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Thursday, November 3, 2022

Gerry Eckhoff: Local Government

A decade ago, a Local Government NZ representative - reported (in private session) and in rather embarrassed terms, that a poll showed around 80% of the public don’t have very much faith in Local Government at all.  In other words, the civil service is not particularly civil and the service aspect - can be compared to that of a monopoly provider. Everything seems to take 20 working days (or longer) which, with a commercial organization would ensure receivership.  Staff get the blame and councillors get re-elected. The TV character of Basil Faulty put it rather well - that as owner of a hotel, he could run the business perfectly well -were it not for customers.

We now have a review of local Government by those who are immersed in Local Government and have come up with an idea of - pure genius. Let’s lower the voting age to 16 to get more eligible voters. Those aged 18 don’t vote much so maybe 16 year olds will. We can keep lowering the voting age until we get the required result. 

 

The reasons for Local Government appearing to be so dysfunctional all over the country - starts and finishes around a council table. Quite some years ago there was little or no obvious political affiliations as councillors put aside their back grounds and or political beliefs. Recent past elections have seen overtly Green and Labour candidates standing for election which draws into question exactly who they represent and whether the oath of office is little more than a meaningless formality as they take their place around the council table. The battle lines are therefore drawn before debate is enacted as predictable attitudes soon manifest themselves. It’s called predetermination and that is a root cause of council acrimony. To make matters worse, councils are now compelled to accept unelected representatives (Maori) to promote a singular point of view alongside those who must act in the wider interests of the region/district. The oath of office -sworn by councillors - is not required of the Maori appointees. The call for more diversity and broader representation is a nonsense. Given the size of councils balance sheet, it is knowledge, judgment and experience that matters - not age, sexual orientation, ethnicity, gender or street address.

The role of mayor appears to be something of an anachronism. Just why one elected individual (of many) should hold sway over the other elected members and be referred to as “Your Worship” is unclear and is a relic of a bygone era. ‘Your worship’ is a reprounciation and re spelling of the original “Your worthiness” from Anglo Saxon times.  The election of mayor can also have more to do with a successful photo shoot showing good teeth and hair rather than obvious personal success in management of a large business which a council undoubtably is.  A mayors job is to act as spokesperson for the council - not to act independently of it. Regional councils elect a chair from successful candidates which appears to offer a better chance of a successful tenure. It also holds the essential reality that inappropriate or unilateral decisions by a council chair can result in their dismissal should the council so decide. That is a very important sanction not available with a mayor. The highly controversial 3 waters proposal is a great example of the gulf that can occur between a mayor’s personal belief/ambition and a council’s majority decision. There should be no circumstances where a mayor can disregard the council majority view and trapse off to Wellington to support his or her personal view which is contrary to council opinion. Being the district’s spokesperson or district representative is surely to reflect the will of the people within the area and not a personal opinion.

 There should also be a limit as to how many terms a person can serve as a councillor. Name recognition is an important factor in getting re-elected but how many terms serving on council is too many?  Fresh thinking along with new ideas should always be part of debate around the council table. It should never be seen as a job opportunity paying reasonable money for not too many hours.

One of the most problematic issues is the increasing role of council engaging with commercial entities (council-controlled -companies-CCC) as they grasp and enact the “power of general competence” given to them in 2002. It basically means councils can engage in any enterprise they choose. The Dunedin City Council’s ownership of a lines company left ratepayers and customers to rue the day dividends to council became more important than maintenance of the distribution network. Few can serve two masters

It is however the role that councils play as the rule maker, consent adjudicator and prosecutor of their own rules that causes the most concern.  Nobody is entitled to sit in judgement on their own rules which is a long-held tenant of justice.  Even central Government ensures the clear distinction of roles they play.  Government sets the rules/laws, but the courts interpret such laws and enforcement prosecution is left to the appropriate body thereby ensuring completely appropriate and obvious separation of roles. How is it possible for Local Government, who make the rules, to then appoint their own to sit on the hearing panel instead of a completely independent panel, freed from any undue influence from any party to the proceedings. Local government must also be independent and be seen to be independent.

Trust and integrity of process are the hall marks of a well-functioning democracy. There can be no place for those who seek authority and power for their own sake. The situations in China and Russia, where the seedlings of democracy are crushed under the tyranny of false authority and weaponry - must serve as a reminder to us all that our freedoms start – not just with local government but with those who also serve - by challenge and protest.

Gerry Eckhoff is a former councillor on the Otago Regional Council and MP.

1 comment:

Robert Arthur said...

The link between to operational functioning of the Council processing staff and Councillors is tenuous. It is much to expect staff to process very technical, often deliberately obtuse, Resource Consents, building permits etc, for which they incur daunting legal liability, in a few days. The present structure means able staff are constantly seduced away by outside firms. It is hard to see a solution.
But as for Council operations overall, the problem today is the gross unawareness of the public of what Council does. In Auckland the msm do not cover and few receive or read newspapers anyway. The once widely distributed magazine Our Auckland is reserved for events. The Council website is complex and tedious. Anyone interested is advised to follow meetings on line; an unbelievably tedious consumer of time. Persons acquire a vague idea of the mayor's viewpoint as occasionally reported but all the rest is a mystery. In Auckland knowledge of the the recent mandated zoning changes, vital to all, seems almost non existant. Most media coverage of has been just about one minor side issue; retention of special character houses.

The authors of the recent report on Local Govt seem clearly to have identified what the current govt desires, thereby ensuring continued similar employments. The chances of a radical shift of policy with govt change seem slim and they have risked it. A 16 year old voting age is preposterous. At that age persons have no experience. They are influenced by the views of parents, and now social media influencers and trends. The typical able councillor would have minimum idea of how to reach such an audience and it would be a gross waste of ability to spend time on. One low IQ teenager, brainwashed on the net or by the marae, ranks equal with mature adults with decades of observation and experience. Some sort of qualifying test for voters would be more appropriate.

Below about mayor level there is a huge degree of randomness in voting. As observed, name recognition means much. It is absurd that most votes are based on the photo and ultra brief contrived summary pamphlet provided to the public. What councillors have or not done is unknown to near all. Effective diligent councillors and Board members are replaced on a whim.

In a non distributed free local paper I recently tumbled upon some PIJF funded info about some council activity. The climate change group was being taken to task by maori reps for not being able to indicate relative progress on aspects of climate change as affect maori. If this sort of time wasting side issue is rife little wonder no incentive to publicise operations. With council staff all now selected for pro maoriness, minimal chance of a covering press release from the Council.