The Northern Advocate

Nats backing four-laning in Northland

Nicola Willis tells Mangawhai meeting poor roading links are holding the region back

- Angela Woods

National Party deputy leader Nicola Willis isn’t prepared to reveal the specifics of her party’s transport policy but is keen on its vision of a four-lane highway.

Wallis was in Mangawhai yesterday to speak at a public meeting and said she could see Northland had been held back by poor roading connection­s.

“We know the chopping and changing and to-ing and fro-ing by the Labour Government on the big projects have been very frustratin­g for Northlande­rs,” she said.

“We’ll be considerin­g which of the specific projects we commit to in the leadup to next year’s election but you can expect that our vision remains of having a four-lane motorway — that’s really important.

“We are absolutely committed to the Puhoi to Wellsford connection, we see that Warkworth to Wellsford is the obvious next step.”

National first announced a plan for a f our- l ane expressway connecting Whangārei, Auckland, Hamilton and

Tauranga ahead of the last election.

The cost was estimated at $15 billion for the entire project in 2020.

The maintenanc­e of local roads was also something the party wanted to look at, Willis said.

She was asked about a range of other issues at the public meeting held at the Mangawhai Golf Club, including climate change.

Willis said she personally believed in the science behind human-led climate change, and sustainabl­e farming was important.

Asked about the closure of the oil refinery at Marsden Point, she said she shared the views of National Party leader Christophe­r Luxon and Whangārei list MP Dr Shane Reti.

“The reason for that is simply strategic, it seems to us that having some refining capacity here in New Zealand is a sensible step and a prudent step for the future.

“But as you know, the refinery is a private business and we respect that as a private business there is a limited role for the Government.”

A person asked what National would do about over-subscribed schools in Mangawhai, and the lack of a local secondary school.

Willis said she would raise the issue with National’s education spokespers­on.

“The number one issue we want to address is the cost-of-living crisis,” the politician said.

Willis she acknowledg­ed there were global factors involved in the present high inflation and the rising cost of living, but said the current Government’s policy also had an important role.

National wants to “put a lid on inflation” and keep interest rates stable, Willis said.

She said rents had risen under Labour due to increased taxes and costs to landlords being passed on to tenants.

When asked what National would do to improve housing affordabil­ity in Northland, she said one step they wanted to take was to remove red tape for housing developers.

 ?? PHOTO / ANGELA WOODS ?? Nicola Willis, deputy leader of the National Party, at Mangawhai Golf Club.
PHOTO / ANGELA WOODS Nicola Willis, deputy leader of the National Party, at Mangawhai Golf Club.

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