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Sunday, February 25, 2024

David Farrar: A good summary of Three Waters


grant duncan writes:

Labour's original proposed governance structure, even if you overlook the co-governance aspect of it, was a complicated beast: it had unelected ‘representative' bodies that appoint board-appointment committees that appoint boards that then appoint advisory panels that monitor the boards and report to the representative body. Confused?

And then one asks how these boards would get along with the several local councils in their areas when needing to agree on and coordinate developments like a new suburb's pipes or an upgraded treatment plant. Just fixing a damaged stormwater drain would get more complicated than before. There was bound to be conflict. And the households dependent on these services would have less voice than ever.

This gets to the heart of it – there would be not accountability.

Mr Hipkins has said, somewhat defensively, that National still ‘have to find a way of recognising the Māori interest in water which has been established by the courts'. We'll see what the new government does about that, but Mr Hipkins must know that parliaments make laws and courts apply them, not the other way around. In the meantime, people of all races just want a clean glass of water, please.

three waters helped to sink the Labour government at the 2023 election. Setting aside the ‘race card' accusation, their proposed governance structure was unwieldy and full of opportunities for bureaucratic delay and conflict. It was another own goal by the Labour team as one more ‘solution' turned into one more political problem.

I have no doubt it would have added massive costs to the supply of water.

According to Hipkins, those who question that multi-level model are ‘playing the race card'. Someone needs to tell him that what people really need is clean water in and dirty water out. No wonder Labour loses support over this. Public utilities such as water services should be matters on which a Labour party leads – not loses.

It was a self-inflicted own goal.

David Farrar runs Curia Market Research, a specialist opinion polling and research agency, and the popular Kiwiblog where this article was sourced. He previously worked in the Parliament for eight years, serving two National Party Prime Ministers and three Opposition Leaders.

2 comments:

Basil Walker said...

NZ has to break down the water discussion into common sense groupings .
Urban requirements are quite separate from basically self sufficient rural requirements where water and septic tanks etc are problem free with basic cleanliness .
Urban dwellers waste more treated water than they consume because one toilet flush would be ample per person for drinking and cooking for a day . Toilet and tap are from the same street water pipe source albeit drinking from the toilet cistern,( not the bowl) would be aghast by most people . The basic plumbing operation is beyond them.
Maybe drinking water has to return to weekly plastic bottle water deliveries by the waterman instead of the past service of milk delivered by the milkman at the gate . This would dispence with the costs of treating copious amount of water to be used in all the other home functions , carwash , windows, gardens etc .
Then the focus could be on the more pressing problem of waste water pipes that are the real health hazard.

Peter said...

"Three Waters" was a rort plain and simple.

What I, and I suspect many NZrs, would like to see is the Crown Law Office's advice on the matter to former Minister Mahuta, who claimed it advised that there was an "obligation under the Treaty" to give Maori essentially a 50/50 governance stake - the same thing, more or less, parroted later by Kieran McAnulty, when he took over from her.

Isn't it time that this "advice" was disclosed, so the public can see for itself the basis and veracity of those claims, which the former Labour Cabinet acted on and its Ministers promoted, but never substantiated, to the public?

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