Press Release – Student Job Search Minister for Social Development and Employment, Hon. Carmel Sepuloni, has celebrated the contribution of Student Job Search (SJS) to New Zealand tertiary graduates by hosting an event at Parliament this week. The Parliamentary event, held by The Ministry …
Minister for Social Development and Employment, Hon. Carmel Sepuloni, has celebrated the contribution of Student Job Search (SJS) to New Zealand tertiary graduates by hosting an event at Parliament this week.
The Parliamentary event, held by The Ministry for Social Development (MSD) alongside Student Job Search, celebrates SJS’s expanded graduate services. Attendees included representatives from across government departments, the education and employment sectors, including Tupu Toa Chief Executive Anne Fitisemanu, MSD Deputy Chief Executive Marama Edwards and New Zealand Union of Student Association President Andrew Lessells.
Wednesday, 7 July 2021, 1:38 pm
Minister for Social Development and Employment, Hon.
Carmel Sepuloni, has celebrated the contribution of Student
Job Search (SJS) to New Zealand tertiary graduates by
hosting an event at Parliament this week.
The
Parliamentary event, held by The Ministry for Social
Development (MSD) alongside Student Job Search, celebrates
SJS’s expanded graduate services. Attendees included
representatives from across government departments, the
education and employment sectors, including Tupu Toa Chief
Executive Anne Fitisemanu, MSD Deputy Chief Executive Marama
Edwards and New Zealand Union of Student Association
President Andrew Lessells.
Since the launch of SJS’s
expanded graduate services in March 2021, SJS has sourced
Dominico Zapata/Stuff
Residents at Port Waikato want to be put inside Auckland s Covid-19 borders in level 3 lockdown, as they face a 90 minute drive to supermarkets and petrol stations.
As a million people up the road wish for their lockdown to be over, residents of a Waikato beachside community have called to join Auckland s Level 3 restrictions. Port Waikato residents facing long drives and waits for necessities like supermarkets, petrol and medical supplies want to join their northern cousins to make life more simple. At present they must drive 90 minutes to Te Kauwhata or Huntly to access key services – down a difficult, unsealed road.