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Government's 'Affordable Water Reform' gives councils more control but could reduce the efficiencies of scale

Public Policy / analysis
Government's 'Affordable Water Reform' gives councils more control but could reduce the efficiencies of scale
A drain cover labelled water
Photo by Greg Jewett on Unsplash

The revised Three Waters policy gives councils more control but dilutes the rationale for reform and could increase the cost of colossal infrastructure upgrades.   

On Thursday the Government announced it had listened to feedback from councils and would rearrange its troubled Three Waters policy to give local government more control. 

Ten regionally owned public water entities will be created, instead of four, to manage water assets on behalf of district councils. They will be run by a professional board overseen by a representative of every local council and Māori iwi. 

This is intended to prevent a blowout in rates while still building infrastructure required to ensure drinking water is safe, wastewater is cleanly disposed of, and storm drains can cope with extreme weather. 

Local Government Minister Kieran McAnulty’s revised ‘Affordable Water Reform’ attempts some sort of magic trick, or perspective illusion, to achieve this. 

It should look to councils as though they retain some level of control over water, while simultaneously appearing to credit rating agencies that the entities are independent enough to justify balance sheet separation.

It’s a balancing act which has tipped towards councils in an attempt to rescue the policy that had increasingly begun to be a political liability in an election year. 

McAnulty said he’d spoken with mayors—including some who were members of the opposition group Communities 4 Local Democracy—that were now in favour of the proposal. 

He also said credit rating agencies and investors would be comfortable that the entities would be sufficiently independent from councils to attract funding. 

“We wouldn’t have proposed this today if we hadn’t received advice that it was going to stack up and achieve the balance sheet separation,” he told reporters on Thursday. 

Governance conundrum 

The revised reform would see local water assets divided between 10 management entities, drawn primarily from regional council boundaries. 

Waikato, Bay of Plenty, Taranaki, and Manawatu/Whanganui regions would each get their own entity. While others pair off with a neighbouring region: Northland and Auckland, Gisborne and Hawke's Bay, Wellington and Wairarapa, Nelson and Marlborough, Canterbury and West Coast, and Otago and Southland. 

These entities would be governed by a professional board, which would be appointed and monitored by a Regional Representative Group, which itself would be appointed by local councils and local Iwi in partnership.

New Zealand courts have ruled the Treaty of Waitangi gives Māori the right to participate in decisions that relate to water services.

The professional board would be selected based on “competency and skills” and would not have a co-governance requirement. 

Once established, these 10 water entities would take over all water-related activities including fees and charges, operating and capital costs, and all assets and debts. 

All about that debt 

Councils would like to maintain direct control of water assets, which are reliable revenue generators, but will struggle to fund upgrades without imposing high costs on their ratepayers.

Minister McAnulty said there had been a lot of “mischievous” talk about “asset theft” but the fact was that these assets were funded by debts councils could no longer service. 

Many councils are nearing, or have reached, their debt caps and risk credit rating downgrades if they take on any more. A lower credit rating would increase borrowing costs which ratepayers would ultimately have to cover. 

Alternatively, councils could impose hefty water charges that could also anger voters and get them turfed out of office in the next election. 

The Government estimates that an investment of between $120 billion and $185 billion is required to build and maintain water infrastructure over the next three decades. 

S&P Global Ratings, an international credit rating agency, said Three Waters reform had been devised as a potential solution to this “colossal investment,” both politically and financially. 

“One key benefit from the Crown's perspective is that the reforms should relieve councils of water responsibilities and reduce pressure to increase annual general property rates — a hot topic long before the reforms were envisaged,” it said in a report earlier this year. 

But the ratings agency also said there had been too little scrutiny of the affordability of the $180 billion investment required, with attention instead focused on ownership and co-governance. 

Minster McAnulty told reporters that opponents to reform preferred to focus on these issues because their alternatives didn’t stack up financially. 

Saving for some 

The Government has repositioned the revised Affordable Water Reform as something that will save ratepayers’ money. A factsheet released to the media said households would save between $2,770 and $5,400 on rates each year by 2054. 

However, S&P Global was not convinced in February there would be any meaningful savings for households, as someone still has to pay for the required infrastructure.

