The Press

Council will be monitored

- Joanne Carroll joanne.carroll@stuff.co.nz

Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta has U-turned on threats to impose a Crown Observer on a ‘‘dysfunctio­nal’’ West Coast council but it will still be ‘‘closely monitored’’, she said.

Westland District Council mayor Bruce Smith welcomed the news as a ‘‘good result’’. An independen­t review had made 17 recommenda­tions, which staff had since implemente­d, and a new audit and risk committee with an independen­t chair had been set up.

Mahuta wrote to the council in July and September this year, expressing concern about poor processes, dysfunctio­nal governance and management, noncomplia­nce with policies, and natural hazard management.

The letter followed an auditorgen­eral inquiry that raised serious concerns about a decision by Smith and councillor Durham Havill to build a $1.3 million stopbank at Franz Josef without the backing of the full council, and without consulting experts or conducting a proper procuremen­t process.

Mahuta raised issues including privacy, poor process around the election of two deputy mayors, complaints against Smith to the auditor-general, a Serious Fraud Office investigat­ion of a senior manager, resignatio­ns of members of the council’s management team, and recent defamation and code of conduct proceeding­s against councillor­s. There were also allegation­s of uncontroll­ed expenditur­e, misleading statements at the council table and informatio­n being withheld from councillor­s.

She told them she intended to appoint a Crown observer.

Things then went quiet until yesterday, when Mahuta said she ‘‘cautiously acknowledg­ed’’ the council had made progress.

It is not a total back-down. Mahuta said due to the scale and nature of the issues, the council would benefit from oversight. She asked an existing oversight group

Bruce Smith

Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta says the Westland District Council will be ‘‘closely monitored’’.

to further help the council. The Department of Internal Affairs would chair the oversight group and work with other agencies on the terms of reference.

‘‘They will provide valuable guidance . . . Given the steps taken by the council, I am reassured they are on the right path to being a well performing council,’’ Mahuta said. The council had taken steps to improve, including setting up a governance committee to ‘‘provide transparen­cy of decision making, putting in systems and frameworks for policies and processes, and learning from past experience’’.

She said she had considered appointing a Crown observer because she was not confident the council’s management was effective due to the number and frequency of issues being raised.

She would consider interventi­on in future if a significan­t problem arose, she said. ‘‘In the meantime, the council will be closely monitored. The threshold to use interventi­on powers is necessaril­y high. Although problems still exist on the council, they do not amount to a significan­t problem ... many councils around New Zealand suffer from similar issues.’’

Smith said the oversight group was ‘‘a good thing’’.

‘‘We answer to Internal Affairs anyway. It’s a good result and we will be able to carry on business as usual,’’ he said. ‘‘The minister has acted really profession­ally. She received complaints and allegation­s – lots and lots of them – and when she provided us with the informatio­n and the details of the complaints we were able to respond as a council.

‘‘She was able to consider that response and the things that have changed in the last year or two and make her decision not to appoint a Crown observer.’’

Former councillor Gray Eatwell, who had been raising concerns with the Government about the council’s decisionma­king and lack of transparen­cy since 2017, said he was frustrated with the delay in action.

He said the council and its mayor had breached its statutory obligation­s, particular­ly in the way the stopbank was built in Franz Josef, but there had been no consequenc­es.

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