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"Could've saved a week of drama": School criticised for media presence prior to official investigation

Author
Rachel Maher,
Publish Date
Thu, 11 Dec 2025, 8:17am
Associate Education Minister David Seymour has labelled the principal at the centre of mouldy school lunch a media ‘frequent flyer’. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Associate Education Minister David Seymour has labelled the principal at the centre of mouldy school lunch a media ‘frequent flyer’. Photo / Mark Mitchell

"Could've saved a week of drama": School criticised for media presence prior to official investigation

Author
Rachel Maher,
Publish Date
Thu, 11 Dec 2025, 8:17am

鈥淎 week of drama鈥 could have been avoided had the principal of a school with mouldy lunches waited for the investigation rather than going public, Associate Education Minister David Seymour says. 

New Zealand Food Safety said yesterday the mouldy lunches served at the Haeata Community Campus were most likely caused by an error at the school. 

Seymour told 九一星空无限talk ZB鈥檚 Heather du Plessis-Allan the school should have 鈥渒ept an open mind鈥 so he did not have to spend a week talking about 鈥渨hat happened to 20 lunches鈥. 

鈥淚 guess people might start to ask themselves, 鈥楲ook, this whole saga, it was unreasonable to have a principal who was out in the media for a week, when in reality, Food Safety New Zealand completed the assessment within 10 days, which is lightning speed for most things that happen in government鈥. 

鈥淎nd if they were just open about what might have been the possibility, we could have waited till now, we could have saved a week of drama.鈥 

One of the lunches given to students at Haeata Community CampusOne of the lunches given to students at Haeata Community Campus 

He also said he had been told by Food Safety that the school had a policy of leaving school lunches in the cafeteria so students could have extras if they wanted, and the mouldy lunches came from there. 

He had been told by Food Safety that the school had a policy of leaving school lunches in the cafeteria so students could have extras if they wanted, and the mouldy lunches came from there. 

He said the same lunch was served on Thursday, so this seems like the most 鈥減lausible鈥 answer. 

Seymour said Food Safety NZ had been all over the school and Compass 鈥渓ike a rash鈥 and was confident in the result revealed yesterday. 

Haeata Community Campus principal Peggy Burrows did not wish to respond to Seymour鈥檚 comments this morning. 

She previously told the Herald the findings of the school鈥檚 internal investigation were with the board and the school鈥檚 lawyers and were due to be released on Friday. 

Haeata Community Campus principal Dr Peggy Burrows. Photo / SuppliedHaeata Community Campus principal Dr Peggy Burrows. Photo / Supplied 

Vincent Arbuckle, deputy director-general of New Zealand Food Safety, said an investigation into the incident found that the mouldy lunches were not part of a wider food safety issue with the School Lunch Collective. 

鈥淲e know the issue caused a lot of concern among parents and students at the school, so we considered it important to provide accurate and independent information about the likely cause,鈥 Arbuckle said. 

鈥淎fter carefully examining all the possible causes, we are able to reassure parents that there is not a wider, or ongoing, food safety risk with the School Lunch Collective. 

鈥淭he most plausible explanation is that lunches intended to be served to students the previous week were accidentally mixed in with that day鈥檚 lunches.鈥 

Burrows earlier maintained that none of its 鈥渞obust鈥 systems failed between Thursday and Monday, when the food was served. 

The lunches served at Haeata Community Campus were covered in a thick layer of mould.The lunches served at Haeata Community Campus were covered in a thick layer of mould. 

Arbuckle said New Zealand Food Safety鈥檚 food compliance officers considered the possibility that the error was made by the distributor. 

They found it was unlikely that the distributor delivered lunches from the previous week because several other schools received the same lunch on the same day with no reported issues. 

Arbuckle said another reason was that the Compass Christchurch Kitchen (Central Production Kitchen) only receives the number of meals required for the following school day because of the minimal capacity of available chillers. 

A food poisoning warning was issued last week after several children from Haeata Community Campus ate school lunches covered in thick mould. 

The meals, provided as part of the Government鈥檚 school lunch programme, were eaten before a teacher intervened. 

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