“If councils fund the investment, general property and targeted rates will likely soar to record levels. If water services entities fund the investment, water charges will likely soar instead.” 

The Government argues that water services entities will benefit from efficiencies of scale and expertise that would help to prioritise the required investment. Opponents think this could be achieved in other ways, such as smaller regional council-controlled organisations. 

“In either scenario, there is no free lunch, and New Zealanders face much higher costs to fund this investment no matter who delivers it,” the S&P Global report said. 

“Someone must pay, and it will always be residents. While general property rates and council targeted charges are likely to be lower under the reforms, overall costs for New Zealanders will be much higher given the perceived scope of investment required.”

Now with 10 entities instead of four, the efficiencies of scale will surely be lessened and councils will have more influence over their decisions, plausibly throwing doubt on independence. 

Unproven funding model 

Raf Manji, leader of The Opportunities Party and a former investment banker, said the funding structure was highly risky and unnecessary. 

Water infrastructure should instead be funded directly from the Government’s balance sheet, like housing agency Kāinga Ora has recently decided to do.

New Zealand’s strong sovereign credit ratings and relatively low debt levels means it has a lower cost of borrowing than standalone entities that issue their own bonds. 

Manji said bond investors will want the Crown to underwrite these water entities, but would still demand a premium over regular government bonds. 

The Government should create a Ministry of Water Works to oversee the upgrades and issue 30-year water infrastructure bonds to fund them, he said.

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57 Comments

Raf Manji makes a worrying amount of sense sometimes for a politician.

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14

Probably why so many repeat the wasted vote mantra.

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3

What are they polling at again? 0.8%?

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3.5% according to the latest Roy Morgan poll.

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No, in that poll 3.5% is total support for “other minor parties”, not just TOP.

 

Taxpayers Union poll from about a week ago has them at 0.8%

https://www.taxpayers.org.nz/taxpayer_update_230408

 

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yes our local kiwisavers would be keen, why pay higher rates but then have the holders demand an implied  underwrite.   Very common sense    3 waters reminds me too much of the seabed and foreshore debacle.

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3

Why can't Maori participate in decisions that relate to water services through voting? Why must anti-democratic and racist policy be baked into this reform, if the goal is a better funding model?

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Because Maori own each and every molecule of water, so they should have a priority say in how this water is separated from contaminants and pumped to people's homes. 

Much like central banking, the Tane Mahuta story will help revolutionize the science behind water and wastewater treatment so there will be better outcomes as a result.  

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TOP’s policy since previous leadership (Geoff Simmons) is that Māori own our water as it was never ceded under the Treaty.
 

Assume Raf Manji has retained this stance given that they haven’t said otherwise? I ask because race-based control of our water is the real reason 3 Waters is so unpopular. 

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Where water is concerned, it's not a matter of ownership but rather equity;

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/ratepayers-charged-500-times-more-for-water-than-bottling-companies/FWYMZBUZIVX27XLWWLDPTS4CNE/

Why should you pay 500 times more than a commercial user?

 

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4

Its about unelected racist control via Te Mana o te Wai. No matter how much lipstick is on the pig.

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Control implies a majority vote in decision-making, does it not?

Why do you fear what is essentially shared/equal decision-making between Crown appointments and iwi/hapu appointments in the nomination of members to the proposed entities Boards?

My experience in case law under the RMA is that our natural environment has benefitted immensely from iwi/hapu taking court action to preserve/conserve many outstanding landscapes and ecosystems - e.g., water takes for bottling; seabed mining; run-of-river irrigation/water diversions; etc.   

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democracy
/dɪˈmɒkrəsi/
noun
a system of government by the whole population or all the eligible members of a state, typically through elected representatives.
"a system of parliamentary democracy"

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Majority rules, screw the rest?

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As opposed to minority rules, screw the rest?

To turn Kate's question back on you, what about equal representation of every individual are you afraid of?

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kiwikidsnz, the Air New Zealand Board is not chosen under a general public one-citizen-one vote system;

https://www.airnewzealand.co.nz/board-charter#selection

Are you also opposed to that manner of Board member selection?

