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SOCIETY FOR PROMOTION OF COMMUNITY STANDARDS INC.

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Gay Community cannot redefine marriage – Dom Post – Opinion

October 26, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Marriage about purpose, not rights – Opinion – by Bob McCoskrie – national director of Family First NZ – a registered charity with the Charities Commission – writes:

DEBORAH RUSSELL, (“Marriage should be for all”, October 21, Dominion Post) says the state has no business in the marriage game, but then argues that the state should redefine marriage to allow same-sex marriage.

Marriages are a matter of significant public concern, as the record of almost every culture shows.

If it weren’t for the fact that sexual intercourse between a man and a woman leads to children and brings with it a further obligation to care for tose children, the notion of marriage would probably never have existed.

Marriage encourages the raising of children by the mother and father who conceived them. Onn average, children raised by their biological parents who are married have the best outcomes in health, education and income, and by far the lowest involvement with the criminal justice system.

Russell then argues that denying same-sex marriage is “discriminatory” and “reinforces the power of traditional churches by endorcing their morality”.

Firstly, it is true that marriage by definition is discriminatory. A homosexual cannot now legally marry. But neither can a wholelot of other people. A five-year-old boy cannot marry. Three people cannot get married to each other. A married man can’t marry another person. A child cannot marry her pet goldfish. A football team cannot enact group marriage – the list is endless. It is disingenuous to complain to complain about rights being taken away, when they never existed in the first place. It is like trying to argue that Kiri te Kanawa is being discriminated against since she cannot play for the All Blacks, or Richie McCaw can’t play for the Silver Ferns.

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/comment/5849413/Gay-community-cannot-redefine-marriage

 

[Read more…]

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Filed Under: Civil Unions, Family, Marriage, Moral Values Tagged With: civil unions, Family First NZ, gay community, Marriage, pro-marriage, redefining marriage, same-sex marriage

Disestablishment of the Charities Commission

October 24, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

There has been an open call for public submissions to the Government Administration Select Committee which is considering The Crown Entities Reform Bill – a call made prior to the dissolution of parliament on 20 October 2011. If enancted into law, it will disestablish the Charities Commission and transfer its function to the Department of Internal Affairs. Under the proposed new legislation, the registration and deregistration of charities will be carried out by a new independent decision-making board of three people. 

The Society (SPCS), a registered charity (CC20268), is currently finalising a detailed report to be submitted to the select committee and Minister responsible for the Commission, focusing on the practices and activities of the Monitoring and Investigation Team of the Charities Commission.

The recent overturning by the High Court (via a judicial review) of the decision of the Charities Commission to deregister the charity Liberty Trust – which has charitable purposes based on biblical principles of debt-relief – has in part prompted some politicians to seriously question the functions of the Commission and the independence of the decision-making processes that its Monitoring and investigations team engage in. A number of controversial deregeistration decisions and public disquiet have prompted politicians to call for changes.

 The SPCS has strongly endorsed the charitable activities of Liberty Trust (Charity Reg. No. CC11287), which won an appeal by way of High Court judicial review of the Commission’s deregistration decision. The Charities Commission was set up under the Charities Act 2005 and it registered Liberty Trust as a charity on 8 October 2007.

Further reading:

Liberty Trust – Resurrected as charity by High Court ruling

https://www.spcs.org.nz/wp-admin/post.php?post=2574&action=edit

Liberty Trust website

www.libertytrust.org.nz

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Filed Under: Other Tagged With: Charities Act 2005, Charities Commission, Crown Entities Reform Bill, disestablishment, Government Administration Committee, judicial review, Monitoring and Investigation, Monitoring and Investigations Team

