Auckland Council Vote is Vital Test for Local Democracy
Auckland Council Vote is Vital Test for Local
Democracy
Auckland Council is facing the
ulitimate test for local democracy as a 'supercity'
when the Plans Committee meet on 12th February to consider
the draft Unitary Plan. The issue is whether to allow the
public to be consulted on wording on GMO's as proposed by a
new report, or to sweep the report under the
carpet.
The Final Section 32 analysis on GMO's is
the culmination of many years of work by a team from legacy
councils in Auckland and the North which jointly
commissioned the Inter Council Working Party (ICWP) to
consider local risks of GMO's.(1)
There are
concerns that some Auckland Councillors are refusing to read
the report or to respect its recommendations, because they
may have been prejudiced by misinformation in presentations
given by industry lobbyists.(2)
There is also
concern amongst Local Boards who have been advocating to
council for precaution on GMOs, that their voices may be
lost in the bureaucratic process or their concerns simply
ignored.
"Representatives from across the political
spectrum must heed the recommendations of the Section 32
report. The public need those Councillors who oppose a
precautionary policy on GMOs in the draft Unitary Plan to
set aside their prejudices," said Jon Carapiet, spokesman
for GE-free NZ in food and environment.
Independent
scientists recently wrote to all Auckland Councillors
strongly advising precaution on GMOs and for councillors to
resist being misled by organisations with a vested interest
in pubic subsidy of commercial risks.(3)
A survey
of residents by the council shows that two out of three
Aucklanders support local government action to prohibit GMO
release or at minimum want users of GMOs held liable for
damage. (4)
Local boards have made significant
efforts to engage in advocacy for their communities as the
dual-governship model for Auckland was designed to allow.
How this functions in reality will be evidenced by the
degree to which community support for precaution on GMOs is
respected in Tuesday's vote.
"This process is the
ultimate vitality-test to see how well democracy has
survived the disestablishment of legacy councils and the
creation of a super city," said Jon
Carapiet.
"Aucklanders will not accept an issue
of such significance being swept under the
carpet."
There has been a decade of community
participation in development of plans for the Regional
Policy Statement by the Auckland Regional Council, Waitakere
eco-city's GE-free zone, and the establishment of local
GE-free Zones.
Last December Albert-Eden Local
Board passed a motion for a GE-free Zone in continuation of
the declaration made in 1999 by local communities including
Waitakere, Western Bays, Waiheke, and Devonport. A motion
for a GE-free zone will go before the Waitemata Local Board
on Tuesday evening, just hours after the Plans Committee
vote on including GMOs in the draft Unitary
Plan.
The outcome of the Plans Committee vote will
reveal to what degree local democracy has survived council
amalgamation, or given way to central government authority
and influence by vested
interests.
ENDS