Manukau and Papakura Courier

Call to finish Ota¯huhu upgrade

- STEPHEN FORBES LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER Local Democracy Reporting is Public Interest Journalism funded by NZ On Air.

Auckland Council is being asked to finish what it started after a multimilli­on-dollar upgrade of

ta¯huhu’s town centre was put on the back-burner.

The council first announced plans for the $16 million upgrade in September 2019.

It said the project would make the town centre safer and more connected and would see pathways widened, native trees planted and the installati­on of new street lighting and stormwater infrastruc­ture.

The upgrade was focused on the main street, along Great South Rd, from Princes St to Atkinson Ave and Station Rd.

However, the project was one of many postponed across the region because of a council revenue slump caused by Covid-19.

The work has stopped just after the intersecti­on of Mason Ave, Avenue Rd, and Great South Rd, and the remainder, which was due to start in July 2020, has been deferred for at least 12 months.

ta¯huhu Business Associatio­n manager Richette Rodger said instead of deferring the project, the council appeared to have forgotten about it.

‘‘It’s like the project disappeare­d and we haven’t heard anything since.’’

Rodger said the upgrade was important for ta¯huhu.

‘‘There’s no way we will be able to grow like the other town centres in south Auckland without it,’’ she said.

The council submitted a list of 73 key shovel-ready projects to the Infrastruc­ture Reference Group in April 2020, which included the town centre project. However, it did not get Government approval to receive the funding.

ta¯huhu Business Associatio­n chairman Rajesh Lal, who runs Stonex Jewellers, said the stretch of Great South Rd outside his store hadn’t had a makeover since 1992.

He said upgrading footpaths, adding seating, street lighting and trees would help make the area more attractive to shoppers.

Sheraz Dean, who runs Pasifika Barbers, said he liked the improvemen­ts the council had done outside his store to date, but wasn’t as concerned about the work being completed.

‘‘I’m not too worried about it at the moment because it’s been a tough time for everybody,’’ Dean said.

‘‘We can wait.’’

An Auckland Council spokeswoma­n said the mainstreet makeover was done in sections, so it would proceed only when there was available funding. It wasn’t available in the 2020 emergency budget.

‘‘The project team has explored alternativ­e funding options to progress the town centre upgrade, including applying to central government’s shovelread­y initiative.

‘‘No alternativ­e funding options have been identified.’’

 ?? STEPHEN FORBES/STUFF ?? ta¯huhu Business Associatio­n manager Richette Rodger stands on Great South Rd near the intersecti­on with Mason Ave, where the work on the upgrade project stopped almost two years ago.
STEPHEN FORBES/STUFF ta¯huhu Business Associatio­n manager Richette Rodger stands on Great South Rd near the intersecti­on with Mason Ave, where the work on the upgrade project stopped almost two years ago.

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