Council needs to re-engage with community
Media release
9 April 2019
Council needs to re-engage with community to save economic development strategy
After hearing concerning reports about the
state of Kāpiti Coast District Council’s ongoing economic
development strategy refresh, mayoral candidate Gwynn
Compton is urging Council to re-engage with the working
group involved in drafting the new strategy before tens of
thousands of dollars are wasted on a strategy that the
community doesn’t support.
“I understand that an
initial draft of the new economic development strategy was
originally due to be presented to Council’s Operations and
Finance Committee last week before being pulled before the
agenda was finalised. What’s more, the working group of
volunteers from the community were left in the dark about
what was happening and didn’t even get any thanks for
their substantial contribution to the process until after
the lack of any formal acknowledgement was raised,” says
Mr Compton.
“I also understand that the depth of
frustration from those involved is such that both Mayor K
Gurunathan and CEO Wayne Maxwell have received several
emails and letters raising significant concerns about how
the economic development strategy refresh has been
handled.”
With Kāpiti facing substantial change in
the coming years with the completion of projects like
Transmission Gully and Peka Peka to Ōtaki meaning the loss
of hundreds of related jobs combined with rapid population
growth, Gwynn Compton says getting Kāpiti’s economic
development strategy right and having community support for
its implementation is more critical than ever.
“In
order to thrive in the years ahead and have opportunities
for our young people to call Kāpiti home, we need to have a
diverse and vibrant economy. We can’t rely on just being a
retirement mecca or a coffee stop for tourists as some
believe. We have massive opportunities to grow our tourism,
technology, creative industries, and food and beverage
sectors while using our aged-care and retail sectors as a
solid base to support that growth,” says Mr
Compton.
“But efforts to do that have been hampered
in the past by economic development strategies that don’t
have the support of the community, an inability for Council
to retain experienced staff, and a lack of ambition or
vision for our district from our leaders. We cannot afford
to get this wrong again, and I urge Council to get the
economic development strategy working group back around the
table and to pursue their recommendations, especially for an
independent governance model for the strategy that would
help create a community-led approach to economic development
in
Kāpiti.”
ENDS