The Government has promised a Cyclone Gabrielle emergency package of $250 million for roads and $50 million for businesses, while extending the national state of emergency for another seven days and creating a cyclone recovery taskforce.
Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has also rejected claims of increased looting and disorder in Hawkes鈥 Bay and Tair膩whiti, saying 鈥減olice are not seeing any evidence to suggest there鈥檚 a level of lawlessness鈥.
Hipkins announced the national state of emergency would be extended for another seven days at a post-cabinet press conference in Wellington this afternoon.
He told reporters that a lead minister would be appointed for each of the affected regions, tasked with reporting back on the local recovery approach for their regions.
A cyclone recovery taskforce, structured similarly to Queensland鈥檚 floods taskforce, would be headed by Sir Brian Roche.
A new cabinet committee - including the regional ministers - would be formed.
Finance Minister Grant Robertson will be the new Cyclone Recovery Minister.
Robertson said Cabinet had agreed to $50 million for support to businesses, workers and the primary sector.
On the transport front, he said the damage to roads has been 鈥渕assive鈥, so $250 million would be put into the emergency works budget of NZTA to use on both local roads and state highways.
鈥淭ransport links are essential.鈥
On the $250 million for the roading emergency fund, Robertson said 鈥渢his is just the beginning. There is a massive amount of work required over the next weeks and years.鈥
About 400km of the roading network were currently undergoing urgent repairs in Tair膩whiti, Hawke鈥檚 Bay and central North Island.
He said the stocktake would be done on which roads could be rebuilt and which could not - but urgent remedial work was needed for the key routes, so the initial funding injection was decided on now.
Robertson said a wage subsidy would be considered among the longer term decisions - this was for immediate support.
The $250m was a pre-commitment for Budget 2023, while the business package was from money that was already at hand.
He said no decisions had been made on whether changes would be required to cover the cost, such as tax changes, but when he put the Budget together, he would have to consider both revenue and spending.
On immigration, Hipkins said a special rebuild visa was one of the options being considered to try to get the labour in for the rebuild.
There was significant pressure on housing for those displaced as places they would normally use for emergency accommodation were also full, because of other events in Auckland.
Hipkins said it was too early to speculate on whether Esk Valley would be habitable in the future.
He was getting a daily report on law and order from the police.
鈥淭here is a heightened sense of stress, but police are not reporting an increase in crime over and above what they would normally be dealing with.鈥
It was 鈥渏ust wrong鈥 to suggest that crime had increased and such claims should not be amplified.
Hipkins said about 140 more Police had been flown into the region to help with law and order.
鈥淧olice are not seeing any evidence to suggest there鈥檚 a level of lawlessness. That鈥檚 not to say people are not feeling anxious. I don鈥檛 think people should play to that fear. Police do have this under control.鈥
On calls to bring in the army to help police, Hipkins said there was a threshold before that could be done and it was not at that point. 鈥淭here is no general lawlessness.鈥
He again took a swipe at the 鈥渞umour mill鈥 and urged people to have faith in the police.
He said if people were setting up checkpoints, they should be doing it in conjunction with the police.
He said people filming and taking photos of damaged areas could be 鈥渄isaster tourism鈥 rather than criminals scoping out places to burgle.
鈥淚鈥檓 dealing with the factual information provided by police. And while tensions are high .. the level of crime is not unusually high and not beyond the level they can deal with.鈥
Hipkins said more than 6000 people were uncontactable after Cyclone Gabrielle but 4260 of those were OK. There was no update on the 10 people who police held grave fears for.
About 15,000 were still without power in North Island, about 70 per cent in Napier and surrounding areas.
The emergency response is still underway in many regions hardest hit by the cyclone 鈥 from Northland to Hawke鈥檚 Bay 鈥 and Hipkins warned on Sunday it will be a long road to recovery and could cost billions.
Today鈥檚 initial tranche of economic support is for businesses and people to contend with the immediate issues. A wider economic package is not likely to come until a complete assessment of the damage and what is required.
Labour MP and the MP for Te Atatu Phil Twyford has written to the PM and senior ministers, calling on them to move urgently on managed retreat and to buy out home owners with damaged homes in places it is no longer safe to live.
Hipkins is also set to be asked about rising concerns over law and order in the cyclone-hit areas, including looting, which prompted residents in some areas to set up roadblocks to protect properties, and reports of firearms being waved at road workers.
It has prompted both Act leader David Seymour and NZ First leader Winston Peters to urge the Government to call the Army in to help police.
Seymour said more than 600 police were sent to the Parliament protest and yet only 100 have been sent to Hawke鈥檚 Bay.
鈥淎 presence in the worst affected areas would make a huge difference to communities that are suffering. They are exhausted and they shouldn鈥檛 have to be up all night manning their own checkpoints.鈥
Cyclone Gabrielle decimated Esk Valley. Photo / Warren Buckland
NZ First leader Winston Peters said the lawlessness would only get worse if it was not taken seriously.
鈥淭he Prime Minister needs to approve sending Army personnel to assist police to maintain order - it is a state of emergency and is out of control.鈥
Te Waka Kotahi has also issued a plea for people not to abuse road workers trying to fix the roads.
Police have so far arrested at least 42 people - Police Commissioner Andy Coster said this morning he felt police had the situation under control and the number of law and order issues was actually lower than normal.
The region had 120 additional frontline police staff in the wake of the cyclone and an extra 25 were coming on top of 770 already there.
Coster also said reports of crime were down on normal levels.
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