What I think you are really saying is that Te Tiriti should have no relevance in our Parliamentary democracy - if this is your perspective then you need to put a case forward for repeal of the Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975, as it was that act that brought the 1840 international agreement into domestic law.  All international treaties must be ratified domestically in this same manner (e.g., the UN Charter, the Paris Agreement; etc.)

 

 

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There's no mention of Principles, Partnerships or co governance/government in the ToW. 

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No, there are actually two concepts regarding governance that are mentioned in the ToW - kāwanatanga and rangatiratanga.  As a society, we are working through their application to our present day democracy/constitution.

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Because the bottlers are not pooing in it and flushing it into sewers, but I am.  Because the supply infrastructure to the bottler is low cost.  Because the bottler will definitely shut down if water restrictions are emplaced.  This all makes supplying the bottler way more profitable than supplying me.  

Which is why we need water to remain under complete democratic control, because supplying the populace is uneconomic compared to everything else.  We need to have overwhelming democratic control to force them to make uneconomic decisions in favour of the public good.  

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Kate the underlying point you are making is on the quality of government economic policies. I would suggest that these have been crap for at least 50 years, and could suggest that the quality issue goes back at least 100 years, where people and organisations with wealth and privilege hold a higher position in policy beneficiaries than ordinary people. This is clearly not changing. Is the point Chris Trotter made about Mike Moore telling David Lange, Richard Prebble and another who they, as the Government, could absolutely not afford to piss off, namely big business and money, still holding true? If so it needs to change!

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On behalf of their whānau and ancestors, iwi/hapū would say it goes back 183 years.  Were that not the case, there would have been no settlements for past breaches and injustices.

It does need to change and I see evidence of that kind of change all the time. Often small victories, and at other time losses - but the general direction I think is toward greater social justice (in NZ, that is!). 

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NOT true, Raf is not as woke as Geoff.  I looked into this yesterday as someone else posted this rumour.

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"...  Māori own our water as it was never ceded under the Treaty."

 

Is there another country in the world where the "me-firsters" have such powers? 

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Mr McAnulty has gone from being in the industry of flogging live horses to flogging dead ones.

 

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These entities would be governed by a professional board, which would be appointed and monitored by a Regional Representative Group, which itself would be appointed by local councils and local Iwi in partnership.

The professional board would be selected based on “competency and skills” and would not have a co-governance requirement. 

Read it carefully.

Could be a Tui add.

 

 

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3 waters is a 3 legged dog that hopefully will bring the govt down. As noted above its an illusion to suggest that savings will be made when the outcome will just be different people paying the bill -S&P Global (and Manji) are right

and zero evidence that 10 entities with two layers of governance will be any better than the current setup to actually get stuff done - representative groups will be much larger than any sensible management expert would recommend ( actually looks a bit like DHB's which this govt said were a bad idea)

So the driver remains iwi control, hidden in plain sight despite the denials (and the claims that we are to stupid to understand) and for this reason alone the govt should go

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So: the councils have borrowed all they can. Because of all their vanity projects.

Why separate these water things out and have the ability to borrow even more when interest rates are going to the sky???

Being prudent and doing just core boring Council business is not included in any of this.

Rates + water rates bills are going to be horrendous down the track if this goes ahead.

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Spot on Grattaway, Labour are trying to change the narrative now to " if you vote for National then ratepayers will lose X dollars of savings."

This is spurious bullshit!

Why?

1) Behind closed doors the Maori component of the cabinet convinced these peanuts that only they can look after fresh water,

2) Government then hunted for an entity that would write them a report with only one outcome.( a predetermined outcome) Said report cost taxpayers millions and told us unless ratepayers handed over all their water assets and control we would be doomed as it is going to cost 180 billion dollars to fix everything. This from Scottish Water which is a tiny entity compared to NZ's water assets. But they are "experts". Lol!

3) All the so called savings are predicated around this 180 billion figure. An amount with no proper scrutiny or stress testing! Its all bullshit!

Unfortunately our mostly ignorant and stupid MSM cannot figure this out. Or don't want too!

New Zealanders must not let this asset and power grab happen!

 

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economies of scale are important if you live in mangawhai,the 7,000 odd residents would then share the cost (68million) of their sewerage upgrade with whangarei and auckland ratepayers.they would be first in line of many towns and hamlets across the motu eager to get gold-plated systems affordable to them at the expense of  city dwellers who thought they had already paid their share.

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So a win for those with holiday homes in far flung places then.

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The elephant in the room is that this Labour govt hasn’t exactly had a track record of success over the last 5 years. 

Polytech merger - failure

DHB merger - failure

Eliminate child poverty- failure

Kiwibuild- failure 

Perhaps we’ll be pleasantly surprised but I suspect we’ll see millions poured into consultants, public relations and hui’s but the pipes will still leak, the waterways will become even more polluted and water rates will increase.

 

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The only politician with a sensible policy on water reforms is TOP, Raf has done a fine job of articulating this but the media won't publish because TOP are lacking traction in the polls because the media won't publish his comments because.....and so the world goes around again and again.

 

Go to the TOP web site and read Raf Manji's press release from yesterday and the TOP Policy on water reform.  Very interesting

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5

You forgot...

Education

Economy

Emissions

Crime

Roading

Trains

Inflation 

Suicides

Kindness

Free speech

Zero COVID

Road to zero

 

Actually if you look at the failures you quickly see that Andrew Do Little has had a hand in most of them.

 

 

 

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Haha.

Yep, we have been shafted all right.

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I didn’t forget them just didn’t think there would be enough space in the comment box.

 

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How anyone thinks adding another two layers of beauracracy onto water and leaving the regulation and planning permission elsewhere is going to save money is beyond me.Having just done 12 years local Council and watching Regional slow all our plans down as new Govt regs came in I just cant see how this will save anyone.

Once upon a time I sat in Rotorua and the DIA told us we needed 80 -100 billion in upgrades and once they found out that NZs Councils LTPs already had 120 bn planned the figure jumped miraculously to 180bn.

The whole thing will just end up like the road fiasco we have now,has anyone noticed how most water is now sorted after the Cyclones yet the roads and in particular the highways are still a shambles.

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They're better off introducing national standards, specifications and product approvals to bring efficiencies at the supply chain side.

And then providing a funding central government funding model that enables water authorities to apply for funding.  

Then we just need to figure out how to legislate against enormous rates increases to fund white elephant projects.  

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NZs water Solution 101...

The best and cheapest short and long term solution!!

1. Audit all council commercial water supplies to determine how they all rate to worlds best practice

2. Tender (to the world) the rectification off every non performing site to worlds best practices/standards 

3. Ensure there is a 20 year full warranty with each tendered site. And all work is completed within 5 years ( or penalty payments)

4. Pay the bucks now and just do it!

 

and call it  'H2O bro"! Best Resourced Original 

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Oh. I see. No one here except for a couple of punters seems to support this debacle at all. This means we must all be racists. Seems in line with the rest of the country, we are all unreasonable racists because we can all see through this pitifully stupid racist idea....except for the 20% of us that are complete idiots.

Anyhoo, I'd love to know where all these made-up figures are coming from that people in the likes of Taranaki are going to have to pay 20,000+ for water each year if people do not accept three waters, and just a measly 5000+ each if this massive management layer is added ten times to what is already there now. Where on earth do these figures even come from? Are they trying to scare people into thinking this is a good idea. 

These figures are crazy. How can they extrapolate these out to 2054 ? What inflation rate are they using, is this based on incompetent Labour governments with massive inflation for the next 30 years to get to this ? 

Does anyone know how they are actually calculating these figures?

If ever implemented it will be a total fail, just like everything else they have ever done. If only you could bet on the outcome. Failure is a dead certainty.

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I'm for better water quality (freshwater, harbour and nearshore) and better water infrastructure upgrade and management - and I wouldn't  argue the fact that many (if not most) local councils have already reached the ability of their ratepayers to fund their existing borrowings (let alone major increases to those borrowings). More over, the evidence is well known/documented in terms of infrastructure deficit with respect to reticulated services maintenance and upgrade (particularly in Auckland and Wellington, but also in many provincial areas).

So, definitely reform is needed - and the core issue is the funding mechanism - not the governance model.

Funny how we get so sidetracked..

