Community Groups / April 2022
May 2022 | March 2022-
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Design a Metlink Bus – deadline 19 May
- Ngaio Progressive Association
- Metlink has a new ‘Design a Metlink Bus’ colouring competition, after it was so successful last year. The competition is open to all tamariki aged 4 to 18 years of age and closes at 5pm on 19 May. Metlink wants … Continue reading →
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Weekly News for Friday 29 April 2022
- St Andrews on the Terrace Presbyterian Church
- I have just finished reading Very Rev John Murray’s notes on his time as minister of St. Andrew’s on the Terrace from 1975 to 1993. An amazing vision for an inclusive city church. 29 years later I sit writing this as the newest minister of St. Andrew’s on the Terrace. Who would have thought that […]
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St Andrew's on the Terrace, 30, The Terrace, Paekākā, Wellington Central, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Vicar's Letter - 29 Apr 2022
- All Saints Hataitai
- Kia ora All Saints whānauAfter our 10:30 central gathering on Easter Sunday we carried on our celebration of the Resurrection with a hunt for chocolate eggs in the vicarage garden.
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All Saints Anglican Church, 90, Hamilton Road, Hataitai, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6021, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Newsletter Week Ending 1 May 2022
- Karori Anglican Churches
- KARORI ANGLICAN AGM This year’s AGM will be held at St Mary’s church on Monday, 2 May starting at 7pm. We look forward to seeing you there! 2021 ANNUAL REPORT AND FINANCIAL REPORTThis year both the Annual and Financial reports are in digital format. You can view these reports by clicking on this link: Annual […]
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Karori, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Remembering Emily
- Age Concern Wellington
- When the Companion Walking Service was set up in 2020, we needed a bank of volunteers ready for when the referrals started to come in. At that time, I belonged to an exercise group in Karori and over coffee told the group about my new job. One member of the group, Delyse, was particularly ... Read more
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Karori, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Hutt City Civic Award Nominee, Volunteer Carol Bradnock
- Age Concern Wellington
- As a child, Carol Bradnock liked to help seniors because they often looked sad and she wanted to help make them happy. Perhaps it’s because she has a lot to live up to (her grandfather founded the Rātana movement and her grandmother was Iriaka Rātana, the first woman to represent Māori in the New ... Read more
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DCM – together we can end homelessness – one very special story
- Downtown Community Ministry
- 96 DCM – together we can end homelessness – one very special story p{ margin:10px 0; padding:0; } table{ border-collapse:collapse; } h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6{ display:block; margin:0; padding:0; } img,a img{ border:0; height:auto; outline:none; text-decoration:none; } body,#bodyTable,#bodyCell{ height:100%; margin:0; padding:0; width:100%; } .mcnPreviewText{ display:none !important; } #outlook a{ padding:0; } img{ -ms-interpolation-mode:bicubic; } table{ mso-table-lspace:0pt; mso-table-rspace:0pt; } .ReadMsgBody{ width:100%; } .ExternalClass{ width:100%; } p,a,li,td,blockquote{ mso-line-height-rule:exactly; } a[href^=tel],a[href^=sms]{ color:inherit; cursor:default; text-decoration:none; } p,a,li,td,body,table,blockquote{ -ms-text-size-adjust:100%; -webkit-text-size-adjust:100%; } .ExternalClass,.ExternalClass p,.ExternalClass td,.ExternalClass div,.ExternalClass span,.ExternalClass font{ line-height:100%; } a[x-apple-data-detectors]{ color:inherit !important; text-decoration:none !important; 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line-height:150% !important; } } @media only screen and (max-width: 480px){ .headerContainer .mcnTextContent,.headerContainer .mcnTextContent p{ font-size:16px !important; line-height:150% !important; } } @media only screen and (max-width: 480px){ .bodyContainer .mcnTextContent,.bodyContainer .mcnTextContent p{ font-size:16px !important; line-height:150% !important; } } @media only screen and (max-width: 480px){ .footerContainer .mcnTextContent,.footerContainer .mcnTextContent p{ font-size:14px !important; line-height:150% !important; } } Many of the people DCM supports die at a young age. Today we share the story of Russell, who died two days before Christmas last year. Remembering Russell Two days before Christmas, the team from DCM stood with two police representatives down on the waterfront, at the site where the body of a man they had all supported over the years had been found that morning. After a karakia led by the police iwi liaison kaimahi, the DCM team sang waiata, beginning with “Te Hokinga Mai”... ...TANGI ANA TE NGĀKAU I TE AROHA... How my heart weeps with sorrowful love... HEI ORANGA MO TE MŌREHU, TANGI MŌKAI NEI... The survivor cries out with loneliness... E RAPU ANA I TE ARA TIKA... Seeking out the right path... Russell Fleming was born in Palmerston North and spent his earliest years in Levin. Later the family moved to Lower Hutt. Russell had two older sisters and two older brothers. His mother describes him as her “surprise baby”. Growing up, Russell learned many skills from his father. He loved tinkering with bikes and as an adult, this continued to be something he enjoyed. On the morning of Russell’s funeral, there was a bike in his flat which he had been working on. He rode bikes; he rode scooters. This was part of who he was. His father Hugh helped him get his heavy truck driver’s license. Russell always saw himself as a worker. This had been one of his family’s core values. Drunk or sober-ish, he would say to us “I have to get a job!”; “I have to get my truck driver’s license back.” His mother recalls how, when they were together, he would say, “You sit down, Mum. I will make you a cup of tea.” His house was clean. Even on the day of his funeral, there was his washing drying on a clothes horse indoors. Russell’s undoing was his alcohol addiction. He kind of didn’t have a choice. He faced so many challenges – addictions, mental health, a back injury and a head injury, which he attempted to address through self-medication. Combining his prescription meds with alcohol led to a seizure. Being diagnosed as epileptic meant he lost his truck driver’s license and could not work, something that was so important to him. As a result of this complexity, Russell could not access or receive the support which he needed, something we often see with the taumai we support at DCM when they experience multiple, complex issues. He did not fit in one category; the fact that he needed support around all three (mental health, addiction, cognitive impairment through head injury) meant he slipped through the cracks of secondary health services. Russell lived a mobile life, but was always drawn back to Wellington, to this area, to “home”. And so many people in Wellington were connected to him and were part of his story: his friends in the street community, the street cleaners, the Wellington City Council local hosts, his lawyer, all the different tenancy managers, Mōkai Kāinga and the community gardens – even the police were fond of him! At DCM, Russell connected with and was supported by so many of the team over the years – from the dentists, eye doctor, and Te Aro Health nurses to many DCM kaimahi. Every team at DCM was part of his journey – the Outreach team when he was rough sleeping, the Sustaining Tenancies team when he was struggling to stay in a home, and towards the end of his life, he was housed again through the Aro Mai Housing First collaboration. Here a few of those he was closest to, share their memories and reflections about Russell. Russell loved spending time with Natalia and Rob. Natalia Natalia Cleland, DCM I was the first person Russell met when he came back to Wellington in 2018. He had been living at a campsite in Nelson, and he said to me, “I can’t keep living on the street! I need a house!” He connected with people well, and was able to voice his own aspirations well. I didn’t want to be the one who told him that there was no house for him. I wanted to be in his corner, supporting him. So I put him on the line to the MSD Social Housing team. He howled and screamed down the line – “I need a house! I am going to die out here!” He absolutely demanded a house – and he got one! This is when he got his first tenancy – at Lower Hutt, just around the corner from his parents. “Yes, the housing stuff; well, it’s stuffed!” – this was probably one of the most incredible things Russell said. He was really smart and could see what was going on in the broken system. Not just looking at his personal situation but seeing that he was caught in a system that was “stuffed”. I was blown away by his insight and how he didn’t complain about his homelessness necessarily but rather he called out the problem for everyone. He was such a friendly guy, so happy and gregarious. In every photo shown at his funeral, he is smiling, laughing. This was his strength, but also the challenge. He was so connected, he didn’t always know when to step back and give others some space. His personality could be too much for others at times. Russell was always connected to his family, even in his dis-connection. He always wanted to be re-connected to them all. There was a birthday card from his parents that he kept on his mantelpiece in his final home. When we mentioned this to his mother, she said that it would have been a card from several birthdays ago. He had carried it around with him while he slept on the streets and put it on display when he moved into that final house. “Yes, the