The New Zealand Herald

Families ‘repossess’ college

Claimants plan new school for Ma¯ ori on Hato Petera site

- Simon Collins

Teducation wo Ma¯ori families whose ancestors lived around the site of Northcote’s Hato Petera College 170 years ago have “repossesse­d” the land.

Kaitaia-based Kotahitang­a Aotearoa Movement leader Reti Hohaia Netana Boynton said the group, representi­ng the Peters and Turoa families from the Nga¯ti Paoa iwi, planned to reopen a school for Ma¯ori on the site in line with an original land grant by Governor George Grey to the Catholic Church in 1850.

The Church has asked Education Minister Chris Hipkins to cancel the integratio­n agreement under which it operated a Ma¯ori college on the site after the roll dropped this year to just one student.

Hipkins issued an interim decision in June to close the school but gave the commission­er, Lex Hamill, 28 days to respond to the decision.

That deadline expired in July but a spokeswoma­n said Hipkins was still consulting on the issue and would now make a decision “at the end of this month or early next month”.

The issue is politicall­y delicate given the large Ma¯ori caucuses in the governing Labour and NZ First Parties, although Boynton said his Peters family was not related to Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters.

He said his wife, Lisa Peters-Popata, was descended from a Peters family that lived in Raleigh Rd, Northcote, in 1923.

Nga¯ti Paoa iwi chairman Gary Thompson said Boynton’s group did not represent the whole iwi.

“He represents those two families,” he said.

Thompson, a former Hato Petera house parent, has told Hipkins and the Catholic Church that the iwi wants to be involved in any decision about the school, but said he had not heard from Hipkins.

Catholic Church spokeswoma­n Lyndsay Freer said the Church had not tried to remove Boynton’s group.

“We understand the school is dealing with it,” she said. “People have the right to protest.”

But Boynton said the school had closed and there was no one on site except his group, which he said was “about 15 of us”.

Posts on his Facebook page show his group pulling sheets of wood off the windows and walls of the college, exposing what appear to be undamaged walls underneath.

“There was no reason to cover them, it’s actually a big cover-up,” he said.

He said his group had access to the college marae, but was using a public toilet in the nearby Northcote shops and asking friends in the area for use of their showers.

He said he knew Associate Education Minister Kelvin Davis, whose Te Tai Tokerau electorate includes Northcote, but he had not had contact with Davis over the repossessi­on.

 ?? Photo / Brian Platt ?? Lawrence Peters Rahipere (left), Dre Peters Rahipere and Reti Boynton, whose families lived near the site 170 years ago.
Photo / Brian Platt Lawrence Peters Rahipere (left), Dre Peters Rahipere and Reti Boynton, whose families lived near the site 170 years ago.

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