2017 in New Zealand

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Flag of New Zealand.svg
2017
in
New Zealand

Decades:
  • 1990s
  • 2000s
  • 2010s
  • 2020s
See also:
  • Other events of 2017
  • Timeline of New Zealand history

The following lists events that happened during 2017 in New Zealand.

Population[]

National

Estimated populations as at 30 June.[1]

  • New Zealand total – 4,793,700
  • North Island – 3,677,200
  • South Island – 1,115,800
Main urban areas

Estimated populations as at 30 June.[1]

  • Auckland – 1,534,700
  • Blenheim – 31,300
  • Christchurch – 396,700
  • Dunedin – 120,200
  • Gisborne – 36,600
  • Hamilton – 235,900
  • Invercargill – 50,800
  • Kapiti – 42,300
  • Napier-Hastings – 133,000
  • Nelson – 66,700
  • New Plymouth – 57,500
  • Palmerston North – 85,300
  • Rotorua – 58,800
  • Tauranga – 137,900
  • Wellington – 412,500
  • Whanganui – 40,300
  • Whangarei – 57,700

Incumbents[]

Regal and vice-regal[]

  • Head of StateElizabeth II
  • Governor-GeneralPatsy Reddy

Government[]

2017 is the third and final full year of the 51st Parliament, which first sat on 21 October 2014 and was dissolved on 17 August 2017. A general election was held on 23 September to elect the 52nd Parliament.

The Fifth National Government, first elected in 2008, ends. The Sixth Labour Government begins.

Other party leaders[]

  • LabourAndrew Little until 1 August, then Jacinda Ardern (Leader of the Opposition until 26 October)
  • GreenJames Shaw and, until 9 August, Metiria Turei
  • New Zealand FirstWinston Peters
  • Māori PartyTe Ururoa Flavell and Marama Fox
  • ACT New ZealandDavid Seymour
  • United FuturePeter Dunne until 23 August, then Damian Light until 14 November (party disbanded)

Judiciary[]

Main centre leaders[]

Events[]

February[]

March[]

  • 7 March – Jacinda Ardern is elected deputy leader of the Labour Party

April[]

  • 6 April – A state of emergency is declared as the town of Edgecumbe is evacuated due to flooding caused by the remnants of Cyclone Debbie[2]
  • 13–14 April – Cyclone Cook, now an extratropical cyclone, moves across the North Island[3]

May[]

June[]

July[]

  • 19–21 July – Severe flooding hits the east coast of the South Island between Christchurch and Balclutha
  • 21 July – Mycoplasma bovis disease found in a South Island herd of cows

August[]

  • 1 August – Jacinda Ardern elected leader of the Labour Party after Andrew Little resigns[6]

September[]

  • 23 September – The 2017 general election is held

October[]

  • 26 October – Jacinda Ardern is sworn in as the 40th Prime Minister of New Zealand
  • 31 October – Trolleybuses are withdrawn from service in Wellington[7]

December[]

  • 4 December – The Healthy Homes Guarantee Act 2017 receives royal assent, having passed its third reading in Parliament on 29 November
  • 30 December – The 2018 New Year Honours are announced[8]

Sport[]

Rugby union[]

Shooting[]

  • Ballinger Belt –
    • Jim Bailey (Australia)
    • Brian Carter (Te Puke), third, top New Zealander[9]

Births[]

Deaths[]

January[]

  • 7 January
    • Nick Calavrias, businessman (born 1949)
    • Sir Bruce Slane, public servant (born 1931)
  • 8 January – Elspeth Kennedy, sharebroker, community leader (born 1931)
  • 9 January
    • Michael Chamberlain, pastor, exonerated in the death of Azaria Chamberlain (born 1944)
    • Brown Turei, Anglican archbishop (born 1924)
  • 10 January – Heather McPherson, poet (born 1942)
  • 11 January – Newman Hoar, cricketer (born 1920)
  • 23 January – Pat Downey, barrister and solicitor, Human Rights Commissioner, legal editor (born 1927)
  • 24 January – Manu Maniapoto, rugby union player (born 1935)
  • 26 January – Dame Laurie Salas, women's rights and peace activist (born 1922)

February[]

