A public inquiry into the performance of the Earthquake Commission will help understand where the Christchurch rebuild went wrong. Photo / Simon Baker
A public inquiry into the performance of the Earthquake Commission will help understand where the Christchurch rebuild went wrong. Photo / Simon Baker
An independent organisation will be formed to resolve outstanding insurance claims from the Canterbury earthquakes.
Budget 2018 included $8m in funding to set up and run the special insurance tribunal.
Earthquake Commission Minister Megan Woods said it would allow people to "get on with their lives", seven years on fromthe quakes.
"It will provide an active, individually case-managed resolution process for claimants and their insurers, as well as mediation services," Courts Minister Andrew Little said.
Another $3.5m will be spent on a public inquiry into the performance of the Earthquake Commission, which was announced in December.
The main Budget initiative for Christchurch has already been announced - $300m over the next year to accelerate rebuild projects in the city.
It is up to the Christchurch City Council to decide how the money will be spent on the various projects, which include a roofed, multi-purpose stadium.
"The fund is being guided by what the people of Christchurch want," Woods said.
"While all the projects will of course need satisfactory business cases, we are not making Canterbury decisions from Wellington."