Taranaki Daily News

People focus possible for marae fund

- Craig Ashworth Local Democracy Reporting

New Plymouth’s fund to assist marae may shift focus towards developing people, rather than only buildings.

Each year New Plymouth District Council allocates $200,000 to its Marae Developmen­t Fund, with just over half of that used to insure the district’s marae.

Criteria for the rest of the spend focus on physical buildings and facilities, similar to funding available for community halls.

The fund is due for review next year and the council’s kaitakawae­nga (iwi liaison lead) Aroha Chamberlai­n told the iwi liaison committee Te Huinga Taumatua of a growing call for nonphysica­l developmen­t.

Chamberlai­n said the existing focus on buildings was understand­able ‘‘but we’re getting more whānau talk to us about increasing capacity and capability of the people within the marae.’’

Her report said marae would not exist without the people that belong to and use them. ‘‘The social and cultural features of marae and its use for the revitalisa­tion of te reo and tikanga and the transmissi­on of mātauranga are not recognised through the grant criteria.’’

A newly establishe­d grant – Whanake – has a wider focus and is available to community groups providing activities, programmes or services that help meet aspiration­s of whānau, hapū and iwi.

Chamberlai­n said Whanake would probably meet some of the demand, but council officers would also consider building human capacity when reviewing the Marae Developmen­t Fund in 2023.

Te Huinga Taumatua recommende­d accepting applicatio­ns to the 2022-23 fund from Urenui and Owae marae.

Urenui Pā trustees have a multi-year plan to renovate and extend existing whare and then build a new, larger wharenui by 2025.

Longer term plans for the Pā include building papakāinga housing.

Needing $150,000 to complete the first phase of the Urenui Pā developmen­t, the trustees applied for $50,000 from the council fund – their first applicatio­n for 20 years.

Manukorihi Pā (Owae marae) is also in the middle of a major redevelopm­ent including the building of a new wharekai, and Te Huinga Taumatua recommende­d the granting of $83,600 to meet inflation-escalated project costs to complete the build.

In previous years Manukorihi has received a further $80,000 from the fund – mostly to restore the roof of the wharenui Te Ikaroa a Māui.

A surplus of $40,000 from the 2021-22 year meant both applicatio­ns could be fully granted.

– Public Interest Journalism funded through

NZ On Air

 ?? ?? Renovating Mana Tamariki - a rare raupā whare protected within a more modern shell - was first priority in the Urenui Pā developmen­t.
Renovating Mana Tamariki - a rare raupā whare protected within a more modern shell - was first priority in the Urenui Pā developmen­t.

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