 

  

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Rubbish, Councils are guilty of spending money on getting re-elected and on other non-core projects rather than spending ratepayers' money on what they are actually supposed to be doing.

It needs to be legislated that non-core spending needs to stop, and also what non-core spending consists of, and that ratepayers' funds need to be directed into the necessary places.

The whole argument that there is no money for infrastructure because everything is so inefficient and we just waste all the money is mind-numbingly dumb. 

I'm for good water infrastructure too, but, it needs to be invested in at a compulsory level of rates income, and if there is no money left over for the pet projects then the pet projects need to go. 

It's as simple as that. The plan put up by National I believe includes these aspects. The problem we have now has it's roots back in a previous Labour government allowing councils autonomy to spend/waste money on whatever they wanted rather than core services. That needs to stop, and funding needs to be provided by the central government to help councils that are in this situation remove themselves from this situation (created by another Labour government) over time, rather than removing assets from councils and putting them in control of unaccountable idiots.

Maori and Iwi have nothing to do with this process and should be completely excluded (unless they are elected of course).

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The Key National Government already had a go at this.  They amended the Local Government Act - removing reference to sustainable development/wellbeing as one of the purposes of LG - and changing line to read;

d) provides for local authorities to play a broad role in meeting the current and future needs of their communities for good-quality local infrastructure, local public services, and performance of regulatory functions.

I don't think it made any difference whatsoever.  Then the Productivity Commission looked at things again in 2018/19 - which was the fifth time governments of different colours had asked the PC to investigate local government - after this the PC wrote up a consolidated report on all their investigations - it's worth a read - linked below;

https://www.productivity.govt.nz/inquiries/local-government-funding-and-financing/

And hence, we've landed where we are with these major reform programs wrt to RMA and the LGA.  And where the latter is concerned - funding is the issue, always has been.

Its all well and fine to say, stick to core services (i.e., water, wastewater, solid waste, stormwater and roads) - but then, central government drops all kinds of cost-sharing "carrots" for tourism infrastructure, irrigation and storage infrastructure; convention centers; sport stadiums and so on.  These central government "carrots"  (very often offered on a 50/50 funding basis) are largely responsible for the 'nice to have' infrastructure LG budget blow outs.  If they (central government) didn't do this sort of cost-share on 'nice to haves', most LA balance sheets would be in much better shape.  

Why doesn't central government offer to buy back all the stadiums, convention centers, and business development assets instead of the water reticulation ones?

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"for good-quality local infrastructure, local public services,"  Could drive a barge pole through that. Stadiums, other sports facilities, cycle ways, halls, parks

If that's what Key came up with, then he masqueraded as a leader and also not even as a manager.

That may be harsh and I can't be sure that he wan't hamstrung by DDD ( the last latter is Dunne, assign what you like to the first 2 Ds) and the Maori party.

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Evidently, many councils are guilty of not spending money in order to get re-elected.

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Kate - if the core issue is the funding mechanism, then how does having unelected iwi representation get us access to more/cheaper funding?

I think you'll find the Maori faction within the Labour party see the governance model (i.e. co-governance model) is the core issue, and they couldn't give a rats about the funding mechansim. 

  

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Treaty of Waitangi settlements coming to the end, so where do the Maori and Pakeha elite go to now, oh thats right, Mahuta will look after us once again, lets have health and Water reforms.  Then we can rebuild our empires at the expense of the tax and rate payers of this fine country, what a buch of suckers they are.

So continue voting Labour/National and get the same outcome.  They will continue to screw you if you let them.

 

Aha.   Just seen the latest poll results,  Yep, sheeples, you are still voting/Nats/Act or Lab/Greens. Same again same again

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There is no 'representation' per se - my understanding is the proposal is for joint-decision making on nominations to the Board of Directors of these new entities.

But, if the question you were asking was - what is the advantage to having a tangata whenua lens applied to this type of Board member decision-making, then I'd say that (as I pointed out above), iwi/hapū have a great deal more experience with resource management law than any other cohesive group; and they have generational knowledge of many of the freshwater natural resources in their rohe.  Plus, te ao Māori brings a unique, eco-centric perspective/worldview to RM/resource-use matters.  

