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Happy Monday Friend,
This week we farewell the CEO of Wellington Water, reveal the
latest extravagant taxpayer-funded party(s), expose the Ministry of
Education's wayward priorities, and share our exclusive intel
collected from the National Party's conference... We will also give
you an update on the Government's unwinding of Labour's Three Waters
policy.
Film Commission partying away taxpayer money 💸🎈
After the Ministry
for Pacific Peoples got a hounding for spending $40,000 on a leaving
party for its outgoing CEO last year, the Film
Commission decided to jump on the gravy train too.
Spending more than $16,000 on four separate parties, the
situation is so strange even the screenwriters receiving millions of
taxpayer dollars from the Commission each year couldn't make it
up.
Not content with just one leaving party, the outgoing
CEO Mladen Ivancic decided he needed two – one
in Auckland and one in Wellington, the latter of which was of course
hosted by long-time
friend of the Taxpayers' Union and corporate welfare recipient, Peter
Jackson.
And of the "special guests", more than 80 percent weren't
even Ivancic's colleagues. Plus, once they were over their
taxpayer-funded hangover, they got two more welcome parties for the
incoming CEO too!
In true Wellywood fashion, the incoming CEO, Annie Murray,
signed off on the leaving parties while Ivancic signed off on the
welcome ones on his way out! "I'll scratch your back if you scratch
mine!"
Jordan
spoke to Newstalk ZB about how out of touch the Film Commission really
is.
This comes following a near $500,000 golden goodbye for the
previous CEO after just nine months on the job, four months of which
were paid leave. That's
a whole other story...
But it's not all bad news this week.
Government adopts key aspects of Taxpayers' Union Three Waters
alternative 💦💦💦
On Thursday, the Government released the latest update in its Three
Waters reforms and it's good news, Friend.
The relentless advocacy, campaigning, policy work and legal
drafting is finally paying off.
The Three Waters replacement will include many of they key
principles and proposals of our alternative we spent the last two
years developing.
Our Economist, Ray Deacon, wrote
about the latest updates in an opinion piece for Wellington's The Post
published on Friday:
Decades of poor asset management, combined with the
tendency of councils to raid money intended for things people can’t
see, like pipes, to fund the politically expedient things people can
see like convention centres and town halls, have led to the situation
we find ourselves in today...
Yesterday’s announcement from the
Government is a lifeline for New Zealand’s water infrastructure. It
incorporates many of the proposals from the Taxpayers’ Union’s
technical advisory group.
I was part of that group. Joined by
a team of experienced experts in infrastructure, local government, and
economics, we set out to develop comprehensive legislative drafting
instructions for a future Government to pick up.
Continue
reading over at The Post.
Key points from Thursday's announcement:
-
Councils, jointly or individually, are able to set up
council-controlled organisations (CCOs) with ring-fenced
revenue for water infrastructure (so it can't be used to hide
stealth rates increases to fund pet projects as some councils
currently do).
-
CCOs can borrow for long-term investment in core infrastructure
with that cost more fairly shared across all users over the
infrastructure's lifetime, rather than lumped on the ratepayers of
today – or worse, using borrowed money for day-to-day wasteful spending (or
not undertaking the capital work at all).
-
Drinking water safety and quality will continue to be
regulated by the new water regulator, addressing the core issue that
caused the Havelock North water crisis back in 2016.
-
Small shared domestic water schemes will be exempted
from the regulations preventing them from being required to
deal with the same level of expensive red tape as our largest
cities. This is a huge win. Under the current rules,
farmers connecting just two dwellings (such as a farmhouse and
shearers quarters) were to be regulated like a town-supply
utility!
-
The regulator must consider the costs imposed on suppliers before
imposing ineffective or impractical regulation where the cost far
exceeds the benefits, preventing engineers from being totally
risk adverse or gold-plating (no matter the costs).
-
Economic regulation, enforced by the Commerce Commission, will
require CCOs to publicly produce economic, service
performance, and management data, ensuring they are properly
managing their assets and future investment. This is standard around
the world and is already in place for electricity lines companies.
As
Ray summed it up:
Our solutions to the
nation’s water woes focused on tackling the core issues rather than
using the reforms as a Trojan horse for pushing ideological
changes – namely, expanding co-governance and centralising
control, as the previous Government did.
Friend, all of this work was made possible thanks to the thousands
of our supporters who backed the Taxpayers' Union against all odds to
first stop, and then scrap, Three Waters.
We were up against what, at face-value, was an unwinnable battle: A
single party majority Labour Government, a media unwilling to report
fairly on Three Waters, an opposition unwilling to be vocal and a
multi-million dollar taxpayer-funded propaganda campaign to scare the
public into supporting their proposals.
But with people power, grassroots activism, roadshows, TV and
newspaper ads and hundreds upon hundreds of banners we slowly turned
the tide and won convincingly. Take a bow Friend.
