Business Scoop » Government Invests To Support More Rangatahi Into Employment scoop.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from scoop.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
“Rural
communities, local employers and at-risk rangatahi are all
set to benefit from a
$2.96m investment into five
employment and skills programmes working with 193 at-risk
rangatahi and their whanau,” Carmel Sepuloni
said.
“He Poutama Rangatahi funding will enable the
Employment Pathways Programme and the Manawa Ora Rangatahi
Life Skills Programme to provide rangatahi with holistic
pre-employment training. This will be underpinned by
intensive pastoral care, which will support rangatahi to
connect with their cultural identity through iwi, hapū and
the wider community.
“In addition, this funding will
benefit New Zealand’s economy by supporting training
within industries such as conservation, forestry,
MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government invests to support more rangatahi into employment foreignaffairs.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from foreignaffairs.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
We tend to think of warfare as a uniquely human trait. After all, although animals do attack and kill each other, this is usually all a part of nature’s circle of life and death, right? This seems to be all fighting over territory, food, or mates, at the whims of their natural instincts, and there is usually little thought given to the fact that animals might wage premeditated war with each other, taking sides and engaging in strategy like us. Yet, humans don’t seem to be alone in our capacity for power struggles, alliances, and flat out war, and this can be seen with the spooky case of a group of chimpanzees in Africa that began a full-fledged civil war, which remains the only witnessed such incident of its kind.
Govt to skip contractors in shoddy water projects
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Govt to skip contractors in shoddy water projects
IT IS now official: the government will no longer award tenders to contractors who delayed water projects or delivered shoddy works.
This follows a series of reports of works performed below standard and others undertaken for longer than agreed in the contracts. Most if not all of the culprits are indigenous firms.
Speaking after an inspection tour on implementation of water projects here yesterday, Deputy Water Minister Maryprisca Mahundi said ‘enough is enough’ with firms that impair the government’s efforts to relieve Tanzanians, mainly women and children, the burden of having to carry buckets of water for long distances on a daily basis.