Other policy gains, as outlined in a letter to Green delegates for their special general meeting last night, include:
• Significant climate action, with a shift towards a net zero carbon emission economy by 2050. The specific focuses will be on: transport, energy, primary industries. The establishment of an Independent Climate Commission. Support for a shift in farming to more sustainable land use.
• Overhaul of the welfare system, ensure access to entitlements, remove excessive sanctions and review Working For Families so that everyone has a standard of living and income that enables them to live in dignity
• Significant increase in the Conservation budget
• Improve water quality and prioritise achieving healthy rivers, lakes and aquifers with stronger regulatory instruments, funding for freshwater enhancement and winding down Government support for irrigation
• Free counselling for under-25s and access to mental health services and support for everyone
• Access to education for children with special needs and learning difficulties
• Substantial progress in this parliamentary term to eliminating the gender pay gap in the public service
• Reduction in the number of students living in hardship
• Review, and adequately fund and support, the family reunification scheme for refugees
• Increase funding for alcohol and drug addiction services and ensure drug use is treated as a health issue, and have a referendum on legalising the personal use of cannabis at, or by, the 2020 general election.
Shaw said that the policy gains in the Labour-Green agreement were not a secret. The party had just not made them public yet as it was still coordinating with Labour.
New Zealand First supports a referendum on the decriminalisation of cannabis.
Shaw said there was nothing in the Labour-Green agreement that New Zealand couldn't live with, and the same applied for the Greens in relation to the Labour-NZF agreement.
He said there may be issues that would make the Greens uncomfortable, but nothing they can't live with.