The Northern Advocate

Old boys’ club rumours rejected

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number of us have had our heads down, working hard on relationsh­ips, trying to be a very effective advocate and enabling business to get moving forward.”

Robinson said, in his humble opinion, his support was due to his good track record leading organisati­ons, including taking Whangārei Boys’ High School through a successful rebuild and appointing its first female principal.

His leadership at NorthChamb­er has seen it move forward to form a joint venture with the Employers and Manufactur­es Associatio­n (EMA). Despite the election result, McInnes said she was glad she stood for the presidency, as the challenge injected some life into NorthChamb­er.

Nearly 50 people attended the AGM, more than twice as many as last year, and new people had put up their hands to join the chamber board, she said.

The new board members are Brenda Leeuwenber­g (Nomad8), David Finchett (Northport), Dirk Mostert (Forsyth Barr), Wayne Tollemache (JTC Consulting), Sandeep Diwan (Calders Design and Print) and Mere Teinaki (Northland Chartered Accountant­s).

They join existing board members vice-president Sue Walters (Northland Scaffoldin­g), treasurer Danny

Douglas (Bridge Advisory), Professor Douglas Sutton (Cave Farms), Stephen Gibson (Marsden Maritime Holdings), Natalie Blandford (Project Apōpō) and Jules Smith (Again).

Business Tai Tokerau boosting Northland commerce

Meanwhile, NorthChamb­er’s joint venture with EMA is about best representi­ng Northland businesses and moving the region forward rather than competing with each other for members, chief executive Darryn Fisher said.

The new joint venture will be called Business Tai Tokerau, which will be a member of both the New Zealand Chambers of Commerce and Business New Zealand. The “marriage” is not quite signed and sealed yet, with the two organisati­ons effectivel­y “dating” over the last 12 months, now getting engaged and set to get married in a year’s time, when their financials will merge, Fisher explained.

EMA Northland regional manager Michael Turner said the two organisati­ons are both not-for-profit membership orgnisatio­ns for businesses.

“In a region like Northland where resources are so limited, there’s lots of ground to cover and lots of diversity, it’s about making a difference and not for the two organisati­ons to be competing.”

Fisher said the focus of Business Tai Tokerau will be:

a reliable, first-world connection to Auckland

expansion of Northport including a dry dock and coolstore

Northland education strategy, including aquacultur­e and marine infrastruc­ture management strengthen­ing, diversifyi­ng and growing Northland’s economy from within.

Business Tai Tokerau has already secured Northport as a major sponsor for the next three years, and is working closely with other organisati­ons like Federated Farmers and Young Enterprise Scheme (YES).

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