Napier Courier

Is community board on the cards?

Māori ward councillor­s also in elections shakeup

- Doug Laing

Five options with Māori ward councillor­s and the question of whether Napier should have its first community board are being tested in the city’s representa­tion review deciding the city council structure from next year’s local election.

The options emerged from an open council workshop on April 16, following a survey over recent months, get their first airing at the council’s Ngā Mānukanuka o te Iwi (Māori Committee) meeting on Thursday.

They are also up for discussion at public meetings in each of the current four wards this month.

Views are also being sought on whether there should be an elected Maraenui Community Board, stemming from a requiremen­t that the reviews must provide effective representa­tion of communitie­s of interest, which the Local Government Commission cites as perceptual, functional and political.

Comprising elected members and able to include appointees and tasked elected councillor­s, there are about 110 nationwide, just one in the Hawke’s Bay region, but with two in the Tararua District.

They have limited powers specific to the area, as is the case with the Hastings District Council’s sevenmembe­r Rural Community Board, establishe­d in 1992 in a compromise after fears of a loss of rural influence in a Hastings-Havelock North merger with eight of the 10 ridings of the Hawke’s Bay County when it disappeare­d in local government reform three years earlier.

The new phase follows earlier consultati­on which found majority support for Māori wards in Napier, but comes ahead of a 2025 poll in which there will be both an election of the councillor­s and, as a result of a decree from the new Government, a referendum on whether there should be any Māori wards, from the next election in 2028.

Councils are required to undertake representa­tion reviews at least once every six years, using population changes and other factors to decide the number of councillor­s, and whether they should be elected in a single vote across the city or in area wards.

The Napier ward options all propose two Māori ward members. Three propose a one-member increase in numbers at the Council table, currently made up of the Mayor and 12 councillor­s, and two, aware of the potential extra cost, propose a onemember cut in the numbers.

All retain a geographic­al wards structure, one retaining the current four wards of Nelson Park, Taradale, Onekawa-Tamatea and Ahuriri, one cutting the number to three general wards, and two reducing the number to two, but with two options also allowing for two members at-large, elected across the city vote.

Papers note surveys found “little appetite” for a larger council.

Napier has had a council of a mayor and 12 councillor­s for many years, a full wards system applying for the last two elections, with Nelson Park Taradale each having four councillor­s and Ahuriri and Onekawa-Tamatea each having two, replacing a mixed-representa­tion model in which six were elected at-large across the city.

Public sessions will be 11am-midday gatherings for Nelson Park at The Base, Maraenui, on May 11, and Taradale at Taradale Co-Lab on May 14, while the Onekawa-Tamatea meeting at Napier Aquatic Centre on May 16 and Ahuriri’s at Napier War Memorial Centre on May 21 will both be 4-6pm. The council will decide on a preferred option by the end of the month, calling for submission­s before a final decision. Wairoa establishe­d a Māori ward in 2019, the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council and Hastings and Tararua introduced them in 2022. Central Hawke’s Bay will introduce a Māori ward in 2025.

 ?? Source: Napier City Council / Herald Network graphic ??
Source: Napier City Council / Herald Network graphic
 ?? Photo / Warren Buckland ?? There was a protest in Napier in 2021 when Napier City Council decided against introducin­g Ma¯ori Wards at the following year’s election. But it has decided to have Ma¯ori ward members from the next election in 2025.
Photo / Warren Buckland There was a protest in Napier in 2021 when Napier City Council decided against introducin­g Ma¯ori Wards at the following year’s election. But it has decided to have Ma¯ori ward members from the next election in 2025.

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