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Search results for Flatmate.

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  1. NZCASS: the experience of e-crime findings from the 2006 survey [pdf, 230 KB]

    ...688 863 1101 1188 Sole parent 281 439 482 517 Quintile 5 (most deprived) 650 1044 1321 1457 Couple/no children 876 1018 1344 1412 Couple/children 1154 1330 1423 1505 Urbanisation Extended family/wha-nau 175 283 358 397 Auckland 816 982 1149 1215 Flatmates 160 199 218 226 Other major urban areas 1392 1705 2135 2287 Family – other combination 192 268 318 337 Less densely populated areas 1034 1367 1778 1914 All respondents 3242 4054 5062 5416 Notes: 1 Ethnicity is multiple response,...

  2. 2017 NZSSAA 025 (8 June 2017) [pdf, 214 KB]

    ...stereotypical role) he will support the other partner and any child or children of the relationship if she has no income of her own or to the extent that it is or becomes inadequate. The commitment must go beyond mere sharing of living expenses, as platonic flatmates or siblings living together may do; it must amount to a willingness to support, if the need exists. There must be at least that degree of financial engagement or understanding between the couple. …4

  3. The age of physical abuse victims and the sentence imposed on their abusers [pdf, 50 KB]

    ...Other family member 25 3.2 Other known to each other1 129 16.5 Stranger 154 19.7 Unknown relationship 142 18.2 Total 782 100.0 Living arrangement Living together 265 36.9 Not living together 454 63.1 Total2 719 100.0 Notes: 1 For example, neighbours, flatmates etc. 2 Excludes 63 charges where it was unknown whether or not the victim and offender were living together at the time of the incident. There were some charges where it was obvious that the victim and offender were not living together...

  4. OIA-112091.pdf [pdf, 1.9 MB]

    ...Protection Order A Protection Order protects the person who applied (called the applicant) and any children who regularly live with them from the violent person (called the respondent). The Order can also protect other people, like a new partner or a flatmate but the person who applies for the Order must ask for these people to be protected in the Order (as other potential protected adults). If the respondent encourages other people to be violent towards anyone named in the Order, the...

  5. [2013] NZEmpC 30 Looker v AG Walter & Sons Ltd [pdf, 119 KB]

    ...prior dismissal of two other employees, one of whom was his partner, in which the complainant was allegedly the informant as to one of those employees. Mr Looker has indicated that he will wish to call the evidence of his partner and her former flatmate because they allegedly go to the 6 WC 1/09, 16 February 2009. motive of the complainant, whose complaint also led to Mr Looker’s dismissal. Those claims are denied by the resp...

  6. [2011] NZEmpC 148 Service and Food Workers Union PSA v Pact Group [pdf, 119 KB]

    ...care subsidy. Such clients are identified through a needs assessment process and are provided with support 24 hours per day. Supported accommodation is provided in houses or flats in the community. The clients live together essentially as ―flatmates‖ with support staff present at all times to provide organisation, supervision, guidance, and security. [14] The defendant provides accommodation for a very small number of people directed to live in supervised premises under th...

  7. Disputes Tribunal booklet [pdf, 574 KB]

    ...a bike in an accident • damage to a vehicle when someone borrowed it. Your house or flat For example, disputes about: • fences • tree roots damaging drains • damage to property • property that’s been borrowed and not returned • flatmates not doing what they agreed to. Buying goods or services For example, disputes about: • goods that don’t work properly • whether a tradesperson has done work properly • the amount of money charged for work done • loss cau...

  8. NZCASS Technical manual [pdf, 5.3 MB]

    ...the dwelling. CBG’s Sample Manager software selected the person who had the next birthday to be the respondent. There was no substitution in the case of non-response. For situations where the next birthday was not known (eg in a household where a flatmate did not know birth months of other flatmates), an alternative procedure based on the alphabetical order of first names was employed. This alternative procedure selected the adult (aged 15 or over) whose first name began with the lette...

  9. [2022] NZEmpC 223 FGH v RST [pdf, 688 KB]

    ...there were also medication issues. [121] By mid-March 2020, Ms H was showing distress to her parents and her siblings. At the same time, she was conscious of concerns which were developing about COVID-19 in the community. Also she had a new flatmate, which became challenging. Medical consultations from late March 2020 [122] Just prior to the commencement of Alert Level 4 late on 25 March 2020, Dr Hurst recommended Ms H see a psychiatrist, Dr Roy. Over several sessions durin...

  10. [2022] NZEmpC 177 Shah Enterprise IT Ltd v A Labour Inspector [pdf, 240 KB]

    ...Shah would attend to banking and other matters for the store while Mrs Shah worked, and then he would pick her up when she finished work. [14] Prior to Mrs Shah returning to New Zealand, the relationship between Mr Maradiya and Mr Shah was as flatmates and friends. Understandably, things changed with Mrs Shah’s return. Mr Shah spent more time with his wife, and Mr Maradiya began feeling more of an outsider in the home. [15] Mr Maradiya was engaged to be married to a woman he...