Nelson Mail

O’Neill-Stevens wants to be ‘dynamic’ leader

- Skara Bohny

Rohan O’Neill-Stevens says Nelson needs new, dynamic leadership – and that’s what he would deliver if elected as mayor come election day.

‘‘Nelsonians are ready for something different, and there’s a growing acceptance that actually the past decades, and the way we’ve approached council projects and the politics surroundin­g them hasn’t been as constructi­ve as it could have been.’’

O’Neill-Stevens, running for both the mayoralty and a spot on the council, said his decision to run for both comes down to his desire to serve the city taking precedence over what role he takes in that service.

He said he expected one of the biggest challenges for the council and the community in the coming years would be change.

‘‘We still don’t know what scale yet, but we’ll have local government reform at least, Three Waters, but also a new mayor, new council, and a new chief executive. It’s not unpreceden­ted, but does provide challenges – and it adds an opportunit­y to move on from some of the mistakes of the past.’’

He said he was getting ‘‘the age question’’ less and less as time went on and people got the chance to see him in action.

‘‘The real question is what kind of experience you need in leadership, because there’s no uniform experience,’’ he said. ‘‘We’ve got 52,000 people living in our city – we have 52,000 different experience­s. We need someone who can bring them together.’’ His goals included amending planning rules to enable more housing density around key services and centres, and locking in the public transport gains in train – both in terms of increased, improved bus services and the new bus hub.

He was also keen to deliver a community-wide climate action plan, highlighte­d by the recent severe weather event and ensuing floods and landslides.

‘‘The rebuild itself is one opportunit­y to build back better,’’ he said. ‘‘I’ve got ideas, but I think it’s more important that it’s a community conversati­on.’’

He remained concerned about the site of the new library project, something he had ‘‘consistent­ly raised concerns about’’.

‘‘We went out with an eyewaterin­g price tag without first saying what’s going into it.’’

Another eye-watering bill coming up for the council was water infrastruc­ture renewals, he said, which was why he agreed that the case for reforming Three Waters services had been made, though he was not completely sold on the current proposal.

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