It's Raining, It's Pouring. Why The Rush
Right to Water
Press Statement
for immediate
release
19 March 2009
IT'S RAINING, IT'S POURING. WHY THE RUSH **
Greater Wellington Regional Council’s call
for local councils to take
urgent action on water is
peculiar, says Right to Water.
In a media briefing on
water supply issues in the Wellington area
yesterday,
GWRC chair Fran Wilde put city councils on notice for urgent
action on water supply.
“NIWA reports a summer with
well above average rainfall. We’re wondering
if the
urgency is more to do with the recent increase in lobbying
by
business sector and the water industry for compulsory
metering and
direct charging”, said Right to Water
spokesperson Maria McMillan.
“Fran Wilde says metering
is one of the options councils can look at.
Good
decisions can’t be made in a hurry, and we hope that
creating an
environment of panic isn’t being used to
rush through a user-pays
system”, said Ms
McMillan.
“Wellington mayor Kerry Prendergast has
already talked favourably of
water metering, but
Wellington City Council and other councils in the
region
need to keep open minds on the issue, ensure proper
consultation
and give thought to the dire social impact
of metering”, she said.
“Like most user-pays schemes
metering would hurt poor households the
most. Those on
low incomes can’t use less water just because they have
less money but they’d still have to pay. Even before
the recession, one
in five New Zealand children were
living in poverty. Making people pay
for an essential
service would only exacerbate poverty”, she
said.
ENDS