Dear John,
The government has announced that six transport projects from the
NZ Upgrade Programme announced in January 2020, will not go ahead.
Mill Road four lane widening has been cancelled. This project was
progressed under a National government so that it should have broken
ground in the last quarter of 2017 with full funding. After being
reinstated in January 2020 and consulted on and scheduled to start in
2022 Labour has cancelled it again. The three and a half years that
the Labour government has delayed this project has put the cost out of
reach they say. Even though the land needed has largely been
purchased and the consultations and court hearings have been done
too.
This is bad news for many who have moved out from Auckland central
to new more southern subdivisions in Takaanini, Flat Bush, Pokeno,
Paerata and Karaka. The daily commute on the Southern Motorway is very
slow on many stretches of State Highway One north of the Manukau
interchange and cancelling the Mill Road four lane widening will mean
this continues.
Whangarei to Port Marsden that would have been 22 kilometres of a
main road widened to four lanes with cycle and walk lanes added to it,
has been cancelled. This is part of a major upgrade of roads to
Northland which are narrow and known to be dangerous high crash
zones.
As recently as November 2020 the NZTA website proclaims that “these
projects aim to improve safety, build greater resilience into the
transport system, and improve the connection and access to Northland.”
But not now.
Recently it was announced that the widening of the Southern
Motorway from Papakura to Drury South awarded to Fulton Hogan, has
been begun. Lanes have been moved to accommodate work in the centre of
the Highway but the extension to Drury South has been cancelled.
This will impact all who drive from south of Drury and specifically
the people who might have bought into the Stevensons Quarry
development, Paerata Rise and other new housing and business
developments in the southern parts of Auckland.
Three new railway stations for Drury were proudly announced on the
Kiwirail website in November 2020. Creating these new stations is
another crucial step to support future growth in southern Auckland
which is estimated to be 120,000 people moving to 40,000 new homes.
By opening up the area to really efficient rail services and
encouraging more people to make use of convenient, low-emissions
public transport, traffic congestion on the roads will not become
worse.
Now one of these three stations has been cancelled.
Te Puna to Ōmokoroa in Bay of Plenty which would have been a 4 lane
14 km expressway is cancelled now. Previously on the NZTA website it
said “Once complete, the Takitimu North Link will significantly
improve safety and accessibility, build resilience, support growth and
provide more transport choice for communities. The project is a key
part of the region’s SmartGrowth strategy.”
Now improvements to this very dangerous road are cancelled.
Why is it that at the SH1/SH29 intersection in Piarere, a new
roundabout that would have improved safety for those travelling
between Auckland, Hamilton and Tauranga has been cancelled? It would
have future proofed the extension of the Takatimu North link
expressway at a lower cost than will ever apply in the future.
How can the government believe all of these projects can be cheaply
tweaked to provide the same level of safety and travel efficiency that
the fully completed projects would have achieved?
While announcing these cancellations, the government has confirmed
plans for a brand-new cycling and walking bridge across the Waitematā
Harbour at an estimated cost of $785million.
It is so much better for all the people in the south of Auckland
Northland and Bay of Plenty that a brand-new cycle and walking bridge
will be built across the Waitemata Harbour isn’t it? How is that going
to speed up train travel and stop the endless traffic holdups on State
Highway 1?
Can we wait five years or more to see if thousands of people will
use this new crossing to walk or cycle to work? And when the existing
harbour bridge is no longer fit for use, what then?
All of this shows you can't trust Labour to deliver transport. It
is quite clear the Labour Government can’t count, can’t control costs,
and hates cars and even rail commuters.
What would National do?
We would immediately give the green light to all the cancelled
projects because the money has already been put aside for them.
We would prioritise a second crossing for the Waitemata Harbour to
support the needs of Aucklanders and indeed all of the North Island.
It would cater for all road vehicles.
It would be future proofed for use well into the future at a cost
of up to $2billion but done once and done well so that Aucklanders
will not be suffering gridlock for decades to come.
We would prioritise this project over the $10 billion the
Government says it is going to be spending on a slow tram down
Dominion Rd (light rail). We would also put in more train lines for
freight and express train travel to other city centres, as we promised
in 2017.
Covid-19 Vaccinations Delay
New Zealand is about out of Covid-19 vaccine but the PM has
announced more will arrive for June and July in mid-July. A million
doses is due that will double the number of vaccines in the country.
My maths says that 1 million doses is enough for 500,000 people not 5
million less the 3 percent who have been vaccinated to the beginning
of June.
We are receiving complaints about the booking and IT systems that
show there aren’t enough staff to answer the phones and the systems
are poor for people trying to book a vaccination online. The
Government’s reporting is short on facts about the number of vaccines
delivered and the future timetable but we know the roll-out is very
slow. And yet, this Government is constantly telling us everything is
going to plan.
Nurses’ Pay
So the government is offering to lift pay for nurses on the bottom
salary bands by 4 to 10 per cent.
Meanwhile the more experienced, highly trained nurses are receiving
next to no increase but
Minister Andrew Little says pay parity and a one off payment will
narrow the gap.
Nurses were calling for up to 17 per cent more pay but the
Government says it is strapped for cash to meet this.
I say that the Government is more focused on restructuring the
health system, for which $486 million has been set aside in Budget
2021, than valuing the very people that make the health system
work.
Has Labour’s Finance Minister scored an own goal by spending money
so freely last year during and after the lockdowns? Has he
over-borrowed and now our frontline workers especially in health are
going to pay?
The government was in charge of the finances last year and while we
have had fewer tourists in the country, our significant food exports
and other products exports have not slowed down and the milk prices
have gone up so where has this cash strapped position come from?
The Government is likening the Covid environment, to the GFC, and
blaming it for making it financially constrained now.
This is a blow for the infrastructure spending they promised and
for the government employees who provide health, education and other
essential services like policing.
Best wishes,
Judith.
Hon Judith
Collins http://judithcollins.national.org.nz/
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