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Dear Friend,
Hopping mad: COVID-19 funding to ‘destroy’
wallabies for $153,000 a pop 🦘🔫
After almost six months’ worth of excuses,
transfers and extensions on an Official Information Act request sent
back in November, your humble Taxpayers' Union has revealed
that taxpayers and Otago ratepayers have forked out more than $2.76
million and employed over 26,000 hours of work to 'destroy' (that’s
the term the bureaucrats use) just… 18 wallabies! That's a
kill cost of $153,000 per wallaby.
This was just one of the ‘Jobs for Nature’
projects funded by the COVID slush fund. Jobs for Nature was allocated
$1.2 billion – that's $614 for every kiwi household – as a
‘make work’ scheme when the Government feared we would see mass job
losses as a result of the pandemic.
Despite record-low unemployment and
an economy overcooked by Government spending, the fund has continued
to dish out taxpayer money to ineffective ‘conservation’ projects at
an average cost of around $200,000 per 'nature job'.
There is still $167 million yet to be spent:
We say this should stop.
Jordan spoke about this wasteful spending with
Newstalk ZB’s Heather Du Plessis-Allan.
The story was also covered in the Otago Daily Times and Stuff’s Dominion
Post.
Hopping to it: officials defend spending
with misleading spin 😵💫
John Walsh of Biosecurity New Zealand (the
government agency responsible for this project) defended the spending arguing “it’s not wasted
money”. Walsh was quoted in Stuff newspapers as saying the kill
count no way represented “all the wallabies killed by the programme”
and due to wallabies’ nocturnal nature and the remote landscapes,
aerial drops were often the best method of killing.
We called out these misleading comments pointing
to the official information response provided by his agency that
showed that no aerial drops were actually used in Otago...
It is clear that this project, alongside
many others supported through the Jobs for Nature fund, have no
ambition in delivering meaningful outcomes for New Zealand's
environment on a restrained budget.
A lot more to come... 🤫
This is just our second investigation into
this enormous fund. This is just the tip of the iceberg for a much
greater raft of unnecessary waste...
A lesson from Northern Ireland: Where co-government often means no
government at all 🇬🇧🇮🇪
Writing in the New Zealand
Herald, I looked at the system of "co-government" in Northern
Ireland and considered the parallels with some of the recent proposals
here in New Zealand. Three Waters, the proposed Resource Management
Act replacement, and the Government's so-called 'Review into the
Future for Local Government' all reserve places on governance bodies
for unelected mana whenua representatives.
There are two major problems with
co-government models. First, is the creation of veto power. Where one
community can block a proposal – even if it has majority support –
simply because it disagrees with it. This veto power means that
Northern Ireland is currently without a government and it is almost
impossible to get anything done.
Secondly, there is the problem of
disconnecting decision making from democratic accountability. By
reserving spaces on governing bodies for certain groups, it means
that, however they might vote in elections, people are not always able
to effect meaningful change as the people making the decisions remain
the same no matter how much voters disagree with their policies.
The lesson from Northern Ireland is, however
well-intentioned, co-government rarely works in practice. It can bring
government to a standstill, undermines democratic accountability, and
often exacerbates the divisions it is designed to heal. If New Zealand
wants to avoid similar paralysis, it should think twice before
embarking on this path.
You
can read my full piece over on the NZ Herald's website here.
A Taxpayers’ Union
investigation revealed that several councils are forking out
millions of ratepayer dollars to subsidise a private airline and the
wealthy individuals using it.
Across Kapiti Coast, Whakatane and
Whanganui, ratepayers have been forced to foot the bill for more than
$2 million in corporate welfare – benefiting only a tiny number of
ratepayers who use the services. Since 2018, Air Chathams has been
given almost $1 million dollars by Kāpiti Coast District Council along
with a $500,000 interest-free loan. Whanganui and Whakatane district
councils also coughed up hundreds of thousands of dollars in loans
bringing the total value of welfare to more than $2 million.
Kāpiti Coast airport would need to see a
1,500 per cent increase in passengers in order for it to be
financially viable, something even its own Chief Executive recognised.
In a blog post this week, one of our young
interns, Alex Murphy, criticised the Council's decision to fund these
unsustainable routes and tears apart the report that supposedly
provides economic justification for this wasteful example of corporate
welfare. You
can read the full post here.
The war in Gore: Mayor and CEO face-off ⚔️
Like many, we've been following the events in Gore where the
country's youngest Mayor has had a 'relationship breakdown' with the
Council's CEO.
While it is difficult to know exactly what is going on at the
Council, we've been astonished by the willingness of the CEO – an
unelected bureaucrat – to air his dirty laundry in public by speaking
to multiple media organizations. The role of public servants is to
serve the public by implementing the policies of their democratically
elected representatives – not obstruct them and then bad mouth them in
public.
