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Home / Rotorua Daily Post

Te Arawa's plea on Rotorua Māori ward: Reconsider one-seat model

Felix Desmarais
By Felix Desmarais
Local Democracy Reporter ·Rotorua Daily Post·
18 Nov, 2021 08:28 PM5 mins to read

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Te Tatau o Te Arawa deputy chairman Rawiri Waru. Photo / File

Te Tatau o Te Arawa deputy chairman Rawiri Waru. Photo / File

LDR_STRAP

Te Arawa is calling on local councillors to "vote carefully" ahead of its final decision on the future governance structure of the council today.

It follows Te Tatau o Te Arawa representative Potaua Biasiny-Tule storming out of a committee meeting on Tuesday and calling the process a "sham".

In a statement on Thursday evening, Te Tatau o Te Arawa deputy chairman Rawiri Waru implored councillors to reconsider signing off on a council structure that would see one Māori ward with one seat.

In a narrow vote, Rotorua Lakes Council's Strategy, Policy and Finance Committee recommended the model for the council to consider, with council officers and some councillors arguing the model allowed better parity for voters on the Māori roll.

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Waru said the model "came out of the blue".

"We are concerned and dismayed with both the process used to land on this model and the outcome of the committee.

"We're hopeful that at [today's] meeting councillors will recognise that the recommendation is out of step with what Te Arawa, voters on the Māori electoral roll and the general community are asking for."

He said a Te Tatau analysis of submission data found 50 per cent of submissions on the representation review – which consulted on different governance models – supported three Māori ward seats.

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"That's compared to just 4 per cent of submissions favouring the council's original option of having two Māori seats at the table."

He said while Te Arawa would have preferred to ask for a 50/50 split of seats at the council table, it was aware the Local Electoral Act did not allow for it.

"Instead, we aligned our tono [submission] with the act along with the direction and endorsement of our people and asked for three Māori seats, one at-large, and six general."

Waru said it would be a travesty – a misrepresentation – if the council signed off on one Māori seat "when tangata whenua and the wider community want three seats".

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"We're asking our elected members to be bold, brave and forward-thinking equitable partners and hear our tono [request].

"We need you to deliberate and ensure there are three Māori seats on Council at the next election."

At Tuesday's committee meeting six elected members voted to recommend the model to the council and six voted against. The casting vote in favour from committee chairwoman Merepeka Raukawa-Tait ensured its referral to Friday's council meeting.

Representation reviews, which decide things such as how many councillors there are and whether wards or at-large constituencies are in place, are a six-yearly legislative requirement for all councils.

The council consulted on its then-proposed structure from September 8 to October 8 and elected members later met in a closed-door workshop to discuss a preferred structure in light of public feedback.

While the council's original proposal consisted of one Māori ward with two seats, one general ward with four seats, four at-large seats and the mayor, a report for Tuesday's meeting stated after public feedback, elected members advised council officers the preferred structure was three Māori ward seats, three general ward seats and four at-large seats.

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However, council officers found the preferred structure would be illegal because an equation in the Local Electoral Act means the number of people enrolled in the Māori roll in the district had a bearing on how many seats could be allocated to that ward.

Using the calculation, the maximum number of ward seats was 1.68, which rounded up to two.

In Tuesday's meeting, council officers said while a model with two Māori seats, four general ward seats and four at-large seats would also be a legally-allowable model, it was less equitable as it meant those on the Māori roll could only vote for six candidates, while others could vote for eight.

The model with one Māori seat meant all voters had the same number of votes available to them, regardless of which electoral roll they were on.

In the meeting, Te Tatau o Te Arawa representation Potaua Biasiny-Tule said it was "insulting" the one-seat model had not been discussed with Te Arawa, but council officers said it was not possible because of timing constraints and the fact Te Tatau had been a submitter on the representation review.

The committee had also voted in favour of chief executive Geoff Williams pursuing legislative change that would allow a model with three Māori ward seats, three general ward seats and four at-large seats, and legal advice suggested it could be achieved before the 2022 election through a local bill specifically for the Rotorua district.

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• The council meeting starts at 9.30am today and is expected to be live-streamed on the council website and its Youtube channel.

The model to be considered

• One mayor elected at-large.

• One Māori ward with one seat.

• One general ward with one seat.

• Eight at-large seats.

• Continuation of the Rotorua Lakes and Rural Community Boards.

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