The New Zealand Herald

Goff promises crackdown

If you go out to dinner, it’s not over a $500 bottle of champagne, mayor warns

- Bernard Orsman

Auckland Mayor Phil Goff has revealed details about a crackdown on travel, hospitalit­y and gifts after the council’s promotion agency reported a 43 per cent jump in travel costs to more than $900,000 over two years.

Goff is considerin­g imposing the same rules on council officers that apply to central government, which last week showed Trade Minister Todd McClay and NZ First leader Winston Peters tried to put aside their trade difference­s over foie gras and snails at a bistro in Paris.

The details of Goff’s policy on “sensitive spending”, flagged in December and still being worked on, could include elected representa­tives and officers having to release details of credit-card spending, including hotel, meal and entertainm­ent costs, he said.

“I want to have safeguards in there so if you go out to dinner, it’s not over a $500 bottle of champagne covered by the ratepayer,” said Goff.

The group-wide policy would set a high standard and apply to council officers and elected representa­tives because the money has the same source, he said.

Goff was concerned at a 43 per cent rise in staff travel costs over two years at Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Developmen­t (Ateed), saying he had received an assurance from the agency that there were robust business cases and spending was appropriat­e in each case.

Figures show Ateed staff travel rose over two years — from $649,108 to $926,606 in flights, accommodat­ion and expenses — prompting Goff to remind Ateed bosses to show constraint and a responsibl­e approach to spending on travel.

The $926,606 figure includes $134,000 in costs for World Masters Games Ltd, a subsidiary of Ateed set up to manage this year’s World Masters Games in Auckland. An Ateed spokesman said the games objective is to deliver $30.8 million of economic benefit for Auckland.

The figures for previous years also included costs from World Masters Games Ltd.

The figures, released on the Ateed website, show the agency spent $100,000 on chief executive Brett O’Riley’s internatio­nal travel, hotels and expenses in the 2015 and 2016 calendar years, including back-toback trips to China in April and July last year. He made six overseas trips in 2015 and seven last year.

In a statement released last night, Ateed chairman David McConnell said staff undertake travel as part of work delivering five key priority areas on behalf of council — building a culture of innovation and entreprene­urship; attracting business and investment; growing and attracting skilled talent; growing the visitor economy; and building Auckland’s brand and identity.

“To achieve Ateed’s publicly stated targets, agreed by council through the organisati­on’s Statement of Intent, staff are often required to travel offshore to attract visitors, direct investment and smart jobs to Auckland,” McConnell said.

“This travel is planned for through Ateed’s annual budgeting process. Equivalent agencies in other cities around the world undertake this sort of activity routinely.”

McConnell said it would be difficult for Ateed to achieve the desired economic transforma­tion for Auckland without specialist staff members travelling internatio­nally.

All internatio­nal travel requires a robust business case signed off in advance, in accordance with council policy, he said.

O’Riley resigned from the top role on February 1, which pays between $380,000 and $390,000, but is staying on until September 1.

At the time, O’Riley said it had always been his intention to stand down after five years in the job and his decision was not influenced by Goff becoming the new mayor.

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