Whanganui Chronicle

Whanganui Holdings bites the dust

-

Another Whanganui councilcon­trolled organisati­on is set to close.

Whanganui District Council Holdings has GasNet, Whanganui Port companies and the New Zealand Internatio­nal Commercial Pilot Academy (NZICPA) as subsidiari­es.

Mayor Andrew Tripe said the subsidiari­es would now report directly to the council’s council-controlled organisati­on (CCO) committee.

“Including the $118,000 saved from the Whanganui & Partners decision and a reduction in the number of directors at the port companies, we’re now looking to save about $380,000 per year as a result of these moves to simplify and streamline our CCOs,” he said.

The current CCO committee is chaired by councillor Josh ChandulalM­ackay, with councillor Rob Vinsen as deputy chairman and it includes all elected members.

It was announced earlier this month that economic developmen­t agency Whanganui & Partners would be brought in-house at the council, with the company and board of directors being disestabli­shed.

The council made the decision on Holdings at a closed council meeting on Tuesday, after completing a CCO review that began last year.

Tripe said the review aligned with the council’s six-point plan to keep rates increases affordable. Appointing one board of directors to oversee both port companies had already saved ratepayers $63,000, he said.

The Holdings board is made up of chairwoman Carolyn van Leuven, Richard Briggs and Lucy Elwood.

“We’re looking at growing Whanganui’s population, improving efficiency, looking for alternativ­e funding for projects, cutting council services, selling assets to repay debt and identifyin­g sources of non-rates revenue.

“The council has already locked in $700,000 of service-level cuts across other council services as well as another $1 million of efficienci­es from the council’s back-office functions, bringing the total savings to more than $2m so far.

The council was also about to start public consultati­on on its Long-term Plan 2024-34 and will seek community feedback on additional service cuts that could be made to reduce costs and minimise rates increases.

One review recommenda­tion was for the council to ensure investment­s were delivering enough of a financial return to be worth the associated investment risks, Tripe said.

“Higher-risk investment­s should have a higher return on investment.

“We’ll need to ensure NZICPA [New Zealand Internatio­nal Commercial Pilot Academy] stabilises and starts to return to profit after the disruption of Covid-19 which interrupte­d the flow of internatio­nal students to the academy.

“The report found NZICPA has a positive impact on the Whanganui economy, and when student numbers increase it will support nearly 100 jobs and provide $9.8m of GDP per year into the local economy.”

He said GasNet had consistent­ly delivered dividends but the council needed to balance receiving dividends with a need to reinvest in Gasnet’s developmen­t.

 ?? Photo / Bevan Conley ?? The Whanganui Port company, a subsidiary of Whanganui District Council Holdings, will now report directly to a council committee.
Photo / Bevan Conley The Whanganui Port company, a subsidiary of Whanganui District Council Holdings, will now report directly to a council committee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand