The Press

Shake-free amid signs of recovery

- Mike Yardley

How sweet it has been to revel in the Christmas season in Christchur­ch, without it being marred by one of Mother Nature’s mad crackers. With the seismic sequence continuing to taper off, Cera’s Roger Sutton has declared 2013 the Year of the Rebuild.

It will be the year in which reconstruc­tion and repair supersedes the stream of plans, pop-ups and demolition­s. There are encouragin­g signs that the insurance industry is hitting its straps on the road to residentia­l recovery, although Southern Response, the giant tortoise among insurers, is really going to have to lift its game, if it seriously intends honouring its completion targets.

Meanwhile, the Fletchers Home Repair programme continues to make solid inroads, with 30,000 full-scope home repairs completed.

However, alarm bells are ringing over the quality of work, with more and more homeowners refusing to be pressured into signing off the work, amid a growing clamour of complaints about repair deficienci­es.

Just before Christmas, a friend of mine returned home to discover every single room in her house had been painted the wrong colour. Quality assurance must be a top priority for Fletchers in 2013, to ensure its work programme is executed with care and efficiency.

As 2012 draws to a close, some headline moments stand-out for me as Hits and Misses. In what has been an annus horribilis for the Anglican Bishop of Christchur­ch, Victoria Matthews spectacula­rly compounded her perception of being out of touch with the public pulse with her eyebrow-raising call for an artificial beach to grace Cathedral Square.

But it’s the beleaguere­d Education Minister Hekia Parata and her hapless ministry that take out the gong for biggest self-inflicted public relations disaster of the year, with their ham-fisted mishandlin­g of the Christchur­ch schools shake- up. It still beggars belief that Parata and her officials allowed the barking mad idea of merging our four single-sex state schools to grow legs, before it was finally knocked on the head in November. Look for Tony Ryall or Nick Smith to be handed the education portfolio next month.

In a city riddled with so much transition, turmoil and complexity, Christchur­ch is blessed with remarkable people who send our spirits soaring – the gap fillers, rubble greeners, crate creators and communal gardeners have spritzed our city with urban soul.

The young and entreprene­urial resolve from the likes of C1 Espresso’s Sam Crofskey and the heritagelo­ving benevolenc­e of Ceres, pledging to restore Peterborou­gh Apartments, help fortify our city’s future fabric.

I greatly admire Ngai Tahu’s Mark Solomon for steadfastl­y refusing to support the litigious luddites from the Maori Council. And I believe the city’s exemplary leader in 2012 has been the Canterbury District Health Board’s David Meates on keeping our health services afloat under extreme circumstan­ces.

 ?? Photo: JOSEPH JOHNSON/FAIRFAX NZ ?? Leadership: David Meates, of the Canterbury District Health Board.
Photo: JOSEPH JOHNSON/FAIRFAX NZ Leadership: David Meates, of the Canterbury District Health Board.
 ??  ?? Hekia Parata
Hekia Parata
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