15:25:06 Monday 31 March 2025

Iwi representatives welcomed to council committees

Tauranga Mayor Mahé Drysdale (left) with the new tangata whenua representatives Rohario Murray, Jacqui Rolleston-Steed and Arthur Flintoff. Photo / Supplied

Three iwi representatives who will sit on Tauranga City Council committees have been welcomed to their roles.

Late last year, elected members voted to reinstate tangata whenua representatives and their voting rights to the council’s three committees.

A pōwhiri was held for Arthur Flintoff, Rohario Murray and Jacqui Rolleston-Steed at Wairoa Marae on Wednesday as part of the council’s tangata whenua committee meeting.

Environmental planner Flintoff will join the city future committee. He is a board member of Ara Rau Tangata and was a Smartgrowth adviser for four years.

Lawyer Rohario Murray was appointed to the audit and risk committee. She was on the council’s strategy, finance and risk committee from February 2021 until May 2024.

Rolleston-Steed joins the city delivery committee. She is the director of the Bay of Plenty Regional Public Service Commission and worked at Bay of Plenty Regional Council for 22 years.

The tangata whenua representatives would be paid $1085 a meeting that included any preparation needed and $542 for a workshop or “approved duties”.

Tauranga Mayor Mahé Drysdale: “We will make better decisions for the city.” Photo / Supplied
Tauranga Mayor Mahé Drysdale: “We will make better decisions for the city.” Photo / Supplied

Mayor Mahé Drysdale said the councillors involved in the selection process were impressed with the quality of the candidates.

The skills and knowledge the iwi representatives would bring would be a benefit for Tauranga, he said during Wednesday’s meeting.

“We will make better decisions for the city.”

Drysdale said it was a pleasure to welcome them to the team.

“Thank you for putting your hand up, picking up the tea towel and serving your community.”

The relationships the council was building with Tauranga iwi and hapū were fantastic, he said.

“We want to work with anyone that wants to make our city better. We’re very into working in partnership to achieve our goals.”

The request to reinstate tangata whenua representatives to council committees was made by Te Rangapū Mana Whenua o Tauranga Moana, a collective that represents the 17 iwi and hapū in Tauranga.

Iwi representatives had been appointed to council committees since 2016 and were given voting rights in 2020.

Te Rangapū Mana Whenua o Tauranga 
Moana chairwoman Matire Duncan. Photo / Alisha Evans
Te Rangapū Mana Whenua o Tauranga Moana chairwoman Matire Duncan. Photo / Alisha Evans

At December’s meeting, Te Rangapū chairwoman Matire Duncan said tangata whenua representation was a legal requirement under Te Tiriti o Waitangi and the Local Government and Resource Management Acts, not preferential treatment.

“It reflects a commitment to shared decision-making and inclusivity, which are vital for our community’s future.”

Last week, Tauranga MP Sam Uffindell came under fire from Duncan for his proposed equal voting rights bill.

Uffindell said the draft bill was intended to stop any move away from the principle of equal suffrage where each person got an equal say in electing people.

Duncan said the bill risked undermining the Crown’s obligations under Te Tiriti o Waitangi.

It appeared to be a reaction to councils granting tangata whenua representatives full voting rights on committees, she said.

“This bill misrepresents Māori representation mechanisms as special rights rather than corrective measures to address the ongoing effects of colonisation and ensure meaningful partnership between the Crown and tangata whenua.”

 

 

Uffindell said he disagreed with giving voting rights to any unelected members on council committees, whether on “racial lines” or “expertise lines”.

“At a higher level, I believe in equal suffrage and … to be on a local council, you need to be elected to be on that local council.”

The tangata whenua representatives will join their committees from Monday.

- LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

 

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

11 comments

Democracy

Posted on 28-03-2025 10:21 | By rogue

In a " democracy " this is something that should probably be decided by the people, not dictated to voters.


More cost

Posted on 28-03-2025 11:19 | By FRANKS

to ratepayers.......so where are the savings coming from?????


How about you ask the

Posted on 28-03-2025 11:24 | By an_alias

How about you ask the rate payers before you place un-elected people onto decision making.
You have placed people there that have a say on how our taxes are paid without anyone being accountable to the rate payers.
I'm just appalled!


Hmmm

Posted on 28-03-2025 12:24 | By Let's get real

Well qualified people, fantastic.
HOWEVER, unelected...
I have absolutely no problem with advisory members, but I baulk at having unelected representation with voting rights.
I would have actually voted for any of these people in the last council elections (ahead of our current representative) so in my mind, this is an excuse to load committees with single interest individuals, as I have said in the past "through the backdoor".
We have a Maori ward and a democratically elected Maori councillor, so why should we accept these appointments without challenge. It might very well load decision making and significantly alter the outcome of contentious issues.
IT'S WRONG


Undemocratic

Posted on 28-03-2025 13:52 | By Fatjak

No one should be allowed to sit on a council committee unless they have been democratically elected by the people. This is so wrong.
They also get paid and get voting rights.
Absolutely ridiculous.
Why do we have elections if this is allowed to happen!!!!!


Maori Representative

Posted on 28-03-2025 14:21 | By davidt5

Can I put my hand up to get on to this gravy train? It is much more than my fortnightly payment of the pension.
Now in future we can load unelected people on to committees who have been co-opted for their biased opinions. With the right stacking we can get any motion pushed through the council.
Wow the anti fluoride gang will just love this opportunity.
One person - one vote. Three persons - no votes. How come?


Use democracy to get rid of the un-democratic

Posted on 28-03-2025 14:31 | By Jules L

All of those councilors (and the mayor) who created this breach of democracy, by bringing in un-elected people with voting rights, clearly need to be taught a lesson about how democracy works at the next election. When the next election comes, don't vote for the the councilors (and the mayor) who agreed to this un-democratic sham.


Costly

Posted on 28-03-2025 19:14 | By Kancho

Indeed more cost for what another opinion and when Mahe says “We will make better decisions for the city" I'm sorry so far I haven't seen anything that would fit this claim so have no faith in the extra costs for that another opinion . When council goes into restructuring and cancelling unnecessary expenditure on unaffordable projects. So convince me that council will actually grasp the nettle. So far this is yet another cost and another opinion to do what ? . I won't hold my breath as I expect we will just get more of the same . Ironically pay for this


How

Posted on 29-03-2025 14:50 | By Accountable

Quote Mahe Drysdale :-
"The skills and knowledge the iwi representatives would bring would be a benefit for Tauranga, he said during Wednesday’s meeting."
“We will make better decisions for the city.”
Can Mayor Drysdale give to us all some tangible evidence of what he sees as benefits for Tauranga and why does he believe the councilors will make better decisions because of the inclusions of these particular people chosen by the elected members because of their particular race rather than their ability to stand and be elected in a democratic election?


Shame on Tauranga City Councillors

Posted on 30-03-2025 10:02 | By JanGyenge

Shame on Tauranga City Councillors

No Democracy No Rates


So...under the Treaty of Waitangi......

Posted on 30-03-2025 22:15 | By groutby

.......all Maori were given and accepted absolute EQUAL rights and obligations as all others in the country at the time and into the future.....I did not see any clause in the document suggesting this will be the 'living' document some wish to believe it is....
I do not imagine 'equal' rights include being given voting rights based on race (tenuous as it is) is an adequate reason to allow the free and democratic rights to be overridden....
So, I also ask for Drysdale or indeed any of the councillors to reply to the question By Accountable as to the tangible benefit for all ratepayers and the City for having these non elected people added to their annual costs at the whim of those supposedly working for the benefit of the ratepayer....we await a reply.....


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