.....but “Egmont” is being expunged
The big bread-and-butter issue of pay packets and weekly incomes was at the core of three ministerial statements since Point of Order’s previous monitoring of the Beehive website.
Andrew Little was earning his keep, meanwhile, by delivering a speech in which he discussed co-governance.
He was involved in a Treaty-based exercise aimed at having a mountain declared a person, for legal purposes, although it is not clear if we could sue it or have it arrested in the same way we can sue or prosecute real people.
But much more is happening, according to Little’s speech.
The main peak of Mt Taranaki/Mt Egmont will be renamed Taranaki Maunga and Egmont National Park/Te Papakura o Taranaki will become Te-Papa-Kura-o-Taranaki,
But whoa. This is not so much a renaming but rather an excision of words rooted in colonisation like “Egmont”, “park” and “mountain”.
For good measure, the taxpayers who have had no say in this deal will provide $35 million for Taranaki tribes to do whatever they intend doing to restore their mana, exercise their sovereignty and so on.
The statements dealing with incomes are –
But much more is happening, according to Little’s speech.
The main peak of Mt Taranaki/Mt Egmont will be renamed Taranaki Maunga and Egmont National Park/Te Papakura o Taranaki will become Te-Papa-Kura-o-Taranaki,
But whoa. This is not so much a renaming but rather an excision of words rooted in colonisation like “Egmont”, “park” and “mountain”.
For good measure, the taxpayers who have had no say in this deal will provide $35 million for Taranaki tribes to do whatever they intend doing to restore their mana, exercise their sovereignty and so on.
The statements dealing with incomes are –
From tomorrow over 1.4 million New Zealanders are expected to receive a little extra to help with the cost of living as a result of changes made by the Government.
Over 8000 community nurses will start receiving well-deserved pay rises of up to 15 percent over the next month as a Government initiative worth $200 million a year kicks in.
The Government is introducing a scheme which will lift incomes for artists, support them beyond the current spike in cost of living and ensure they are properly recognised for their contribution to New Zealand’s economy and culture.
The last of those announcements is worth closer examination.
Carmel Sepuloni, Minister for Arts, Culture and Heritage, recalled that – in line with New Zealand’s Free Trade Agreement with the UK – the government last year announced the Government was establishing an Artist Resale Royalty Scheme.
Now it is introducing a Bill that will ensure creators of visual arts are recognised and rewarded when their work is resold on the secondary art market.
She said:
“Artists have some of the lowest median incomes in New Zealand and have limited opportunities to benefit from their work on an ongoing basis.
“It will establish an Artist Resale Royalty Scheme, which ensures a five percent royalty is collected every time an artist’s work is re-sold, meaning artists will benefit from their creations on an ongoing basis.
More than 80 countries, including Australia, the UK and all EU nations, have a similar royalty scheme in place for their artists.
Another new ministerial statement deals with Pacific language weeks –
Minister for Pacific Peoples Barbara Edmonds has announced the 2023 Pacific Language week series, highlighting the need to revitalise and sustain languages for future generations.
When (we wonder) will the Government launch Mandarin Language Week, or Hindi Language Weekk, or Urdu Language Week – or umpteen other possibilities to consume public funding and keep bureaucrats in work?
And then there’s Andrew Little’s speech, delivered as Minister of Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations –
Today is an important day for Taranaki, and for all of its people – including this boy from New Plymouth.
Little was speaking about the Crown’s agreement with Taranaki tribes that would result – later this morning – in Okaiawa, Ngā Iwi o Taranaki and him (as the Crown representative) initialling the final historical Treaty of Waitangi redress deed affecting the Taranaki region.
This is the Taranaki Maunga Collective Redress Deed, Te Ruruku Pūtakerongo,
The main elements:
- The Crown will make an apology for its historical breaches of the Treaty of Waitangi. The apology will include:
- The Crown is sorry that the promise of partnership that arose in 1840 so quickly became a history of conflict, confiscation, and neglect;
- The Crown will profoundly apologise for its confiscation of Taranaki Maunga in 1865;
- The Crown hopes that through this apology the connections to ngā maunga can be restored and strengthened, so that future generations might again look to Taranaki as a symbol of resilience and hope, rather than of loss.
