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Hi Friend,
We hope you've had a relaxing summer break. Unfortunately,
Government waste doesn't pause for summer and while Callum is still in
Scotland visiting family, the rest of the Taxpayers' Union team have
kept up the effort to find and expose government waste while standing
up for taxpayers.
This week's taxpayer update covers the 'best of the worst'
of waste we uncovered since Christmas... Happy New Year!
NZTE's spending your money on yoga, singing contests,
scavenger hunts and even "paper, scissors, rock
tournaments" 🧘✂️👀
We start with New Zealand Trade and Enterprise (NZTE). Thanks to a
confidential
tip-off to your humble Taxpayers' Union, we've obtained official
documents showing that rather than getting serious work done, NZTE
have used 'Regional Team Meetings' as an excuse to holiday blow out the
budget on luxury accommodation, extravagant food and (frankly) what
can only be described as children's activities.
Judge for yourself the activities paid for by taxpayers at
just seven meetings costing taxpayers $809,450
over the past two years. Here are some of the agenda
items:
Reading the information response, we thought someone was
playing a joke. Rock, paper, scissors tournaments, silent discos and
scavenger hunts? You couldn’t make this stuff up.
How this kind of expenditure was allowed to go on across
multiple years is simply unfathomable. We say it is time for NZTE to
grow up, front up and stop acting like children.
Universities Pouring Even More Money into Wasteful Projects
Despite Financial Woes 🚧 🏗️
New Zealand's universities are in financial dire straits with low
enrolments and shockingly high deficits. Yet despite a need to rein in
spending – we've discovered that university leaders continue to blow
budgets on vanity projects instead of focusing on core education.
A prime example is Victoria University of Wellington, which,
despite announcing a financial crisis last year leading to staff
layoffs and course cancellations, continues to spend heavily on
a ‘Living Pa’ project. This sustainability-focused
building has seen costs escalate from $35 million to an estimated $60
million.
Wellington's The Post (Stuff.co.nz) covered our exposé that yet
another $8
million was approved in December.
For a university that is constantly crying out for more taxpayer
funding, they sure have a lot of extra money to blow on vanity
projects such as this. Ironically, the cost blowout of
the ‘Living Pa’ project is almost the same as the University's deficit
that led to the job losses!
In response to us labelling the building a 'vanity project', The
Post/Stuff went to the University for comment.
Incredibly, Professor Rawinia Higgins, deputy vice-chancellor
Māori, said that despite the ballooning costs she was appreciative
that it is effectively too late to cancel!
“The financial sustainability
project has put a lot of pressure on everybody. We are fortunate the
pā was already in flight,” [...]
"When complete, the living pā
will be a place for the “big conversations”, Higgins
said.
There is a need for a 'big conversation', but we're not sure Prof
Higgins thinks it should be about cost control!
Designed to be a sustainable living
building, the three-storey pā is being built with minimal use of
concrete and steel.
It will have a
glazed facade, engineered timber cladding, solar array on the roof,
and a closed loop water system. It must generate all its own energy,
have its own water systems, be entirely carbon neutral and have used
non-toxic materials.
Once completed
it will be home to Te Kawa a Māui (School of Māori Studies), Māori
student services, while also housing collaborative working, teaching,
and marae engagement spaces to advance teaching and research models
that draw on mātauranga Māori and emerging science and
technology.[...]
Higgins
(Tūhoe) saw how the building served as a “bridge” of understanding to
who Tūhoe were as a people.
“To me that’s
what learning should be about ... finding a bridge or commonplace that
brings people together.”
Higgins said
they had been “very deliberate” about the pā’s design so as not to
detract from the wharenui which would be the “jewel of the crown in
the whole complex”.
[...]
Positioned in the heart of the campus, the pā will become a “beacon
for Māori students”, with the wharenui no longer hidden behind “what
used to be some very old colonial looking buildings”.
[...] With the
building shape more evident, Higgins hoped it would provide a sense of
hope about the university’s future.
But it isn’t just Victoria University... Otago claims that asking
about the cost of a $110k sculpture is "culturally insensitive" 🤯
This week, we were in the Otago Daily Times calling
out Otago University for spending $110k on a sculpture despite
their own financial woes.
What’s worse is that the University refused to share how it spent
the money until the Chief Ombudsman got involved to force their hand.
They claimed that the request for the cost of the sculpture was “of a
vexatious nature and culturally insensitive.”
We say it’s high time our tertiary institutions get back to
delivering on their core purpose, and putting pretentious pet projects
to one side. Nothing is more important to the future of our country
than the provision of education. It is critical that our Universities
focus (and focus their limited budget on) education and research.
Taxpayers Forking Out to Provide Foreign Aid to Countries
with Space and Nuclear Programmes! 🚀 💥
In case you missed it over summer, Newstalk ZB covered our exposé
that Kiwi taxpayers are spending millions on foreign aid to
countries wealthy enough to have their own space and nuclear
programmes!
For example, in the same year that India landed a spacecraft
on the moon, they received $1,178,000 from Kiwi taxpayers, Indonesia
has been granted a whopping $25,068,402.67 and Pakistan has been given
$3,500,000.
On
Newstalk ZB, our investigations coordinator Oliver argued that if a
foreign government has enough money to invest in ambitious space
programmes, it should not expect to be receiving funding from
taxpayers that is earmarked for helping the world’s
poorest. We say that New Zealand's limited foreign aid
budget should be directed to those who need it most and, in
particular, our Pacific Island neighbours.
Half the Cost of Your Summer Road Trip Went Straight
to the Government Coffers!
