Lisa Owen Interviews Metropolitan Mayors
On The Nation: Lisa Owen talks to Auckland Mayor Len Brown, Wellington Mayor Celia Wade-Brown & Christchurch Mayor Lianne Dalziel
Len Brown says signs that Auckland house prices have peaked as more apartments and affordable houses are built
However acknowledges the 8,000-10,000 houses a year currently being built are short of the 13,000- 15,000 a year needed in Auckland
Celia Wade-Brown and Lianne Dalziel says they will “probably” stand for re-election in Wellington and Christchurch, Brown promises statement “soon” but hints he might not stand
“I've been the mayor, by the end of this term, for nine years. And I mean, it's been brilliant, but it is hugely challenging, and also hugely challenging in your personal life”
All three mayors reject Productivity Commission recommendation that Government should set price threshold at which councils would be forced to release more land.
Wade-Brown willing to tap into city’s economic fund to help keep the Phoenix football club in the capital.
Says Wellington is interested in “free pandas” and would pay for the bamboo if central government provided the pandas.
Dalziel calls on government to take the lead in preparing for sea level rises due to climate change. Asks why councils should have to do the research and have the “hard conversations with people”.
Brown says only way he can see Auckland transport system improving “is through something like a motorway toll”
Wade-Brown would like other ways to raise money beyond rates, says “a wider tool box would be useful”
Dalziel says central government often doesn’t consider how much it costs local government to implement and enforce their policies
Christchurch mayor expects changes to Christchurch Regeneration Bill as it goes through parliament, but denies final power remains with minister Gerry Brownlee
Brown says Auckland sells around $100m of surplus property each year, but he won’t sell strategic assets
Lisa Owen: Good morning to Len
Brown, Celia Wade-Brown and Lianne Dalziel. Do you need a
name change for this morning, Lianne? You’re the only
non-Brown mayor. I want to start by asking you all very
briefly what you think the biggest challenge is that is
facing your city. Lianne?
Lianne Dalziel: Well,
I guess mine’s obvious, and the challenge facing
Christchurch is how we continue the rebuild and recover
after the series of earthquakes that we experienced. But,
you know, as others have said, you never let a serious
crisis go to waste, and it is an opportunity as well, and we
are seeing some incredible opportunities emerge, and, of
course, the latest conversation that we’ve been having
with central government is how do we transition from
recovery into a regeneration conversation, which I think is
much more exciting for the city.
All right,
we’ll talk about that a bit more. Celia, what’s your
challenge?
Celia Wade-Brown: We want to increase
our economic growth while making our wonderful, sustainable,
compact city even better known globally. We are not a huge
city. We’re 200,000 people living in Wellington; 500,000
in the greater region. But we still do things pretty well.
We are number 12 on the Mercer Quality of Life, and it’s
really good to see Auckland there at number three. I think
we’re working really well as the cities together. We’ve
been to China together. We’re collaborating on resilience.
New Zealand’s too small to waste time competing with each
other.
Len, where do you start? What’s your
biggest challenge?
Len Brown: Well, we’re
growing at 2.9% population at the moment, and so managing
that population growth, which is about an extra 43,500, and
over the last five years, so we’re just celebrating five
years since the Supercity was established, we’ve grown a
city the size of Dunedin. So that’s a challenge in itself.
But in beside that, of course, the big challenge – sort
the transport out. Get a full integrated transport system
into place, really build a great public transport system and
an active transport system in beside that with cycling. And
I think we’re doing that, but there’s a lot of further
action yet to go.
Because some people would say
housing is one of your big problems, isn’t it? You’ve
been dealing with a housing crisis. Are there signs that
prices in Auckland have peaked?
Brown: Yeah, I
think there are. And, yes, it is a challenge, because purely
of that population growth, and in the fact that during the
last GFC we were only building 1,000 houses a year, so
basically, people stopped buying and the builders stopped
building. So now we are at about 8,500 extra consents a
year, half the houses we’re building are apartments, which
is great, so we’ve got choice, and the fact that we’re
building those apartments and the types of terraced houses
means that we’re building in a more affordable range. So
greater choice, more range, and that will help to moderate
the prices.
So you think that price is
stabilising?
Brown: I think so,
yes.
But the thing is you’ve still got
shortfall, haven’t you? Depending on whose estimates you
take, up to 30,000 houses short.
Brown: Look, if
you’re talking about a three to five year time frame, that
would be right. But if you also listen to people like the
Finance Minister, he’s talked about a surplus coming at
us, so we have a bow wave.