- Next, the official name of the national park will be changed. It will be Te-Papa-Kura-o-Taranaki, meaning ‘the highly regarded and treasured lands of Taranaki’. The name Egmont will be removed completely. The main peak will be known as Taranaki Maunga.
- Other ancestral peaks on the mountain and across the ranges will also be recognised: Pouākai, Patuhā, Kaitake and Panitahi (Fantham’s Peak).
- The Mount Egmont Vesting Act 1978 (under which the mountain was vested in the Taranaki Māori Trust Board and then gifted back to the Crown) will be repealed and a new legal framework established for the mountain. This framework involves recognising the mountain as a legal person, and other structures created to support governance and kaitiakitanga of it).
- The national park will continue to be administered under the National Parks Act 1980.
- There will be a $35 million contribution made to the iwi collective entity, Te Tōpuni Ngārahu, to assist in exercising its statutory functions and support the health and wellbeing of the maunga.
- The deed also includes an agreed historical account which sets out in more detail the history of Crown Treaty breaches in relation to Taranaki Maunga and the surrounding lands.
Little explained that the eight Taranaki tribes will have a new collective body, named Te Tōpuni Ngārahu, to act on behalf of them all.
The national park including the mountain and the surrounding peaks will be vested in its own legal entity named Te Kāhui Tupua, meaning ‘the collective of ancestors’.
This will have all the rights, powers, duties and responsibilities of a legal person – a similar arrangement to what has been done before, such as with the Whanganui River and Te Urewera, which tells us a powerful precedent was set with the Whanganui settlement. The river became a living person, legally, without much murmuring of dissent.
Little said:
And as has been the case with those previous examples, a representative entity will be established to act as the human face and voice of Te Kāhui Tupua (which, remember, is the mountain, the national park, and the surrounding peaks).
That representative body will be made up of four Crown appointees and four iwi appointees, all of whom must act in the best interests of the maunga. This entity will be named Te Tōpuni Kōkōrangi.
What these new arrangements mean is that the responsibility to care for this most special of places rests with us all. It reflects the mana of local iwi over their maunga.
And it upholds the Crown’s obligations under the Treaty, on behalf of all New Zealanders.
Little proceeded to discuss the Crown’s obligations under the Treaty of Waitangi.
The Treaty was not an agreement between Pākeha and Māori, he said – it was an agreement between the Crown and Māori, he said.
Making the agreement work required finding ways through difficult issues together.
This led to Little bringing co-governance into considerations.
Some call joint arrangements “co-governance”. Others just call it partnership. Mostly I – and I know my predecessors of various political stripes in this portfolio – have found it’s really just about working together to make New Zealand better.
This agreement is just the latest of many examples of partnership.
Co-governance arrangements are a form of partnership with groups of special standing or expertise. They are about governments working together with communities, experts or other partners to provide direction over a sphere of shared interest to achieve better outcomes.
They have taken many forms, and have been used to get the best outcomes for our land, resources and for our communities.
That’s why successive governments have entered into them, and why they have endured.
Little then drew attention to the views of Christopher Finlayson, his predecessor in the Key Government, on the important role that co-governance agreements play.
He makes the point that government is not the only source of wisdom and knowledge. If we want the best decisions then we need the best possible input, including the longstanding historical links tāngata whenua have with our natural resources.
Little proceeded to discuss some of the larger and better-known examples of the Crown working in collaboration with Maori tribes around New Zealand.
He mentioned the Te Urewera Board, established in 2014. Its board comprises six Tūhoe appointees and three Crown appointees who act as the representative of that legal person and oversee the activities in Te Urewera;
But he opted to focus on and enthuse about the success of the Waikato River Authority, established in 2010, represented by five Crown members and five iwi members.
Chris Finlayson, let the record show, recently wrote an article for The Listener about power sharing.
There have been “teething problems” and “a few controversies”, he acknowledged.
Perhaps he had been reading Point of Order (HERE and HERE)
He said that, in hindsight…
I think one major thing went wrong. The word “co-management” morphed into “co-governance” I do now know they. It was never intended to mean anything different, but in hindsight, it was regrettable. The problem is that the word “governance” is too close to the word “govern”.
Finlayson insisted “co-governance” was meant to describe the agreements he discussed in his article,
… subject in nearly all cases to local authority control. No more, no less.
He noted that National leader Chris Luxon has spelled out out what a National Government would to with regard to partnership with Māori tribes to deliver services. Luxon favours the tribes providing leadership at a local level rather than being over-governed from Wellington.
Hipkins responded by accusing Luxon of stoking fear (“an accusation reported uncritically by most of the media”) and told him to reflect on his behaviour.
In contrast to Luxon, Hipkins has provided no detail about his view on co-governance, and wasn’t even asked to provide one. How depressingly predictable.
Finlayson concluded that co-governance is a limited, successful concept intended to address treaty grievances.
But it has morphed into a source of genuine concern for some New Zealanders
These people are owed an explanation by the government as to why it has allowed this situation to arise, Finlayson says.
Point of Order is a blog focused on politics and the economy run by veteran newspaper reporters Bob Edlin and Ian Templeton
4 comments:
Finlayson does not comment on the veto for one group only in so-called co-governance arrangements.
Why not? This is the real issue - i.e. control by one group of the population over the rest.
What a complete crock. This is nothing less than the labour/greens cult continuing with the destruction of democracy and pushing more apartheid. Who cares what Tinkerbelle Finlayson says or thinks. He caused enough racial discontent when he was an MP. I would not be in the least surprised if he was in the middle of the trans activists last weekend.
"There will be a $35 million contribution made to the iwi collective entity, Te Tōpuni Ngārahu, to assist in exercising its statutory functions and support the health and wellbeing of the maunga." Who is going to account for the spending of that taxpayers' money? Or will it just disappear and all of the tribal elite end up with new utes? How does the racist government justify this complete waste of more taxpayers' money with the economy the way it is?
Just another example of this governments subservience to maori.
If Mt Egmont was to erupt, and is regarded as a “person”, could the surrounding communities sue that “person” who is represented by the so-called tribal management board? Think in terms of volcanic gas, dust and rocks being spewed in all directions, plus lava flows maybe. Egmont has been designated a dormant volcano rather than extinct.
It is incredible how many agreements with maori have been renounced on the basis that not everyone was consulted. I suppose we will be handing back Tongariro soon on the basis that Te Heu Heu did not consult his lowest slave. After a few stalwarts have done all the leg work and the likely bonanza becomes apparent, a myriad others emerge to be in on the bounty. I wonder if maori have ever apologised for the settlers ransacked and killed on land bought from the then owners by last conquest.
Hopefully the Egmont arrangement is true co governance and not mere token non binding pakeha advisory involvement as the Ureweras. Some co governance arrangements seem to be more or less satisfactory (although no comparison of running cost before and after). But, apart from the Tupuna Maunga Authority, most are presumably on good behaviour until the nation wide maori conquest is more complete. On these "balanced" structures the maori group act as a bloc, are selected, supported and fed material and instructions by the vast network of academic maori activists and others, whereas the pakeha appointees often receive little or no external guidance in the general interest and have other employment so cannot devote endless hours to monitoring and countering maori manipulations. So beside the maori power of veto, the suspect allegiance of some of the other "side", and their lack of patience, motivation and energy to fathom the full possible import of crafty worded proposals and to battle endless wrangles, the result is that maori triumph and effectively control the outfit. (As with all proposed co governance)
Especially concerning is that the interests of the nation are not to the fore, but the interest of the Maunga. This provides enormous scope for limited access and contrived restrictions. And if anyone chances to fall and break their neck when you are booked to climb, a rahui will descend and your holiday wrecked.
So if you have not fully explored Mt Egmont do so soon whilst you still can unhindered by fees and petty rules and compulsory infliction of tedious embellished legends and maori propaganda.
Presumably in addition to the mere $35 million, running costs will be met by the govt, just as the Auckland Council supports the Tupuna Maunga gravy train.
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