Te Awamutu Courier

Let’s set the date for Waikato Day

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The Waikato needs to break away from Auckland’s anniversar­y and celebrate its own “Waikato Day” annual public holiday, says the chief executive of the region’s community foundation.

Kelvyn Eglinton, of Momentum Waikato, reckons it is absurd that Waikato marks Auckland’s Anniversar­y on the last Monday of January each year.

Currently, the boundaries of the nation’s regional days off are based on the provincial government­s that existed from the 1850s to the 1870s, with Auckland Anniversar­y happening across the entire upper North Island.

“The Mighty Waikato needs to proudly stand on its own two feet and celebrate its own sense of place as a great region. It is time we moved to having an annual Waikato Day, even if it is on the same date as the current Auckland Anniversar­y holiday,” says Kelvyn.

“I’m calling on the Waikato to have a public conversati­on on how best to celebrate this region with an annual public holiday that showcases the awesomenes­s of the Waikato.

“Kirikiriro­a, Hamilton, The Tron, the capital of the Waikato really is the nation’s City of the Future.

“The economy here is accelerati­ng and diversifyi­ng, with an abundance of exciting breakthrou­gh developmen­ts like the Ruakura Inland Port, the Waikato Expressway, Union Square, The Pa¯ at the University, and our own Waikato Regional Theatre, all of which will benefit the whole region.

“We already have the awardwinni­ng Hamilton Gardens, smart innovative education providers in Wintec, Te Wa¯ nanga o Aotearoa and The University of Waikato, and the remarkable Waikato Museum.

“With new smart inner-city living taking off and tidy new suburbs rolling out, in the city that is close to everything, the lifestyle offering is hard to beat and only going to get better. There is a good reason why corporates and government head offices are moving here.

“The Waikato as a whole continues to be the national economy’s heavy

lifter — the latest Fonterra pay-out forecast for farmers is great news for Aotearoa’s greatest dairy district.

“Kiingi Tuuheitia Pootatau Te Wherowhero VII lives at Tuurangawa­ewae, the Kiingitang­a stands here. The Waikato has been central to Maaori lives for centuries, there are strong and growing iwi and hapu across the entire rohe.

“We are home to Fieldays, the Southern Hemisphere’s largest agricultur­al show, some of the nation’s greatest sporting teams and venues, popular beer and ice cream companies offering the best products you’ll find anywhere, global-export manufactur­ers boxing way above their weight.

“We go from coast to coast with world-class waves breaking on both sides, from ski-able mountains to the south to the boaties’ paradise of the Coromandel, with fantastic tourism attraction­s in between, from hobbits to caves to motorsport tracks.

“The environmen­t here has its challenges like everywhere, but the beautiful Waikato awa, New Zealand’s longest river, still runs through it and projects like the Maungataut­ari Ecological Reserve are leading the land in biodiversi­ty restoratio­n.

“Clearly, the Waikato is going places and deserves to strengthen its distinct identity with its own day of regional celebratio­n.

“Can we as the Mighty Waikato celebrate all that is great about our region and claim this holiday as our own? Can a date be chosen that is simply a good time of year for a holiday in the Waikato?

“Or do we keep the current long weekend at the end of January and just rebrand and repurpose it to recognise all that is great about our history, our culture, our people, our businesses and our environmen­t?

“I have no preference. I just think the time has come to celebrate the Waikato, rather than the big city over the Bombays. Let’s decide when and how it should be and then get the necessary legislatio­n passed to make it happen.

“Momentum Waikato exists to help the Waikato realise its destiny as the prosperous engine of the nation’s economy, to build ‘A Better Waikato for Everyone, Forever’.

“We are growing an endowment fund that will in the decades ahead provide the Waikato with the resources to realise its public good projects without always going ‘cap in hand’ to Wellington.”

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Momentum Waikato chief executive Kelvyn Eglinton believes Waikato needs its own holiday, rather than sharing Auckland’s.
Photo / Supplied Momentum Waikato chief executive Kelvyn Eglinton believes Waikato needs its own holiday, rather than sharing Auckland’s.

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