If you managed to get away for a road trip over the summer
break, unfortunately it was unlikely that you were able to escape the
grip of big government with almost half of the pump price of petrol
being taxes.
That's right, we
revealed that 48% of the cost every time you fill up the car is
tax that goes straight to the government – in Auckland it's more
than 50% thanks to Labour's regional fuel tax!
Wellingtonians wanting to escape the city and head to Taupō
for a few days will be forced to stump up $86 in fuel taxes for the
journey. One of our young staffers decided to head to the Rhythm and
Vines New Years festival in Gisborne and got stung with $120 in fuel
taxes!
For many, the summer holiday period is the one time of the
year that they are able to get off work and enjoy time with friends
and families. After the costs of a more expensive Christmas this year
(thanks to Grant Robertson and Adrian Orr), on top of exorbitant fuel
taxes, the prospect of a summer getaway is unfortunately becoming less
and less viable for many families.
Now many people would be happy paying fuel taxes, if the
money was actually spent on fixing and maintaining the roads, but
anyone driving anywhere this summer can't have got very far without
hitting sections of road riddled with potholes. Instead, the
government continues to blow fuel excise revenue on projects
completely unrelated to driving such as coastal shipping, cycle tracks
and public transport pet projects.
Share Secrets, Expose Extravagance: Are You Aware of
Wasteful Spending?
Many of our waste stories come tip-offs from supporters like
you, or from within the bureaucracy itself.
If you're aware of examples of government departments or
local councils engaging in extravagant, inappropriate or wasteful
spending that you think we should investigate, please send us a
confidential tip-off with what you know. You
can do so on our tip-line by clicking here.
Other News in Brief ⏰
- We called on the government to get rid of road-related
excise taxes from marine
fuel for recreational boaties. Currently, boaties pay all the same
fuel taxes as motorists despite boats not being operated on the road.
We suggested a similar claims process to that used
by commercial fishing operators.
- We
revealed that police officers filled up their cars with the wrong
fuel 19 times in the past year, costing
taxpayers almost $8000 to fix the damage. This is despite spending
thousands of dollars over the past few years fitting the vehicles with
attachments that are meant to prevent exactly this from
happening!
- ACC's lavish and patronising 'Have a Hmmm' campaign was revealed
by us to have cost $2.4 million over just 7 months. We are asking
questions to see whether this actually lead to a measurable reduction
in injuries or if it was a costly and ineffective
exercise.
- The Ministry of Health was taken to court over incorrectly
threatening a business after they misinterpreted their own
regulations. We
revealed that this legal action cost taxpayers $250,000, something
that could have been easily avoided if the Ministry had accepted the
businesses offer to meet and resolve the issue.
- We dug
into the police's $320,000 podcast and it turns out only 15,400
people downloaded it – that's $21 per download! We even invited them
on our podcast, Taxpayer Talk, last year to promote being a
cop, but they passed. Similarly, we
also revealed the police have no clue how many folks used their
$634,000 recruitment app.
One More Summer Read? 📕
We've absolutely loved getting feedback over summer from
people reading The Mission: The Taxpayers' Union at 10. We
even had a few text messages from Cabinet Ministers telling us they're
reading the book (apparently it is a better read than the mountain of
gloomy Ministerial briefing papers!).
If
you haven't yet grabbed your copy, click here to get yours
today.
Thanks for your support and all the best for the year ahead,
|
Connor Molloy Campaigns
Manager New Zealand Taxpayers’
Union
|
Media
coverage:
NZ Herald Govt
announces review of Kāinga Ora, Christopher Luxon responds to
criticism over publicly-funded te reo lessons
Otago
Daily Times Taxpayers
foot bill for Luxon's reo Māori
lessons
RNZ The
Panel with David Cunliffe and Nalini Baruch (Part
1)
RNZ PM
in hot water over tax payer funded te reo
tuition
NZ Herald Gerry
Brownlee off to a solid start as Speaker - Audrey
Young
Rural News Tough
times
interest.co.nz Finance
Minister Nicola Willis wants Treasury to report fiscal risks more
clearly
MSN Fireworks
in Parliament over Govt's mini-Budget
Otago Daily
Times Criticism
by Taxpayers' Union
'embarrassing'
BusinessDesk On
the Money: the taxi waits for no one, Cecilia's in the market, hear
Jordan, and more
Stuff Damien
Grant: Being in Opposition can be a gift, but it's time which must be
used wisely
Stuff Which
council staff are earning more than
$100,000?
Timaru Herald Waitaki
council rejects 'vanity project' claim about $32m Ōamaru event centre
project
The Post Costs
jump $26m on Victoria University’s Living Pā
project
Stuff Is
$100,000 still a big salary in 2023?
NZ
Herald Claire
Trevett: National leader Christopher Luxon’s dire interview of no
answers
ChannelLife Taxpayers'
Union slams NZ Police's Virtual Cop app
Basset,
Brash & Hide JOHN
RAINE: Ministerial Spring Cleaning and the Parable of the Rowing
Eight
Newstalk ZB Taxpayer
Union questions prior Foreign Aid spending; urges focus on 'Pacific
friends'
Newstalk ZB Afternoon
Edition: 05 January 2024
Basset, Brash &
Hide GRAHAM
ADAMS: TVNZ’s naked bias on display
Otago Daily
Times Secrecy
shows ‘lack of respect’ for taxpayers
1
News Felix
Desmarais: Ten faces to watch in politics in
2024
Otago Daily Times Learning
to answer questions
|