The New Zealand Herald

Why the ‘h’ do they bother?

Regional councils pursue trivia while environmen­t goes backwards

- Rachel Stewart on Twitter: @RFStew Rachel Stewart

I’ve long contended that some of the dullest minds in the country are sitting around local government tables making decisions much bigger than their neurons can effectivel­y process.

To be (a bit) fair, most of them are more inclined towards governance roles in regional councils. What better place to show off your lack of smarts?

I’ve a long history of defining regional councils as nothing more than enemies of the environmen­t. Yet, these are the very people tasked with looking after our environmen­tal resources. There’s a reason they removed the word “environmen­t” from their names. It was basically a lie. Accordingl­y, I’d like to see regional councils completely revamped and/ or razed to the ground.

If you think that’s extreme, it stems from years of witnessing waterways degrading on their watch. And, because they’re politicall­y top-heavy with dairy interests, they’ve almost perfected the art of pretending they’re doing something meaningful about water quality when the opposite is generally true.

So, when their wee minds get distracted from their default position of NOT working on the most important issue facing this country’s economic and environmen­tal stability — water — I get nervous. It’s like watching Donald Trump, but without the lucidity.

Heard of Orizons? Oh, I’m sorry. I left out the “H”. Horizons is the trading name of the Manawatu-Whanganui Regional Council — except currently “Whanganui” is spelled without the “h”. Confused? Let me break it down.

Despite the Whanganui River’s name being legally changed in 1991, and the district that carries its name being legally changed in 2015, Horizons would have us believe that it needs to “consult” the ratepayers over correcting a grammatica­l and a spelling error. Because, when the racist stew is boiled down, that’s what it is. A grammatica­l and spelling error.

It’s really quite something that the “h” in Whanganui is still up for debate by a council whose boundaries are defined by two river catchments.

Further to that, Horizons has voted to ask the NZ Geographic Board to go through the required process of recommendi­ng the Government to approve the name change.

So, you have to ask, why have they decided to “consult” the people, many of whom are scattered hundreds of kilometres away from the Whanganui River and district, and have no understand­ing of, or interest in, the area anyway?

The “consultati­on” is happening via their Long-Term Plan, and they’ve called for submission­s. These submission­s will generate the same stock-standard responses the whole “h” issue engendered before. The racists come out in force arguing spurious colonial ethnocentr­ic history, while the rational voices are unlikely to even play the game. Why bother?

Horizons’ chairman has been doing the media rounds saying the issue is “divisive” and the council “doesn’t want to open up old wounds”. He even claims he’s received “a number of threatenin­g letters”.

Here’s the thing. The reason I keep putting the word “consult” in quote marks is because they absolutely did not need to do it. Also, we all know that councils have the right to ignore said “consultati­on” and do whatever they want anyway. And often do. So, why are they doing it? I think it’s a mish-mash of misguided motives. Maybe it was to appease some racists around the council table. Perhaps it was a way to treat the Whanganui part of their territory as a poor second cousin, as many feel they do. Possibly, they see the spectre of public discord as fun.

A few weeks ago, this dysfunctio­n reared its ugly head when they decided to write to the conservati­on and environmen­t ministers asking for their views about trout and salmon protection.

Why? Because one of the tactics used to deflect attention away from dairy farming’s impact on water quality is to attempt to blame introduced fish species for the problem. They’ve done it before, and they despise Fish & Game for its years of effective work highlighti­ng dirty dairying and the negatives of irrigation schemes. Remember the One Plan?

The One Plan is the document the council uses to direct how natural resources are managed in the region. Fish & Game was successful­ly involved in the 2017 Environmen­t Court judgment that found Horizons was not correctly implementi­ng its own One Plan, or doing enough to keep streams and rivers clean, and incorrectl­y issuing consents for dairy farming.

Given such petty-mindedness, it’s no wonder Horizons wants to relitigate the “h” in Whanganui. It’s an “up you” to the legal name, and an attempt to hurt local iwi.

How thick — with an “h” — do they have to be?

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