Otago Daily Times

Major employer courted

- CHRIS MORRIS City council reporter

DUNEDIN’S GigCity status could help deliver a big win, as a major employer eyes a move south that could bring 300 jobs with it, Mayor Dave Cull says.

Mr Cull yesterday confirmed he and Dunedin City Council chief executive Dr Sue Bidrose have been in talks with the major national employer — which is yet to be named — in recent weeks about a move to Dunedin.

The organisati­on was considerin­g Dunedin for a range of reasons, but one of them was the city’s gigspeed fibre broadband infrastruc­ture, he said.

And, if confirmed, the move would deliver 300 new jobs to the city.

Mr Cull revealed the details during yesterday’s council 10year plan budget hearing, as Digital Community Trust chairman John Gallaher spelled out the need for Dunedin to use its new fibre infrastruc­ture to become a ‘‘smart city’’.

Mr Cull told the meeting he had been conscious of previous criticisms of the city’s slow response to winning the Gigatown competitio­n, but the organisati­on’s possible shift south showed the infrastruc­ture’s value.

‘‘That’s the outcome,’’ he said. Mr Cull would not be drawn on the identity of the organisati­on, or whether it was private or public, when contacted by the Otago Daily Times after yesterday’s meeting.

He was also not yet prepared to give odds on the likelihood of the organisati­on moving to Dunedin, but said the interest to date was ‘‘positive’’.

Dr Bidrose told the ODT she could not talk in detail about the ongoing talks either, but confirmed the organisati­on had approached the council seeking assurances about any move to Dunedin.

That included whether the council could help navigate a potentiall­y timeconsum­ing and expensive resource consent process.

Dr Bidrose said the council had given an assurance it would roll out its ‘‘red carpet’’ treatment to help the organisati­on.

Earlier, Mr Gallaher told yesterday’s hearing attention was now turning to what came next, following the rollout of the city’s fibre infrastruc­ture.

The network of fibre infrastruc­ture had spread across much of the city since Dunedin won the national Gigatown competitio­n in 2014, but complaints about delayed efforts to make the most of the win had emerged too.

Mr Gallaher told councillor­s that, with the benefit of hindsight, some aspects of the network’s rollout could have been done differentl­y.

Despite that, the network now in place represente­d a ‘‘pivotal opportunit­y’’ and a chance for the city to rebrand itself as a ‘‘smart city’’, he said.

Those opportunit­ies needed to be a fundamenta­l part of the council’s 10year plan, Mr Gallaher said.

The trust was finalising a report identifyin­g those opportunit­ies, which would be given to the council in the next few weeks, he said.

Much like the arrival of electric ity, people in Dunedin were still learning what the arrival of fibre meant and the uses it could be put to, he said.

A review of Dunedin’s digital strategy, signed off in 2010, was needed, and the plan for the digital space needed to be worked into the city’s economic developmen­t strategy, he said.

‘‘We need to move on,’’ he said.

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