housing stuff; well, it’s stuffed!” Russell Fleming Robert Robert Sarich, DCM How would I describe Russell? He was ENERGETIC – literally a ball of energy. And he was LOVING. He was also completely and utterly committed to social justice. I first met Russell on Lambton Quay. I was out on outreach, walking along the street en route to work early in the morning. I explained where DCM was and left him a card. “Please come down and see us,” was my kōrero. He was open to this, immediately, which was awesome. When he was housed out at the Hutt, I helped him move in. He was always positive. He was only ever negative when he was drinking. I guess that in a past time, he would have been the lovable town drunk. As I say, Russell was committed to social justice. If things were going wrong for other people, he would often raise it with us. He would tell us about the person, tell us that they needed help, tell us that it wasn’t “fair” how things were for this person. You often had to listen and reflect, wait to see what it was that Russell was getting at, what it was that was going on with the person he was concerned for. But often when you got to the heart of it, Russell was bang on. Russell was assaulted a few times, when his behaviour was just too big for others to deal with. He would advocate for himself too. I thought it was very brave; he would go to the police, name no names, but he understood he needed to do this – for himself, and for others. “If they could do it to me, they could do it to anyone, Rob!” he would reflect to me. My feeling is that Russell was a lot more settled in the final months of this life. Russell knew that he was loved, not merely tolerated. Yes, he was a loved ball of energy, dressed in a beautiful korowai. Hamish Hamish Knight, Police City Community team, Wellington I have been in the Police for 14 years, and Russell Fleming is one of those characters like Ben Hana, who you really connect with, who many people know and have connected with. He had that wow factor. He has evolved over time; he has grown and he has changed. And it’s not just that the numbers of bangles up his arm have been added to, the jewellery has changed. But some things have also stayed the same. Russell has always been pleasant to chat to. Banter. That’s the word. Russell and I enjoyed plenty of banter. He went through his camo stage, with that huge backpack, full of everything! I would pretend that I couldn’t see him in his camo gear. He would be calling out to me, and I would be going: “Who is that talking? I can’t see anyone!” Yarns – that’s another word. There were some big yarns about his life. I usually had to cut him off or we would be talking on and on and on – forever. He was talkative, yes, but he was never disrespectful of me, of police, of authority. I didn’t arrest him; there was no offending that I dealt with. I would take the alcohol off him. He would listen to reason. Like when I would explain that he was just being too loud. He knew he needed to tone it down; he just didn’t really know how to go about it. He didn’t go looking for trouble, but it did seem to find him at times. Russell seemed to be on the fringes. In so many ways. On the fringes of many friendship groups, but never at the heart; never quite experiencing the connections and close friendships he seemed to want. That was a bit sad, watching him try to find a place he belonged. “I am a homeless person. But I look out for others.” Russell Fleming Joe Pastor Joe Serevi, Salvation Army I first met Russell at DCM. He was sitting outside, and he wasn’t having a good day. I said to him, “Come on, let’s go for a walk and have a chat.” I took him for a cuppa. Russell just loved to talk, and that’s how I began to connect with him. Russell was such a character, with his great big backpack, and his military fatigues. He was intelligent, and this shone through whenever you had a kōrero with him, especially when he was sober. He was one of the more challenging people on the streets, and he found it very challenging when he got housed. Those four walls and living alone were difficult for him. Russell was someone who really needed and was always seeking connection with other people. I was privileged to be one of those people, and to be able to support him in different ways over the years. Russell Russell Fleming, in his own words Many of you have “met” Russell through DCM’s film clip. He was keen to be involved with this – he saw it as a way to lift up DCM and acknowledge the support he, and others, had received from the team. At the time, he was rough sleeping. In amongst all of the film footage which Ocular shot while making the DCM film clip are conversations which the film crew had with Russell. Producer Steph Miller pulled some of these reflections out for us this month. There is Russell, in his own words, talking about his life and about homelessness. He speaks about the complexity – of being so used to the street that he often felt more settled there: “It’s hard. Every