Government Notices and Orders in Council




17 APRIL
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE
739

Otahuhu, an area of 9 perches, more or less, being Crown foreshore, as a recreation reserve; as shown, edged red, on plan marked M.D. 13272 and deposited in the office of the Marine Department at Wellington.

P. J. BROOKS, Clerk of the Executive Council.

(M. 54/16/74)


Amending Licence to Take Material from Porirua Harbour

ARTHUR PORRITT, Governor-General
ORDER IN COUNCIL

At the Government Buildings at Wellington this 31st day of March 1969

Present:

THE RIGHT HON. J. R. MARSHALL PRESIDING IN COUNCIL

PURSUANT to the Harbours Act 1950, His Excellency the Governor-General, acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council, hereby further amends the licence granted on 2 September 1968*, amended on 7 October 1968†, by deleting the reference to “10c per cubic yard” in condition 4 (b) of the Second Schedule and substituting therefor “5c per cubic yard”.

P. J. BROOKS, Clerk of the Executive Council.

*Gazette, 12 September 1968, p. 1557
†Gazette, 7 November 1968, p. 2031

(M. 54/15/75)


Redefining the Limits of the Harbour of Riverton

ARTHUR PORRITT, Governor-General
ORDER IN COUNCIL

At the Government Buildings at Wellington this 31st day of March 1969

Present:

THE RIGHT HON. J. R. MARSHALL PRESIDING IN COUNCIL

PURSUANT to section 3 of the Harbours Act 1950, His Excellency the Governor-General, acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council, hereby redefines* the harbour of Riverton as being all that area of water bounded by the line of mean high-water spring tides and having as its seaward limit the arc of a circle commencing from the landward boundary of the foreshore northwards of the Jacobs River Estuary and thence into Foveaux Strait and thence to the landward boundary of the foreshore of the southern coast of Howells Point; such arc being the arc of a circle of 2 nautical miles radius, having as its centre Triangulation Station Riverton, and having as its inner limits—

(a) a right line drawn across the entrance of the Pourakino River, being an extension of the southern boundary of Lot 57, Block 1, Jacobs River Hundred;

(b) a right line drawn across the entrance of the Aparima River, being an extension of the southern boundary of Lot 59, Block 3, Jacobs River Hundred.

P. J. BROOKS, Clerk of the Executive Council.

*Gazette, 23 November 1868, p. 550

(M. 43/61/4)


The Building Industry Technician Training Council Order 1969

ARTHUR PORRITT, Governor-General
ORDER IN COUNCIL

At the Government House at Wellington this 17th day of March 1969

Present:

HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL IN COUNCIL

PURSUANT to the Technicians Training Act 1967, His Excellency the Governor-General, acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council, hereby makes the following order.

O R D E R

  1. This order may be cited as the Building Industry Technician Training Council Order 1969.

  2. In this order:

“the building industry” means the industry of workers employed substantially in connection with carpentry and joinery and in site work and work related to the activities of junior management by employers engaged in building construction and civil engineering.

  1. There is hereby established a technician training council in respect of the building industry.

  2. The Schedule to this order is a copy of the principal training scheme formulated in respect of building cadets engaged in the building industry.

  3. (i) Every person other than a worker who commits a breach of any provision of the training scheme, a copy of which is annexed as the Schedule to this order, shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding two hundred dollars.

(ii) Every worker who commits a breach of any provision of the said training scheme shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding fifty dollars.

P. J. BROOKS, Clerk of the Executive Council.


SCHEDULE

PRINCIPAL TRAINING SCHEME FOR BUILDING CADETS

  1. Preamble

1.1 The object of the training scheme is to enable technician trainees, who will be known as building cadets, to become sufficiently well acquainted with all normal techniques used in the industry to be able to appreciate the work of each trade. They are also to be introduced to the problems of control of building operations on the site and in the office and all of the preliminary commercial and technical planning related thereto.

1.2 The building cadet in his training should be given as varied a practical experience as possible in all aspects of the building industry covered by his academic studies.

1.3 The building cadet should acquire sufficient theoretical and practical knowledge to relieve professional staff of much supervisory work and to be able to oversee the work of skilled tradesmen, as a means of ensuring greater efficiency and productivity in the industry at both site and administration levels.

  1. Entry to the Training Scheme

2.1 While the road to technician status must always remain open to tradesmen and trade apprentices who have proved their ability to cope with the course of study, technician trainees will for the most part be direct entrants to the industry.

2.2 In the event of a building cadet finding the course of studies beyond his capabilities he should, subject to the approval of the New Zealand Carpentry and Joinery Apprenticeship Committee, be entitled to apply for an apprenticeship in carpentry with an appropriate credit of time.

  1. Industry to Which the Training Applies

3.1 Building cadets shall be trained for the building, construction, and civil engineering industry.

  1. Application of Training Scheme and Conditions of Employment

4.1 The provisions of the training scheme and conditions of employment shall apply to all employers of building cadets throughout New Zealand (whether bound by an award or agreement relating to the industry or not), and to all Building cadets employed by such employers in such industry, and to all contracts of building cadetship (including those in force at the time of the establishment of the Building Technicians Training Council).

  1. Interpretation

5.1 The interpretations as provided for in section 2 of the Technicians Training Act 1967 shall apply.

  1. General

6.1 The applicants for the establishment of the Building Technicians Training Council are conscious that it is necessary for employers to be able to give the necessary practical training envisaged in the training scheme. It is therefore recommended that when the Council is considering any application to enter into a contract, matters such as the size of the employer’s operations, the number of tradesmen employed, and the variety and scope of the practical training which can be given, should be considered.



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✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏗️ Amending Licence to Take Material from Porirua Harbour

🏗️ Infrastructure & Public Works
31 March 1969
Harbour licence, Material extraction, Porirua Harbour, Fee adjustment
  • Arthur Porritt, Governor-General
  • J. R. Marshall
  • P. J. Brooks, Clerk of the Executive Council

🏗️ Redefining the Limits of the Harbour of Riverton

🏗️ Infrastructure & Public Works
31 March 1969
Harbour limits, Riverton, Nautical miles, Foreshore, Estuary
  • Arthur Porritt, Governor-General
  • J. R. Marshall
  • P. J. Brooks, Clerk of the Executive Council

🎓 The Building Industry Technician Training Council Order 1969

🎓 Education, Culture & Science
17 March 1969
Building industry, Technician training, Cadets, Training scheme, Penalties
  • Arthur Porritt, Governor-General
  • P. J. Brooks, Clerk of the Executive Council