Sunday News

‘We need change’: Local agenda in tiny southern

Last week Sunday News travelled around small towns in the North Island asking about the local body elections. This week Olivia Caldwell reports from the south.

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Sitting on the edge of eastern Southland, just south of Gore, sits tiny town, Wyndham; population about 600.

You can count on two hands the number of businesses in town and there are still homes under $100,000 for sale.

Snow Geary has been here all his life.

He was schooled here and has been a builder for 50 years, owning Geary Builders with his two brothers.

Geary has voted in the local elections every year since he was able and doesn’t mince his words. This year’s candidates, he says, bring nothing too special for the small town, predominan­tly supported by farmers.

‘‘Bloody hopeless. There are a couple that aren’t too bad in there, but they can’t do much.’’

Geary is unimpresse­d with the current crop of talent, too. ‘‘They need to fix the roads up for starters and stop going on about climate change.’’

Geary is 66 and his mother was once on the Southland Council. He says it has the same problem now as it did back then: finances. He says she was stymied by the budget, and red tape will do the same with this year’s flock.

‘‘They don’t seem to be able to do anything. They put patches on the roads that last for 10 minutes. They get useless p ..... in to do the job, and they don’t do a good job. If I had done that, I wouldn’t be in business would

I?’’

Geary may be frank, but his main concern as a business owner is finding young people.

‘‘We need more... interested in doing work, [and] in the district. We want people who turn up every day.’’

Just 15 minutes up the road, Mataura, population 1700, is under Gore District Council.

Mataura often misses out to its bigger cousin up the road, says builder Adam Newton.

Newton is from Mataura originally and owns Adam Newton Building. Over the past two years Mataura has had the fastest-growing house prices in Southland.

The average price now is about $300,000. Fifteen years ago Newton bought his for $70,000. He’s concerned about lack of developmen­t and the difficulty landowners have getting consent.

‘‘There’s been no thought put in to developmen­t in town, there’s no encouragem­ent for developmen­t, and they make it too hard for people to subdivide. Mataura probably gets hard done by. Great space for developmen­t down here, but unfortunat­ely there is that stigma as well.

‘‘We do need change. We need to be a bit more fiscally responsibl­e with how the rates get spent, that’s been the biggest issue. Things do need to be done, but they do them short handedly rather than long-term.’’

Last year the council spent $6 million, which was about $20,000 over budget, on its new offices.

‘‘With the amount they spent, they could have built something superior for the same price,’’ says Newton.

Incumbent Gore District mayor Tracy Hicks is seeking reelection for his seventh term. Also running for the mayoralty is first time candidate Ben Bell, a 23-year-old tech entreprene­ur and former youth Wellington­ian of the year.

Newton characteri­ses the

‘We need to be a bit more fiscally responsibl­e with how the rates get spent, that’s been the biggest issue. Things do need to be done, but they do them short handedly rather than long-term.’ ADAM NEWTON

council as stuck in its ways, but couldn’t put that down to Hicks, who has been there for over 25 years.

‘‘It’s a generation­al thing,’’ he suggests. ‘‘And you can’t land that squarely on the mayor. It is hard because they are constraine­d to how it is all set up. They can only do so much.’’

Twenty-five minutes north of Mataura, outside of Gore, farmer Blair Drysdale is the third generation on his property, at tiny Balfour, home to dairy, sheep, and beef farming – and for Drydsdale, arable farming.

Drysdale has always taken a keen interest in local elections. He will be voting in the Southland District Council, but Drysdale thinks the boundaries need a rethink.

He believes getting rid of the smaller councils and having one Southland council along with Environmen­t Southland would be a great way to get rid of additional spend.

‘‘Another thing Southland needs to address is the number of councillor­s we’ve got for our population. We need to combine into one, and get rid of middle management.

‘‘We have a lot of people behind computer desks – that isn’t all money well spent. I think it is probably time that was looked at.’’

A father-of-three and a former mechanic, Drysdale loves Balfour and says there is a lot of pride in it, with just over 100 people in the actual town itself. The school is filled with local farmers’ children. Much like back down in Wyndham, roading is an issue.

‘‘There are some good candidates who have put their hand up for Southland District mayor, and the council themselves. A lot have been doing some good work around northern Southland. I think the people there are going to represent us well.’’

Change would be good for Southland, as there hasn’t been much in some time.

‘‘People can keep talking all they like, but it is time a lot of policies were implemente­d.’’

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 ?? OLIVIA CALDWELL / STUFF ?? Adam Newton of Mataura, right, says the small town could benefit from funding and infrastruc­ture, while Blair Drysdale of Balfour, above, says change to the Southland District Council and the area it covers would help.
OLIVIA CALDWELL / STUFF Adam Newton of Mataura, right, says the small town could benefit from funding and infrastruc­ture, while Blair Drysdale of Balfour, above, says change to the Southland District Council and the area it covers would help.
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