The Post

Extra tunnel problem for new mayor

- Damian George and Tom Hunt

Wellington Mayor Andy Foster is already facing his first battle with his new councillor­s, with most objecting to his push to bring forward constructi­on of an extra Mt Victoria tunnel.

Foster wants the extra tunnel – part of the $6.4 billion Let’s Get Wellington Moving (LGWM) programme – to be completed ahead of a proposed mass transit system, and plans to take his case to Transport Minister Phil Twyford.

But the new mayor would first need to gain the support of his new councillor­s, most of whom told Stuff they were in favour of retaining the current plan, which prioritise­s mass transit.

LGWM is a joint venture between Wellington City Council, Greater Wellington Regional Council, and the New Zealand Transport Agency. It features several major infrastruc­ture projects, each of which are still subject to business cases and sign-off from the three parties.

Twyford said on Monday he was open to discussing concerns about the sequencing of the 20-year programme, which has an extra Mt Victoria tunnel down for completion after 2029, along with a tunnel near the Basin Reserve.

But of the 10 councillor­s contacted by Stuff yesterday, six said they wanted mass transit between the city’s railway station and airport to remain the priority. Four could not be reached for comment.

Another, Jenny Condie, said she wanted to see business cases first but campaigned for mayor on mass transit being done first.

Councillor­s opposed to the idea were Green Party members Sarah Free and Iona Pannett, Labour Party members Teri O’Neill, Fleur Fitzsimons, and Rebecca Matthews, and independen­t candidate Jill Day.

O’Neill, a first-time councillor, said mass transit looked to be the most future-focused solution. ‘‘Andy voted for the current [LGWM] plan and I’d really like to see that rolled out.’’

Fitzsimons said Foster had no mandate to renegotiat­e the previous council’s unanimous endorsemen­t of the programme, while Day said the council needed to focus on moving ahead with the current plan.

Nicola Young did not want to comment, but noted she had voiced her support for reassessin­g the programme’s timeline.

Diane Calvert, who campaigned for bringing the tunnel project forward during her mayoral bid, and Simon Woolf both sided with Foster.

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