Hawke's Bay Today

Three Waters plan runs deep

Government ignores public opposition

- Bruce Cotterill is a company director and adviser to business leaders. He is the author of the book, The Best Leaders Don’t Shout. www.brucecotte­rill.com

Last Friday afternoon, after the deadlines for the Saturday papers and with material for the 6pm news bulletins already well planned, it came. The announceme­nt we all should have wanted to hear. Except that we didn’t.

As any seasoned politician will tell you, Friday afternoon is when you dump unpopular, controvers­ial or just plain bad news.

Despite more than 88,000 of us putting up submission­s, few of us were heard. I’m told that fewer than 400 oral submission­s were called.

So, last Friday afternoon, the updated report on the Three Waters Bill was presented by the select committee responsibl­e for considerin­g submission­s and presenting a revised document.

Just three working days later, on Wednesday evening of this week, a modified Three Waters Bill passed its second reading.

Even without knowing the contents of the revised bill, haste is something we should be concerned about. It’s a pace of activity that is usually reserved for matters that the Government wants dealt with immediatel­y; either because it is vital for the national interest or it is so unpalatabl­e that they want to shut down the debate as quickly as possible. It would seem that the latter was their only justificat­ion.

Let’s face it, this Government has been in an “inappropri­ate” hurry on Three Waters from the start. Despite the changes not yet being signed into law, they have already recruited a heap of people and leased highqualit­y and expensive office space. Every step has been action ahead of the democratic process.

And so to the modified bill. Note the word modified. Not dramatical­ly altered or materially changed. Modified because despite the more than 88,000 submission­s, the great majority of which were heavily against its proposals, there was little change to the provisions of the bill. Except for one area.

So what was modified?

For the benefit of the uninitiate­d, the Three Waters legislatio­n is about the management of freshwater, wastewater and stormwater. However, as a result of the select committee’s most recent rewrite, it’s no longer just about Three Waters. You see, they’ve added a couple of new categories. Hydro, the water that flows through New Zealand’s worldclass and sustainabl­e electricit­y system is one.

Oh, and they also added another category. Coastal. That’s right folks, the seabed and foreshore is back in play. This time, with the highly controvers­ial co-governance proposals locked in.

And finally, just for good measure, they’ve also seen fit to include, at the 11th hour, an option to include parks and reserves. Parks and reserves currently owned and operated by the ratepayers through the councils that represent them.

New Zealanders should be upset or even angry. We’re not, though. We either don’t know about the changes being proposed, don’t understand what’s going on, or don’t care. I deeply suspect that, if Kiwis understood what was happening, we would care very much.

You might think I’m exaggerati­ng for effect. But throughout this week I’ve been talking to people about it. A few of us are quite knowledgea­ble and highly exercised about what is happening. Then there are plenty of us who know something is happening with Three Waters, but don’t know the detail. And believe it or not there are a lot of people, probably those who get their news and current affairs from their favourite Facebook bubble, who have no idea it is even happening.

We should be stomping mad that neither of our top-rating TV news channels ran the story of the bill’s passing on their 6pm bulletins on Thursday evening.

This is major constituti­onal reform, involving the deliberate confiscati­on of assets from ratepayers and the councils that represent them, to a government and a policy that will be controlled by iwi-based or tribal interests. The consultati­on process has been minimal and most of us would say what little consultati­on has occurred has been ignored.

The French would have people marching in the streets and tractors blocking the freeways if this was occurring in their country. Not us. Let’s just sit back and let it happen!

I can only imagine that, like many of those I spoke to this week, we don’t really have any idea what is actually going on here. So, for those readers who are interested, here it is in a few simple sentences.

Despite not mentioning it during the 2020 election campaign, the new majority Labour government hit the ground running immediatel­y after the election and launched a plan that would see the Government taking control of the infrastruc­ture and services that deliver all three water assets – drinking water, wastewater and stormwater.

Despite the fact that, in most parts of the country, our freshwater is among the best in the world, it used a single event in Havelock North a few years ago as an example of what could occur if reform didn’t happen quickly.

The plan was accompanie­d by a very expensive and highly misleading advertisin­g campaign telling us that we would have brown sludge coming out of the taps unless the Government took control of the water assets from the councils.

Organisati­ons like the Taxpayers’ Union and Democracy NZ have funded court action which asserts that the minister and her government have acted illegally. That court action is ongoing. Farmers and business owners have banners out the length of the country asking the powers that be to “Stop 3 Waters”.

And yet, despite ever-increasing opposition from a wide cross-section of New Zealanders, the Government has pressed on with its plans. Centralisa­tion of water assets, it says, will occur, just like the already unsuccessf­ul centralisa­tion efforts in health and tertiary education.

As a result, we have the latest steps, as outlined above, that will see Three Waters expanded to Five Waters and maybe even a few parks.

So we see, finally, after all this time, what Three Waters has been about all along. It’s not about brown sludge coming out of your taps. In fact, it’s not about water at all. It’s about an asset grab of not only the water assets we thought, but also for a slice of our hydro schemes and for the highly contentiou­s foreshore and seabed. By the time the third and final reading comes around, you can bet that the country’s parkland will no longer be an option. It will be included.

Perhaps the inclusion of the foreshore and the parkland will get us animated and angry.

We should be staggered that this legislatio­n, delivering major constituti­onal change, is sleepwalki­ng its way through Parliament via an aggressive majority government, while it appears that there is nothing that opposition politician­s can do about it.

You see, unless New Zealanders do something, I’m guessing that the third and final reading will go much like the second reading this week. A few opposition politician­s putting up a brave fight against the tyrannical majority before quietly leaving the stage defeated and deflated.

By the time next year’s election campaign is run, Three Waters final reading will have been completed and this most extraordin­ary and controvers­ial series of changes will have become law. The assets will be operated by undemocrat­ic Government-appointed boards, and the councils that paid for them will be left out of pocket, and we, the people, will be one step closer to losing our collective democratic voice. Despite overwhelmi­ng opposition, Three Waters will be law.

It would be tempting to throw in the towel. And yet, despite everything that has happened, Three Waters should continue to be a central election issue in 2023. Those parties currently in opposition must run a campaign to totally repeal this legislatio­n and if elected they must do so promptly.

And we may as well brace ourselves for it now. Taking things away from people is always much harder than giving them out. Repealing this law will be messy and disruptive and difficult. But it must happen.

That’s why we have elections. When government­s become this corrupt, they and the laws they created must go.

Bruce Cotterill

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