Corin dann biography of williams

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  • Rod Carr (administrator)

    New Zealand businessman and administrator.

    Roderick Marshall Carr (born 1958 or 1959)[2] is a New Zealand businessman and administrator. He retired from his position as vice-chancellor of the University of Canterbury in 2019[3] and has been a chairman of the board of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand,[4][5] and a director of Lyttelton Port Company, Taranaki Investment Management and Canterbury Employers’ Chamber of Commerce.[6][7] In 2019, Carr was appointed as Chair-designate for the Climate Change kommission and has been confirmed in that role for five years following the passing of the Climate Change Response (Zero Carbon) Amendment Act. Carr has been partially sighted and legally blind since birth.[8]

    Banking

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    Carr has held executive positions at the Bank of New Zealand and the National Australia Bank[9][10] and multiple roles at the Reserve Ban

    Corin Dann on his move to Morning Report with Susie Ferguson and the tough times the duo has already faced together

    March was one of the toughest months broadcaster Susie Ferguson has faced in her many years on radio.

    Similarly, former TVNZ political journalist Corin Dann, who has just started co-hosting duties opposite Susie on Radio New Zealand’s flagship Morning Report, endured a harrowing few weeks.

    Both were in Christchurch, but for very different reasons – Susie (41) to cover the unfolding tragedy of the mosque terror attack and Corin (44) back in his home town dealing with his own heartbreak, the death of his much-loved mother Marg.

    As the duo – who despite being two of the country’s top broadcasters had never previously crossed paths – prepare for the Weekly‘s photo shoot, Corin talks of walking past armed police at Christchurch Hospital in the days after the shootings to be with his mother who had been diagnosed just six weeks prev

    Devoy may step in if Peters continues to stigmatise

    Sunday, 16 June 2013, 8:41 pm
    Press Release: TVNZ

    Sunday 16 June, 2013

    Race Relations Commissioner Dame Susan Devoy says she may step in if Winston Peters continues to ‘stigmatise one population to his own benefit’

    New Race Relations Commissioner Dame Susan Devoy says she expects New Zealand First Leader Winston Peters will play the race card in the lead up to the next election.

    “I think what Winston will do, and I think it’s been talked about by other experts and academics in the field in relation to his speech on Sin City, is to use the race card,” she said on TVNZ’s Q+A programme this morning.

    Asked if she’d get involved if Mr Peters continued in that vein, Dame Susan said “Well, I will. I’ll have to, and particularly if people come to the Commission, not that that will
    border on making a complaint, but there’s a broader human rights issue here in that he will continue to stigmatise one population to his own benefi

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