Christchurch Earthquakes: The Political Circus
Christchurch Earthquakes: The Political Circus
Hugh Pavletich | FDIA Performance
Urban Planning
24 October
2011
Christchurch - A Bureaucratically Buggered City
There is a attitudinal change underway in Christchurch, New Zealand, following the first major earthquake 4 September 2010, the second 22 February with the third 13 June 2011. To date, there have been some 7,700 aftershocks in total and they are still continuing.
In development and construction terms, Christchurch was on its knees prior to the September 2010 event, mainly because the failed amalgamation of local authorities some 20 years earlier, had bureaucratically buggered the city, sapping it of commercial vitality and enterprise.
Development in the wider city had degenerated
very much in to a "political game". Some six months prior to
the September 2010 earthquake, the writer discussed within
The bloated centralized Council "ruled" -
and still does - so that now, it is at war with its
community and business.
It is very much now a contest
between the romantics and realists - whatever their
political persuasions.. The realists will prevail of
course, as increasingly the romantics will be found to have
nothing to offer - other than continuing failure. Until
the realists prevail, there will be no effective political
leadership, to allow the city to start on the necessary path
of recovery. The Leadership Vacuum The three key
players to date have been the former accountant / forex
dealer and current Prime Minister Rt Hon John Key, former
woodwork teacher and current Recovery Minister Hon Gerry
Brownlee and former chemist / television presenter and
current Mayor Bob Parker. From the time of the first
earthquake event, September last year, these three people
never grasped what needed to be done, to maintain public
morale and ensure commercial confidence was maintained. An
effort was made during the early part of this year to
address the "leadership vacuum", by bringing on board Roger
Sutton, Chief Executive of the local Orion electricity
network provider, to head up the Canterbury Earthquake
Recovery Authority, responsible to Minister Brownlee. Sutton
has failed to date. He has not replaced the civil
service management team, with skilled specialist people
from the private sector to support him. Sutton’s
abilities appear to begin and end as a
"communicator". Attributes - Resilience, Affordability,
Flexibility It is also clear that none of these people
realise that for a city to thrive and cope with adversity,
it must be resilient, affordable and flexible. Let's
consider these three attributes - (1) Resilience: The
ability to cope with adversity and recover quickly. Poor
quality urban governance and planning means the city has
lost this important attribute. Because of this, these
earthquake events will likely cost $30 billion, where the
costs should be closer to $10 billion (refer writers June
2011 article Christchurch
earthquakes: Council Stalled Recovery) - with
comprehensive lost opportunity costs higher still. Some 12
months following the first major earthquake event, the
recovery has still to get underway (2) Affordability:
Christchurch's generally poor quality housing stock is rated
"severely unaffordable" at 6 times annual household
earnings, as this year's 7th Annual Demographia
International Housing Affordability Survey (the writer
is the co author) illustrates. It should not exceed 3 times
annual household earnings, in normal and properly governed
markets. (3) Flexibility: Because of the bureaucratic,
"anti market" and highly prescriptive planning and generally
hostile governance (with notable exceptions), there is no
scope to make timely changes, in attempting to address
issues at the local level. Instead they have chosen to
take the bureaucratic approach, in endeavouring to deal with
issues. Properly, they should have realised that their role
was to focus on being enablers and provide a sound
regulatory environment, to allow people with their homes,
communities and businesses to get back up on their feet as
quickly as possible. One great success through this saga
of poor quality governance, was in how the central
businesses that were able to (following the most destructive
earthquake event of 22 February 2011), managed within 7 to
14 days, to have their operations up and running throughout
the suburbs of the city. A spontaneous and truly remarkable
achievement, where there was little involvement by the
Authorities. During this "spontaneous exodus",
regrettably, the Authorities disrupted and denied many
businesses the ability to retrieve stock, files and
equipment. Most of these businesses will long remember these
difficulties, when considering whether or not to return to
the central area in the future. The Draft CBD Plan
Fiasco... As though that wasn't enough, the
Christchurch City Council in "adding insult to injury",
ignored business completely and instead embarked on an
unworkable and highly prescriptive Central
City Planning exercise - in large measure, devoid of
competent research to back it up. Light rail was thrown
in to this hodge podge for bad measure - with a dart board
cost estimate of $400 million. No one was kind enough to
tell Mayor Bob Parker, that Christchurch is not Hong
Kong. ....and the Public and Business have had a
gutsful...... A seasoned Wellington based commercial
property investor, Sir Robert Jones, provided a very
thoughtful response soon after with an Opinion in The Press
late September "CBD
cannot be rebuilt", stating plainly: "Christchurch has
always justifiably boasted of being our garden city. A new
and realistic strategy should build on this desirable
feature and abandon thoughts of resurrecting its CBD. It
could follow the model of many Christchurch - size American
cities with insignificant CBD's and instead comprise
suburbs, each with its own commercial centre of low rise,
low cost, walkup offices with shops below in garden
settings, much like the delightful Havelock North. Such
buildings are quickly built, cheap and will find a ready
investor market." These considered comments from Jones are
important, because residents need to be reminded that
Christchurch is part of the New World. Hankering for the
whimsical "aesthetic delights" of the pre automobile cities
of the Old World (as romantic
architects - and here
- and their professional cousins urban planners tend to do)
is futile. Instead of fantasising and becoming even more
irrelevant within the development and construction sectors,
the architects would be well advised to discuss amongst
themselves, how they might play a more constructive role.
