Labour and Marine Notices




The Overtime and Holidays Labour Legislation Suspension Order 1941, Variation No. 7.

IN pursuance of the Labour Legislation Emergency Regulations 1940, the Minister of Labour doth hereby order as follows :—

  1. This Order may be cited as the Overtime and Holidays Labour Legislation Suspension Order 1941, Variation No. 7.
  2. This Order shall be read together with and deemed part of the Overtime and Holidays Labour Legislation Suspension Order 1941 (hereinafter referred to as “the principal Order”).
  3. The principal Order is varied as follows, namely :

The provisions of the principal Order shall not apply to the workers coming within the scope of the awards specified in the following Schedule, viz. :—

SCHEDULE.

Name of Award. Date. Reference (Book of Awards).
1. New Zealand Motion-picture Operators’ award 31/3/39 Vol. XXXIX, p. 314.
2. Taranaki, Wellington, Marlborough, and Canterbury Front-of-house Employees’ award 17/2/41 Vol. XLI, p. 35.
  1. This Order shall come into effect on the day of the date hereof.

Dated at Wellington, this 1st day of April, 1942.
P. C. WEBB, Minister of Labour.

Notice to Mariners No. 7 of 1942.

Marine Department,
Wellington, N.Z., 1st April, 1942.

NEW ZEALAND.—NORTH ISLAND.—HAURAKI GULF.

(1) Minefield established.

(1) Position : Bollons Rock. Lat., 36° 35’.5 S.; long., 174° 52’.5 E. (approx.). Chart No. 2543.
Details : A minefield has been established in the area within the following limits : From Bollons Rock in a 176° direction to Rangitoto ; thence across the gap and along the northern shore of Motutapu to Home Bay Point (lat., 36° 46’ S.; long., 174° 56’3 E.); thence in an 092° direction to Waiheke Island; thence along the northern shore of Waiheke Island to Thumb Point; thence in a 327° direction to lat. 36° 33’ S., long. 175° 01’ E.; thence in a 270° direction to long. 174° 55’ E.; thence in a 218° direction to Bollons Rock.

WARNING.—This area is highly dangerous, and all ships, including fishing-vessels, are prohibited from entering it. Ships disregarding this warning do so at their peril.

(2) Prohibited Anchorage established.

(2) Position : Rakauananga Point. Lat., 36° 37’.7 S.; long., 174° 48’ E. (approx.).
All ships, including fishing-vessels, are prohibited from anchoring in the area within the following limits : From Rakauananga Point in a 120° direction to the western limit of the minefield ; thence northward along the limit of the minefield to lat. 36° 33’ S., long. 175° 01’ E.; thence in a 324° direction to Flat Rock; thence in a 300° direction to Kawau Island; thence along the southern shore of Kawau to Momona Point (lat., 36° 25’.7 S.; long., 174° 49’ E.); thence by a right line to Fish Point; thence southward along the shore and across the entrances of harbours and creeks to Rakauananga Point.

NOTES.—The mined area should be defined wholly or partially, as the case may be, on the charts affected, and the note “Mined Area (see Warning)” inserted therein. The warning should be prominently placed on the charts clear of navigational details.

The note “Prohibited Anchorage” is to be inserted in Area 2.

Authority: Navy Office, 23rd March, 1942.
Charts affected: Nos. 1998, 1896, 3565, 2543, 1212.
Publications: New Zealand Pilot, 1930.

L. B. CAMPBELL, Secretary.

The Iron and Steel Control Notice 1942.

PURSUANT to the Factory Emergency Regulations 1939, I, George Augustus Pascoe, Factory Controller, hereby direct and give notice as follows :—

  1. This Notice may be cited as the Iron and Steel Control Notice 1942.
  2. Every occupier of a factory and every owner of factory materials shall comply with the provisions of this Notice.
  3. Compliance with this Notice may be excused or varied by the express prior consent in writing of the Factory Controller and subject to such conditions as may be specified in such consent.
  4. Any such consent may at any time be withdrawn by notice in writing given by the Factory Controller to the person to whom such consent was given.
  5. On and after the day next following the date of publication hereof in the Gazette neither iron nor steel, whether wrought or cast, and whether in the form of bars, rods, sections, angles, sheets, plates, strips, pipes, tubes, or wire shall be used for any of the following purposes :—

Advertising hoardings or boards.
Art metalwork.
Bird-cages.
Bottle-racks.
Baths (other than cast iron).
Coat-hangers.
Clothes-hoists.
Caravans or trailers.
Curtain-rods.
Chimney-pots.
Furniture, office, house, or industrial (excluding cabinet-makers’ hardware).
Fencing standards or stringers.
Fences (including chain-mesh netting, but not including single-strand wire fences).
Gates.
Grass-catchers.
Lamp-shades.
Luggage-carriers.
Lawn-mowers.
Metal signs.
Novelties made of wire.
Road signs.
Roller shutters.
Shelving.
Street-gutter or water-table crossings.
Tennis-court enclosures.
Travelling-trunks.
Tree-guards.
Wheelbarrow bodies or frames.
Wire doormats.
Window frames or sashes.

Dated at Wellington, this 8th day of April, 1942.
G. A. PASCOE, Factory Controller.

The Machine-tools and Engineering Equipment Control Notice 1942.

NOTICE is hereby given that, in pursuance of the Supply Control Emergency Regulations 1939, and the Factory Emergency Regulations 1939, I, George Augustus Pascoe, the Factory Controller, hereby require and direct as follows :—

  1. This Notice may be cited as the Machine-tools and Engineering Equipment Control Notice 1942.
  2. This Notice shall come into force on the day following publication thereof in the Gazette.
  3. Except with the precedent consent of the Factory Controller, no occupier of any factory or owner, within the meaning of the Factory Emergency Regulations 1939, of any factory materials shall sell, dispose of, part with the possession or control of, acquire, obtain possession or control of, or otherwise deal with any metalworking or woodworking machine-tool or engineering equipment of any of the types, or used for any of the purposes referred to in the Schedule hereto, or any accessory commonly used in conjunction with any such machine-tool or engineering equipment.
  4. Within seven days after the importation into New Zealand of any machine-tool or engineering equipment of any of the types, or used for any of the purposes referred to in the Schedule hereto, the importer thereof shall furnish to the Factory Controller a description of such machine-tool or engineering equipment.
  5. Within fourteen days after the publication of this notice in the Gazette every person, including private owners, who owns or has in his possession or control any metal-working machine-tool of any of the types, or used for any of the purposes referred to in Part A of the Schedule hereto, and who has not previously supplied particulars thereof either to


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✨ LLM interpretation of page content

👷 Overtime and Holidays Labour Legislation Suspension Order 1941, Variation No. 7 (continued from previous page)

👷 Labour & Employment
1 April 1942
Labour Legislation, Overtime, Holidays, Awards, Industrial Agreements, Exemptions
  • P. C. Webb, Minister of Labour

🚂 Notice to Mariners No. 7 of 1942

🚂 Transport & Communications
1 April 1942
Marine, Minefield, Hauraki Gulf, Prohibited Anchorage, Navigation
  • L. B. Campbell, Secretary

🏭 The Iron and Steel Control Notice 1942

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
8 April 1942
Iron, Steel, Factory Regulations, Restrictions, Manufacturing
  • George Augustus Pascoe, Factory Controller

🏭 The Machine-tools and Engineering Equipment Control Notice 1942

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
Machine-tools, Engineering Equipment, Factory Regulations, Importation, Control
  • George Augustus Pascoe, Factory Controller