nzherald.co.nz

John Armstrong: Sky City report 'deeply disturbing'

By John Armstrong
5:30 AM Wednesday Feb 20, 2013
John Key may have escaped personal blame for the serious flaws in the convention centre project but the report is far worse than he had been leading people to believe, says Armstrong. Photo / Christine Cornege

John Key may have escaped personal blame for the serious flaws in the convention centre project but the report is far worse than he had been leading people to believe, says Armstrong. Photo / Christine Cornege

Verging on banana republic kind of stuff without the bananas - that is the only conclusion to draw from the deeply disturbing report into the shonkiness surrounding the Government's selection of SkyCity as the preferred builder and operator of a national convention centre.

The Prime Minister's attempt to downplay Deputy Auditor-General Phillippa Smith's findings in advance of their release yesterday by saying he had not lost any sleep from reading draft copies may turn out to be a costly political miscalculation.

John Key may have escaped personal blame for the serious flaws in the old Ministry of Economic Development's handling of the convention centre project but the report is far worse than he had been leading people to believe.

He is taking refuge in the report's assurances that no evidence could be found to suggest "inappropriate considerations", such as connections between political and business leaders, were behind the final decision for the Government to negotiate with SkyCity as the preferred bidder.

In other words, no corruption. Or at least none that could be found.

Smith's report, however, does not mince words when it comes to slamming the whole selection process from the seeking of expressions of interest to their evaluation as being neither transparent nor even-handed, with four other interested parties seeking the nod to build the convention centre being kept in the dark for months while the Government got cosy with SkyCity.

Things got so bad that some officials expressed concern to superiors that proper procedures were not being followed.

The outcome was that one bidder - SkyCity - was treated differently from the others. In particular, SkyCity had a clearer understanding of a critical factor in determining who was successful - that the Government did not want to commit money to the capital costs of the convention centre.

The Deputy Auditor-General's finding that the process lacked fairness and credibility should carry enough weight to call a halt and go back to square one.

National will turn a deaf ear to Opposition demands for that to happen. However, the report offers copious material for Opposition parties to fling in National's face and Key's in particular. And the lack of an official clean bill of health for the project keeps the Government on the defensive even before the haggling over how many more pokies SkyCity will be able to run on its premises and the arguments over problem gambling resume.

Key may not be losing much sleep. But this report is no comforting, soft bed of hay. It is a bed of nails.

By John Armstrong
concerned mother (South Auckland) | 09:43AM Wednesday, 20 Feb 2013
No action this current government has taken has been with out gross conflict of interest, inappropriate decision, blatant flautation of the rules and regulations.

Who or what is going top stop them?
Simondb (New Zealand) | 09:50AM Wednesday, 20 Feb 2013
This is not that different from the way John Key treated the John Banks case.

Yes, what happened was clearly wrong but technically no crime was committed, so it's OK.

You don't have to be a crook to be a politician but it does help.
Durang0 () | 09:50AM Wednesday, 20 Feb 2013
The whole project should be re-opened. Sky City got preferential treatment another example of how this shonky Government operates. Sky City will want more than just a few extra pokies.

Key claims the total number of pokies is still lower than before because Councils are applying a sinking lid. Effectively he is giving Sky City an almost monopoly on those machines as the community drops them for social reasons. We don't need a Convention Centre on the back of famillies misery.

Other options should be explored.
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