Just "playing politics" to fill in the day, is not good
enough. Little wonder the engineers are the lead
profession of our built environment today, as this concise
(unlike the verbose eyewash architects inflict us with) and
highly relevant report
(in conjunction with the Royal Society of New Zealand)
dealing with the Christchurch earthquakes illustrates. This
report is a great credit to the engineering
profession. Successful cities in today's globally
competitive world, must be resilient, affordable and
flexible. The Press
Readers Poll that followed with over 9,700 responses -
the largest on record - illustrating that around 65% of
respondents shared Jones's views. Curiously, these results
were the opposite to what the Council was pressing for with
its Draft CBD Plan, with its sham consultation "Share an
Idea" exercise. And a costly one at that. This would
suggest that business and the community are to a large
extent, on the same page - while the Council (bureaucracy in
the main) is out on a limb. The McFarlane family interests
have been committed and loyal investment supporters of
central Christchurch for generations. At the CBD Draft Plan
hearings soon after, Angus McFarlane justifiably laid
it on the line - as reported by The Press - The draft
plan for the recovery of central Christchurch is a "rubbish
pipedream", that has terrified potential investors,
councillors have been told. The Christchurch City
Council's draft central city plan came under fire from
property owners during yesterday's public
hearings. Councillors sat in stony - faced silence as
property owner Angus McFarlane said the "obstructive,
dictatorial and impractical" plan was a "rubbish
pipedream". McFarlane, who said he owned more than 10,000
square metres of the city, said the city was in despair
before the earthquakes, with a failing central economy and
diminishing values. He told councillors they had made a
mess of the city before the quakes and the draft plan
"proves you have got it wrong again". The Chief Executive
of the Property Council of New Zealand, Connal Townsend,
largely reinforced McFarlane's comments. The barrage from
the business community has been relentless. Finally the
beleaguered Mayor Bob Parker, was forced to capitulate and
arrange a rather hasty meeting with the business community
(the writer was not invited - having been told not to
communicate with him by email, for good measure). These were
in the main people who had been supporters of the Council
for years. They had chosen for their own reasons not to say
anything publicly, when clearly, there have been serious
problems with this Council for the past two decades. Mayor
Parker must have been disappointed with the reception he got
from these carefully chosen individuals from the business
community, as reported by The Press "Investors
will fund rebuild of Christchurch". Hamish Doig, a
local commercial real estate agent (and a cheerleader for
the Councils CBD "visions" in the past) told Parker, that it
will take "more than smiley faces and pretty pictures" to
rebuild the city. Doig was referring to the "Share an
Idea" Council sham consultation exercise, originally
organised by the planners and Parker, to sidestep and ignore
the business community. Council staff had told central
property owners earlier, that they were not interested in
meeting - advising these commercial property owners to air
their views at the "Share an Idea" show (with crayons
provided). The message was clear. Respected retail
entrepreneur Tim Glasson reinforced Doig's statements,
adding - "It's all very well to have a vision, but if that
vision isn't going to work financially, it's not going to
happen." Mayor Parker should have been reminded of his
failed involvement in the Magazine Bay Marina fiasco. Ten
years later it is still a wreck. And other Council
development "initiatives", such as the "Hendo deal", Turners
& Growers, Civic building and others. As one leading
politician told this writer "There isn't a commercial brain
in the place". Long term property developer and financier
Humphry Rolleston was reported as saying - However,
Rolleston said he could not think of one Christchurch
high-rise that had been a commercial success.......Taller
buildings had done "a lot of damage" to the city in the past
30 years. Rolleston spelt it out very clearly to the
Council people - "Councillors lacked the expertise"
Rolleston said. "You haven't been trained to do it, you
are not property developers and I think it would be wise to
pass over that responsibility to a forum which you are part
of" he said. Investors were "frightened" by the councils
"overregulated" process" Rolleston said. As is usual with
those from the business community, Rolleston made the
suggestion that a "Mayoral Group" could be formed to
"attract fresh capital" to the city. Hardly a solution - as
the real problem is that the structure and culture of the
Council needs to be dealt with - with urgency. Rather
surprisingly, Rolleston obviously didn't realise that once
Parker had pulled him in to his orbit, the Council
bureaucrats will control them all anyhow. Then The
"Brownlee Bombshell" As though the Draft CBD Plan
fiasco wasn't enough, the bureaucrats (many seconded from
the Christchurch City Council) over at the Canterbury
Earthquake Recovery Authority (CERA), led by Rosalind Plimmer
from the
Department of Internal Affairs, were up to the same
mischief, with disastrous changes to the
Regional Policy Statement - an Order from Recovery
Minister Brownlee. This should properly be referred to as