time I go in to a house, I am used to being out here.” “A house. It’s just four walls, you just sit there and do nothing. Whereas out on the street… I guess it’s more of a social thing.” ...while at the same time being totally over it, and wanting to have a safe place to be – ”But then again, you want a house cos you are sick of it.” He asks the film crew – “If you were homeless...would you be able to go to sleep at night, in the cold, in the wind, in the rain?” Over and over again, Russell lifts up DCM. “Natalia is a lovely person; she has put me in to a few houses and stuff”; “Natalia and that; they are cool. DCM are cool fellows!” At the same time, he draws attention to the key underlying issue – too many people experiencing homelessness and too few houses: “Natalia and DCM; they are doing a really good job! But they have had to help so many people.” “DCM have so much on their plate, dealing with so many homeless people!” “Yes, the housing stuff; well, it’s stuffed!” And his own kaupapa and commitment to others also comes through, as he shares examples of times when he has been able to help others, especially young people experiencing homelessness and addictions. “I am a homeless person. But I look out for others”. Sia Sia To’omaga, DCM Russell was little, and loud, and often all over the place with his thoughts, with his kōrero. When he was referred to our team, he had a property in the Hutt, back when DCM’s Sustaining Tenancies team was still covering the Hutt. When he was living on the streets, he was bullied. I would go out and look for him, go out and find him. He found a safe space for himself, up by parliament. We knew where to find him. At DCM, we have housed him three or four times, and have tried some different options. The challenges were always around his drinking and his behaviour. He could get to a situation where he didn’t feel safe in the whare or living situation we had sorted for him, and then he would return to the street. One day a few months before his death, he came in to DCM; he was drunk and he was loud. He was calling out to me. “I am going on a course, Sia! Then I can get a job.” He had this card; he was anxious that he might have missed the course, the chance to do this. I was asking him to calm down and to explain what was going on slowly and carefully to me. Here I was trying to call the number on the card – and then a phone call came through! Magic, amazing timing. It wasn’t the same name or number as on the card, but it was a man named Tone, calling to ask DCM about Russell and the course. Tone and I figured out that we knew each other, and we were able to make sure there was a spot on the course reserved for Russell. But it wasn’t going to be easy. When I heard that this training course was going to be at a place at the bottom of Ngauranga Gorge, and that it was going to begin at 7.30am – well, I did not know how Russell was going to get to the right place at the right time. But you know what? He made it! And he completed the course! The last time I saw Russell, I congratulated him on passing the course. He showed me photos of his house on his phone. I said to him “Wow, Russell! You could eat off the floor. It is so tidy! Well done.” Russell kept a beautiful home. Yes, many things were going well for Russell in the final months of his life. He was housed – in a home provided by a private landlord. He was more settled and was feeling very hopeful that he would soon be able to work again. After his death, Tone called Sia to ask how he could forward on Russell’s certificate. Sia had to let him know that Russell had passed away, but that the team would love to pick up the certificate. Russell would have been so proud of this achievement, and sharing it with the team at DCM has been another way of acknowledging him, and all that he meant to so many. Two days before Christmas, the team from DCM stood with two police representatives down on the waterfront, at the spot where Russell’s body had been found that morning. With Rob Sarich on guitar, the team sang waiata, ending with “Ma te kahukura”... MAU ANA TĀKU AROHA Cloak yourself with my love WHAI AKE I NGĀ WHETU Follow the pathway to the stars RERE TŌTIKA RERE PAI Fly straight, fly true RERE RUNGA RAWA RĀ E Soar high towards the heavens. Russell Mark Fleming 31 Mar 1974 – 23 December 2021 “A loved ball of energy” <!-- --> Support DCM We call the people we work with taumai, meaning to settle. This reflects the journey we set out on together – to become settled, stable and well. Nāku te rourou, nāu te rourou, ka ora ai te iwi With your basket and my basket, the people will thrive <!-- --> Copyright © 2022 DCM. All rights reserved. Our mailing address is: DCMPO Box 6133Marion SqWellington, Wellington 6011 New ZealandAdd us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.
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Lower Hutt, Lower Hutt City, Wellington, 5010, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Dining room is open again!
