Horowhenua Chronicle

Bishop eyes decades-long developmen­t strategy

Collaborat­ion and reform key to success

- Janine Baalbergen

When it comes to infrastruc­ture, the current minister in charge has his eyes set well beyond the Government’s term. Infrastruc­ture Minister Chris Bishop identified the ability to plan as a weakness that needed to be rectified, during a meeting with business leaders in Horowhenua this week.

He said that planning needed to span decades.

“One thing we do not do well is plan ahead, but we are working on a 30-year plan for infrastruc­ture with the Infrastruc­ture Commission, a body set up by the previous Labour Government with cross-party co-operation,” Bishop said.

He said the commission was an independen­t crown entity tasked with formulatin­g a credible plan with a priority list. “Infrastruc­ture is a big focus for us and yes we are looking at combined public and private partnershi­p to push some of the projects through earlier than planned.” On the O¯ taki to North of Levin highway, Bishop said: ”O¯ 2NL is an absolute bottom line commitment for us, we will build it, we will fund it ... we have an aggressive plan for roading with 14 new roads of significan­ce around the country. They save lives and unlock communitie­s.” Dubbed the minister of everything by Horowhenua Mayor Bernie Wanden, Bishop, the Minister of Housing, Minister for Infrastruc­ture, Minister Responsibl­e for RMA Reform, Minister for Sport and Recreation, Leader of the House, and Associate Minister of Finance, was in Levin to talk about aspects of his portfolio.

Wanden said he was optimistic for the future of the region now that the expressway was secured. “We are well placed to meet the challenge ahead,” he said.

Bishop commented on Horowhenua being a growing and very important region for the country.

He said the Government was doing everything possible to right the ship by controllin­g spending and debt, which is painful.

Government spending increased by 83 per cent over the past six years, he said.

“The economy hasn’t grown in the last two years. We now pay more in interest repayments than we pay for health, education and police force combined. Some of that spending was due to Covid-19 and necessary, but the Government just kept on spending.

“We are going for growth. Growth can solve most problems, at the moment we have 4 per cent each year.

“We need more nurses, policemen, teachers, midwives, correction officers, not consultant­s and contractor­s. The gravy train is over. It will take years to turn this around,” Bishop said.

“Reducing public service is a deliberate decision, there are 18,500 more back office staff that there were six years ago and we want them on the frontline. Christophe­r Luxon has said he wants this to be a government of infrastruc­ture: and that includes roads, rail, water services, and electricit­y.”

Spending is deliberate­ly conservati­ve and that will be revealed in next month’s Budget, Bishop said.

When it comes to housing he said the Government is thinking of apartments and medium density housing.

“We need to go up. Housing is too expensive to build, too expensive to develop and too expensive for people to get access to home ownership.

“We are making changes to the RMA to make it faster and cheaper to do anything. Plan changes and subdivisio­ns take too long. It takes eight years to get consents through for a windfarm and two years to build it, for example. It takes too long and costs too much.”

Consents for new infrastruc­ture are currently costing $1.3 billion a year, he said. “By the end of 2026 we will have a new RMA, which will be freedom-enhancing, based on property rights,” he said.

He gave high praise to local MP Tim Costley, who was instrument­al in getting both Bishop and the Prime Minister in Levin this week.

“He is a very vocal advocate for you and constantly pipes up in caucus.”

 ?? Photo / Vicky Timpson ?? Todd Strode-Penny, director of TSP Constructi­on who hosted the event, Minister Chris Bishop and Brendan Duffy, chair of the Horowhenua Company Ltd.
Photo / Vicky Timpson Todd Strode-Penny, director of TSP Constructi­on who hosted the event, Minister Chris Bishop and Brendan Duffy, chair of the Horowhenua Company Ltd.
 ?? ?? Chris Bishop said O2NL ¯ is an absolute bottom line for the National-led Government.
Chris Bishop said O2NL ¯ is an absolute bottom line for the National-led Government.

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