Hope that helps.

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Maori stuff brings nothing, no one cares, except for a few woke white people. It means zero here, and absolutely nothing in the real world. A majority of Maori could not give two stuffs about it either. My heritage is not European originally and I don't care for the culture of my forebears at all, it's completely irrelevant. It has nothing to do with the administration of taxpayers' money or assets in any way shape or form,

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I think you have to study te ao Māori in order to make that determination. Certainly, I find the culture, its philosophy/ethics, protocols and other knowledge have much to offer by way of human and ecological understanding and worldviews. As does Enlightenment philosophy and knowledge. And Greek philosophy and knowledge. And Confucian philosophy and knowledge. And, and, and...

All provide different and useful insights - ways to expand our understandings.

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That is nice for you, many people believe in many different things and that is great for them.  Some people believe in aliens. and that they live among us. However, it is not a reason to have aliens co-govern public assets. They could, but then they will need to be elected and have a majority to that. Same as everyone else, regardless of anyone's beliefs. Imagine if aliens had landed here before the Maori, what would happen then? Do they own the water? Maybe they have been here the whole time. So many things to think about...

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It's good you've resorted to humour :-).

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Come on Kate - if it such a light-touch "joint decision making" arrangement then why did Mahuta attempt to entrench these provisions under the cloak of darkness. You know there is more to this, but calling this out might make us all a little bit racist. 

We don't need a tangata whenua lens applied. What we need is the best engineers (regardless of race), the best planners (regardless of race), the best project managers (regardless of race) to deliver world class three waters infrastructure. The rest is just noise (and rather expensive noise..).    

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In terms of the history - I thought the intent regarding entrenchment was to prevent the assets from ever being sold - as per how our electricity assets; rail assets, etc. were sold.  But, it was proposed and went so quickly, it's a non-issue now.

In terms of now, I'm not in favour of the re-jig - not because of iwi/hapū participation in decision-making, but instead because I haven't seen any evidence that 10 is better than 4 in terms of efficiency/cost-savings.

And, I think TOPs proposal regarding the funding model makes far more sense.

The professionals you mention that are needed are operational, not governance matters.  It's the governance of this water infrastructure that has failed in many locations, e.g., Palmerston North should have upgraded its sewerage treatment plant decades ago; Havelock North's problems; high nitrate levels in SI aquifers; sewage pipes in Wellington failing regularly; Auckland beaches closed regularly due to stormwater and sewage pipe cross-contamination, and the list goes on and on and on.

 

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I'm sure their are other ways central govt can take a big stick to councils who have mismanaged their basics. I can see a number of the councils wanting 3 waters, not necessarily because of co-governance but as a means to pass on the financial burden to central govt while they continue to recklessly spend money on other projects and not reduce rates increases.

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Well, yes, they can appoint Commissioners;

https://www.beehive.govt.nz/release/commissioners-reappointed-tauranga-city-council

But that doesn't mean rates increases go down!

And of course, the 'flagship' new project expenditure that they are touting is a 'nice to have' glory project;

https://www.stuff.co.nz/bay-of-plenty/127906350/taurangas-civic-precinct-a-silver-bullet-or-red-herring

You couldn't make this stuff up!!!!!!

 

 

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Last night, my toddler didn't want to eat her vegetables from her Dora The Explorer plate, but she would if I served them on her Barney & Friends plate.

Dora The Explorer was a distraction from the "core issue" (getting a two year old to eat her veggies) so I just got rid of it.

Co-governance is the same. If it's a distraction - one that the public has become fixated on for no good reason because it's not that important as you seem to believe - then get rid of it and watch most of the resistance melt away. 

If co-governance isn't something important, then why is it needed in this legislation in order to improve water quality/outcomes. 

 

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If co-governance isn't something important, then why is it needed in this legislation in order to improve water quality/outcomes. 

Why is it needed?  Because so far, we have made an absolute mess/crisis out of water quality;

https://www.rnz.co.nz/national/programmes/morningreport/audio/2018885897/freshwater-report-paints-poor-picture-of-water-quality 

It's time for some kind of circuit breaker in terms of decision-making in this regard - we have to halt the degradation somehow..  

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