- Compassion Soup Kitchen
- From Tuesday 26th April, the dining room will be open for 2 meals a day! Breakfast from 7.45 to 8.45 am, and dinner from 4.45 to 5.45 pm. We’re very excited to have all our volunteers and whānau back inside!
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Suzanne Aubert Compassion Centre, 132, Tory Street, Te Aro, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6040, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Weekly Bulletin: Staying connected as a church - 24 April 2022
- St John's in the City
- Kia ora St John’s whānau, We live as a Resurrection Community, and share the life we have been given in Christ.
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St John's, Willis Street, Te Aro, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Town Center Upgrades
- Island Bay Residents' Association
- Kia ora Island Bay Residents Association, We really enjoyed speaking to so many members of the Island Bay community last Saturday in regards to the Island Bay Town Centre Upgrades. We are excited to get this project underway and begin those conversations further with the working group, who we are in contact with. The workingContinue reading "Town Center Upgrades"
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Island Bay, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, New Zealand/Aotearoa (OpenStreetMap)
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Weekly news for Friday 22 April 2022
- St Andrews on the Terrace Presbyterian Church
- E News 22 April 2022 Well, it’s another long weekend in honour of ANZAC. The closest experience I had to do with war was in the United Kingdom in 1995. I had the privilege of being invited to preach the sermon at the 50th Anniversary of the founding of the United Nations on the 24th […]
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St Andrew's on the Terrace, 30, The Terrace, Paekākā, Wellington Central, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Regional support for new children’s hospital
- Wellington Health Foundation
- Bill Day, Chair of the Foundation, enjoys travelling the region speaking with our incredible supporters.
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Vicar's Letter - 22 Apr 2022
- All Saints Hataitai
- Kia ora All Saints Whānau,Happy Easter! What’s great about Easter is that it’s not all over in a weekend.
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All Saints Anglican Church, 90, Hamilton Road, Hataitai, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6021, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Doing density well in central Wellington - a public talk - 5 May
- Inner-City Wellington
- PUBLIC TALK: DOING DENSITY WELL IN WELLINGTONBetter public transport, safer streets, more green spaces?_______When: Thursday 5 May, 5.
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Notes from the April Meeting
- Newtown Residents' Association
- We met on 18 April 2022, via zoom. These are brief notes of the main items discussed; see below for a link to the full minutes. Local Body Elections & Proposed Meet the Candidates meetings Nominations for Mayor, Councillors and Greater Welllington Councillors open on 15th July and close on 12th August, so we won’t know till then how … Continue reading Notes from the April Meeting →
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Family2Family is back!
- Wellington City Mission
- Thanks to the amazing team at New World, Family 2 Family is back! We are thrilled because this is one of the vital ways of keeping the Social Supermarket stocked... Read more » The post Family2Family is back! first appeared on Wellington City Mission.
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Newsletter Week Ending 24 April 2022
- Karori Anglican Churches
- KARORI ANGLICAN AGM This year’s AGM will be held on Monday, 2 May starting at 7pm and this year our 2021 Annual Report is in digital format. You can view the report by clicking on this link. A few hardcopies are available for those parishioners who are not online. PARISH DINNER – IDEAS NEEDED!We are […]
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Karori, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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April 2022 Meeting - Troubleshooting TCP/IP
- Wellington VHF Group
- April 2022 Meeting - Troubleshooting TCP/IP ZL2WAL Thu, 04/21/2022 - 10:44 This months general meeting will be Troubleshooting TCP/IP by Ron Zoest ZL4TDR Date: 28 April 2022 Time: 7:30 pm Location: Tawa Community Centre Meetings
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Tawa, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Projected Image Competition 2022 – Zoom Link
- Wellington Photographic Society
- 21st April @ 7:00 pm – 9:30 pm via Zoom This is the WPS Annual Competition for Projected Images which […]
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February 2022 Residents’ Association meeting minutes
- Pukerua Bay Residents Association
- Tuesday, 8 February 2022 Present: Paul FitzGerald, Iain McLean, Kate Dreaver, Mel Galletly, Margaret Blair, Jonathan Harker, Pauline Morum, Pat Henley, Lenka Horanska, Stewart McKenzie (PCC), Nicola Ethridge (PCC), Chris Kirk-Burnnand (GWRC), Guy Marriage, Janice Rodenburg, Adele Hickford.
