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Photo by Amanda Crowsen

Kia ora Friend,

 

The Minister for Oceans and Fisheries walking into Parliament yesterday, proudly brandishing a gifted, gasping crayfish, wasn't the flex he thought it was. It demonstrated how disconnected this government is from everyday New Zealanders. 

 

For many of us, gathering kaimoana to feed our families and friends is becoming harder every year. 

 

We can no longer gather crayfish from Northland’s east coast and parts of the Hauraki Gulf. The depletion of intertidal critters, including cockles, crabs and catseye has meant we are facing major restrictions on recreational shellfish and invertebrate gathering along the Auckland (east and west coast) and Coromandel coastline. In Kaikōura public fishing for pāua is down to four months of the year. And blue cod fishing on the Canterbury coast is constrained.

 

And in this economy, who can justify paying $50 per kilo for snapper fillets or $70 for blue cod?

 

If passed, the Fisheries Amendment Bill will make things worse. We can expect fewer fish in the water and more of our fish exported for private profits. 

 

That's why National Kahawai Day on May 28 matters more than ever. Kahawai has long been the people's fish, accessible, abundant and valued far beyond its dollar value. Keep reading on to learn more about what makes National Kahawai Day so significant.


And remember to keep sending a strong message to politicians. Only you can make a difference - I Fish. I Care. I Vote.

Celebrating National Kahawai Day

Photo credit NZ Fishing News

May 28 is National Kahawai Day - a day to celebrate one of New Zealand's most iconic and accessible fish. 

 

For generations, kahawai has been the people's fish.

 

It's the fish of summer holidays, surfcasting with the kids, early mornings with grandparents, and the unmistakable smell of fresh kahawai cooking after a day on the water.

 

Kahawai was never just another species. It was part of growing up in New Zealand.

For many families, kahawai created the first real connection to the ocean - affordable, abundant, close to shore, and shared between generations.

And there was once enough for everyone.

 

But over time, many New Zealanders have noticed the change.

 

The fish aren't as common close to shore. Seabirds struggle to find roving kahawai schools. The average size has declined. And the simple experience of catching a kahawai for dinner is disappearing for many families.

 

This isn't just about fishing.

 

It's about what we are losing as a country: our connection to abundance, to healthy wild food, to the coast, and to each other.

 

At a time when New Zealand faces rising obesity, diabetes, and poor nutrition, we are also eating less seafood than previous generations. Yet kahawai remains one of the healthiest and most accessible wild proteins our ocean can provide.

 

National Kahawai Day is about recognising the value of this incredible fish - not just commercially, but socially, culturally, recreationally, and nutritionally.

 

Because kahawai belong in our waters close to shore. It belongs in our communities. And it belongs in the memories our children are yet to make.

 

On May 28 we are not celebrating exporting 1.4 million kilos of unprocessed, frozen whole kahawai for $2.02 per kilo.  

 

It's about rebuilding abundance so more New Zealanders can experience the joy that once defined coastal life in this country: birds diving offshore, schools of fish within casting distance, kids catching their first fish from the beach, and families bringing home healthy food from the sea.

 

More kahawai in the water means:

healthier ecosystems

healthier communities

healthier families

and a stronger connection between New Zealanders and the ocean.

 

Kahawai has always been the people's fish.

 

So this May 28, celebrate National Kahawai Day.

 

Catch one.
Cook one.
Share one.
Tell the stories.
Pass it on.

And help bring back the abundance that made kahawai a treasured part of life in Aotearoa.

 

Kahawai Legal Challenge

May 28 is significant because it's the day in 2009 when the Supreme Court delivered its landmark judgment in the Kahawai Legal Challenge proceedings. The Court was clear, the Minister must make an appropriate allowance for our Māori customary and recreational fishing interests before he sets the commercial allocation. 

 

A year after the Court's decision the fisheries Minister, National's Phil Heatley, decided to manage kahawai on the northeast coast at a higher level so there would be more fish in the water, increased catch rates, and benefits for non-commercial fishers. 

 

After 17 years we're still celebrating the courage and ongoing commitment from the New Zealand Sport Fishing Council to challenge the management norm of running fish populations down to seriously low levels, just to satisfy exporters' demands.

How to Help

We can only do our job with the support of people like you. If you would like to do more, please consider one of the following:

➔ Donate to LegaSea

➔ Become a partner 

➔ Become a LegaSea Legend

➔ Share this email on Facebook

The verdict is in. Kiwis want the Fisheries Amendment Bill scrapped.

In May, more than 33,000 people submitted to the Primary Production Select Committee, with the overwhelming majority opposing this offensive piece of legislation. 