  • 1 February – Bernie Portenski, athlete (born 1949)
  • 4 February – John Dickson, poet (born 1944)
  • 8 February – Steve Sumner, association footballer (born 1955)
  • 12 February – Sione Lauaki, rugby union player (born 1981)
  • 13 February – Jim Watson, biotechnologist and entrepreneur (born 1943)
  • 14 February – John Watkinson, soil chemist (born 1932)
  • 19 February – Halaevalu Mataʻaho ʻAhomeʻe, Tongan royal (born 1926)

March[]

  • 1 March – Tania Dalton, netball player (born 1971)
  • 3 March – Bramwell Cook, gastroenterologist (born 1936)
  • 6 March – Dudley Storey, rower (born 1939)
  • 12 March – Murray Ball, cartoonist (born 1939)
  • 15 March – Phil Garland, folk musician (born c.1942)
  • 23 March – Nigel Hutchinson, film producer and commercial director (born 1941)
  • 24 March – Roger Bradley, cricketer (born 1962)
  • 25 March – Eric Watson, rugby union player and coach, cricketer (born 1925)
  • 27 March

April[]

  • 3 April
    • Tomairangi Paki, Tainui kuia, kapa haka exponent (born c.1953)
    • Bruce Palmer, lawyer, judge (born 1935)
    • Bill Tinnock, rower (born 1930)
  • 6 April – John Anslow, field hockey player (born 1935)
  • 7 April – Robin Kay, artist, historian (born 1919)
  • 8 April – Sir Douglas Myers, businessman (born 1938)
  • 9 April – John Clarke, satirist (born 1948)
  • 18 April – Digby Taylor, sailor (born 1941)
  • 19 April – Jill Amos, politician, activist (born 1927)
  • 20 April
  • 27 April

May[]

  • 2 May – Hugo Judd, diplomat (born 1939)
  • 3 May – Doug Rollerson, rugby union and rugby league player (born 1953)
  • 4 May
    • Rosie Scott, author (born 1948)
    • Beryl Te Wiata, actor, author, scriptwriter (born 1925)
  • 6 May – Lyn McLean, lawn bowls player (born c. 1945)
  • 13 May – Nicholas Tarling, historian, academic, author (born 1931)
  • 15 May – Graeme Barrow, author (born 1936)
  • 17 May – Kevin Stanton, musician (born c.1956)
  • 18 May – George Martin, rugby league player, field athlete (born 1931)
  • 25 May – Earl Hagaman, hotel operator (born 1925)

June[]

  • 11 June – Lois McIvor, artist (born 1930)
  • 15 June – Dame Ngāneko Minhinnick, Ngāti Te Ata leader (born 1939)
  • 21 June – Oliver Jessel, businessman (born 1929)
  • 24 June – Nick Kirk, Anglican cleric (born c.1958)
  • 25 June – David Goldsmith, field hockey player (born 1931)
  • 26 June
    • Sir Duncan McMullin, jurist (born 1927)
    • Guy Ngan, artist (born 1926)
  • 27 June – Jacinta Gray, cyclist (born 1974)
  • 28 June – Bruce Stewart, author, playwright, marae founder (born 1936)
  • 29 June – Marrion Roe, Olympic swimmer (born 1935)

July[]

  • 3 July – Rolf Prince, chemical engineering academic (born 1928)
  • 5 July
    • Chris de Freitas, climatologist (born 1948)
    • John Karlsen, actor (born 1919)
  • 8 July – Gay Eaton, textile artist (born 1933)
  • 10 July – Marama Martin, radio and television personality (born 1930)
  • 12 July – Allan Hunter, rugby union player, teacher, historian (born 1922)
  • 15 July – Michael Cooper, economist (born 1938)
  • 16 July – Cliff Whiting, artist, master carver, heritage advocate (born 1936)
  • 17 July – George Hill, agronomist (born 1938)
  • 18 July – Ian Mason, cricketer (born 1942)
  • 23 July
    • Wenceslaus Anthony, businessman (born 1957)
    • Tom Lister, rugby union player (born 1943)

August[]

  • 2 August
    • Sir John Graham, rugby union player and administrator, educator (born 1935)
    • Paul Renton, rugby union player, farmer (born 1962)
  • 4 August – Trevor Martin, cricket umpire (born 1925)
  • 6 August – Tim Homer, radio personality (born c.1973)
  • 10 August
    • Dorothy Fletcher, historian (born 1927)
    • Sheila Natusch, naturalist, writer, illustrator (born 1926)
  • 14 August – J. S. Parker, painter (born 1944)
  • 15 August – Tui Flower, food writer (born 1925)
  • 19 August – Alan Sayers, athlete, journalist, writer (born 1915)
  • 20 August – Sir Colin Meads, rugby union player, coach and manager (born 1936)
  • 22 August – Tom Pritchard, cricketer (born 1917)

