Earlier this week, Wellington’s newspaper, The Post, launched a “conversation” inviting public responses about how Wellington could move on from the problems currently besetting it. The responses published so far show a level of fondness for the city, but a deep frustration at its current problems and the way they have been dealt with by recent Councils.
It
all smacks of a desperate recognition that Wellington, the nation’s capital, is
slowly dying. The current Wellington City Council borders on being
dysfunctional; the city’s infrastructure is collapsing, or, in the case of the
pipes, bursting and leaking profusely, seemingly without the prospect of repair
anytime soon. Severe water restrictions have been threatened and the prospect
of a double-digit percentage rate increase looms. Wellington has been surpassed
by Christchurch as the nation’s second city, and the gap between the two looks
set to widen in coming years.
The
Council is polarised and divided on just about every issue facing it – from
cycle ways to developing more space for housing. Civic amenities are being
closed to try to make ends meet. The once “Coolest Little Capital in the World”
now looks being a leading candidate to be the “Most Rundown Little Capital in
the World”. And still the Council squabbling continues.
In
the light of this chronic failure – which has affected the city for most of the
last twenty years, if not longer, it is no surprise that whispers are
intensifying that the Capital city is now headed on the mortifying but
inevitable path of having the Council sacked by the government – the way the
Council in Tauranga was – and replaced by Commissioners to sort the mess out.
For many Wellington ratepayers, the move cannot come quickly enough.
Wellington
has always felt it was living in the shadow of Auckland. The joke used to be
that Auckland, with its then myriad number of local boroughs and Councils was
too divided and disorganised to ever pose a real threat to the capital city. But
when more and more major companies started relocating in Auckland because of
the port and airport, leading to then-Prime Minister Key’s infamous comment
that Wellington was “dying”, Wellington’s civic leaders expressed predictable
outrage but otherwise failed to heed the warnings. Now, with the advent of the
super city and the arrival of a Mayor with an uncompromising and unashamed
“Auckland First” agenda, Wellington’s faces being left well and truly behind,
to moulder away quietly.
After an extraordinarily shaky and uninspiring start, Mayor Brown is starting to make significant progress. His uncompromising non-partisan approach to unrelentingly pushing Auckland’s interests appears to be paying dividends. Even his left-wing critics are now grudgingly beginning to acknowledge that while his methods and approach may be unusual, he is making a beneficial difference for his city. Brown appeared to be developing a good relationship with the previous government in its latter stages, and certainly looks to have a good working relationship with the present government.
Already,
as Mayor of Auckland he has met various government Ministers more frequently
than most of the other metropolitan Mayors, to push his city’s case. By way of
contrast, Wellington’s Mayor, who, as The Post helpfully pointed out recently
has but a twelve-minute walk from her office to the Beehive, has had the least
contact of all metropolitan Mayors with Ministers, despite her city probably
facing the most serious immediate problems of all.
The
new government says it is interested in developing city-specific plans, along
the lines of an approach being taken by the current British government. It is
also a concept Mayor Brown says he wants to promote for Auckland, so there is
already synergy between the Mayor’s aspirations and the government’s policy.
But there appears to be no such aspiration in Wellington. Even if there were,
the prospects of Wellington Councillors ever being able to agree on what a
Wellington-specific plan should look like are near zero.
When
Wellington adopted the “You can’t beat Wellington on a good day” and the
“Coolest Little Capital in the World” mantras they captured the public mood.
That helped create a positive mood in the city and helped Wellington get over,
at least for a while, its historic inferiority complex.
For once, Wellington people had a spring in their step, feeling positive about
their city and what it had to offer. Those days are long gone now – a tired
inner city, leaking pipes, road works everywhere you go, bickering Councillors
and civic amenities being closed have changed all that.
So,
good on The Post for trying to whip up a positive conversation about Wellington
and its future. Every little bit helps. However, the campaign looks too much
like one desperate final effort to make an impact. It smacks more a case of manning the pumps to
keep the steadily sinking ship afloat. While it may save the ship for a while,
allowing it to drift aimlessly on towards the ever-nearing rocks, it is most
unlikely to be enough to bring the dysfunctional Council to its senses.
Therefore,
the only remaining question is how long the government will let this situation
continue before it intervenes.
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