The management of these assets, including their maintenance and improvement, will be the responsibility of four newly created publicly owned water entities: Entity A (that’s us – Auckland and up), B (central North Island), C (the lower East Coast of the North Island, and the top of the South Island) and D (the rest of the South Island). Councils will have shares in the new entity, at the rate of one share per 50,000 people. Each council will have at least one share.
Entities will be governed by independent boards, appointed by a Regional Representative Group, based on their skills, knowledge and experience. Councils and mana whenua will form part of the Regional Representative Group that will appoint members of the Water Service Entity Board, based on their skills. The number of votes the council gets to vote for the board is proportional to their shares.
Local Water Done Well
The proposed Local Water Done Well water management plan has one key difference: councils keep ownership and control. This plan promises to repeal the Three Waters reforms, restore council control, set strict rules for water quality and investment in infrastructure and ensure water services are financially sustainable.
National’s plan is closely aligned with the recommendation from Communities 4 Local Democracy (C4LD), which has representatives from the majority of councils in NZ, including Whangārei District Council. This plan would introduce a ‘regulatory backstop as a last resort mechanism’, which means a National-led government would step in if any council wasn’t able to deliver a viable plan for their own water management.
Under both plans, there will be a higher bar set for water quality and infrastructure, which means there will be costs to cover, and both plans agree councils shouldn’t under-invest in water infrastructure.
So, how are councils expected to meet the costs of infrastructure, including maintenance, depreciation and expected growth?
This is the million-dollar (or billion-dollar!) question. As the famous saying goes, ‘the devil is in the details’ – but to use another famous saying, ‘there is a lot of water to go under the bridge yet’!
As mayor, my interests will always lie with the people of our district and region.