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2021 AGM Report
- Karori Anglican Churches
- Click here to download the 2021 AGM Report
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April 2022 issue of Kōrero out now
- Pukerua Bay Residents Association
- By now you should have received the April 2022 issue of our Kōrero newsletter in your letterboxes. It is also available as a PDF download on our Kōrero page.
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Weekly Bulletin: Staying connected as a church - Holy Week April 2022
- St John's in the City
- Kia ora St John’s whānau, May you feel the presence of God in your life as we journey through Holy Week towards Easter.
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St John's, Willis Street, Te Aro, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Weekly News for 15th April 2022
- St Andrews on the Terrace Presbyterian Church
- Well, I’m definitely feeling the Wellington weather this week. I had all the COVID symptoms but remained negative, I think it was just a culmination of packing up in Auckland, driving down to Wellington in a day, unpacking and then preparation for my induction and hosting my family and friends over a 5-day period, my […]
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St Andrew's on the Terrace, 30, The Terrace, Paekākā, Wellington Central, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Newsletter Week Ending 17 April 2022
- Karori Anglican Churches
- KARORI ANGLICAN AGM This year’s AGM will be held on Monday, 2 May starting at 7pm. This year the annual report will be in digital format, available from Wednesday, 20 April. We will upload it onto our website and send you a link via email. A few hardcopies will be available for those who […]
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Karori, Wellington, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Wellington Hospitals Foundation Autumn 2022
- Wellington Health Foundation
- The post Wellington Hospitals Foundation Autumn 2022 appeared first on Wellington Hospitals Foundation.
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Vicar's Letter - 14 Apr 2022
- All Saints Hataitai
- Greetings to you all today, in what is considered the holiest week of the church calendar.
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All Saints Anglican Church, 90, Hamilton Road, Hataitai, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6021, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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What is a Place for Local Making? It's in Courtenay Place offering a range of workshops & events
- Inner-City Wellington
- From the website A Place for Local Making is a shared space for inspiring imaginative and caring ways of making and living together in our multispecies entanglement.
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How local businesses are helping each other - buy local to help too
- Inner-City Wellington
- From Scoop Wellington cafés have been teaming together to ensure their survival as they struggle in the wake of Covid…“We are a very small cog in a large wheel and for our business to be successful we not only rely on our loyal customers but also need other businesses in this city to do well.
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Keas on an adventure to the South Coast
- Brooklyn Scout group
- On Saturday afternoon, thirteen Keas did a fantastic job of using all the skills they had learned in Term 1 to lead their expedition on the City to Sea walkway. They checked their maps at Kingston, confirmed their route to … Continue reading →
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Scout Hall, Harrison Street, Brooklyn, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6021, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Weekly Bulletin: Staying connected as a church - 10 April 2022
- St John's in the City
- Kia ora St John’s whānau, I’m sending you this email earlier this week because of two opportunities for you today – our Lent Reflection tonight, and a Virtual Choir you can join (…details for both are below) We celebrate Palm Sunday this weekend – Jesus rides into the city as the Prince of Peace.
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St John's, Willis Street, Te Aro, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Wellington City Council Drop-in Session
- Island Bay Residents' Association
- It was great to see so many people actively engaging and interacting with our community, at the Wellington City Council drop in this morning. If you missed it there are another two sessions later today, so make sure to check it out and share your opinions on how to improve Island Bay.