Christchurch charity – Pillars Inc. – focus on children of prisoners

October 19, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

PILLARS Inc, a registered charity with the Charities Commission  has recently published a manual for organisations working with children of prisoners. “The charity (No. CC 23953), registered on 6 May 2006, has just completed “ground-breaking in-depth research on ‘A Study of Children of Prisoners’ in New Zealand. The research [which took more than two years to complete], looked at the impacts of arrest, sentence, and imprisonment of a parent on the children. A core goal of the project was to understand the situation and needs of the children of prisoners, so that the cycle of crime for the next generation can be stopped, and to bring down prisoner numbers by reduction in crime.” (Challenge Weekly, 3 October 2011, p. 3). [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Other Tagged With: Charities Commission, children of Prisoners, Pillars Inc, registered charity

Media Matters in NZ to fight BSA ruling

October 19, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Media Matters in New Zealand Inc., a registered charity with the Charities Commission, has engaged Tony Ellis QC, one of our country’s most respected Civil Rights lawyers, to fight the Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA) recent decision to penalise Donald McDonald for his use of the BSA complaint system.  Tax-payer funded lawyers acting for the BSA and TVNZ will engage with Tony Ellis QC in the High Court of New Zealand and Media Matters is seeking funding support for its legal action from its members.  

Registered as a charity on 30 June 2008 (CC42477), Media Matters in New Zealand Inc (Incorporating Children’s Media Watch) exists among other things to warn and alert New Zealanders to the “dangers” posed by the media, “especially its threat to the well-being of the young and vulnerable in our society”. It encourages its members to use the BSA complaints system where there has been a perceived breach by the broadcaster of the Broadcasting Standards (as set out clearly in legislation – see the BSA website). The Society for Promotion of Community Standards Inc. also encourages its members to do likewise and it fully endorses the objectives of this charity.

John Terris, National President Media Matters, in his recent notification to members of the organisation’s forthcoming AGM on 9 November 2011, wrote:

“One of the few avenues available to us is the complaints system, administered by the Broadcasting Standards Authority, which, has become so permissive that it is now turning on the very people it was set up 20 years ago to serve. (See BSA.govt.nz Decision No. 20120)

“In an unprecidented move, the BSA actually fined one of our members, Donald McDonald of Wellington,  just because, in their view, he complains too much. And why would he not, given the disregard for accuracy which characterizes our television news.

“Simply put, they want to stop him from complaining (as he does on a regular basis) so they can ignore the serious negative effects of TV on the young, reflected in things like the rising rate of youth crime, the misuse of drugs and alcohol, and the climate of greed and envy and all other ills in our society which televisions feeds and nurtures.”

[The BSA has chosen to target Don McDonald] “a pensioner of limited means who is a member of the Royal Society of NZ and a respected scientist, while art the same time. they penalise our television channels with a slap on the wrist with a wet bus ticket when they err instead of imposing a hefty fine for their shameless exploitation of our kids.”

Source: Media Matters in NZ Newsletter/AGM Advert – written by President John Terris.

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Filed Under: Broadcasting Standards Authority, Children's Television Tagged With: Broadcasting Standards Authority, BSA, BSA Complaints, Children's Media Watch, Don McDonald, Donald McDonald, John Terris, Media Matters, Media Matters in New Zealand, Media Matters in New Zealand Inc, Media Matters in NZ, Tony Ellis QC

Why did EnergySmart Ltd – a registered charity – go bust?

October 11, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Hutt Mana Charitable Trust [a registered charity with the Charities Commission] could end up losing $2.5 million over the liquidation of EnergySmart [Ltd] and the sale of its [Lower Hutt] Railway Ave building.

A preliminary creditors’ report by liquidators Shephard Dunphy records an estimated shortfall of assets over liabilities of $1.63 million.

The creditors’ list runs to more than three pages.

Questions are being asked why a company with 11 per cent of the insulation and energy efficiency retro-fitting market under the Government’s Warm Up NZ subsidy scheme, and with tax-free charitable status, went bust.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/local-papers/hutt-news/5763872/Why-did-EnergySmart-go-bust  Hutt News 11 October 2011 [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Other Tagged With: Charities Commission, EnergySmart, EnergySmart Ltd, HMTC, HMTC chairman, Hutt Mana Charitable Trust, Ian Hutchings, registered charity, Roger Styles, tax-free charitable status

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