Weekend Herald

Three Waters co-governance stays; help for small councils

- Adam Pearse

The co-governance aspect of Three Waters reform has survived the select committee process, which heard more than 88,000 public submission­s on the topic.

The Water Services Entities Bill proposes the establishm­ent of four publicly owned water entities to deliver “more cost-effective, safe and efficient water services”, taking the responsibi­lity away from councils.

The legislatio­n dictated the entities would be governed by equal numbers of territoria­l authority representa­tives and mana whenua, which had drawn extensive criticism.

A statement from Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta did not mention co-governance directly, but she confirmed the select committee process had prompted a change to the representa­tion of rural councils.

They had been concerned their voices would be “drowned out” by urban centres.

“At their request, the bill now includes a provision which requires a mix of rural, provincial and metropolit­an councils to be present on the regional representa­tive group.”

Annual shareholde­rs’ meetings would also be establishe­d and would be open to the public, in the “interests of transparen­cy”.

Internal Affairs had also worked with the Office of the Auditor-General to improve accountabi­lity measures in the legislatio­n, including strengthen­ed reporting lines and obligation­s, and increased audit scrutiny.

“This level of public reporting will give communitie­s greater visibility of infrastruc­ture investment that supports broader wellbeing.”

Mahuta said she was confident a solution could be found and criticised those only focused on problems.

“Everybody else is talking about more problems and these problems have been around 20 years,” she said.

“I’m probably the only minister that’s been brave enough to take forward a really difficult issue and come up with a solution, not more problems, and this solution ensures that it is not going to be a burden on ratepayers, who are facing a cost-of-living challenge right now.”

A report by the finance and expenditur­e committee, published yesterday, contained objections to the bill from each of the National, Act and Green parties.

As they have voiced in the past, National and Act have opposed the implementa­tion of co-governance as it pertained to the water entities.

National’s statement included its recognitio­n of the “role of mana whenua as a group . . . with some interests in specific cultural assets”, but considered co-governance unjustifie­d.

“There has never been a clear justificat­ion from the Government for the inclusion of co-governance of public services, which represents a significan­t departure from existing policy.”

This was echoed by Act, which claimed Mahuta had not explained the need for co-governance.

“Mahuta, who is responsibl­e for this bill, is unable to justify why it is necessary for mana whenua to get more of a say than other parts of the community when it comes to the four new water services entities.”

The Green Party was strongly supportive of co-governance, stating water was a “taonga” and that iwi and hapu¯ had long called for stronger water management rights.

However, it did recommend “councils retaining real ownership of water assets and infrastruc­ture”.

Mahuta referenced those who “questioned the fundamenta­l elements” of the reform — a comment likely directed at those who took issue with co-governance.

“The Government has listened to and considered these views.

“We remain firmly of the view that the future affordabil­ity and sustainabi­lity of our water infrastruc­ture is best served by reform underpinne­d by the four fundamenta­ls of public ownership, balance sheet separation, good governance, and Treaty partnershi­p.”

Mahuta said there were shared views between the Government, councils and communitie­s on the need to amend water networks while also limiting costs.

“Keeping a lid on rates rises is imperative, as households, businesses, communitie­s and councils around the country face cost-of-living challenges.

“When an estimated 34,000 New Zealanders get sick from drinking water each year, that is a crisis.

“We are committed to ensuring . . . drinking water is clean, boil water notices are minimised, sewage leaks get fixed, and pipes are in the ground to help build new homes, in the most cost-effective way possible.”

 ?? ?? Nanaia Mahuta
Nanaia Mahuta

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