Wellington Water boss quits 👋
The same day as the Government's Three Water's announcement, Wellington
Water's Chief Executive, Tonia Haskell announced her resignation –
effective the very next day.
Credit where it's due for Ms Haskell for falling on her sword
following the organisation's incredibly poor (and expensive)
performance.
Wellington
Water recently admitted overlooking a budget error, forcing
ratepayers to fork out an additional $51 million to plug the
holes.
Earlier in the year, a damning
report highlighted the skyrocketing costs of fixing the city's
leaks, and over the summer ratepayers were forced onto water
restrictions as the region was losing almost half of its drinking
water to leaks.
A serious shakeup is needed at Wellington Water. The Board
must work quickly to find a strong replacement who is able to bang the
right heads together and get things done.
A similar approach would be useful in central government
too...
Time to pull the plug on taxpayer-funded EV
chargers 🔌
Last week, Rhys, one of our young researchers, uncovered
that the Ministry of Education is pumping millions of dollars into
taxpayer-funded EV chargers for their staff. Since 2022, they have
spent almost $2.2 million on 297 chargers, only four of which are on
properties owned by the taxpayer. For the avoidance of doubt, this
isn't car chargers at schools, it's mostly chargers at
offices and carparks that aren't even owned by the Ministry.
There’s not even any environmental benefit either. As
I explain here, these policies don’t make a dent in emissions.
If government departments were wasting taxpayers’ money
installing petrol pumps in their basements it would rightly be called
ridiculous. Paying millions to install EV charging points is no
different, except it comes with a hefty sprinkle of middle-class
welfare for Wellington bureaucrats plugging in their Teslas.
This $2.2 million is just one Ministry’s contribution.
Other departments are almost certainly at it too, on top of the tens
of millions already splurged on public EV chargers by EECA.
The Ministry needs to use every cent to fix our broken
education system. It’s
time to pull the plug on this nonsense.
So while it's open-season when it's taxpayer
money, when politicians are spending their own money the story is
slightly different...
Frosty reception at the National Party conference 🥶
Earlier this month, the National Party had their annual conference
in Auckland.
We're always keen to keep our ears close to the ground, and picked
up a scoop or two – but when one of our staffers in attendance
reported one little thing he overheard, we couldn’t help but
laugh.
Conference-goers had a frosty reception when the National
Party apparently refused to put the heating on, saying it would cost
the party too much money!
This from the same people running a government spending programme
which is spending even more than Grant Robertson was!
So now we know, politicians can indeed be frugal – at least
when it’s their money they’re having to spend, not that taken from
hardworking taxpayers…
Now take that approach to Wellington please.
Taxpayer Talk – MPs in Depth with National MP
for Napier, Katie Nimon🎙️🎧
So while the National Party get-togethers may be frosty, that
doesn't mean their MPs are. This week
on Taxpayer Talk, I
sat down with National's Katie Nimon – a rising star and local MP from
my home patch in Napier.
Katie was elected as the MP for the Napier electorate at the 2023
General Election, winning back the seat that had been held by Labour's
Stuart Nash since 2014.
Katie's maiden speech stood out to the Taxpayers' Union staff as
she was one of the very few MPs to mention an economist, in her case
Adam Smith.
Born and raised in Hawke's Bay, Katie has had experience working
in, and eventually running, the iconic family bus company Nimon and
Son before becoming the transport manager at the regional council.
A passionate advocate for her region, Katie shares her story before
politics, what drives her and why she wanted to become an MP.
Listen
to the episode on our website | Apple Podcasts, | Spotify | iHeart
Radio
Enjoy the week ahead.
|
Connor Molloy Campaigns
Manager New Zealand Taxpayers’
Union
|
Media
Mentions:
Newstalk ZB The
Huddle: Are we being too hard on the C2 500
crew?
The Post A
lifeline for New Zealand’s failing
infrastructure
The Post Auckland
mayor’s plan to ‘dethrone’ errant Auckland
Transport
Kiwiblog Why
I have resigned from the Research Association of New
Zealand
RNZ Mediawatch
for 11 August 2024 [16:34]
Media
releases:
Fun
Police Need To Stay In Their Lane
TVNZ
Must Be Sold Before It’s Too Late
TVNZ’s
$1.5M Rebrand A Smokescreen For Poor Performance And Declining
Trust
Time
To Pull The Plug On EV Charging Rort
Taxpayers’
Union Welcomes Progress On Three Waters Replacement
Nicola
Willis Promises To Tackle Bureaucrats’ Rocketing Wage
Growth
Second
Aratere Ferry Incident Highlights Need To Sell
Interislander
Government
Wasted $2.2 Million On Ministry Of Education’s EV Chargers, Needs
Lessons In Climate Policy
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