Egan thanks family, friends for ONZM honour
Greenlea Premier Meats managing director Anthony (Tony) Egan says receiving the officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit (ONZM) honour has been humbling.
The Greenlea Foundation Trust is honoured to have helped provide an ambulance for the Cambridge community.
Cambridge and surrounding communities are benefiting from a new emergency ambulance, thanks to joint funding from longstanding supporters, Grassroots Trust Limited and Greenlea Foundation Trust.
The Generation 4 emergency ambulance was blessed during a special ceremony at Hato Hone St John's Te Awamutu ambulance station last month attended by Grassroots Trust and Greenlea Foundation Trust representatives, St John Order members, ambulance staff, and fundraising team members.
The new vehicle is fitted with modern equipment including a power-load electric stretcher and stair carry chair, which will help make it easier and safer for ambulance staff to move patients in and out of the vehicle.
St John has been serving New Zealand communities for over 140 years and South Waikato area operations manager Craig Scott says the team is elated with the continued generosity of Grassroots Trust and Greenlea Foundation Trust.
"We couldn't be more grateful to Grassroots Trust and Greenlea Foundation Trust. Our ambulance staff receive excellent training, but having a state-of-the-art ambulance with modern equipment is what enables them to provide the best care they can for our patients."
Grassroots Trust has been a valued supporter of St John for many years and since 2022 they have funded more than $4.5 million for vehicles and equipment.
Their generosity has contributed toward 28 vehicles across the North Island including Generation 4 ambulances, Major Incident Support Team (MIST) vehicles, Patient Transfer Service (PTS) vehicles, Complex Patient Ambulances, and lifesaving equipment including defibrillators.
Martin Bradley, executive chairman of Grassroots Trust Limited, says the organisation is proud of its long running and significant contribution to Hato Hone St John.
"We recognise the vital lifesaving working that ambulance officers carry out in our communities every day and we want to make a tangible and meaningful difference that honours their work while benefiting as many people as we can."
Greg Clark, livestock manager Greenlea Premier Meats, handed over the keys to the new Generation 4 ambulance, alongside Kevin Burgess, MNZM, director of Grassroots Trust LTD.
The Greenlea Foundation Trust is an ongoing advocate of Hato Hone St John, having provided funding for new ambulances, a health shuttle and emergency ambulance equipment.
"The Greenlea Foundation Trust is honoured to partner with Grassroots Trust to provide an ambulance for the Cambridge community," says Aaron Craig, general manager of Greenlea Premier Meats.
“Greenlea established the Foundation in 2011 to support the range of charitable initiatives across the communities that have been the cornerstone of Greenlea’s business for the past thirty-plus years.”
Workload in the Waikato region has been rising year on year, with more 50,900 emergency ambulance callouts across the region last year. In the lifetime of the new ambulance, it is expected to travel half a million kilometres and respond to over 30,000 incidents.
Families farming the same land for generations, including one spanning 187 years, were recognised at the 2026 Century Farms and Station Awards held in Lawrence, Otago recently.
Cambridge and surrounding communities are benefiting from a new emergency ambulance, thanks to joint funding from longstanding supporters, Grassroots Trust Limited and Greenlea Foundation Trust.
Safer Farms ambassador Lindy Nelson's dedication to "rethinking how the primary sector works together to reduce harm on farm" has been recognised with a finalist place in the New Zealand Workplace Health and Safety Awards for 2026.
Applications for Silver Fern Farms Co-operative's next board-appointed farmer director are open.
It's our time to shine, says Deer Industry NZ chief executive Rhys Griffiths.
New Zealand needs to have "a really mature conversation" around modern gene editing technologies and synthetic biology, says the Prime Minister's Chief Science Advisor, Dr John Roche.