Letter to Rodney Hide, survey of N Shore boards
Letter to Rodney Hide with survey of North Shore community board members on Governments response to the Royal Commission
[David Thornton is a former member of North
Shore City Council, Auckland Regional Land Transport
Committee and Greater London Council]
30thApril
2009
Hon Rodney Hide MP
Minister of Local
Government
Parliament Buildings
Wellington
Dear Minister
Governments response to the Royal Commission
I
write to present to you the views of a group of individual
serving Community Board Members in North Shore City as
expressed in an informal, but constructed, survey carried
out after the Government’s announcement.
Full details
are as set out below.
This paper has also been
distributed to some board members in other parts of the
region as part of the process of developing a
‘regional’community boards submission to you which will
come to you under the signature of Mike Cohen.
I will be
pleased to be part of any future discussion forum on these
and other issues relating to Auckland’s
Governance.
Yours sincerely
David Thornton
Member,
Glenfield Community Board
[Eecutive, Auckland Region &
Far North Community Boards Association]
Government
response to the Royal Commission on Auckland
Governance.
Opinions of a group of North Shore elected Community Board members
[Initiated and co-ordinated by David Thornton, Glenfield Community Board]
Following the Government’s response to the Royal Commission, and the mayors and councils early reactions, I discussed with fellow elected community board members on the North Shore the possibility of achieving a common view as individual members familiar with their own communities.
We moved forward with some email correspondence and a meeting which prepared a draft position paper. This paper was circulated to all 24 elected members, the majority of whom responded, and the document amended to note the reservations of a small minority on some points.
A total of fourteen (14) community board members responded to the draft position paper, a further three (3) were away from Auckland and unable to respond – the remaining seven (7) members did not respond. Since the final draft paper was ciruclated, on Wednesday 22nd April, four (4) more members have responded to give a total of sixteen (18) respondents – 75% of total possible,
The first part of the position paper set out
six (6) general position points. (see below)
Of the sixteen (16) respondents, seven (7) fully supported the six points, a further six (6) supported with minor reservations, three (3) had stronger reservations on a couple of points, and two (2) did not agree with the idea of having a position and asked not to be associated with the paper [although both later asked to be kept informed!!].
This means that the majority of North Shore elected Community Board members support the position with a small number having some reservations on a couple of points.
I stress that these are the personal individual views of elected community board members and should not be construed as the formal views of any of the boards – at this stage!!!
This paper is offered to encourage further discussions within our communities and to give initial thoughts to key stakeholders and decision-makers.
A. General position of a
majority of elected North Shore City Community Board
members
1. Despite some reservations we
accept the inevitability of the Government’s proposal for
a single Auckland Council for the Auckland region and will
work with all parties to achieve the best outcome for
residents, ratepayers and the Region
2. We
strongly support all 20 councillors being elected on a ward
basis – i.e no councillors to be elected ‘at large’.
[Three respondents felt that some ‘at large’ would be
necessary to ensure a ‘regional view]
3.
We do not support the council wards being established on the
same boundaries as Parliamentary Boundaries.
4.
We accept the inevitability of the election of a Mayor at
large – with the proviso that the office has powers
restricted to those powers in the government’s proposals
i.e. power to appoint Deputy Mayor and Committee Chairs, and
preparing budget for council approval, and staffing of the
Mayor's office [Two respondents were strongly opposed to
election of Mayor ‘at large’]
5. We
support the establishment of a minimum of 30 Local Boards,
with boundaries established on the basis of communities of
interest, and with the widest possible powers and
delegations. [Three respondents felt we should not specify
number of Local Boards at this time]
6. We
would like to be given every opportunity to work with the
Minister and with the Department of Internal Affairs to
assist in producing a system which guarantees a definitive,
co-operative and sustainable future for local government for
Auckland
B. Delegations to Local Boards.
The next part of the paper deals with delegations, powers, functions and funding in relation to Local Boards.
Powers
Local Boards to have the powers to
set their own budgets - within a funding cap agreed with the
Auckland Council – to carry out their delegated functions
which shall be set out in legislation.
It is critical
that these functions include delegated powers to DECIDE
rather than simply ADVOCATE.
This is not an exhaustive
list and some additions/deletions are likely after further
consideration.
Functions
1. Local
maintenance of roads and footpaths.
2.
Traffic management of local roads, parking etc
3.
Manage provision and maintenance of street furntiture and
trees, street naming, stopping and temporary closure.
4.
Street lighting, policy, location, style
5.
Cycleways and walkways, locations/priorities
6.
Beautification, graffite removal
7. Public
information signage
8. Hear and decide local
resource consents – including notifications
9.
Local parks (as defined and agreed with Auckland Council)
– maintain, develop, allocate space, hire, create new
park, concessions, making reserves management plans.
10.
Recreation centres and local sports facilities.
11.
Community Centres, Coummunity Houses, halls and local
facilities.
12. Local Enterainment and cultural
venues.
13. Delegated law-enforcement control of
litter
14. Public toilets – locations, a local
cleanung and maintenance contracts.
15. Beach
control (use, cleaning and sanding)
16. Local
events promotions – celebrations, memorials,
entertainment,fireworks, markets.
17. Camping
grounds
18. Local artworks – location,
development, approvals
19. Minor safety works,
set priority of projects
20. Citizens Advise
Bureaux
21. Local Art Galleries and Museums [One
respondent felt strongly that these should be a regional
responsibity due to funding concerns]
22. Any
other activity delegated by Auckland Council.
Funding
We recommend there should be a formula for the
expenditure of rates collected by the Auckland
Council.
The formula should be based on dividing the
total income into two parts – a percentage allocated to
Local Boards for them to carry out their functions, and the
balance for Auckland Council to spend in accordance with its
city-wide policies and priorities.
Local Boards would be
advised on their individual allocation and have the power to
prepare their own budget and make decisions on priorities
within their area.
C. Resource
Consents.
The Government’s plan shows Resource Consents
being dealt with at Auckland Council level.
We can
accept that lodging and processing can be centralised [with
local ‘branch’ offices] but we are concerned if Hearings
are also centralised.
Changes in recent years include the
development of an accreditation system for Hearings
Commissioners – and those accredited can, theoretically
and in fact, hear applications in any part of the
country.
Furthemore, once accredited, any commissioner
who ceases to serve in an elected capacity can continue to
be a commissioner.
It seems to us this clearly
establishes that resource consent hearings are
quasi-judicial and come under the RMA rather than the Local
Government Act.
We therefore believe that, under the
proposed new governance scheme, local hearings panels be
established in each Local Board area to ‘hear and
decide’ local recource consent
applications.
ENDS