the "Brownlee Bombshell". It seems clear that Recovery
Minister Gerry Brownlee hasn't even read this Order. Back
in 2007 / 08 Brownlee had been Chairman of the NZ Parliament
Commerce
Committee Housing Affordability Inquiry. He knows
right from wrong on these issues. Coming in to Government
late 2008 and being appointed Minister of Economic
Development as well, Brownlee and his colleagues knew
exactly what the problems and solutions were, as his
colleague, Housing Minister Hon Phil Heatley made clear early
in 2009, at the time of the release of the Annual
Demographia Housing Survey. Prime Minister John Key told the
international community soon after through the Wall Street
Journal "You
can't spend your way out of a crisis". Interest Co NZ
reported
on the "Brownlee Bombshell" and the writer commented (2) as
well. This is referred to as Chapter
12A - Regional Policy Statement and is the usual hodge
podge of quack planning lore - divorced from the real
world. Not only is their grossly insufficient land supply
made available on the good ground on the fringes of
Christchurch, where the real demand is, but this Order
actually bans the provision of new family housing on the
fringes of Christchurch. If new home buyers want a
conventional family home on 700 square metre lots / sections
or more, they are forced from Christchurch and will have to
go out to the adjoining counties of Selwyn and Waimakariri ,
where densities of 10 per hectare minimum are allowed.
Policy 11: Residential Densities states - Residential
subdivision and development shall achieve the following net
densities, arranged over the whole of an Outline Development
Plan area shown on Map 1 and for intensification
developments: (a) 10 lots or household units per hectare
in Greenfields Areas in Selwyn and Waimakariri
District; (b) 15 lots or household units per hectare in
Greenfields Areas of Christchurch City; (c) 50 lots or
household units per hectare for intensification development
within the City Centre Area; (d) 30 lots or household
units per hectare for intensification development elsewhere
as identified within the Christchurch City Plan. (c) and
(d) are unmarketable of course, as Christchurch residents
are acutely aware (because of the earthquakes) of the
dangers of dense development. Living on top of one
another, like battery hens, is not the "Kiwi way". Medium
density with sections / lots of 450 square metres or less (b
- above) are environmental eyesores and not suitable for
normal family living. What people want are reasonable size
sections / lots, where they can grow vegetables and trees
(where the roots don't interfere with services), have room
for the kids to play and park cars, caravans and boats. And
as we do not know the future (unlike indoctrinated urban
planners who fantasize that they do), people need large
sections, so that they can modify and add to their homes, as
their needs change and incomes rise. Christchurch too is
New Zealand's Garden City - as Sir Robert Jones reminded us
- and we should be proud of that. There is abundant land
supply available in New Zealand, with our small population
of just 4.4 million, as the writer made clear some years ago
within New
Zealand Lifestyle Block Mythology. Just 0.70% of New
Zealand is urbanised. Although public officials have
conned some of the gullible public in to believing the myth
that we must be sustainable and conserve resources, the real
reason is because Local Government has lost control of its
costs and the capacity to meet its infrastructure
responsibilities to the public it is paid to serve. Indeed
- being preached to by public officials about how to manage
resources property, is an insult to the public. They are
hardly "glowing examples" of the wise use of
resources. "Brownlee Bombshell" Ignores Real
Issues No attempt is made within Chapter 12A -
Regional Policy Statement to address any real issues of
course. It is a ham-fisted hodge podge of inappropriate
muddled and micro planning - completely contrary to the
spirit and intent of the Resource Management Act. Well at
least as the original architects of the Act intended it to
be. It is not only incompetent - but callous as well. In
generating this drivel, it seems Brownlee, Sutton and
Plimmer and the other people at CERA, did not think for a
moment about the additional hardship they are inflicting on
the people they are paid to serve. And Sutton at $500,000 a
year, is "handsomely paid" to serve the public and perform
to an acceptable standard. Brownlee - Where Are the
$200,000 Fringe Houses? As the writer made clear on
Canterbury Television Jo Kane One on on Programme (Video) back in
June (did you get that Brownlee - back in June), the
priority should have always been to get affordable fringe
land opened up, so that $200,000 house and land packages
($50,000 for the serviced lot - $150,000 for the actual
house construction) were made available for people to
relocate to. Particularly those from the Red Zone, where the
average payout will be in the order of $295,000. But then
the writer made this clear to the Authorities via the New
Zealand Herald back September 2010, a few days following the
first earthquake event - Earthquake
highlights need to open city limits. And for that
matter, as far back as early 2005 - some 7 years ago - when
the first Demographia International Housing Affordability
Survey was released. What needs to be done has been
exhaustively discussed these past 7 years - refer Performance
Urban Planning - Highlighted Article Section in
particular. The people of Christchurch do not deserve this
political
circus.