Dear Friend,
I'm sorry to email on a Friday – and I apologise it is so long –
but it is important. While Three Waters was about community/council
assets, this email is about a new series of bills going
through Parliament right now that will dictate what you can can do
with your house, your farm, and your
business. And unlike Three Waters, it is getting nearly no
media attention.
David Parker's new planning bills are even worse than Three Waters
– and apply to your
land/house/business
Right now, the Government is sneaking through legislation that is
almost identical to Nanaia Mahuta's original plans with Three Waters,
but relates to our homes, town planning, consenting, and natural
environment.
The short point is , if
you thought Three Waters was bad, the Government's proposed
replacement to the Resource Management Act is much, much
worse. I
am asking for your support to stop these radical reforms in their
tracks.
While most New Zealanders looked at the Three Waters shambles with
horror, Environment Minister, David Parker, was taking notes. He’s
decided to replicate the worst elements of the water reforms in his
proposed replacement to the Resource Management Act.
But you won't have read much about this issue in the media. Unlike
Three Waters, there's no taxpayer-funded Government ad campaign or
even much of a public discussion.
Make no mistake: The Government is trying to sneak this one
through. The bills – 891 pages in total – were dumped just
before Christmas and the Government closed submissions on Waitangi
weekend. That – plus the fact Ministers have deliberately not promoted
the bills – has meant that the media is only just starting to wake up
to the possible implications of these reforms. That's
why I'm writing urgently to you and all of our supporters today to ask
for your support.
Under this proposed law,
powers over planning and when a resource consent is required will be
stripped from local councils and handed to 15 new co-governed
‘Regional Planning Committees’. That means the decisions about the
building consent for your deck, new home, factory, your farm's water
take, and how your city or town is planned will be made by people you
cannot vote out. 'Regional Planning Committees' will be tasked
with enforcing a litany of costly new rules from Wellington to
restrict the way you use your property.
I need to be clear: The Resource Management Act is broken. Its
planning rules have fuelled a housing and infrastructure crisis. But
we need to get RMA reform right, and David Parker’s new Soviet-style
planning regime is not the answer. Instead of cutting red tape, he's
come up with a cure worse than the disease.
Friend,
will you chip in to the fight against this power grab?
Local control will be lost: Instead of elected decision makers,
town, city and environmental planning will handed to co-governed
Regional Planning Committees before the end of this year
If you thought dealing with silly rules from your local council was
bad, wait until it's a co-governed Regional Planning Committee that
voters cannot sack making the rules. David Parker wants to take
responsibility for planning rules away from our 67 democratically
elected local councils and hand it to 15 new co-governed ‘Regional
Planning Committees’.
That’s right: First your council lost its responsibility for water
asset management, and now it’s losing responsibility for planning. At
this rate your Mayor will be responsible for little more than the
library collection and the annual Christmas parade!
Unless we act right
now, the law will be passed before this year's election. And with
the election result looking so close, the only way to ensure we defeat
this is to blow the whistle now, so these proposals become as
unpopular as Three Waters.
Think of all the conversations in your local community about zoning
rules, intensification, and planning priorities. I'm no fan of my
local council, but at least under the current system, voters can hold
the decision makers to account. Under this new system, the decision
makers will be out of town, beholden to Wellington, and insulated from
accountability by layers of bureaucracy.
Each local council – even large metropolitan ones – will have just
one representative on the new regional committees. That also means
that local voices in, say, Waitaki will be drowned out by other
committee members. Decisions over say a proposed geothermal energy
plant in Taupo would be made in Hamilton by a co-governed,
unaccountable, committee.
The rules even allow the Minister (currently David Parker) to make
his own appointments to the Regional Planning Committees so that
Wellington has people to ensure that these committees dance to the
Government's tune.
And the new committees will be bound by ‘National Planning
Frameworks’ issued by the Minister every nine years, dictating
comprehensive environmental targets and limits, and rules governing
resource allocation from Kaitaia to the Bluff. That means
environmental decisions and regional 'quotas' on things like CO2
emissions will be made by Wellington.
We
need your support to stop this unaccountable co-governed centralisation
by Wellington.
Even more co-governance will make public input meaningless
Under the
proposed regime, all persons exercising planning power must
“give effect” to principles of the Treaty of Waitangi. David Parker
wants to strictly enforce this rule with three new layers of
co-governance:
-
Unelected appointees from local
iwi/hapū will sit on the new Regional Planning Committees with full
voting rights.
-
David Parker is trying to say this isn't
co-governance as the proposed legislation only requires a minimum of
two iwi/hapū representatives and the exact number is up to local
communities. But it's not as simple as that. The committees deciding
on appointee numbers for local councils and those from iwi will be
bound by the principles of the Treaty. A recent Waitangi Tribunal
decision makes it explicit that, "nothing less" than a 50/50 split
will do in order to satisfy the so-called "partnership"
principle.
- A new, unelected ‘National
Māori Entity’ will put pressure on the new planning
committees to ensure that they abide by Treaty principles, and will
have priority over public consultation on the new National Planning
Frameworks.
-
At any time, iwi or hapū can produce a
Te Oranga o te Taiao (environmental wellbeing) statement, dictating how the Minister of
Environment must
uphold the “intrinsic relationship” between iwi/hapū and the
environment in National Planning Frameworks for which there is no appeal process outlined
in the bill.
David Parker is
trying to say that these reforms don't involve co-governance, but, as
you can see, that is blatantly untrue.
We
need your help to make sure New Zealanders know about
these Bills, and step up to protect democratic accountability before
it is too late.
Higher costs for ratepayers due to bureaucracy and legal
minefields
These reforms mean everything from building a new deck to
constructing a new hospital or supermarket will be even harder. Can
we count on your support to oppose more red tape?
The legislation's first reading was snuck through just before the
Christmas break. The Government wants to have it passed before this
year’s election and only gave the summer holiday period for formal
submissions.
Of course, our team worked over summer to get their heads around
the 891 pages of legislation and made a
submission. But the real fight is the
political one: we
need to raise public awareness.
If New Zealanders were fully aware about the true implications of
David Parker’s power grab, it could turn into a real political
headache for the Government just like Three Waters.
But to do that, we need your financial
support. Click here to chip-in to the "Stop Central Planning
Committees" war chest.
18 months ago, the Taxpayers' Union decided that we had no
option but to take on Nanaia Mahuta's Three Waters. Back then the vast
majority of Kiwis were backing the Government, as very few understood
the downsides of what the Government was doing. It was only
after a mammoth campaign, hundreds of events, and thousands of
banners, signs, and an advertising blitz across TV, radio and online
did the National Party (and the media) catch on to the costs of Three
Waters. Three Waters would not be the thorn in the
Government's side, had the Taxpayers' Union not led the fight (and
supporters like you making the campaign possible with substantial
financial support).
I'm
emailing because we have to do it again. Only with your support can we
blow the whistle and force this issue onto the political
agenda.
Just like we did not let Nanaia Mahuta get away with Three Waters,
we cannot let David Parker get away with these even more radical
proposals. But
we can't fight the fight without the means to do so.
We need to put so much political pressure on the Government that
David Parker's plans become a liability for Labour’s re-election
prospects and are therefore scrapped by Chris Hipkins.
Friend,
can we count on you?
Thank you for your support.
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David Farrar Co-founder New Zealand
Taxpayers' Union
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Ps. This effort, like all of the work at the Taxpayers'
Union, is 100% people powered. We
are relying on New Zealanders like you chipping in with a confidential
donation so we can stop this madness.
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