Auditor-General wings Dunedin Council in report on Jacks Point debacle
By Pattrick Smellie
March 13 (BusinessDesk) – The Auditor-General holds the Dunedin City Council partly to blame for pre-tax losses
totalling $8.7 million on Central Otago property developments in the late 2000s by its wholly-owned electricity network
company, Delta.
Delta lost $5.9 million on property investments at Luggate and was reported by NBR in 2009 as “rescuing” failing finance
company Hanover Finance over its exposure to the failing Jacks Point development, near Queenstown, by buying 98 plots in
the 700 plot development.
Delta went on to lose $2.8 million at Jacks Point. Total losses of $8.7 million may be reduced to a net $6.4 million
after $1.5 million of available tax losses are applied.
The report published today by the Office of the Auditor-General found “no evidence of impropriety or of poorly managed
conflicts of interest in relation to either investment.”
“However, they did identify some breaches of the Local Government Act 2002 and the Companies Act 1993 and instances of
Delta using artificial business structures to avoid public accountability.”
Potential conflicts of interest involving South Island business identity and Delta director Mike Coburn, who was also a
Jacks Point director, had “caused me to pause and think,” said Auditor-General Lyn Provost.
They had also concerned members of the public and her staff, she said.
Coburn was a director of Dunedin City Holdings, which controlled Delta. He resigned in 2011 rather than be sacked by
Dunedin mayor Dave Cull along with the rest of the board of DCH, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Dunedin City Council,
whose directors were also the directors of Delta.
Cull sought the Auditor-General’s inquiry.
However, the report criticises the Dunedin City Council itself for placing pressure on DCH to make up for forecasts of
plunging dividends from the council-owned assets in 2006, without giving the company any guidance on the risks the city
council was willing to bear.
“I consider that the Council and Dunedin City Holdings Limited bear some responsibility for the investments,” said
Provost.
“The council had given no direction about how much risk it was willing to take on. Because most of the directors of
Delta were also the directors of Dunedin City Holdings Limited, the governance regime that the council had in place did
not provide Delta with adequate oversight of, or guidance about, the investments.”
On alleged conflicts of interest involving Coburn, Provost said disclosure processes were “largely adequate.”
“We identified some instances where there should have been earlier or fuller disclosure for better transparency, and one
instance where the director's involvement in both sides of a venture would have been problematic had the venture
proceeded.”
“In public office, having multiple roles and interests requires careful management,” the Auditor-General said. “People
with such interests need to behave with the utmost integrity and transparency to avoid real or perceived conflicts and
risks to the public entities they serve.”
“Although Delta carried out a careful process before investing in Luggate, it is difficult, because of the size of the
loss, to avoid concluding that the investment was a mistake,” said Provost.
There had been too much focus on potential profit and too little assessment of downside risk.
She would issue a separate report later this year with recommendations relating to the council control of commercial
investment entities.
(BusinessDesk)