Firstly, he wanted to know if state housing was to be built on nearby land, and, secondly, local iwi had now taken ownership of the kura site from the Ministry of Education who previously owned it.
In his letter the councillor asked Mr Foss whether the National Party took notice of public opinion and what they were prepared to do about the above situation.
However, Mr Foss hit back saying "asking such questions via a letter to the editor is just being provocative and grandstanding".
"I would have thought Mr Dixon, as a councillor, would have access to information about zoning, local infrastructure, population forecasts, planning and consent," he said.
Referring to past conversations about the issue the MP said: "As I have written in Hawke's Bay Today, there are quite a range of views about the kura, some think it's not an issue at all while others are adamantly opposed.
"I have and will continue to facilitate all views to both the Minister and Ministry of Education."
When asked if he had heard the same rumours as Mr Dixon, Ngati Kahungunu Iwi Incorporated chairman, Ngahiwi Tomoana, said: "It's all news to me."
"I've never heard about that."
Mr Tomoana said people were "scaremongering" and ignoring the facts.
This is not the first letter penned by the councillor.
In November he wrote a letter to Prime Minister John Key raising concerns of some Arataki residents.
In the letter to Mr Key, Mr Dixon outlined that it was not the building of the location which he was against, but rather where the Ministry of Education had chosen to build it.
Construction of the new kura is expected to be completed in 2017.