NEWS RELEASE
27 April 2001
AGREEMENT ON RE-LAYING
OF CBD CABLE
Utility companies who failed to meet Auckland City regulations when laying cable in the central business district have
agreed on a programme of reinstatement of their sub-standard work.
The repair work is in 19 sites and will be done in a planned programme of works starting now and is scheduled to finish
at the beginning of June if there is fine weather and no unforseen circumstances.
Councillors say the utility companies should have been more vigilant in monitoring the quality of their work and they
are adamant the Council will not be held responsible for the roads and footpaths being dug up a second time in four
months.
The Council’s Transport and Roading Committee this week received a confidential report which detailed a list of
non-compliance with agreed regulations.
The Committee recommended the utility operators immediately reinstate non-complying works to the agreed standard with
minimal disruption to motorists, businesses and residents in the CBD and that the costs to Council of the reinstatement
be identified and communicated to the public and the utility operators.
In some areas the utilities had failed to ensure the cables were laid to the agreed depth, in other locations poor
compacting has meant the roadway has subsided and the quality of reseals has been inadequate in other places.
The chairperson of the committee, Councillor Catherine Harland, said the need to re-lay the cable and the road and
pavement reinstatement was disappointing as the Council and utility operators had gone to great lengths to minimise
disruption in the CBD when the cables were laid over the Christmas-New Year holiday period. In the majority of cases
this was achieved.
“Now, because of the poor quality of work and lack of adequate quality control checking by utility operators they are
having to do some of the work again,” said Councillor Harland.
“If the utilities had done the job right first time, we would not be in this situation.”
She said the onus was on the utility companies project managers to ensure their contractors met the agreed standards.
The reinstatement standards were based on a Code of Practice for Working in the Road, developed as a joint initiative
between the councils in the Auckland region and the Auckland Utility Operators Group.
While the committee was critical of those companies not meeting the agreed standards, it acknowledged that there was
some good quality work from some utilities in the CBD and in the Auckland isthmus.
As part of its “roll out” of telecommunications cabling, the council had an agreement with several telecommunication
operators on the installation of high-speed fibre optic cable in Auckland’s central business district.
This avoided the problem of each of the four telecommunications companies individually digging up two trenches per
street – eight trenches per street would have been unacceptable.
The agreement which had the four companies cabling simultaneously, reduced disruption in much of the central city when
major work began after Christmas.
Councillor Harland said the outcome the Council is seeking is good quality roading and repairs by the utility operators
at no cost to the ratepayers.
ENDS
For further information, please contact:
Councillor Catherine Harland, Auckland City Council, tel: 636-8464.