No, but we’re
talking about right now. If you look at even your own
housing project office estimates, you’ve got a shortfall,
and it’s big.
Brown: Yeah, and we are working
off the base of very low build. So, as I say, we are
building probably in the vicinity of 8,000 to 10,000 houses
at the moment a year. We need 13,000 to 15,000. So ourselves
and the government, under the Housing Accord, are doing
everything we possibly can to provide the opportunity for
the private sector to do those building.
All
right, let’s bring Celia back in. Celia, the thing is
you’ve actually got a kind of different sort of issue in
some ways. Your house prices fell in the last quarter –
just a little bit, but they did fall. How do you get people
to move to your city? Because you talked about economic
growth.
Wade-Brown: Well, we’ve got about 1%
population growth per annum, and most of that is in the
central city. So that makes it much easier. We’ve got many
more apartments being built. We cheered up Victoria Street,
so we’ve now got more apartment buildings there. We’ve
agreed Special Housing Areas for some fabulous areas like
Shelly Bay. And we’ve just won an award last night for the
wonderful Clyde Quay Wharf. That’s a very much a top-end
apartments, but we’ve been doing up the social housing as
well. And we need that.
You need people to move
in, and you’re encouraging Aucklanders.
Brown:
Absolutely.
Wade-Brown: We’ll have some Aucklanders,
that’s fine.
Brown: And to be fair, we are shedding
population the same time that we’re taking it on, so
two-thirds of our growth is from migrants. And in some of
your recent television coverage, we’ve seen a number of
Aucklanders turn up in places like Bay of Plenty and
Tauranga.
So are you happy for Celia to be
encouraging people to move out of your
city?
Brown: In the end, the government’s
trying to do it also with some of their policy settings
around migration.
Wade-Brown: You get more points if you
settle outside of Auckland. But we’ve all written and said
that we can accept more refugees as well, so it’s not only
the high-earning, high-skills people that are
welcome.
Lianne, is Auckland’s size an issue, do you
think?
Dalziel: Well, no, I think this is a global issue.
I’ve just returned from a conference in London, and that
was the City Lab conference, and what they identified there
is that this is an issue in all major cities throughout the
world, and it’s an issue in Christchurch as well. And we
may not be the same size and scale as Auckland, but we
actually do have the same issues. But with the challenges
that we face, we actually also face an incredible
opportunity. Something that our region had actually worked
on prior to the earthquakes happening was an urban
development strategy which actually looked at land use
across ourselves, the Waimakariri District Council and the
Selwyn District Council as well. So in many respects, the
work that we had done in the years before the earthquakes
occurred actually enabled the government to move quite
quickly in terms of land use recovery plan. We’ve had an
ambition to increase the size of our CBD area – the four
avenues, as it were – within Christchurch by over 20,000
people out to 2041. What we’re going to have to do is hit
the fast-forward button. We need people living in our
central city. We need people living there because it will
activate the city. It will make it a vibrant and exciting
place to be. And it’s the central city that really has
been the focus of the growth. You have to remember that
we’ve lost over 7,000 properties through the residential
red zone since the earthquakes.
You’re talking
about land use there, and I just want to ask you all before
we move on from housing – the Productivity Commission
reckons that when land prices hit a certain level, the
government should be able to step in and make you guys open
up more land. So are you happy to give up control of city
planning?
Brown: No. Otherwise, what are we
doing in it? I mean, I think it’s quite clear, and, you
know, the Productivity Commission actually made some quite
good recommendations, but that was not one of
them.
That’s not one you want a bar
of?
Brown: No. Look, and the way for us to do
it, and it’s worked well for us given the special
challenges that we have around the issue of growth and
trying to get upward growth in particular to deal with some
of the issues that Lianne has been talking about where you
have concentrations of population to enable better movement
of transport. We’re doing that under a Housing Accord. And
even if there are disagreements, we do them within the
accord and do them in a way that’s much more mature than
slagging each other off on TV.
Let’s see what
the other two think.
Wade-Brown: I do think you
have to have the dense urban centre, and our Special Housing
Areas…
Are you happy to give up that right,
though?
Wade-Brown: Not at all. We need to have
a really good planning. It’s far too expensive to build a
cheap house on the outskirts. It’s expensive for
infrastructure. It’s expensive for transport. It’s
short-term thinking.
Lianne? Would you be happy
to turn that power over to the
government?
Dalziel: No, and I don’t think
that it needs to be. I actually think that we can work in a
far more collaborative model around finding the solutions.
