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Home / Hawkes Bay Today

Napier RSAs leave war memorial working group

By Victoria White
Reporter·Hawkes Bay Today·
7 Mar, 2018 07:00 PM3 mins to read

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Napier RSA president John Purcell speaks to a council meeting about the war memorial project. Photo / Duncan Brown

Napier RSA president John Purcell speaks to a council meeting about the war memorial project. Photo / Duncan Brown

Napier's two RSAs have quit a group charged with restoring the Napier War Memorial, saying it has "reached the end of its usefulness".

The group, which also includes Napier Mayor Bill Dalton, three councillors, as well as the Napier and Taradale RSAs - was established last year to oversee the memorial project.Read more: New name "Napier War Memorial Centre" proposed
Napier City Council to consider reinstating War Memorial in Napier Conference Centre name
Council vote today on War Memorial name

However first Napier then Taradale RSA left the group as they felt their organisations' opinions could be better represented outside it.

"I think that the steering group has reached the end of its usefulness really in many ways," Taradale RSA President Peter Grant said.

He said the group, set up by the Napier City Council, was told its main focus was on the "roll of honour" criteria, meaning it could not provide input into "every other decision" as it would have liked - including the proposed renaming of the Napier Conference Centre.

"We weren't really asked as a steering group to submit anything to the council on the naming and I can't understand why not. It might have avoided the situation with them putting up a paper to the councillors that wasn't agreed by most of the councillors."

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In an unusually fiery meeting this week councillors went against a recommended name, and instead voted on a name influenced by "public appeals".

Grant said the Taradale RSA did not want to be involved in the next phase of the project because he understood it would not be reported back to the steering group, that the design elements would be decided by council.

"Not being a member on the steering group any longer would give me more freedom to express our views on wider aspects on the War Memorial, rather than being committed to the steering group decisions."

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Napier RSA president John Purcell said his RSA also did not want to be involved in the design and build of the new memorial.

"If we stayed in then we may have had to agree to the group, by stepping back we can have our own say," Purcell said.

"I may well have [agreed with the group], but I didn't want to be restricted by having a consensus pushed on me. I wanted to actually speak to what the members want here."

Napier Mayor Bill Dalton said choice to be, or not be part of the group.

"We saw yesterday how democracy works, and democracy is not necessarily particularly efficient. I have no thoughts on whether the presidents should or shouldn't leave, or what that does, it's simply a choice they've decided to make."

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