September[]

  • 5 September – Cedric Hassall, chemist, academic (born 1919)
  • 9 September – Sir Pat Goodman, businessman, philanthropist (born 1929)
  • 11 September – Malcolm Templeton, diplomat (born 1924)
  • 15 September – Alma Evans-Freke, television presenter (born 1931)
  • 16 September – Andrew Leachman, master mariner (born 1945)
  • 18 September – Tony Laffey, association footballer (born 1925)
  • 19 September – John Nicholson, motor racing driver and engine builder (born 1941)
  • 21 September
    • David Beatson, journalist, broadcaster (born 1944)
    • Vera Burt, cricketer, hockey player, coach and administrator (born 1927)
  • 29 September
    • Annette Johnson, alpine skier (born 1928)
    • Ian Smith, rugby union player (born 1941)

October[]

  • 2 October – Peter Burke, rugby union player, coach and administrator (born 1927)
  • 3 October – Norma Williams, swimmer, swimming administrator (born 1928)
  • 12 October – Derek Steward, athlete (born 1928)
  • 15 October – Francis Pound, art historian, curator and writer (born 1948)
  • 19 October – Edmund Cotter, mountaineer (born 1927)
  • 22 October – Sandy Thomas, military leader (born 1919)
  • 23 October – Gordon Ogilvie, historian, biographer (born 1934)
  • 29 October – Roly Green, rugby union player (born 1927)
  • 30 October – James Beard, architect, town planner, landscape architect (born 1924)
  • 31 October
    • Norman Hardie, mountaineer (born 1924)
    • Terry McCashin, rugby union player, brewer (born 1944)

November[]

  • 5 November – Geoff Rothwell, World War II bomber pilot (born 1920)
  • 6 November – Clem Parker, athlete (born 1926)
  • 7 November – Paddles, cat owned by Jacinda Ardern
  • 9 November – Tom Coughlan, rugby union player (born 1934)
  • 15 November
    • Dame Sister Pauline Engel, educator (born 1930)
    • Moana Manley, swimmer, beauty pageant contestant (born 1935)
    • Bert Ormond, association footballer (born 1931)

December[]

  • 7 December – Neil Ritchie, cyclist (born 1933)
  • 12 December – Jane Galletly, television scriptwriter (born 1928)
  • 13 December
  • 15 December – Michael Hartshorn, organic chemist (born 1936)
  • 17 December – Castletown, Thoroughbred racehorse (foaled 1986)
  • 21 December – John Vear, cricketer (born 1938)
  • 30 December – Dame Cheryll Sotheran, museum executive (born 1945)

Exact date unknown[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b "Subnational Population Estimates: At 30 June 2016 (provisional)". Statistics New Zealand. 21 October 2016. Retrieved 21 October 2016. For urban areas, "Subnational population estimates (UA, AU), by age and sex, at 30 June 1996, 2001, 2006–16 (2017 boundary)". Statistics New Zealand. 21 October 2016. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
  2. ^ Bilby, Lynley (7 April 2017). "Stopping flooding is just the beginning following ex-cyclone Debbie's wrath, says Whakatane District mayor". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  3. ^ MetService (2018). Review of the 2016/2017 and 2017/2018 Cyclone Seasons by TCWC Wellington (PDF). RA V Tropical Cyclone Committee for the South Pacific and South-East Indian Ocean Seventeenth Session. World Meteorological Organisation. p. 2. Archived (PDF) from the original on 22 July 2018. Retrieved 22 July 2018.
  4. ^ "Budget 2017". New Zealand Government. 13 February 2018. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  5. ^ "Queen's Birthday honours list 2017". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. 5 June 2017. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  6. ^ "Andrew Little resigns as leader of the Labour party". Radionz.co.nz. 1 August 2017. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  7. ^ George, Damian (3 October 2017). "Wellington's electric trolley bus wires to start coming down in a week". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  8. ^ "New Year honours list 2018". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. 30 December 2017. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  9. ^ "Ballinger Belt". National Rifle Association of New Zealand. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
Retrieved from ""