Bailout comment prompts walkout
TEMPERS flared during a Wanaka Community Board meeting yesterday, leading to a temporary halt in proceedings and community trust members walking out in protest.
The board had been meeting to decide whether to approve the conversion of a $500,000 council loan into a capital grant to the Wanaka Community Hub Trust, and whether the money should come from the town’s assets reserve fund or a small general rates rise.
Queenstown Lakes district councillor Niamh Shaw suggested a lastminute amendment which extended the interestfree loan to the hub by up to 12 months and converted it to a capital grant subject to defining community oversight, governance and equity at the sole discretion of the council.
Cr Shaw said although the community hub was presented as a community facility, the community had no equity in the building and almost no input or direction into its management.
‘‘Fundamentally the community hub trust is a charitable organisation with excellent intentions that has made some decisions and it has ended up in financial difficulty and is asking the community to bail it out.’’
Wanaka Community Hub Trust chairwoman Yeverley McCarthy yelled ‘‘that is untrue, and over the top’’, then walked out of the meeting together with several of the trustees.
Community board member Jude Battson responded that she thought the amendment was inappropriate and she was ‘‘concerned about what is going on in the background to lead to it’’.
After the meeting, Mrs McCarthy said she felt insulted and ‘‘sideswiped’’ by the comments.
‘‘For the last year we have met regularly with council representatives and provided them with a 10year review document, which they have reviewed and have come back stating that we have met every standard that they have asked of us.
‘‘Even [council community services general manager] Thunes Cloete proposed the loan become a grant at the meeting today,’’ Mrs McCarthy said.
She said it was the council which recognised the need for a community hub in Wanaka as long ago as 2004, but so far it had only granted $20,000.
The amendment passed with the support of community board chairman Barry Bruce.
Cr Shaw said that while the resolution was not the preferred option for the trust, the offer to extend the interestfree loan in order to get a better outcome for the community could not be considered as a negative.