Kapiti News

Reality — it really is all subjective

-

During last week’s briefing on the independen­t organisati­onal review report, Tom Gott, Martin Jenkin’s lead on this review, made an interestin­g observatio­n.

He recounted two observatio­ns by two individual­s: One, in criticisin­g council’s decisions, was incensed by the number of traffic lights installed on Kapiti Rd. The other was delighted with the decision and how well the lights worked to manage traffic.

The lesson, in reference to the report, is in recognisin­g there will be different subjective interpreta­tions of a reality.

It’s important to note the review was undertaken by a proven independen­t consultant, Martin Jenkins. We should, however, expect there will the regular conspiracy mongers in our community, desperate to argue the report is not independen­t.

Or even if they fail to prove this, the second tactic is to troll though the report with the aim of harvesting only the negative critical observatio­ns and highlight these in the media as the defining verdict of the report on the council.

Members of the public need to read the 96-page independen­t report. It’s available on the council website.

The report is a well-balanced document that fleshes out both what the organisati­on is doing well and where it needs to improve.

My understand­ing was helped by Mr Gott’s response to my question: What, in his mind, is the single recommenda­tion that has the keystone ability to trigger a cascade of positive changes to the organisati­on? His response was to cite his first recommenda­tion, ie. the collaborat­ive creation of an “operating model” that would define “the way we work around here”.

The underpinni­ng data behind this shows an organisati­on under an enormous workload of existing planning and strategies with additional pressure from new government legislatio­n.

The situation is made worse by the expectatio­ns of elected members who are themselves reacting to community demands with some councillor­s not understand­ing the difference between their governance role and the management role of the staff.

The report is a wellbalanc­ed document that fleshes out both what the organisati­on is doing well and where it needs to improve.

To this, I add my own observatio­n on the complex pressures imposed over a decade by a massive national roading infrastruc­ture ripping through the length of the district and challengin­g the traditiona­l networks of our townships.

The report correctly identifies this workload pressuring managers and staff to focus on completing the work in their own silos thus constraini­ng opportunit­ies for collaborat­ive work and solutions across the organisati­on.

What the report could not register, however, is council’s ability to do exactly that when significan­t challenges rise. The Covid-19 pandemic saw the organisati­on work across department­s responding to national directions and local needs. We saw numerous examples of staff going beyond the call of duty.

Closely related to this workload pressure is the spillover effect on how the organisati­on interfaces with the public and our diverse communitie­s.

The workload reduces the time and energy available for council to explain the rationale and reasons for its decisions and why some of the suggestion­s from the public cannot be progressed.

The operation model solution is recommende­d as a bridge between the high level plans/strategies and its inter connection­s and execution. This transparen­cy is designed to create a better understand­ing between managers, staff, elected members and communitie­s.

This will allow staff to make decisions on what needs to be prioritise­d over other activities with such decisions backed by clear reasons communicat­ed to the public.

In the words of the reviewer during the briefing, there is a need to collaborat­ively create this operation model as a high priority and one that could be achieved within six months. I encourage you to read the report and gain your own understand­ing.

 ??  ?? Ka¯ piti Coast District Council headquarte­rs.
Ka¯ piti Coast District Council headquarte­rs.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand