Hawke's Bay Today

Mega housing agency announced

Housing NZ and KiwiBuild to unite in bid to fast-track urban developmen­t

-

The Government is bringing together Kiwibuild and Housing New Zealand under one mega housing authority to drive urban developmen­t, with the power to override local councils.

The Housing and Urban Developmen­t Authority (UDA) would lead the Government’s large-scale urban developmen­t projects while remaining the state landlord, Minister for Housing and Urban Developmen­t Phil Twyford said.

The authority, made up of Housing New Zealand and its developer subsidiary HLC and the Kiwibuild unit, would have wide-ranging powers to speed up developmen­t.

It will be able to override existing council designatio­ns, cut the planning and consenting process time from five years to one year, build and change infrastruc­ture, change bylaws and even reconfigur­e green spaces.

Twyford emphasised that the Government would be working alongside councils and checks and balances were in place. But he said councils would not be able to veto any proposals and public consultati­on periods would be shorter.

“There are so many things that slow down and get in the way of developmen­ts. It’s not just the planning system. Often developers have to deal with 10 or 15 local government and central government agencies, it’s a nightmare for them,” he told Newshub Nation.

“We’re creating a really joined-up, one-stop shop that can sit alongside council and unlock these big developmen­ts and allow us to crack into it at pace and scale,” he said.

“We have put checks and balances around it. They are, for example, a number of decisions will end up having to go to be signed off by the relevant Cabinet minister. The plan for a given project will be open for public submission­s.”

Twyford said no changes were planned for the current powers within the Public Works Act to be changed around compulsory acquisitio­n and it was unlikely people’s private property would be acquired for developmen­ts.

But he told Newshub: “You need to have those Public Works Act powers in your back pocket so you don’t get a single land-owner blocking large developmen­t in order to make a windfall gain.”

On the ability of the authority to acquire green spaces, Twyford said it had to have the ability to reconfigur­e them but any changes would have to be signed off by the Conservati­on Minister. Councils would be consulted over their parks.

“We recognise that the public rightly cherish open spaces and reserves,” he said.

“The authority will transform the way New Zealanders live, work and play by building communitie­s with a mix of public, affordable, and market housing, as well as the jobs, transport links, open spaces and facilities people need. It will do this at scale and pace so we can build our way out of the national housing crisis.”

Legislatio­n to establish the authority will be introduced to Parliament next year and it is expected to be up and running in early 2020. The Government has allocated $100 million to get it started.

The Employers and Manufactur­ers Associatio­n (EMA) said the approach was good to speed up brownfield­s developmen­t in cities with strong population growth.

“Many of the powers of the new authority, eg: compulsory acquisitio­n of land, already exist in the planning system but this authority has greater power and an approach that allows it to speed up decision-making on developmen­ts,” EMA chief executive Kim Campbell said.

“The authority will be able to over-

We’re creating a really joined-up, one-stop shop that can sit alongside council and unlock these big developmen­ts . . . Phil Twyford, Minister for Housing and Urban Developmen­t

ride existing planning law and consent its own plans and complete developmen­ts in shortened time periods.”

He said it would require genuine consultati­ve approach with existing communitie­s.

“If developmen­t is managed properly, people requiring affordable housing will not be displaced from their communitie­s so that fears of gentrifica­tion need not be a problem.

“We welcome this new model but its creation also highlights shortfalls in our wider resource management system, including urban planning. The rewrite of that must continue while the authority provides immediate relief to the urban housing crisis,” Campbell said.

 ?? Photo / File ?? The Government’s new Housing and Urban Developmen­t Authority will have wide-ranging powers to speed up projects, Minister for Housing and Urban Developmen­t Phil Twyford says.
Photo / File The Government’s new Housing and Urban Developmen­t Authority will have wide-ranging powers to speed up projects, Minister for Housing and Urban Developmen­t Phil Twyford says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand