Dear Friend,
I'm emailing from the Local Government New Zealand annual
conference in Wellington.
LGNZ are the organisation that were bribed given
taxpayer money by Nanaia Mahuta to endorse the last Government’s
anti-democratic 'Three Waters', despite LGNZ (apparently) standing for
‘localism’ and ‘democracy’ – the very things Three Waters would have
undermined...
LGNZ are also the organisation that two
years ago literally banned the Taxpayers’ Union
(including our supporters, like you!) from attending their
previous conference, which was ironically titled “The Future of
Local Government”.
They must be short of money (their largest members, Auckland and
Christchurch City Councils, recently pulled their membership) because
this year they've let me in!
The conference started this afternoon. After 47 minutes of pōwhiri,
the Mayor of Wellington Tory Whanau gave the first speech (introduced
as a 'welcome to Wellington').
The Mayor's main point was that “we should decide”
about having Māori wards. And no, she wasn’t saying that “we”
local communities should decide on Māori wards, she meant we
the
politicians should decide!
Following Ms Whanau was the Prime Minister, Chris Luxon. Mr Luxon
was allocated just 10 minutes for the three day conference.
Rather than wait for the media (and the left-wing mayors to scream
from the rooftops), I thought it best to just send it straight to
you.
As you'll see below the speech was extraordinary.
The room was dumbfounded. To call the audience disrespectful would
be an understatement (turkeys don’t welcome an early Christmas, after
all).
The room literally laughed when the MC (Kim Hill) thanked the Prime
Minister.
But from a ratepayer perspective (I seem to be literally the only
‘ratepayer’ person here!) is this best speech at a local
government conference in a generation?
Judge for yourself:
Rt Hon Christopher
Luxon Prime Minister
21 August 2024
Speech to LGNZ SuperLocal conference
Ka nui te mihi kia koutou. Kia ora and good
afternoon, everyone.
Before I begin, I’d like to thank LGNZ for
their invitation to speak here today.
I spend a lot of time meeting with many good
mayors and councillors across the country, but this is a great
opportunity to speak to so many of you here all at once.
So, thank you to LGNZ for that opportunity, and
more importantly, thank you to each of you for stepping into the
public square and serving your communities in these roles.
I’d also like to acknowledge Minister Simon
Watts and, in particular, Minister Simeon Brown, who are
here.
As you know, Simeon is responsible for the
Local Government portfolio, has an ambitious reform programme, and has
accomplished a lot in a very short period of time. So, thank you,
Simeon, for all of your hard work and leadership.
New Zealand faces big infrastructure challenges
- Water. Transport. Resilience. And each of those will be absolutely
critical to get right.
We know your communities need the tools to
sustainably finance the necessary investment. So, we’re making
changes.
Through changes agreed by the Local Government
Funding Authority, we're alleviating pressure on council debt caps,
which will relieve a lot of pressure on fast-growing
councils.
We’re presenting a suite of options for
achieving local water reform that will satisfy ratings agencies'
concerns while maintaining local control of water.
We’re also taking a hard look at a range of
rules and regulations that incur costs that central government
directly loads onto councils. Traffic management is a good example of
an area we know desperately needs change.
And Simeon Brown will soon present more detail
on our framework for Regional Deals – how they will work, what we want
to enable for communities, and, most importantly, what we expect in
return.
So, we’re doing our part. And I believe it’s
time for local government to do theirs.
Ratepayers expect local government to do the
basics and to do the basics brilliantly. Pick up the rubbish. Fix the
pipes. Fill in potholes. And more generally, maintain local assets
quickly, carefully, and cost effectively.
But nothing in life is free, and ratepayers
expect to pay for it in exchange. But what they don’t expect to pay
for is the laundry-list of distractions and experiments that are
plaguing council balance sheets across the country.
The building we’re in today is a classic
example. With pipes bursting and other infrastructure under pressure,
Wellington City Council decided to spend $180 million of ratepayers’
money on a convention centre, which, according to public reporting, is
now losing money.
It looks very nice, and it’s very nice that
politicians like us have another expensive room to deliver speeches
in, but can anyone seriously say it was the right financial decision
or the highest priority for Wellington given all of its
challenges?
Ratepayers are sick of the white elephants and
non-delivery. So, my challenge to all of you is to rein in the
fantasies and to get back to delivering the basics
brilliantly.
Councillors often tell me that they agree with
all that, but there’s a problem. They just need more help from central
government, usually in the form of cold, hard cash.
I have to be honest with you – the previous
government might have taken that approach, but the party is
over.
There is no magic money tree in Wellington,
thanks to the previous government's economic mismanagement and
vandalism.