Newsroom
have just published a good summary of events and picked up my
comments:
More power to the
people
Taxpayers’ Union Campaign Manager
Callum Purves says the Taxpayers’ Union wants to see an option of
recall elections introduced so that, if people are unhappy with the
performance of a mayor or councillors that there is a mechanism by
which they can resolve it without having to look at something like
commissioners or some external influence.
And if conflict between a council
chief executive or local body politician is unable to be resolved the
Taxpayers’ Union is quite clear who should resign.
“Ultimately in a democracy if there
is also a conflict between elected representative and officials, so in
this case we have a conflict between the mayor and the chief
executive, that we are strongly of the view that the elected
representative is the one that stays if there is a choice,” says
Purves.
Taxpayer Talk: ACT MP Simon Court on Three Waters and
the proposed RMA reforms🎙️
This week on Taxpayer Talk, I sit down with ACT Party
MP, Simon Court, to discuss the recent Three Waters rebrand, the
proposed resource management reforms and what ACT is proposing to
solve New Zealand's significant infrastructure and planning
problems.
Simon Court is ACT's spokesperson for infrastructure, the
environment and local government and has been leading their response
to the contentious Three Waters and RMA reforms. Prior to becoming an
MP, Simon was a civil and environmental engineer working both in the
private sector and for local government. Simon believes that local
control, strong private property rights and the right incentives for
councils to make good decisions will be what leads to solving some of
our biggest problems going forward.
Later in the podcast, for our War on Waste
segment, Taxpayers’ Union Deputy
Campaigns Manager, Connor Molloy, reveals a 19-month long
investigation into the Government’s decision to give millions of
taxpayer dollars to a gang-affiliated meth rehabilitation program and
the bureaucratic process of simply getting straight answers from
officials.
Listen to the episode | Apple | Spotify | Google Podcasts | iHeart Radio
One more thing 🙏
Friend, we’re proud to be a truly people-powered
organisation, and it will only be through the generosity of thousands
of supporters like you chipping in what you can that we’ll be able to
keep up our work promoting our mission of Lower Taxes, Less Waste,
and More Accountability.
If you can, please click the button below to make a donation
today so we can keep growing our movement, and fighting for a better
deal from Wellington (and town halls!).
Thank you for your support.
Yours aye,
|
Callum
Purves Campaigns Manager New Zealand
Taxpayers’ Union.
|
Media
coverage:
Newstalk ZB Midday Edition: 04 April 2023 – Lobbying
Review (02:05)
NZ Herald Bryce Ewards: Victory for transparency in lobbying
reforms
The Northern Advocate Future of Kerikeri’s Turner Centre up in air as
council mulls ownership
Stuff Air
Chathams received more than $1 million from Kāpiti Coast
council
NZ Herald Māori
holds balance of power in new poll
The Time
Online NEW
POLL: Māori Party holds the balance of power
NZ
City Another
poll points to Te Pati Maori holding the keys to Parliament at this
year's election
Te Ao Māori News Te
Pāti Māori 'kingmakers' in latest political
poll
Newstalk ZB Morning
Edition: 09 April 2023 – New Poll (00:38)
Newstalk
ZB "We're
very clear on our priorities": Deputy PM on Labour's plan for
re-election
Newstalk ZB "We've
got a fantastic future ahead of us": National's Chris Luxon shares
six-month plan for election
Newstalk ZB Politics
Central: Will staff misconduct derail Chris Hipkins' chances for
re-election? (15:40)
Waatea News Te
Pāti Māori Kingmakers must have immediate bottom lines for every New
Zealander
Newstalk ZB Auckland
Transport's new CEO plans to increase public transport use by 20
percent
The Spinoff The
edge of a knife, six months to voting day
The
Working Group with
Shane Te Pou, Matthew Hooton & Damien Grant
NZ
Herald A
lesson in co-governance from Northern Ireland – Callum
Purves
Kapiti Observer Revamped
Three Waters to create 10 water management entities in an effort to
give local governments more influence over massive infrastructure
upgrades
NZ Herald Frontline
police told to ‘consider necessity’ of bail arrests as NZ’s largest
prison nears capacity
Q+A “Nobody
died because of lack of empathy”: Auckland mayor Wayne
Brown (18:44)
Newstalk ZB Taxpayers'
Union Executive Director 'astounded' by $2.7 million cost to eradicate
18 wallabies
Stuff Govt
officials stand by $2.76m wallaby spend in Otago for 18 kills - 'It's
not wasted money'
Otago Daily Times MPI
defends $2.76m cost of Otago wallaby
control
Stuff Ruth
Richardson: The taxation problem I should have fixed 33 years
ago
Wairarapa Times-Age Carterton’s
rates are on the rise
Newsroom Gore
council war could outlast
inquiry
Newsroom Kawerau
leads small councils’ fight against new amalgamations
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