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Home / Whanganui Chronicle

Letters: Council must ask right questions in climate change consultation

Whanganui Chronicle
26 Sep, 2019 05:00 PM4 mins to read

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We must develop the port or abort, says Garth Scown.

We must develop the port or abort, says Garth Scown.

When I work with newcomers to the fields of sustainability and resilience, I observe most struggle to find the right questions to ask.

This is perfectly normal for newbies, but the problem is that asking the wrong questions usually means getting answers that are not helpful for achieving meaningful results.

As I discussed with Laurel Stowell of the Chronicle in a recent interview, this appears to be the case with the council's climate change consultation. Most of the questions are off track enough as to provide little of value that the council can, will or even should act on.

We saw the same thing a year or two ago with a community survey on the environment that had almost no questions about the environment. My issue is not with consultations or surveys. My issue is with their quality.

If questionnaires and surveys are not robust in their design then the results are not robust. I believe the saying goes, "garbage in — garbage out".

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With limited council resources of time and money, I see nearly everything as a matter of "opportunity cost". In other words, if we spend time and money in one place they are not available to spend in another.

Over a decade of living in the River City I have observed and lamented far too many projects and programmes that were poorly conceived, poorly designed and poorly managed.

All that money wasted for lack of robustness. I'm hoping the same does not happen with a fledgling climate change strategy.

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We need to start by asking the right questions.

NELSON LEBO
Okoia

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Port or abort

Murray Shaw, among others, has pointed out that to have a viable port, it must be separated from the river. A river port is not practical.

$100 million might build the separation wall and put the river straight out. Another $100 million will then dig out a regional port capable of handling decent-sized cargo ships.
Obviously, this is beyond Wanganui's capacity to fund, so it's abort the port.

If we attempt to make it viable for coastal shipping, then the bill won't be so big but will have a constant drag on the ratepayer.
A decent port would be of national interest, an income-earning enterprise, so it should be in the interest of the Government to build; $200 million is not big bickies to the government.

They would reap a lot of GST and company tax while building it, then an income from the port and an income from the tax take that would be generated by the businesses that would be created in the surrounding area.

Decreasing the infrastructure needs for growing our present ports and the huge distances the trains have to travel to load out of Tauranga and Auckland — it's called win-win.

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G R SCOWN
Whanganui

Downward spiral

Jim Maidens (Letters, September 24) aptly describes NZ Post's "death spiral" as services are further reduced.

Time to remind readers how, three decades back, the Labour government, captured and captivated by neo-liberal nonsense, decided to split up the old P&T Department. The postal section was retained, although many rural post offices were closed. An Australian bank took over Bonus Bonds, and NZ Telecom was sold to an overseas corporation. Not that all members of the Labour caucus agreed with the sale — three were kept out of Parliament on decision day.

Today we find all the parties currently in our House of Representatives about to vote for the second and third readings of two bills designed to encourage more foreign investment in public projects, i.e. Shane Jones' NZ Infrastructure Commission and David Parker's Venture Capital Fund bills. Both would require the establishment of more teams of talking heads and their expensive reports.

When former Finance Minister, Roger Douglas declared smugly on a recent Q&A television interview that the ideas he promoted were still in place, he was all too correct!

HEATHER MARION SMITH
Gonville

•Send your letters to: Letters, Whanganui Chronicle, 100 Guyton St, PO Box 433, Whanganui 4500 or email letters@wanganuichronicle.co.nz

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