Mitsubishi Motors New Zealand (MMNZ) has formalised a loan vehicle agreement with Taskforce Kiwi, following its support of the not-for-profit’s Cyclone Gabrielle disaster relief response.
MMNZ will supply the organisation with three Triton utes to facilitate community projects in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch.
The brands chief executive Warren Brown says the partnership is “a small contribution within the greater scope of the work undertaken by Taskforce Kiwi’s team of volunteers.”
Established in September 2022, Taskforce Kiwi largely consists of former members of the defence force, police and emergency services, who volunteer alongside Kiwis from the wider community to offer their skills and experience in aid of local communities ‘on their worst day’.
The volunteers work alongside emergency management agencies, local government and community organisations to provide natural disaster relief.
Help for Hawke’s Bay
In the wake of Cyclone Gabrielle in February 2023, Taskforce Kiwi sent 165 volunteers to assist in a range of operations, including debris clearance, missing person searches, needs assessments and aid coordination.
One essential requirement was quick availability of fit-for-purpose off-road vehicles, so Taskforce Kiwi national director Richard Adams got in touch with MMNZ.
“I’d worked with a similar organisation across the Tasman, which had a relationship with Mitsubishi Motors Australia,” Adams says. “I managed to arrange contact with MMNZ and they were very quick to get on board.
“We had the conversation on a Thursday and by Saturday they had four Triton utes ready and waiting for us.
“We used the vehicles for ten weeks and they proved vital to our work, enabling us to have a greater impact on the ground, because we could navigate uncertain and dynamic environments that we couldn’t have accessed without them.
“We used the Tritons for recon – checking roads nobody had been through since the cyclone, some of which were still heavily inundated with water – and we knew we could deploy volunteers safely in those vehicles.
“As we are a not-for-profit organisation, having the Tritons on loan at no cost was a massive boost,” he says.
Now that MMNZ has formalised the relationship, Taskforce Kiwi will receive three long-term loan vehicles for day-to-day operations and, when required, emergency disaster relief.
MMNZ will also have additional vehicles on hold in case extra assistance is required.
“It means a lot to our organisation,” said Adams. “We’ll use them to help with volunteer training and community engagement, as well as disaster response when needed.”
Supporting local
Brown says the MMNZ team was only too happy to provide help when asked.
“Taskforce Kiwi does an incredible job punching above its weight to help local communities and those in need further afield,” Brown says.
“It embodies those great Kiwi traditions of volunteering, teamwork and endeavour. As a people-focused business, we recognised this was a perfect opportunity to give something back to our local communities.
“In Triton, we had the right vehicle for the task at hand, so it really was a no-brainer from our point of view,” he says.