Tauranga City Council's four commissioners have been reappointed and will remain until the election in two years' time.
Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta announced the reappointment of commission chair Anne Tolley and commissioners Bill Wasley, Stephen Selwood and Shadrach Rolleston today.
'As the council continues to face substantial infrastructure and funding challenges, it is clear that ensuring certainty for Tauranga is more important than ever,” says Mahuta.
'The reappointment of the current Tauranga commissioners will provide crucial continuity and stability as they work across the city and wider Bay of Plenty region.”
Selwood told Local Democracy Reporting he is 'really pleased” to have been reappointed for the extended term.
He says this will enable continuity in the work programme that the commissioners have put in place over the last 14 months.
When asked what goals he was hoping to achieve, Selwood says, they have a 'wide range of initiatives under way”.
'Priorities include addressing the city's affordable housing supply needs, catching up on the deficit in infrastructure, CBD development and community facilities,” he says.
'We will now be able to see many of these initiatives through to fruition and set up a strong platform for the newly elected council in 2024.”
Wasley says it will be 'great to continue working with his fellow commissioners, that have a range of complementary skills and experience”.
His goals include continuing to have a council that was outwardly people focussed and the development of community partnerships to assist with delivery of various initiatives.
Walsey also wants to see: 'A increased focus on environmental sustainability including greening of the city and completion of the 2023/24 long-term Plan”.
Rolleston agrees that the commission had 'orientated the council as an organisation to be more outward focused and engaged with its community”.
He says they have delivered an 'ambitious” long-term plan and restored positive working relationships with community stakeholder organisations.
Tolley lists some achievements as an increased focus on quality urban design and maintaining excellent project management and procurement.
As well as bringing the infrastructure impediments for housing and transport to the forefront of discussions with central government.
Tauranga City Council chief executive Marty Grenfell. Supplied image.
Tauranga City Council chief executive Marty Grenfell says the reappointment will provide the governance stability and continuity required to implement key elements of the city's workplan.
'The work the commissioners have done in the last 14 months has helped restore confidence in the council's governance, after an extended period of dysfunction,” he says.
'They bring a high level of professionalism to their roles and their complementary skills and experience have supported the council management team and staff in bringing together the range of initiatives required to begin addressing the city's housing supply issues, urgent infrastructure needs and inadequate community facilities.”
The commission's term will allow them to deliver the 2024-34 long-term plan and tackle crucial issues affecting the availability of land for housing and commercial development, says Grenfell.
'Tauranga's historic underinvestment in infrastructure is responsible for many of the problems we face today.
'The commissioners have quickly come to grips with the city's issues and their openness to engaging with a wide cross-section of the community has ensured a high level of support for measures which elected councils have struggled with in the past,” he says.
Western Bay of Plenty District mayor Garry Webber told Local Democracy Reporting extension of the commissioners' term was appropriate in the short term to the enable the long-term plan to be embedded.
'Getting through one more long-term planning cycle, is critical for the future of the city and the wider Western Bay region,” he says.
Western Bay of Plenty District mayor Garry Webber. Photo: John Borren/SunLive.
Webber says the SmartGrowth strategy that was formed in the mid-2000s was now being taken into reality under the commissioners.
'They have a commitment to the wider strategy, the SmartGrowth strategy,” he says.
'To getting the congestion under control, getting the housing opportunities moving forward quickly rather than, calling for more reports, which we saw a lot of prior to the commissioners coming in place.”
Webber says the working relationship was better with the commissioners than it had been with previous councils.
SmartGrowth was formed in 2004 to provide a unified direction for the Western Bay of Plenty. It is a collaboration between Tauranga City Council, Western Bay of Plenty District Council, Bay of Plenty Regional Council, tangata whenua and other key organisations.
Webber says: 'a democratically elected council should return in the mid-term”.
Local Government New Zealand president Stuart Crosby. Photo: Supplied.
Local Government New Zealand president Stuart Crosby says LGNZ disagreed with the extension of the commissioners over an elected council.
'Now the decision has been made to retain a commission, it makes sense that the current commissioners are retained,” he says.
The commission was appointed by Mahuta following an independent review in November 2020 which identified significant governance problems.
In March 2022, the minister announced she was extending the commissions term past October, when the election would have occurred.
The commissioners have been in place since February 2021 and will remain until July 2024 when elections occur.
Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.
10 comments
The only certainty
Posted on 22-04-2022 17:45 | By Johnney
Mania Mahuta wants is for this mob to vote and support her 3 waters. I say they need to abstain due to conflict of interest.
Disgraceful
Posted on 22-04-2022 18:02 | By Let's get real
Consultation with the ratepayers should be through referenda, which could easily be done reasonably safely online through their website. The decision to build an enormous monument to their dictatorship is appalling and should definitely be put to ratepayer decision through ballot. If it can work in Switzerland just what are they concerned about. I guess those that pay the bills are really being consulted properly. How difficult is it to ask ratepayers "Do you want a Museum..?" "Do you want more public buildings...?" "Do you want to pay an extra $4 a week rates grab...?"
The Struggle Is Real . . . Hmmm
Posted on 22-04-2022 18:25 | By Yadick
I'm sure the Commissioners struggle with inflation will be as real as everyone else's. I just hope they can afford to pay their bills and eat. Actually what I really hope for is that they're going to work hard and honestly for the money they're supposed to be earning . . . There's a major difference between earning and payed.
Corrupt
Posted on 22-04-2022 19:36 | By jed
Some locals will be delighted with the boost to their businesses .
3 waters
Posted on 23-04-2022 06:54 | By wilton4@xtra.co.nz
only so nania mahuta can get her three waters see the our rates sky this year
Illegal
Posted on 23-04-2022 09:10 | By Slim Shady
"ensure certainty"?! Meaningless Soviet speak to justify illegality. Even the Russians get to vote for Putin or Putin.
Reappointment.
Posted on 23-04-2022 14:09 | By morepork
To "ensure certainty" you understand... ensure certainty of WHAT, exactly? Continued destruction of our Democracy? Implementation of plans that the people of Tauranga had no say in? Mahuta took "independent advice" and decided to extend the Commissioners. They needed more time. It used to be called "writing yourself a blank cheque", but now it is "ensuring certainty"...
pay
Posted on 23-04-2022 20:17 | By dumbkof2
oh goody says tolley. here comes my 3/4 million pay day
certanty
Posted on 24-04-2022 11:02 | By dumbkof2
the only thing certain about this is they will be getting paid to do what mahuta says
Willie Jackson
Posted on 24-04-2022 14:05 | By Slim Shady
Willie says democracy has changed. It certainly has Willie. It’s gone.
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