Shifting your costs onto taxpayers doesn’t save
anyone any money. It means ratepayers pay more tax, and are left with
less of their own money, to meet the cost of a slightly smaller rates
bill.
Or it means we spend less on health and
education so that councils can avoid tightening their belts exactly as
Kiwi families, businesses and central government have had to do across
New Zealand.
Yes, I’m sure that will be very popular among
councillors, who want to spend money without raising rates to pay for
it. But if any of you think those will be the terms of a regional
deal, it’s time to come back to reality.
We do want to work closer together – and there
will be new revenue tools for councils, where that makes sense – but
the days of handouts are over.
I know some councils already well understand
that new operating environment and they are taking their
responsibility to ratepayers very seriously.
Thank you for those efforts, because your
unrelenting focus on delivering value for money is making a real
difference in your communities.
Finally, if there was any doubt about our
commitment to getting local government back to basics, I have some
announcements to make today on our local government work
programme.
First, Cabinet has agreed to streamline
the purpose provisions in the Local Government Act to get councils
back to basics.
For Councils, that means abolishing the four
wellbeing provisions in legislation and restoring focus on local
services and infrastructure.
For ratepayers, it’s simple. The central
government focuses on must-haves, not nice-to-haves, and we expect
local government to do the same.
Second, Cabinet has agreed to
investigate performance benchmarks for local councils, similar to the
approach some Australian states apply to their local authorities.
In theory, the Local Government Act establishes
the accountability of local authorities to the communities they serve.
But in reality, it’s difficult to get consistent, easily accessible
and comparable information about how councils are actually
performing.
The performance measures we’re looking to
introduce are in areas councils should already be monitoring closely,
such as financial performance and customer service
delivery.
But sunlight is the best disinfectant – and
ratepayers deserve to know exactly what they’re getting for their
rates.
Third, Cabinet has agreed to
investigate options to limit council expenditure on ‘nice-to-haves’.
In some Australian states, revenue caps are
applied to non-core activities to control rates increases.
We’re interested in how a similar approach
could work here in New Zealand, ensuring the right balance between
ratepayers' interests and councils' financial positions.
Yes, councils need adequate revenue to fund
core responsibilities like roads, rubbish and water, but the
value-for-money proposition is more questionable in a range of other
areas.
Councils need to examine those areas more
closely, and I’m up for any tool – like revenue capping – that makes
them do so.
Fourth, Cabinet has agreed to review
the transparency and accountability rules that apply to
councils.
It’s unacceptable that the rules as they stand
today allow unelected officials, in many cases, to prevent elected
members from accessing the information they need to represent their
communities. We will review those settings.
There have been too many absurd scenarios in
which ratepayers are effectively shut out of decision-making because
elected members’ rights to access information are treated as a
secondary consideration.
My expectation is we find a way to end those
practices.
In conclusion, we want a productive and
constructive relationship with local government – one that enables
your growth and development and gives you the tools you need to pay
for it.
But we expect you to spend ratepayers’ money
responsibly. In short, localism comes with both rights and
responsibilities.
In central government, we’re getting on with
the job. We're stopping wasteful spending, shifting money from the
back office to the frontline, setting clear delivery targets and
expectations, prioritising what to do and what not to do, and letting
Kiwis keep more of what they earn.
My parting message: it’s time for you to do the
same.
Go line by line, stop the wasteful spending,
remove the bureaucracy, focus on better customer service, and end the
projects that aren’t delivering value for money.
Ratepayers don’t expect much – they just want
the basics done brilliantly.
We’ll play our part – now it’s time for you to
play yours.
I’m confident that working together, we can
achieve a lot for New Zealanders – better infrastructure and more
resilient communities, all at an affordable price for
ratepayers.
Thank you.
ENDS
Immediately following the Prime Minister, the Labour-aligned
President of Local Government New Zealand, Sam Broughton, got up and
tried to put the boot into Mr Luxon.
Broughton said that criticism of local government "is not
productive". That got a loud cheer from the attendees in the room. He
also called on new ways for councils to tax local communities, in
addition to rates! 🤦
So what do you think, Friend? Was Mr Luxon bang on, or did
he go too far? We've posted the response we sent to
media over on our Facebook page. Head over and let us know what you made of the
speech.
So, it seems James’ call last night (and
the thousands of supporters who have already used our email tool)
for the Government to adopt the policy of capping annual rates hikes
is realistic. So too, is reform to ensure better transparency and
accountability of how ratepayer money is being spent.
Thanks for your support.
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Jordan
Williams Executive Director New Zealand Taxpayers’
Union
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