Govt responds to Three Waters working group

Ministers Grant Robertson and Nanaia Mahuta are giving their official response to the three waters working group.

Council ownership of water entities has been confirmed by the Government as part of the Three Waters Reform.

The majority of the 47 recommendations from the Three Waters Working Group have been accepted by the Government.

Three Waters Reform will see the country's 67 council-owned and managed water service providers combined into four publicly owned entities.

There were concerns around ownership and privatisation, which lead the working group to recommend a shareholder model, where councils' would get one share per 50,000 people.

Under this model Tauranga City Council, with a population of 155,200 will get four shares in Entity B and the Western Bay of Plenty District Council will get two shares because of its population of 58,100.

'Fundamentally these reforms are about delivering clean and safe drinking water at an affordable price for New Zealanders. Without reform, households are facing water costs of up to $9,000 per year, or the prospect of services that fail to meet their needs,” says Infrastructure Minister Grant Robertson.

'Everyone accepts the need for change. You only have to look at the number of burst pipes, boil water notices and the volume of sewerage spewing into our harbours to see we can't carry on as we are and that our water infrastructure is crumbling.

'At the heart of councils' concerns have been the issues of ownership and voice, By accepting the majority of the recommendations made by the independent Working Group on Representation, including a shareholding plan, we have listened to these concerns and modified our proposals accordingly,” he says.

Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta says: 'The working group was tasked with addressing the issues of most concern to the sector and Cabinet has agreed to the majority of their recommendations that ensure councils, iwi and communities have a strong voice in the new entities”.

''I acknowledge the anxiety around change, but ratepayers and local communities cannot keep paying more and more for services that have been underinvested in for too long, and now put their health at risk.

'That's why the Government has extensively engaged with local government, iwi and hapū, the water industry for more than four years to understand the case for change and assess the best option for reform.”

'This is the best option to deliver the clean, safe and affordable drinking water New Zealanders deserve while also retaining community ownership and protecting against future privatisation,” she says.

In line with the working group's recommendations the Government will:

  • Provide for a public shareholding structure that makes community ownership clear, with shares allocated to councils reflective of the size of their communities (one share per 50,000 people).
  • Further strengthen and clarify the role of the Regional Representative Group; with joint oversight from local councils and mana whenua to ensure community voice and provide tighter accountability from each water services entity board.
  • Maintain that board members are to be appointed based on skills and competency;
  • Strengthen connections to smaller communities including through local sub-committees feeding into the Regional Representative Group, to ensure all communities' voices are considered as part of investment prioritisation.
  • Recognise and embrace Te Mana o te Wai – the health and wellbeing of our waterways and waterbodies – as a korowai, or principle, that applies across the water services framework.

'The Regional Representative Group is not about ownership but rather ensuring community inclusion and voices are heard, securing a kaitiaki or guardianship role for the protection of our environment, and maintaining the focus on the long-term planning required for national infrastructure,” says Mahuta.

'It's a model that makes sense and is already working well.

'Without the changes we are making all the evidence points to a legacy of broken pipes, outdated sewage plants, and potential repeats of the tragic Havelock North gastroenteritis outbreak that killed four people and made thousands sick. This should not be the case in a first-world country,” she says.

You may also like....

14 comments

3 waters

Posted on 29-04-2022 11:19 | By dumbkof2

as usual no amount of public consultation will make one ioto of difference to mahuta and her cronies. this is what you are going to get wether you like it or not. amazing one person can dictate what the whole country is going to get


Not about water.

Posted on 29-04-2022 11:27 | By jed

I predict there will be civil disobedience not seen since the Springbok tour.


Yet ANOTHER Labour policy failure

Posted on 29-04-2022 11:32 | By TheCameltoeKid

This continual string of Labour policy failures will only end when they're finally voted out. I was dancing on the table when Clark got so resoundingly rolled by John Key. I thought "YAY! That's the last well see of the Labour Party for a long, long time." Yet here we go again with yet another Labour trainwreck in progress and this 3 Waters policy just simply another nail in this Government's coffin. If Ardern had any comprehension about the public opposition to this and other classic examples for policy failures by her Government she should call an election. Yet we all know that this will never happen because she wants to impose these policies that were never part of their campaign. This Government has decided its Citizens. Pure and simple. Thanks Winston!


The Elephant

Posted on 29-04-2022 11:41 | By Kancho

Still in the room even if a better share of assets ownership of ratepayers who paid for the infrastructure. Governance by merit and like the governance of the country by proportional representation not race . The fact that the labour government has talked to Maori for years a out this it not the public / electorate shows intent to push this through under the radar. This will be a major contention in the next election along with seperatism of Health and other areas of public services and if Rotorua and Coffey has its way local government too.


Rubbish ideas

Posted on 29-04-2022 12:23 | By an_alias

Slap lipstick on a pig, its still PIG my friend. You have not made any changes to the power grab you are after. Total control is all you are after just like health.


What an arrogant bunch of

Posted on 29-04-2022 12:46 | By If only

twats !. They have only listened to the bunch of puppets who supported this in the first place (independent group I dont think !) & made tweaks to soothe them.


We should all be grateful

Posted on 29-04-2022 13:49 | By R. Bell

for a democratically elected government that is prepared and willing to listen to peoples concerns. Bring on the Three Waters program and then we can all ( well almost all) settle down and enjoy a better future of clean water for all. Can't wait to see the ' civil disobedience" by our resident old fogies. Should be a sight to behold.


Elected

Posted on 29-04-2022 14:34 | By Kancho

But no mandate only secretive manoeuvring. We shall see if the government get to return after the election after voters maybe get an understanding of what is happening. There are always options to improve water and it's about financing projects. That ratepayers can't afford much more means our taxes should be employed that doesn't mean creating a multilayered bureacracy. I note R Bell up to the usual tossing slurs insults quite risible and peurile because people don't agree with him.


water

Posted on 29-04-2022 15:28 | By dumbkof2

r bell yes they sure do listen to the people. trouble is they still do exactly what they want to do. just all smoke and fog. can;t see a thing


@R.Bell

Posted on 30-04-2022 10:15 | By Let's get real

Interesting that you should use the words "democratically elected"... You do understand how important those words are then. However, I tend to believe that the referendum on Cannabis that was tagged onto the election papers at their first entry onto the stage 5 years ago showed the true nature of NZ politics and the character of some of their strongest supporters.


3 waters...

Posted on 30-04-2022 10:21 | By morepork

... is part of the larger He Puapua plan that must be stopped. After the fiasco in Rotorua, where votes did not have equal value, was blocked, there is a general awakening of the population and people are starting to realize that the Maori Party is determined to replace Democracy with tikanga. Labour has been frantically back-pedalling and distancing themselves from the proposals, but the cat is out of the bag and it is clear what the intention is. There won't need to be civil disobedience by old fogeys or anyone else. We'll simply change the Government and revoke the legislation. Rawiri Waititi may not want Democracy, but the rest of the population does and they are starting to insist on it.


Sometimes the truth

Posted on 01-05-2022 09:27 | By R. Bell

really hurts. Poor old kancho gets all upset when reference is made to the ridiculous prediction by jed. As for water quality, under your model it has deteriorated to a point where peoples lives are literately in danger in some parts of NZ. And no it can't be fixed by throwing good money after bad. L.g.r you wrongly assume that anyone who supports the ruling government also supports the use of cannabis. If you also believe that cannabis use should not be debated, then you reside in cuckoo land. Morepork, your obsession with the discussion document He Puapua is quite pathetic. The council in Rotorua has a unique problem to solve. The Maori party has a right to its views, but must know they can never replace "democracy with tikanga" I believe the problem is in attitude rather than statistics. Intransigent Pakeha versus determined Maori. Time will tell.


Democracy ????????????

Posted on 01-05-2022 10:57 | By crazyhorse

Lol, anyone here except Robby Bell thinks this is democracy needs their head read, in Rotorua, they are looking at a Maori vote being with 2.6 against a single vote for a single non-Maori, the commissioners in Tauranga are leaning heavily towards Maori co-governance and the new 3 waters contains nothing new, in fact, if read carefully more race-based than the first draft, this means there are still four layers of bureaucracy between you and the new water entities, and the representative groups remain 50-50 co-governed between iwi and councils, the truth is, is it actually worth voting at any level in NZ? the question is, does your vote actually count for something? or only if it suits the 15 strong Labour Maori caucus?


Discussion document?

Posted on 06-05-2022 14:11 | By crazyhorse

Robby Bell should be in the Maori party/Labour party, He Puapua is being introduced into NZ as I write, and has been since Labour came into power, without Winston NZ First, who they actually hid this 'discussion document from! co-governanace in councils, 3 waters, Maori health authority and a separate legal system being talked about at this very moment, anybody telling you He Puapua is a discussion document is telling you a lie!


Leave a Comment


You must be logged in to make a comment.