Discussion about council amalgamations too rushed – Wellington mayor

34 mins ago

Councils around the country given 10 weeks to come up with merger proposals.  (Source: 1News)

Wellington's mayor has hit out at the Government's timeline for amalgamating councils, saying it's not enough time for residents to make a major decision.

By Ellen O'Dwyer of RNZ

But Andrew Little says he wants to talk seriously about amalgamation, while leaders further north of Wellington City grapple with how a super-city might look.

The Government is requiring councils throughout the country to submit reorganisation plans by August 9 – or it will make the decisions for councils themselves.

In a speech in the capital on Wednesday, Little said the clock is ticking on Wellington's super-city plans.

"Ten weeks to consider services, assets, facilities, rating, fees and debt. Ten weeks to have deep, complex conversations in homes, businesses, lunch-rooms, sports clubs and community organisations – schools, universities, online, and everywhere else.

Wellington Mayor Andrew Little.

"Let me be clear – we can't have this conversation properly in 10 weeks."

Despite this, Little said he backed amalgamation.

He said combining Lower and Upper Hutt, Porirua and Wellington city councils makes sense – though he's not shutting the door on Wairarapa's councils, or Kāpiti District Council either.

And he was realistic about what he believed a super-city would or would not deliver.

"I do not believe amalgamation would cut the rates, but over time a metro council would help us to manage costs better, and deliver better services too."

Smaller councils fear they could be forced into mergers with larger neighbours as the Government presses ahead with sweeping local government reform. (Source: 1News)

Little said he wants a region-wide referendum on the issue, after he's presented his plan to government, saying the public needed to "have a voice".

The Porirua and Lower Hutt mayors said they already polled their residents on the issue last year.

Porirua mayor Anita Baker said she supports amalgamation.

"We're like Hutt, we did the referendum, and we've got the voice to keep going, to have that discussion – so now it's a matter of finding that proposal and doing it to ourselves so government doesn't – now is the chance to grab it."

Porirua Mayor Anita Baker

The situation is different further north, where in Upper Hutt, mayor Peri Zee said she was "skeptical" about the benefits of a super-city.

"I'm also concerned around Upper Hutt in terms of our current rates structure, which is lower than others. I don't want Upper Hutt to be seen as a revenue source for the rest of the region."

Zee said she was currently consulting with the community to hear their views on a super-city.

Kāpiti District's mayor Janet Holborow said the council was sending out a survey to residents to get their thoughts.

Peri Zee. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

"The important thing is we are really still working on how the model's might look – and also it was good to hear the mayor acknowledge that Kāpiti has options to the North and the South."

Carterton District mayor Steve Cretney said residents told him they felt they had a distinct identity to Wellingtonians.

He said Carterton, South Wairarapa and Masterton district mayors were deciding whether to merge into one Wairarapa unitary council – or join up with Wellington.

The 11 councils are the top tier of local government in New Zealand. (Source: 1News)

Cretney said he ideally wanted one, Wairarapa council, but warned it could lead to rates increases for residents without the Greater Wellington Regional Council delivering public transport, flood protection and pest control.

"Many people that I've had discussions with since this was pushed on us by government, the people are for a Wairarapa unitary.

"But I then put another question to them – are they prepared to pay a certain price for that to occur."

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon.

Cretney said the councils have employed consultants Morrison Low to see how expensive creating a unitary council would be.

He said leaders faced difficult choices in the next few weeks.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said he knew timeframes were tight, but Little was being proactive in front-footing the conversation.

"Frankly, not having a deadline on it, means that the conversation dribbles on forever and ever as is prone to do.

"I know it's putting pressure on the system but it's actually better we make a decision: hard yes, hard no."

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