As the city of Tauranga prepares to elect a new Mayor and Council after three and a half years being run by government-appointed Commissioners, the case for replacing the Wellington City Council with Commissioners strengthens.
The
Wellington City Council has been dysfunctional for years, long before the
current Mayor took office. However, the situation has worsened significantly during
her tenure to the extent it is now almost impossible to see the current crop of
Councillors being able to resolve the massive issues confronting the capital
city.
The
shocking state of Wellington’s water supply, with about 40% of the city’s water
being wasted through leaking pipes, has led to derisory headlines around the
country. Savage restrictions imposed on residents to conserve water over the
summer period have only just been lifted this week, but the Council-controlled
company, Wellington Water, which supposedly runs the system, is giving no
guarantees things will be any better next summer. And the Council seems
powerless to do anything about it.
Central
Wellington is a maze of traffic cones as many inner-city streets are realigned
to remove parking to allow for cycleways and bus lanes. This completely
overlooks the reality that Wellington’s topography means most of the city’s streets
are already narrower than elsewhere. Making them narrower still is neither
practical, nor safe for either cyclists or motorists. But that inconvenient
reality seems to matter little to the Council with its avowedly anti-car and
pro-cycling and public transport approach.
Even
that is coming to grief. Large double decker buses rumble frequently empty
through suburban streets. Commuter bus-stops are being removed in other parts
of the city. The city’s much-maligned bus system, last reviewed in 2014, is
simply not working and needs to be overhauled. Gridlock continues to choke
access to the eastern suburbs and the airport because the Council cannot agree how
to resolve it. Central government’s plan for a second road tunnel through Mount
Victoria aroused little Council enthusiasm.
When
the pandemic struck, and the public servants went home to work, many seemingly
yet to return, Wellington’s already struggling CBD became a ghost town, leading
to the closure of long-standing, well-regarded city businesses. The subsequent
economic downturn, and more latterly the loss of around 4,500 public service
jobs because of government funding cuts, are making the situation worse.
Wellington faces severe long-term retrenchment in jobs and population.
But
the Council clings to the increasingly absurd notion that the city’s population
will increase by around 80,000 people over the next thirty years, with
absolutely no indication of where the jobs will be for this additional
population to fill. The Council’s new housing intensification strategy, based
on non-consented approval of up to six storey high Stalinist style apartment
blocks, in the inner city and alongside designated commuter routes to house
this mythical population increase simply compounds the sense of unreality. Even
more bizarrely, the Minister of Housing, who had previously appealed as a
person of sound judgment and commonsense, has approved this nonsense.
The
appalling way the Wellington City Council does things was highlighted this week
at a Council meeting discussing the city’s long-term plan. A local community
leader – allocated a mere five minutes to make his submission on an issue of
concern to his community – had the temerity to complain that the Mayor had been
working on her phone the entire time he was making his submission. In response,
the Councillor chairing the meeting, rebuked him for criticising the Mayor, terminated
his presentation, and adjourned the meeting until he left.
Not
even the worst of student politicians, which the current ruling clique on the
Council seem so reminiscent of, would behave in such an overbearing and
childish way. Their pointless and petty behaviour, coupled with an arrogant and
smug sense of their own authority, inspires no confidence at all in their
ability to prudently manage a Council operating budget of nearly $820 million a
year, and an annual capital budget of $566 million. And the Mayor’s seeming
indifference to what is happening, simply adds insult to injury.
Increasingly,
it seems wishful thinking to believe that the current Council and its
leadership will ever be capable of waking up to reality and abandoning their personal
hobbyhorses in the interests of making Wellington a functional capital city
once more. Worse for the long term, the current shambles means there is no
incentive for capable people to put their names forward for election to the
Council in the future, so the downward spiral looks set to continue at
ratepayers’ expense.
It
is going to become more and more difficult for the Minister of Local Government
to stand by and watch this train wreck steadily worsen. Ratepayers already face
a 16.4% increase in rates this year, with no clear indication of any
improvements in service delivery. Sooner or later the government will have to
step in and appoint high-powered Commissioners to sort out the sad mess the
capital city has become. For Wellington’s beleaguered residents, that day
cannot come quickly enough.
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