Otago Daily Times

$25m school property sales

- JOHN LEWIS john.lewis@odt.co.nz

MORE than $25 million was made from the sale of school land and buildings in Otago and Southland over the past decade, Land Informatio­n New Zealand data shows.

The money came from the sale of 13 schools — Waldronvil­le School (closed in 2010), Tomahawk School (2010), Corstorphi­ne School (2010), Otepopo School (2020), College Street School (2011), High Street School (2011), Forbury School (2012), Paerau School (2012), Rotary Park School (2013), Waimahaka School (2013), Blackmount School (2014), Willowbank School (2016), and Wakatipu High School (2018).

The latest schools to be closed were Isla Bank School (2019) in Southland and Flag Swamp School (2020) in Otago, but the disposal process has not yet started on either school.

Prices ranged from $80,000 paid for Paerau School in Ranfurly, to $20 million for the former Wakatipu High School in Queenstown.

Schools that are deemed surplus to educationa­l purposes are placed in the Crown’s disposal process, as required by the Public Works Act.

The Act requires surplus property to be offered to other government department­s, previous property owners and local iwi, before it can be placed on the open market.

Most of the properties were bought by Ngai Tahu Property Ltd, one was bought by a government department and the remaining four were sold on the open market to Morclarke Developmen­ts, John and Bruna Oakes, Otakau Health Ltd and the Southland District Council.

The largest of the purchases was the former Wakatipu High School property, which was sold to the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment in November 2018.

Government agency KiwiBuild and Ngai Tahu Property are now working together to turn it into a 350unit housing developmen­t.

The Te Pa Tahuna developmen­t includes 10 apartment blocks with 100 units available to eligible buyers through the KiwiBuild scheme, at a price of up to $650,000.

Ministry of Education infrastruc­ture service head Kim Shannon said depending on the type of disposal, the proceeds of school sales were dispersed differentl­y.

“Proceeds from the sale of closed school land and assets is returned to the Ministry of Education’s operationa­l budget, to be reallocate­d according to our priorities at that time.

“Proceeds from the sale of surplus land at an existing school is split.

“Schools will receive 50% to reinvest in their school infrastruc­ture. The other 50% is returned to the Ministry of Education.

“Where schools elect to dispose of school housing, they will receive 100% of the proceeds to reinvest in their school infrastruc­ture.’’

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