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1News is the news division of New Zealand television network TVNZ.The programme is broadcast live from TVNZ Centre in Auckland.The flagship news bulletin is the nightly 6 pm news hour, but 1News also has late night news bulletins, as well as current affairs shows such as Breakfast and Seven Sharp.
Foodbank Canterbury was a foodbank in Christchurch, New Zealand. It was Christchurch's largest foodbank. [ 1 ] As of December 2020 [update] , the charity delivered 9,000 meals to people every day, and redirected 100 tonnes of food away from landfills into the community per month.
The city of Christchurch as a whole consists of five of these electorates, while the electorate of Waimakariri contains a mix of Christchurch and exurban Canterbury. The Banks Peninsula , Ilam , and Waimakariri electorates are currently held by members of the governing National Party (as part of the coalition-led Sixth National Government of ...
The Canterbury earthquakes of 2010 and 2011 have allowed community stations to play a greater role in the Canterbury community. Compass FM 104.9 FM has existed as a not-for-profit community radio station in the North Canterbury area since June 2011. Several radio stations have also ceased operation as a result of the Canterbury earthquakes.
Christchurch is a major city in the Canterbury Region, and is the largest city in the South Island of New Zealand.With a Māori history stemming back to the thirteenth century as the domain of the historic Waitaha iwi, Christchurch was constituted as a colonial outpost of the British Empire in 1850.
Christchurch: Canterbury University Press. ISBN 978-0-908812-53-0. Wilson, John (2005), Contextual Historical Overview of Christchurch City (PDF) (report), Christchurch: Christchurch City Council, ISBN 9781877313219, OCLC 156459064, archived from the original (PDF) on 1 February 2023 – via Canterbury Earthquakes Royal Commission; Wilson, John ...
It became the Christchurch Star-Sun in June 1935 after merging with a rival newspaper, The Sun, and at the time it ceased daily publication in 1991 it was known as The Christchurch Star. [2] It later became a free newspaper, published twice a week (on Wednesdays and Fridays) until 2016, then once a week (on Thursdays) since 2016.
The building's main tenant was Canterbury Television and the company held the naming rights. CTV occupied the ground and first floors, Levels 1 & 2. The second floor, Level 3, was not tenanted during the quake. King's Education, an English-as-a-second-language school occupied the third floor, Level 4.