The council said no decision had been made about the nursery’s future, but that it was “looking into the viability of its operations” and had made a proposal to nursery staff.
Amalgamated Workers Union New Zealand, which has members in the nursery workforce, claimed the council was closing the facility largely because it had “not been adequately maintained”.
A union spokesperson called this “deeply disappointing” and “short-sighted”.
Rotorua's nursery was previously operated by Infracore before last year's amalgamation with the council. Photo / File
A council spokesperson said a proposal had been presented to nursery staff and the council would not comment further on this yet.
“No decision has been made to close the nursery in October,” the statement said.
A “change process” was ongoing following the amalgamation of former council-controlled organisation, Infracore with the council’s works department in November.
An internal consultation document was shared with council staff on August 12 and feedback closed on August 27.
That feedback was “being carefully reviewed” before decisions would be made, said the spokesperson.
They confirmed this was “unrelated” to using the facility to store abandoned trolleys uplifted under a new bylaw.
Rotorua’s city gardens “will not be impacted” by any nursery decision.
“As consultation with staff is still under way, we will be able to provide further information once the change process has finished.”
They said a decision on the nursery will be made by the incoming council, after October’s local election.
Voting in the election closes on October 11.
Mathew Nash is a Local Democracy Reporting journalist based at the Rotorua Daily Post. He has previously written for SunLive, been a regular contributor to RNZ and was a football reporter in the UK for eight years.
– LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.