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Mooar to Say

Mooar To Say: An occasional column with Aaron Mooar, Station Manager of Raglan Community Radio and the host of the Morning Show.

I was once refused an interview by a senior manager at Waikato District Council. This was the same manager who oversaw the spate of sewerage spills we had a few years ago. He was a bureaucrat who seemed out of touch with the reality in Raglan and after a watching several of his staff leave I requested an interview so I could ask him if he was also going to resign over his poor performance. Keep Reading

Mooar to Say

An occasional column with Aaron Mooar, Station Manager of Raglan Community Radio and the host of the Morning Show.

There has been a really positive news story coming out of Patea over the last two years that started with new principal Nicola Ngarewa being appointed after a period of crisis at the school.

She has modernised the way the school runs, doing away with bell times and offering a kind of flexitime for older students so that they could fit jobs in around their studies. These and many other changes have turned around student performance at the school with an improvement in academic results and an increase in attendance and students numbers. Keep Reading

Mooar to Say

A column from Raglan Community Radio’s Aaron Mooar

Let’s talk about competitiveness in junior sport. “There’s nothing worse than over the top competitive behaviour,” says one group. “I can’t stand how they’re trying to take competitiveness out of kids’ sport,” says another, adding for good measure that “it’s a competitive world out there and kids need to learn that”.

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Mooar to Say

What makes Raglan so special? It’s a question I’ve been trying to answer lately, and so I often ask people in interviews about their view as a prompter for debate, especially if they are political candidates.

The thing is, our town keeps changing despite people’s best efforts to stop it so I’m thinking it could be really important to get a proper answer. If we don’t know what makes this place so special – and how Raglan became Raglan – then we probably won’t be able to preserve the whatever-it-is quality that attracted so many of us here.

Richard Bax, a former council manager, says Raglan really stands out as a place where people don’t want things to change. We rebuilt the wharf to be as similar to the old one as we could and we put in a new footbridge as close to the old one as possible even though there might have been better ways to do it.

Even though the instinct is right, this kind of change prevention really won’t work. Change will happen regardless so we need to develop a vision of what we want the town to be like, a really specific vision, based on an understanding of what makes this place tick – and use that to direct change.

As I type I realise I may have just described the revitalised Raglan Naturally project but there’s one specific area that I want to focus on: housing. I don’t have an immediate answer to what makes this place special but I’m confident the housing situation will have a huge influence over the type of place we’ll be in the future.

With all due respect to my fellow middle class Raglanites, I think it’s the artists, hippies and surf bums who’ve had the major influence on how this town has evolved. Well, them and people who are on the run from Hamilton, too. They’re the ones with the time and presence in the town to create culture.

Through no fault of anyone in particular, they’re being replaced by people who work long hours (probably in Hamilton) to pay off the huge mortgage they just took out because they wanted to move to Raglan and enjoy the local culture.

I’m not trying to point the finger at anyone but I am attempting to ask a question that goes like this: How are we going to ensure there is low cost housing in Raglan so that we can maintain a diverse group of people in town?

Aaron Mooar is host of the Morning Show on Raglan Community Radio 98.1FM and streaming live at www.raglanragdio.com

Mooar to Say

Iceland has reduced teenage drinking by 88 per cent and cigarette use by 87 per cent over the last two decades.

Stories of “hordes of teenagers getting in-your-face drunk” in capital city Reykjavik were common back in the 90s so they decided to put more funding into after-school sports. They also funded lots of art, music and dance clubs and encouraged parents to spend more time with their children.

One of the thoughts behind it was that if teenagers want to change their brain chemistry by getting high then maybe they could start a social movement around getting a natural high. The results speak for themselves. Keep Reading

Mooar to Say

I was just writing my last column here in the studio in the front of the town hall when people began turning up for Craig Purcell’s funeral service.  Keep Reading

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