Media Statement - Council to assess what changes mean for rohe

13 April 2023

Council awash with new plan for Three Waters Reform

KAWERAU District Council was among the many local government on the video call regarding today’s announcement of changes to the Government’s Three Waters Reform.

Minister of Local Government Hon Kieran McAnulty announced changes to the Government’s water services reform programme including that there would now be 10 water services entities instead of four.

This means that Kawerau would be in the Bay of Plenty region along with Whakatāne, Ōpōtiki, Rotorua Lakes, Western Bay of Plenty and Tauranga City.  

What this change means for Kawerau and how it will impact on residents it yet to be assessed Kawerau District Council chief executive Russell George said.

“The change in timeline for implementation from 2024 to 2026 will impact on the Council’s Long Term Planning for three waters assets. It means we will include the three waters’ assets in our plans for the first two years. However, we are well into this asset replacement strategy and will continue with the project as planned.”

“We will continue to support our staff who are affected by these recent changes. Our Three Waters team supports our community and recent weather events have provided extra challenges that they continue to step up and address. Their well-being is our on ongoing concern.”

Currently, Kawerau District Council is working on replacing its drinking water pipes throughout the region, which is a six-year plan that our community wished for us to progress.

Work is well underway this year for the replacement of a main drinking water line along River Road which has meant several short-term water outages and shuts recently.

[ENDS]

For more information, please contact Manager Communication and Engagement, Tania Humberstone on 027 464 3785 or 07 306 9009. 

 

FOOTNOTE: 

Kawerau District Council is a member of

Communities 4 Local Democracy He Hapora mo te Manapori. 

Embargoed until 11.00am 13/4/23

Media release Kōrero Pānui

Government plays political football with Three Waters

Mayors have expressed their disappointment that the Government’s refusal to make meaningful changes to Three Waters Reform, and has turned it into an election issue, rather than seeking consensus.

The government’s ‘reset’ announcement has seen only minor tweaks to the entity model, while doing nothing to answer concerns around community property rights and meaningful local voice.

While the Government has increased the number of entities, the governance structure remains unchanged, leaving communities two steps away from any real influence.

Communities 4 Local Democracy He hapori mō te Manapori Co-Chairs, Mayors Helen Worboys and Dan Gordon, said that Mayors were disappointed the Government had once again rejected the opportunity to seek a consensus approach to Three Waters Reform.

“We think New Zealanders will see through this, it’s the same plan with a different name. “Simply adding more entities and changing the name is a desperate attempt to save this plan and attempt to show they’ve done something with the $100 million they’ve sunk into this process so far.

“We’ve been calling for a reset for this policy for some time, and were genuinely excited about having an opportunity to re-engage with the Minister to map a great path forward for water reform.

“Sadly, in a repeat of what happened when it was mandated, the Government continues to shelve local democracy and ignore an overwhelming majority of the community to press on with its plan virtually unaltered.

“Unfortunately, instead of listening to what communities are asking for, the Government once again thinks it knows better and is serving up a reheated version of the same unpalatable, unpopular plan.

“These are assets that local communities have paid for over many generations. They do not belong to central government, and they are not there to play with as they please, like the health and polytech reforms.

“The plan still sees billions of dollars of assets confiscated without compensation from communities throughout the nation and greatly diminishes their say on the infrastructure they own and have built.

“These are long-term, multi-generational assets and it’s really disappointing that they are now being treated as a political football by Wellington, causing a massive amount of disruption and unnecessary stress to everyone in the sector.”

C4LD is calling for a real reset to the policy, taking the reform out of the hands of central government and allowing for communities to steer reforms that make local sense.

C4LD’s plan meets and improves on many of the Government’s stated bottom lines including scale and balance sheet separation. “We’re facing unprecedented challenges from climate change to demographic shifts, but our communities’ feedback has been clear all along this process.

“They want locally led, locally informed and locally accountable solutions to these issues, not another one-size-fits-none approach dictated from Wellington,” they said.

“While there may be a fresh new minister presenting the ideas, there’s nothing fresh about the ideas themselves, it’s just the same old meal with the same old ‘like it or lump it’ approach.

“It now appears this matter will be once and for all settled at the upcoming General Election as there are clear choices for voters on this matter.”

 

For more information about the Communities 4 Local Democracy He hapori mō te Manapori visit communities4localdemocracy.co.nz/ideas

Media Enquiries: Stephen Doran 027 202 7784 / stephen.doran@timdc.govt.nz

 


First posted: 

Thursday, 13 April 2023 - 4:23pm