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Dear Friend,
It's been a tough few weeks. Like so many, our team have family and
friends who have lost their homes and livelihoods following Cyclone
Gabrielle and our thoughts continue to be with all of those who have
been affected.
Government must cut wasteful spending – not hike taxes – to
fund cyclone clean up ✂️💰
The clean up and restoration works following the devastation of the
cyclone will cost a lot of money, but the knee-jerk reaction to hike
taxes is not the solution. People are already struggling with
the cost of living and a new tax could not come at a worse
time.
Worryingly, this week both Chris Hipkins and Grant Robertson
refused to rule out a ‘cyclone levy’ or other new taxes.
Borrowing more – an option the National Party signalled it
was open to – is not the solution either. It will simply
serve to drive up inflation further and force the Reserve Bank to
whack up the Official Cash Rate even higher than the 4.75% it was set
at yesterday.
The answer is actually quite simple but it may be a
difficult pill for politicians to swallow: The Government needs to get
a grip on its spending.
Unnecessary
projects such as Auckland's proposed tramway that
Treasury officials estimate could cost up to $29 billion –
equivalent to $14,842 for every New Zealand household – should be
scrapped. The over $1 billion annual spend on
consultants should be slashed, and the explosion in the number of
public service mangers could easily be reduced without impacting on
frontline public services.
Chris Hipkins keeps talking of a shift towards 'bread and butter
politics', but refocussing policies isn't enough, the Government needs
to refocus its spending too.
🔍 Taxpayers' Union Investigation: Ministry of Education wasted
$1 million on truancy 'awareness' campaign under Chris
Hipkins 🏫❌
With much fanfare, the Prime Minister announced funding for new
truancy officers to tackle the attendance crisis in our schools. While
the funding may be welcome, we were curious as to why it had taken the
Government so long to take serious action to tackle the problem.
It turns out Chris Hipkins did take action on
truancy when he was Minister of Education. A Taxpayers' Union
investigation this week revealed that the Ministry allocated $1
million last year for an 'awareness' campaign about the truancy
crisis.
Unclear about what this actually meant, we asked the Ministry to
explain how the campaign addressed the problem of declining attendance
and how it improved it. Shockingly, the Ministry said it “was not
expected to have a direct, quantifiable, impact on attendance rates
itself.”
In short, instead of working to fix the problem (kids not going to
school), taxpayers have been made to foot the $1 million bill for an
advertising campaign to make them aware about something the media had
already done a very good job of covering. You couldn't make it
up!
You
can read the full details of our investigation on our website.
High Court confirms Government's Three
Waters is an asset grab from local councils and ratepayers ⚖️🚰
This week the High Court issued its decision on the Three Waters
case brought by Timaru, Waimakariri and Whangarei District
Councils. They had asked the Court to make declarations on the rights
and interests that property ownership entails. You will recall
the comments the then Local Government Minister, Nanaia Mahuta, made
last year that under her Three Waters scheme councils would still
'own' the assets.
The High Court said
"local councils will lose
central incidents of ownership that they presently hold... that local
councils’ ability to control the use of their assets will be
materially diluted through the WSE governance structure, and... that
local democratic accountability for the provision of the Three Waters
services in local communities is essentially lost."
This confirms what we have known all along: That the
Government's claims that councils retain ownership of water assets are
just plain wrong. What will the Government say now?
The judgement also noted that the Government:
"has deliberately
decided that [the Three Waters funding package] is not intended to
compensate local councils for the value of the infrastructure
assets"
But ultimately, our constitutional framework
and parliamentary sovereignty means Parliament can make
these changes to water service delivery regardless of the impact on
local governance and accountability. The way to stop this is through
the ballot box, and that is why we continue to work hard to raise
public awareness and force the Government to Scrap Three
Waters!
Far North District Council spends $2.4 million
on pound that can house just 10 dogs 🐶
Our friends in the Far North are having a tough time of it as
it is with money desperately needed to fix the roads and flood-damaged
infrastructure.
So it's raised some hackles that the Far North District
Council has spent $2.4 million on a pound to house just ten mutts. The
Northern Advocate reports:
An existing dog kennel bought by
Far North District Council to use as a dog pound has ballooned from a
$200,000 upgrade project into a “bizarrely expensive” $2.4m facility
that will house fewer dogs.
The council bought Melka Kennels
near Kaikohe in 2020 with the aim of converting the commercial dog
kennels into a dog shelter that would serve the district’s busy
southern area.
The original plan was to spend
$200,000 to upgrade the site to meet national animal welfare codes to
house up to 24 dogs.
Now the new Southern Animal Shelter
has morphed into a purpose-built facility that has cost $2.4m and will
house just 10 dogs.
That's nearly a quarter of a million dollars per dog that can be
housed at any one time and nearly three-and-a-half times the average
value of a house in the district.
The Council is defending the decision, saying that it's value for
money, and was partly funded by a Covid "shovel-ready" Provincial
Growth Fund grant. So, taxpayers across the country paid up
too...
Taxpayer Talk with Peter Williams: Dr. Oliver Hartwich
And Callum Purves On The Future Of Local Government 🎙️
In the latest edition of Taxpayer Talk, the focus is
on local government. A review into the future of local government has
been commissioned but it fails to address the main issues affecting
the sector, in particular the way it’s funded and what its main
functions should be.
New Zealand Initiative Executive Director, Oliver
Hartwich, explains to host Peter Williams why more localism is such an
important concept and why it can be great for a country’s economy. I
also speak to Peter about what was wrong with the recent local
government review and how the Taxpayers' Union thinks local
government could be improved.
Also in the podcast, our War on Waste team focus on some silly
spending by the Wellington City Council.
You can still make your voice heard on the Review into the
Future of Local Government's consultation report using our easy
submission tool at www.protectlocaldemocracy.nz
Listen to the episode | Apple | Spotify | Google Podcasts | iHeart Radio
Thank you for your support.
Yours aye,
|
Callum
Purves Campaigns Manager New Zealand
Taxpayers’ Union.
|
Media
coverage:
NZ Herald National
and Labour tied, but Chris Hipkins way ahead of Christopher Luxon -
poll
The Spinoff New
poll puts Labour and National neck and neck
RNZ
Labour
closes gap with National in new poll
Newstalk ZB
Jordan
Williams: Taxpayers' Union says Eleanor Catton should pay back her
subsidies
Newstalk ZB The
Huddle: Curia poll results and Auckland Grammar staying open despite
Cyclone Gabrielle
Newstalk ZB
Barry
Soper: senior political correspondent on Chris Hipkins announcing
$11.5 million in support for cyclone affected
regions
Te Ao Māori News Labour
closes gap with National in new poll
The Kaka by
Bernard Hickey National
emergency declared for Gabrielle
The Working
Group with
John Tamihere, David Seymour and Damien Grant
The
Platform Jordan
Williams on Eleanor Catton’s swipe at the NZ Tax Payers'
Union
Kiwiblog Journalist
complains polling question wasn’t leading enough
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