The Northland scandal around the trees that were never planted because no one checked the land is exactly what happens so often to public money. When it's slushing about in such volume, waste is never far behind. The tighter your budget, the more careful you are with it.
This is the sort of laissez-faire approach that will undo the likes of Shane Jones. He has to take himself a lot more seriously if he expects others to take him seriously. This isn't a game, it's not funsies, you don't laugh those sort of mistakes off.
So assuming it's lesson learned, we them turn our attention to another of last week's announcements, $40 million to KiwiRail to develop a regional hub to better move freight.
Once again, not bad in theory. Trains are good, trains carry more than trucks, and trains take trucks off the road.
But trains are in trouble, KiwiRail is a mess and has been for years. Lines are closed, access is an issue.
And what's the $40 million actually buy? An ongoing, profitable extension to the rail network? Or is the $40m a subsidy because rail can't make ends meet. And we will see in a decade that nothing came of it and it's $40m down the drain?
There is a reason rail is in the shape it is. It's already propped up by the government to the tune of tens of millions, and this is another $40m on top.
The Regional Development Fund's success will be measured in real jobs, real expansion, and real return on investment.
It can't afford to be a lavish handout to projects going nowhere.