Christchurch: the Political Shambles
Hugh Pavletich
Christchurch
New Zealand
8 July 2013
By Friday 5 July 2013, it was clear to Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker that the game was up. The drama was played out on TV3 Campbell Live that evening (video) .
All his props had gone.
It is not particularly well understood that Bob Parkers abilities begin and end in front of a television camera. Other
than being trained as a chemist in his younger years, his time had been spent in the media.
As with most in the media, Bob Parker has no real world experience and understanding. Journalism is a spectator activity
essentially - reporting on the successes and failures of others.
Understandably, Bob Parker saw his role in the public offices he held as simply a public relations exercise.
Even when it was blindingly obvious to others that things were seriously wrong or out of control, Bob Parker was
oblivious to the significance of these issues. Much of it was beyond his comprehension.
This is how the A and B teams of elected representatives on the Christchurch City Council evolved. The A team supported
the Parker / Marryatt regime under all circumstances. With trepidation and in fits and starts, the loose B team
occasionally dared to question the decisions of the former.
None of them had much of a clue and the bureaucrats just played things to suit themselves.
There is little evidence to indicate that the Council Chief Executive Tony Marryatt managed much within the organisation
itself, other than managing the Councillors themselves.
Councillors were left in no doubt that it was not a good idea to get on the wrong side of the Parker / Marryatt regime.
They (the Councillors) were also well aware that with their base income as Councillors and lucrative Directorships, that
if they played their cards right, they could be paid (not earn) six figure incomes. This is well above the roughly
$A20,000 stipends their Australian counterparts in the major metros receive – for properly part-time work.
Very few of them would be capable of earning 6 figure incomes outside the Council.
Consistently, Bob Parker would defend the organisations he represented - being the Banks Peninsula Council, the
seriously idiotic Greater Christchurch Urban Development Strategy (former Mayor Garry Moore assisted him in to this role
to give him profile for the Christchurch Mayoralty), and these past 6 years, in his tumultuous role as Mayor of
Christchurch.
Bob Parker saw it very much in terms that if he supported the key bureaucrats in the organisations he represented, they
in turn would support him.
Bob Parker was blind to the failings of his Chief Executive at Banks Peninsula Eddie Parker at the time and Tony
Marryatt of the Christchurch Council.
The Magazine Bay Marina development debacle was extraordinary. The Central Blueprint is a replay.
Quite how people such as Eddie Parker and Tony Marryatt ever reached these positions, is one of the great mysteries of
life. Mr Marryatt’s history at Hamilton was well known.
So as the Christchurch City Council Building Control Unit in an unprecedented step, lost its accreditation with
International Accreditations New Zealand (IANZ) and with Councils Chief Executive Tony Marryatt taking leave, Bob
Parker’s major prop was gone.
Bob Parker would also have been well aware that public opinion was strongly against him. The Press poll result released
today, indicates 70% support for Lianne Dalziel and just 30% for Bob Parker.
This poll reinforced the message of other polls. It seems likely his support would have eroded further, with more
intense scrutiny of an election campaign.
He didn’t need to be told that. The thought of it would understandably exhaust him.
The natural reaction is to blame Parker, Marryatt and other individuals within and outside of the Christchurch Council
organisation, but this would be futile - and wrong.
The forced amalgamation of the Christchurch City Council way back in 1989 is the core problem. It was set up to fail,
providing the foundation for the creation of a bureaucratic monster.
Understandably, good people with the right attitudes and abilities were driven from being associated with it. Instead,
it attracted people of little ability. Those more interested in playing power games.
Indeed, it degenerated in to an organisation where the bureaucracy (with the support of its major props being the
Chamber of Commerce and The Press) was at war with its community and business.
The bureaucracies interests always prevailed.
This bureaucratic cancer seriously corroded the commercial culture of Christchurch. Within a The Press Opinion September
2011, well known commercial property investor Sir Bob Jones explained how market disciplined and competent developers and investors had long abandoned Christchurch (including the
writer 20 years ago), leaving it to “hobbyists and sentimentalists”.
Following the forced amalgamation, it started with the big spending Mayor Vicki Buck era (like Parker, a skilled TV
performer). This was then followed by the sober government accountant type, Mayor Garry Moore, who main job was to
attempt to rein the spending in, with new Chief Executive Lesley McTurk (now Housing New Zealand). Ms McTurk had little
knowledge of Local Government.
Instead, the corporate bureaucracy was expanded and many experienced and well regarded Local Government people left
through that era. When Lesley McTurk left, incredibly, Tony Marryatt was bought in from the Hamilton Council.
Little wonder then, that by the time of the first earthquake event 4 September 2010, Christchurch, in development and
construction terms was already on its knees. With its severely dysfunctional Council and severely unaffordable housing market (both go hand in hand) , it was in no position to recover.
The Government was well aware at the time the Christchurch City Council was a failure.
It had already placed Commissioners in to the local Regional Council called Environment Canterbury a year earlier
(something the previous Labour Government knew needed to happen, but failed to do). While it was common knowledge the
Christchurch Council was next for the Commissioner treatment, this was not seen as politically feasible, following the
first earthquake events of September 2010.
In endeavouring to allow a recovery to get underway, the Government chose instead to go down the path of progressively
taking over the responsibilities and functions of the Christchurch City Council, as its failures became more blindingly
obvious.
In persisting with the failed top down approach, it created further bureaucratic layers with the Canterbury Earthquake
Recovery Authority (CERA) and the Central City Development Unit (CCDU).
Near 3 years on, with this top-down bureaucratic overload, the recovery has been a massive failure – to the extent, even
the bureaucrats within all the organisations are well aware of it. Morale is at rock-bottom, with many looking for work
elsewhere.
The whole top-heavy system has collapsed.
Mid 2012, the writer covered the sorry litany of poor quality decision-making, incorporating an outline of workable
solutions with Christchurch: The Way Forward . There are hyperlinks within this article to earlier ones dealing with the Christchurch situation. Around the same
time, many of these issues were covered in a discussion with Jo Kane of Canterbury Television (video) .
The Commissioner controlled Environment Canterbury, led by Dame Margaret Bazley is also a failure, with its unwelcome
and unnecessary meddling in urban land use issues. Its latest infantile and clearly destructive Urban Land Use Plan (in
essence a poverty creation programme) is only fit for the trash can. It is Recovery Minister Brownlee’s responsibility
to ensure that happens as quickly as possible. Properly, this organisation should be confined to just water issues
through the Canterbury region.
So Christchurch is a massive political shambles.
At this stage, the only likely contender for the Christchurch Mayoralty is former lawyer and union official Hon lianne Dalziel , currently the Labour Member of Parliament for Christchurch East. She has no local government experience.
While Ms Dalziel has made it clear that reform of the Council is essential, whether she has the support, will and
abilities to lead this change, is unknown at this stage.
The citizens of Christchurch will collectively make the decision whether this City succeeds or fails.
To date, they have been remarkably tolerant of failure.
ENDS
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