improve sexual health education, and a range of suicide prevention
initiatives, as well as a social marketing campaign on the risks of
drug taking.
"The budget provides additional support for the community and voluntary
sector organisations which play a critical role in supporting young
people and their families – totalling more than $85.4 million over the
next four years."
The Minister said the government is continuing its coordinated approach
to youth development and is working closely with the agencies and
organisations that have an important influence on the lives of young
people, such as schools, local councils, voluntary organisations and
the social and youth work sectors.
“I'm enormously proud of the investment this government is making in young New Zealanders," she said.
Budget 2007 builds on the investments made in Budget 2006, which
focused on improving the lives of young New Zealanders by promoting
healthy lifestyles, strengthening and supporting youth workers and
making positive changes in the tertiary education sector.
Key initiatives in Budget 2007 for young New Zealanders include:
Community and Voluntary Sector
The Government will support community organisations that play a role in supporting young people with:
- Funding of $20.4 million over the next two years will help
community organisations deliver services that support New Zealand’s
children, young people and their families.
- A further $2 million for the training and support of people working to prevent family violence in Māori whānau and communities.
- The rebate threshold of $1890 on charitable donations has been removed, to reward and encourage more charitable giving.
Health
The health of young New Zealanders is being promoted through:
- A four-year investment of $124.2 million in child and youth health to prevent ill health and disability.
- An additional $8.4 million over four years so newborns and young
adults will have better access to cochlear implants, giving babies born
with serious hearing impairment the best possible start in life and
ensuring adults who are profoundly deaf can lead as normal a life as
possible.
- Providing $23.1 million over four years to support a range of
suicide prevention initiatives as part of the implementation of the New
Zealand Suicide Prevention Strategy, launched last year.
- Providing $13.2 million over four years to support sexual health education and reducing sexually transmitted infections.
- Investing of $5.9 million over the next four years for a social
marketing campaign to raise awareness of the risks of taking drugs and
an online drug evidence database that will back it up.
Education
Budget 2007 delivers:
- Improved schools - $238.3 million of capital funding for school
property includes building 14 new schools, 180 new classrooms and 10
new school gyms, modernising existing schools and development for kura
and wharekura.
- Increase in school operational funding - up 4%, with $233,000 in
2006/07 and a further $139.8 million over the next four years to target
pressures identified in the review of operational funding, and other
initiatives including relief teachers and schools sharing IT expertise.
- A further $17.4 million over the next five years in out of school
services, to give parents more support through care and recreation
services for school-age children and young people.
- Investing $50.7 million in schools over the next four years to
implement the Healthy Eating, Healthy Action (HEHA) plan, to reduce
obesity, diabetes and related diseases.
- Contributing nearly $2.6 million over the next year to social
work services for the nine secondary schools involved in the AIMHI
Health Community Schools project.
Tertiary education & training
Budget 2007 expands allowances and scholarships for an extra 12,000
students, primarily from low-income backgrounds. The measures
announced include:
- The parental income threshold for entitlement to a full student
allowance will increase by 10 per cent, to around $44,330 per annum,
from 1 January 2008. The budget will provide $16.2 million in
operating funding over four years for this initiative.
- The student allowance personal income abatement threshold will be
adjusted for inflation each year. This initiative will be
introduced from 1 April 2008, and will maintain the real value of
personal and couple income thresholds.
- The Step Up Scholarship pilot will be expanded and redesigned to
increase access for students from low-income backgrounds, costing $11.4
million over four years. This will provide another 180
scholarships, an increase of 50%.
- The Ngārimu Scholarship fund will be strengthened in order to assist Māori leadership at a cost of $595,000 over four years.
- Budget 2007 sets aside $285.1 million of operating funding over
four years (and $79.7 million of capital funding over four years) to
enable the tertiary system to better fulfil New Zealand's needs, and at
the same time provide better value for money for taxpayers and students.
- The Government is continuing to invest in tertiary education and
training to make tertiary education more affordable. Budget 2007
increases industry training by $53 million over the next four years,
and aims to increase the numbers in industry training to 220,000 in
training annually by 2011. Investments include:
- Funding over the next two years, to develop and implement a national assessment tool for adult literacy, numeracy and language.
Youth Development
The Government is helping young people who are at risk of not achieving their full potential. Investments in this area:
- A further $700,000 over the next year to support the Turn Your
Life Around (TYLA) and Project K mentoring programmes for young people.
Youth Justice
The Government is investing in a strong youth justice system by:
- Providing $1.4 million over the next year for intensive
intervention programmes for the most serious and dangerous youth
offenders to address the causes of the criminal behaviour, reduce
re-offending by this group and keep young people out of prison.
- Providing $1.3 million over the next year in the Supported Bail
Programme for young people on remand from the Youth Court to ensure
they comply with their bail conditions through one-on-one case
management and individual supervised day programmes.
- Providing $1.5 million over the next year for Multi-Agency Support Services in Secondary Schools (MASSiS).
- Providing $3.4 million over the next four years to boost support for schools dealing with gang issues in Counties Manukau.
Sport and Recreation
The Government is investing more than $11.1 million for programmes in
the coming year targeting children and young people as part of Sport
and Recreation New Zealand’s (SPARC) contribution to the government’s
ongoing $67.0 million four-year Mission-On initiative.
Investments include:
- A $666,000 increase in direct athlete support through the Performance Enhancement Grants scheme to $4.2 million for 2007/08.
- A doubling of SPARC’s regional sports development funding to more than $2.8 million in 2007/08.
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