The New Zealand Herald

Tribes eye $80m Epsom campus

Parts of teachers’ training college 15ha site sacred to Nga¯ ti Wha¯ tua

- Simon Collins education

Ma¯ori tribes are keen to buy Auckland University’s prime $80 million Epsom campus when the university’s education faculty leaves the site in 2020.

The university’s Dean of Education Mark Barrow has told school principals that his slimmed down education faculty will move to the city campus in Symonds St in late 2020.

The 15ha Epsom site, which has been used as a teachers’ training college since 1926, is likely to be sold subject to a right of first refusal granted to the original Ma¯ori tribes of the area under a 2014 Treaty of Waitangi settlement.

Nga¯ti Wha¯tua O¯ra¯kei Trust deputy chairman Ngarimu Blair said it was too early to say whether any of the tribes would buy it, but they were keen in principle.

“The University of Auckland has long been aware of Nga¯ti Wha¯tua’s desire to ‘reacquire’ as much of its former estate as possible,” he said by email.

“I confirm the subject land was part of our second gift of land to the Crown in 1841 and part of a large block of around 13,000 acres that took in Westmere, Pt Chev, Mt Albert and Newmarket.

“The Epsom campus contains one of the most sacred sites to Nga¯ti Wha¯tua and also our Waiohua relations. That site is called Te Pou Hawaiiki where our foundation ancestors placed soil they had brought from the Pacific islands to anchor themselves in a new land.

“There are also other special sites very near to the campus, however the grounds itself were mostly historic kumara and taro gardens that supported the Maungawhau and Maungakiek­ie Pa complexes.

“It is our understand­ing that this land would have to be offered to Nga¯ ti Wha¯ tua before going to market,” he said.

“As this land is subject to the Nga¯ Mana Whenua o Ta¯maki Makaurau Collective Redress Act 2014, it necessaril­y means we would work with the Waiohua tribes and Nga¯ ti Paoa and their relatives from the Hauraki region should the land be offered to us all to purchase.

“It is too early to predict whether we or any of the tribes would purchase the site and what its future would be. Negotiatio­ns have not begun, however we have a longstandi­ng Memorandum of Understand­ing that reflects our historic and ongoing obligation­s to each other.”

The education faculty has confirmed that it will axe 29 fulltime-equivalent academic jobs, a sixth of its 165 academic staff, because of a 27 per cent decline in teacher trainees over the past five years.

It is also ending most of its advisory services to schools, which employ a further 77 people. It is not yet clear how many of those jobs will disappear.

Barrow said the faculty had also been asked to leave the Manukau Institute of Technology’s O¯ tara campus, where it had been training about 200 teacher trainees, because of redevelopm­ent there.

He hopes to open a new South Auckland “hub” for teacher training and possibly other university courses by the start of 2020.

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 ?? Photo / Richard Robinson ?? University of Auckland is to quit its Epsom education faculty campus and move to the city campus in Symonds St in 2020.
Photo / Richard Robinson University of Auckland is to quit its Epsom education faculty campus and move to the city campus in Symonds St in 2020.
 ??  ?? Mark Barrow
Mark Barrow

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