The Press

Putting NZ back together: Where do we begin?

- Dileepa Fonseka dileepa.fonseka@stuff.co.nz

Politician­s are always fond of talking about their longterm aspiration­s for the country, because by the time we get there they will almost certainly be at an overseas embassy, on a corporate board, posted to the United Nations, or sitting on a local council.

The trickier question to ask is what the starting point is for all this ‘‘building back better’’ talk.

Is the starting point for discussion­s on the housing crisis a general assumption that house prices should rise steadily and the investment­s of homeowners should be guaranteed by the state?

Or is it that we need an oversupply of good-quality housing, along with prices and rents to drop?

On migration, is the starting point that we need to scare these migrants out of the country and ‘‘reset’’?

Or is it that we need to carry through on the promises to the people we invited to apply for residency, and understand that mass deportatio­ns are a nearimposs­ibility in the current climate as is the possibilit­y of sending some back to their home countries?

When it comes to infrastruc­ture, should it be we want to bring everybody along on issues like water, or should it be we actually want to just get this extra infrastruc­ture built?

I would pose the same question around housing densificat­ion too, where Wellington City Council seems to be dragging its heels on a report other tier 1 councils have met with little drama, around how planning rules are affecting the availabili­ty of housing.

Let’s just say the results of this report are unlikely to be positive in a city where building consents have lagged far behind other cities’. We hear from the council officer involved they did a similar plan two years ago, which you think would make it easier to do another one.

Then there are other Covidspeci­fic issues such as the continuing managed isolation (MIQ) booking saga. Should the starting point be that our widelyabus­ed booking system is crucial to our Covid-19 response and cannot be changed substantia­lly? Or should the starting point be that we should probably improve it?

Equally, as we eye the reemergenc­e of Covid-19 across the Tasman, should our starting point be an assumption Delta will never get here, or should it be that we now have a golden opportunit­y to build up our containmen­t and tracing systems before we experience something similar?

This isn’t just about vaccines. One idea proposed by Rako Science is to use constant saliva testing, which has a turnaround time of a few hours as opposed to the twoday time for nasal swabs, and could see us develop rings of protection to more easily get on top of an outbreak if it starts before we are vaccinated.

Then there is the idea of making the Covid-19 tracer app compulsory, which would undoubtedl­y increase the uptake and use of it and hopefully help us get on top of any Delta outbreak.

Should the starting point be that we want to get people in the habit of scanning all the time, or that we want to hold on to our agreements with the tech giants around how the bluetooth components of this app should be used (part of the agreement for using their tech is that it cannot be made compulsory)?

I ask this question because the extra uptake we would get from making the app compulsory could very well outweigh any additional benefit we get from their components.

Let us not forget the major problem of climate change either, which can never be ignored. Is our starting point our current way of life while getting others to sacrifice more, or is it that we need to throw everything at it?

The sudden drop in support for Labour is probably not as dramatic as it appears, given the reduced frequency between polls, and the result is likely not driven by discontent over the long-term direction of the country.

In the immediate aftermath of lockdown it was fashionabl­e to talk about building back better, but maybe the better question to ask is: Where do we start?

Let us not forget the major problem of climate change either.

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 ?? SCOTT HAMMOND/STUFF ?? Compulsory scanning would help us quickly get on top of a Delta outbreak.
SCOTT HAMMOND/STUFF Compulsory scanning would help us quickly get on top of a Delta outbreak.

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