Regional changes in the wind?
MIGHT the Maniototo become part of Dunedin city, might Cromwell be administered from Queenstown rather than Alexandra, might Southland local bodies be forced to amalgamate?
Such speculation is gathering momentum as a major review of local government begins.
The review was announced by Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta in April.
The review panel is due to produce its first report in September, a draft report for public consultation in September 2022 and a final report in April 2023.
One of the imponderables is what happens to councils, particularly small councils, if they are relieved of their current responsibilities for drinking water, wastewater and stormwater.
Former Central Otago mayor Malcolm Macpherson was willing recently to predict where the review might lead in the South.
He expected the Government wanted the same sort of centralisation as is occurring with district health boards and polytechnics.
‘‘It’s not going to be a trivial tinker at the margins.’’
He saw the Central Otago
District Council (CODC) as ‘‘uniquely at risk of boundary change’’ because of its geographical position.
‘‘We almost certainly won’t be a district in 10 years.’’
Dr Macpherson believed there was a ‘‘strong case’’ for adjusting boundaries, driven by the economic growth in the west of the district around
Cromwell.
‘‘You can easily see how you could put Cromwell in Queenstown Lakes [district], you could put Maniototo with Dunedin, you could put the Teviot Valley [Roxburgh] with Clutha, and the really interesting question is what happens to Alexandra and the Vincent ward.
‘‘I can’t see a Central Otago surviving.
‘‘I think there will be one or two less local authorities in the South.’’
Gore Mayor Tracy Hicks remembers the 1989 local government reorganisation when the Mataura and Gore Borough Councils and parts of the Southland County Council were amalgamated into the Gore District Council (GDC).
‘‘As the end point got closer, there was a whole lot of scrapping over power, and the politics were rife and there was a whole lot of deals behind closed doors,’’ Mr Hicks said.
‘‘It probably took the best part of 10 years to heal a lot of the wounds that had been inflicted.’’
Mr Hicks said he was pleased that this time, plenty of time was being allowed for the review, and he was looking forward to seeing the panel’s thoughts in its first report in September.
‘‘I’d be really disappointed if there was amalgamation into larger blocks of councils because I think the further you take a government organisation away from the people it serves, services are going to decline,’’ he said.
The GDC faced the prospect of a substantial staff reduction if it no longer had responsibility for water services.
‘‘If you take anywhere up to a third of your capacity, staffing wise, out of an organisation, then you do need to rethink how you deliver services, and what those services might be.’’
If change was coming, Mr Hicks believed it should allow for councils to focus more on the wellbeing of communities, and adjust boundaries to better connect communities of interest.
The 1989 reform saw 850 local bodies amalgamated into 86.
The CODC was an amalgamation of seven, including the country’s smallest, the Naseby Borough Council.
Dr Macpherson said amalgamating all the Central Otago and Lakes councils was politically too difficult at that time.
However, he believed Central Otago was now increasingly orientated towards Queenstown where there was job growth and ‘‘bigbox store’’ shopping.
‘‘We are one economy.
‘‘We share a lot of common interests — sporting, cultural and other stuff.
‘‘It makes for really compelling sense.’’
Dr Macpherson noted community boards with strong powers were created to make the Central Otago amalgamation more palatable.
This time round, he expected reform at national level was more likely, to overcome local, political opposition.
The word amalgamation does not appear in the review panel’s terms of reference.
Ms Mahuta told the Otago Daily Times the Government was ‘‘committed to a modern, robust and sustainable system of local government’’.
‘‘I’m not going to speculate on what the review panel may or may not recommend or how the Government will respond to those recommendations,’’ she said.
‘‘What I will emphasise is that this is an independent review that will engage widely with the local government sector and beyond.’’