 

We want to thank everyone who took the time to make their voice heard.

 

One submitter summed up what many Kiwis are feeling - "I'm deeply worried that one day I won't be able to take my kids out fishing like I did growing up. That's more than just food; that's connection, culture, and time together. This bill puts that at risk."

 

Statements like these remind us why we will keep campaigning to Kill the Bill.

 

Oral Hearings

Last week, LegaSea and the New Zealand Sport Fishing Council presented at the oral hearings held by the Primary Production Select Committee. We urged the Committee to reject the Bill in its entirety.

 

Click here to watch our team in action.

 

The Committee is now reviewing our submission and the tens of thousands of others and must report back to Parliament by 6 August with any recommendations or changes to the Bill.

 

Politicians want to pass this Bill before the November 7th election.

 

We must stop this Bill dead in the water for us, our kids, and future generations. Strong public pressure is the only way to stop it.

 

What can you do to help Kill the Bill?

The most important thing you can do is to email your local MP and urge them to Kill the Bill.

 

The LegaSea team has made it easy; we've put together a draft email template and a list of MPs. 

 

Click here to use our template.

 

To spread the message, we also have a limited stock of "Kill the Bill" signs to give away. Flick us an email to get your hands on one or a couple of these beauties.

What a weekend at the Hutchwilco New Zealand Boat Show

A massive thank you to every single person who came over to the LegaSea stand for a chat, grabbed some merch, shared their thoughts, whacked a fish on the wall, told us they'd made a submission against the Fisheries Amendment Bill, or simply stopped to say they support what we're fighting for.

 

One of the best parts for the team was seeing so many new faces engaging with the issues. Not just the usual crowd, but young families, next-generation fishers, divers, boaties, and ocean lovers who absolutely care about the future of our fisheries and marine environment. 

 

After a huge few months of pushing hard on the Kill the Bill campaign, the show reminded us that there are a lot of people out there who want healthier oceans, more abundant fisheries, and a better future for the next generation.

 

We say it all the time, but this movement genuinely belongs to everyone who gets involved. Every conversation matters, and all your submissions matter. It all helps share the message and build up pressure for change.

 

Thanks again, the support means more than you realise.

Have your say! Auckland Coromandel intertidal zone protection

Walk down to any popular Auckland beach at low tide today, and it is hard to imagine what those rock pools looked like 20 years ago. Our coastlines have been battered from marine heatwaves, sedimentation and pollution, and all of these pressures are compounded by harvest pressure.

 

Fisheries New Zealand is proposing major new restrictions on recreational shellfish and invertebrate gathering along the Auckland (east and west coast) and Coromandel coastline. Species of interest include crabs, cockles, octopus and pāua. 

 

The proposals range in intensity, from reduced recreational bag limits for shellfish and invertebrates, through to partial and full closures of intertidal harvesting areas.

 

These options aren't set in stone. Fisheries NZ is encouraging you to have your say on the future management of our intertidal area by 12 June.

 

We welcome Fisheries NZ's proposals to finally address depletion, but we have serious concerns about the broad nature of the proposals.

 

There is no end date, and no obligation on Fisheries NZ to review whether the closure is working. Without a defined review period, we are simply locking the gate without knowing whether what's inside is recovering. 

 

There is no clear rationale for Fisheries NZ's proposal to prohibit the recreational harvest of rock lobster and squid. Squid aren't known to be under any harvesting pressure, and rock lobster management is already being addressed through separate in-depth fisheries processes and tools. 

 

Fisheries NZ has proposed that the boundary of the closure would extend to 200 metres offshore. That would cover a significant distance away from the intertidal zone, areas that aren't easily accessible or under pressure. Any closure needs to be targeted specifically at vulnerable low-tide coastal areas. Extending the closure further offshore is unnecessary.

 

We encourage you to read Fisheries NZ's proposals here and have your say by 5 pm June 12. Email your submission to FMsubmissions@mpi.govt.nz

In the news...

Shane Jones slams 'small appendage' critics and Death protester, but they could hook another fishing law backdown

It was a busy day for the fishing minister, who carried a live kōura (crayfish) through Parliament and then went to the Seafood NZ conference where he insulted a few people. 

Glenn McConnell, Stuff, May 2026

 

Olympian Blair Tuke calls on government to scrap Fisheries legislation

America's Cup winner and Olympic gold medallist Blair Tuke says the government should scrap its Fisheries legislation. Tuke was speaking to the Primary Production select committee on behalf of the Live Ocean Foundation alongside ultramarathon swimmer Jono Ridler in response to the Fisheries Amendment Bill.

Russell Palmer, RNZ News, May 2026

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