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Island Bay, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, New Zealand/Aotearoa (OpenStreetMap)
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Weekly News for Friday 8-4-2022
- St Andrews on the Terrace Presbyterian Church
- Kia ora, Talofa lava, Well it is nice to finally be inducted into St. Andrew’s on the Terrace. Last night was a wonderful night of celebration I am humbled that so many friends and family and members from St. Andrew’s on the Terrace gave of their time to join me this service of celebration. I […]
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St Andrew's on the Terrace, 30, The Terrace, Paekākā, Wellington Central, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Parade update
- Island Bay Residents' Association
- As you will have seen the work is progressing along the parade, contractors are now beginning to install the street changes that the Council approved in March. Check out here for full details on what is happening: https://www.transportprojects.org.nz/current/the-parade/ As advised by the council: The south end (Reef Street to start of the 30km/hr zone) willContinue reading "Parade update"
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Vicar's Letter - 8 Apr 2022
- All Saints Hataitai
- Kia ora All Saints Whānau, This week we gather together for services again! And what better time than our Palm Sunday celebrations, remembering and joining with the crowd that gathered to welcome Jesus into Jerusalem as King! I always find Palm Sunday such a conflicting event.
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All Saints Anglican Church, 90, Hamilton Road, Hataitai, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6021, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Newsletter Week Ending 10 April 2022
- Karori Anglican Churches
- EASTER YOUTH CAMPThis year our youth have been invited to join the Karori Baptist Church youth camp which is being held during Easter Weekend. The focus of the weekend is for our youth to journey through the Easter story, grow together as youth groups, explore the Makara area, and generally have a great time! […]
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Makara, Wellington
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Winner of the Zonta Science Award 2022, Dr Tara McAllister
- Zonta Wellington
- The Zonta Club of Wellington congratulate Dr Tara McAllister, a freshwater ecologist, winner of the 17th Biennial Zonta Science Award for an emerging scientist.
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Newsletter April 2022
- Wellington Beekeepers Association Inc
- The April newsletter can be downloaded from the link below....
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WCC Community Drop-in
- Island Bay Residents' Association
- Kia ora Island Bay Residents Association, As you will be aware, Wellington City Council will be having a community drop-in session on April 9th to gather ideas and visions to foster the design for the town centre upgrades. We value your insight and leadership moving forward with the upgrades, and would like to work with aContinue reading "WCC Community Drop-in"
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Island Bay, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, New Zealand/Aotearoa (OpenStreetMap)
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Wellington City Council Parking Plan For Island Bay
- Island Bay Residents' Association
- The draft parking plan has been released. Should you have any feedback or queries please contact the city council directly via email: ibparade@wcc.govt.nz
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Island Bay, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, New Zealand/Aotearoa (OpenStreetMap)
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Cubs Get Creative
- Brooklyn Scout group
- Imaginations ran wild as young fingers moulded clay and flourished paint brushes!
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Scout Hall, Harrison Street, Brooklyn, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6021, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Underwater Tennis @ Vogelmorn Tennis Club
- Brooklyn Scout group
- Edmond did a great job organising the night but he forgot check the forecast. Our youth put a positive spin on the night and all went home… well damp(ish) – possibly reflecting on how they could have been better prepared😆
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Scout Hall, Harrison Street, Brooklyn, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6021, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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The Opportunity of a Lifetime!
- Brooklyn Scout group
- The 25th World Scout Jamboree will take place from 1 to 12 August 2023, in SaeManGeum, Jeollabuk-do, Republic of Korea. The theme is “Draw your Dream” – expressing the desire for Scouts to transform the event into their own festival … Continue reading →
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Scout Hall, Harrison Street, Brooklyn, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6021, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Weekly Bulletin: Staying connected as a church - 3 April 2022
- St John's in the City
- Kia ora St John’s whānau, This weekend Daylight Saving ends, and we put our clocks back one hour (if you don’t, you’ll be at Church early!) This Sunday is the fifth in the season of Lent as we journey toward Easter).
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St John's, Willis Street, Te Aro, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Weekly News for Friday 1st April 2022
- St Andrews on the Terrace Presbyterian Church
- Going live! This week we will be live streaming the service, led by Rev Ross Scott, from St Andrew’s on The Terrace. You can choose to join us at church, or you can watch from home. Don’t forget it is daylight saving and we change back to winter time. See John’s notice below. You will […]
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St Andrew's on the Terrace, 30, The Terrace, Paekākā, Wellington Central, Wellington, Wellington City, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand (OpenStreetMap)
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Special shout-outs
- Wellington Women's House
- We wouldn’t be able to do the mahi that we do without the generous support of the volunteers, donors and organisations who support us to provide a safe home to women in need.
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