Because you cannot create new subdivisions miles away from
hubs, from transport centres, shopping centres, services.
All you do is you create isolated areas. They’re not even
communities. If they haven’t got a place where they can
come together, where they can have recreation, shopping,
those sort of things… If you have to jump in your car to
go and get a Sunday paper at the dairy, there is something
fundamentally wrong with the planning
rules.
Let’s talk about rates, then, because
everybody likes to talk about rates, and we’re always
having a furious debate about the rates rising. So are rates
just not enough anymore to pay for what you need to? Why
aren’t they?
Brown: So, let’s talk about the
problem with rates, because I think this is critical. The
problem with rates is that there’s no connect between or
very good connect between what you are charged and your
ability to pay that, and so rates is a regressive tax where
you pay according to how much your land value is. And that
works for some people, but for the elderly in particular,
where their income has flatlined once they get past 65,
generally, and their property values continue to go up,
they’re paying more rates against a
flatline…
I get that, and lots of people at
home will, but I’m wondering why you keep needing more and
more money. Why is it that you’re not able to cover your
costs?
Brown: And by and large, you do. So I
think most of us sitting around the table here operate their
rates increases or they increase their rating revenue under
5%, but for example, for us to deal with the specific
challenge of underinvestment in transport and the massive
infrastructure spend that we’ve got to make to deal with
our challenges of getting the city better moving, the only
way that I can see forward, and my colleagues might disagree
with me, is through something like a motorway
toll.
Yeah, well, so do you think – the other
two mayors – do you think that you need other taxes, other
forms of revenue like motorway tolls, like levies, that you
can get your ratepayers to pay?
Wade-Brown: I
think a wider tool box would be useful. I think it’s
not—you wouldn’t necessarily use all of them. One of the
things that we have a challenge with is getting our share of
the economic growth that’s come from city council
investment. So if we put in the airport runway extension, if
we put in the Film Museum, if we put in the convention
centre, to recoup that purely from rates is quite a
challenge.
Lianne?
Dalziel: Well,
obviously, we have the additional challenge of rebuilding
the city, and the conversation that we had with Central
Government – obviously the council did before I was
elected to this position – tried to look at what was a
fair share that could be transmitted to the taxpayer as
opposed to the ratepayer. But I have to say that I’m the
only one that’s sitting at this table that’s had the
experience of being in central government and in local
government, and I have to say I almost wish I knew back then
what I know now. And that is that central government does
put some obligations on local government, and they don’t
consider the impact that that has on how that’s paid for.
So quite often, you know, Parliament will debate an issue,
and they’ll say, ‘Well, actually, the local council
should determine that issue in consultation with their
community.’ But they don’t take into account how much it
costs us to put in place a by-law, how much it costs to
enforce it, and actually the impact that that has on the
rate-paying base of these smaller areas. I’m faced with
the challenge of coastal hazards at the moment, as are
everyone else, so…
We’re going to talk about
coastal hazards after the break, but this is an opportunity
for us to take a quick break.
Welcome back. I'm talking
with the mayors of our three largest cities: Auckland's Len
Brown, Wellington's Celia Wade-Brown and Lianne Dalziel from
Christchurch. Before we went to the break, we were talking
about climate change. The reality is, all of your cities may
partly be covered by water in the years to come. What are
you going to do about it?
Dalziel: Well, this is
why I wrote to the Minister of the Environment after he was
elected to this position last year, and I said, 'I think
this is crazy that Christchurch leads the way on this. You
know, we actually have been through a significant event and
people are seriously challenged, particularly in these
lower-lying areas of our city that are more exposed than
they were before. Because our land did drop, and in some
areas by 1.3 metres. That's significant. I mean, we've
probably mimicked in a short period of time, a matter of
seconds, the impacts of potential climate
change.'
But house owners are stopping you
dealing with that, aren't they? In terms of the LIMs.
Marking up LIMs. There was a resistance to that because, of
course, it's going to lower house
prices.
Dalziel: No, no. I think that the real
issue here is that in terms of the scientific research, and
this is the point I was making before the break, the
Government really should be leading the way in terms of
this. Why should individual councils have to get their own
independent reports? Why should they have to get them peer
reviewed? Why should they then have to have the hard
conversations with people about what the potential future
might bring? And when we're talking about advice that goes
on LIMs, it's simply notifying the information that we have
available to people. And I would rather that central
government took a leadership role in this area and got the
information that we could all rely on. I understand that the
Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment is not far
off her next report, and I'd say let's wait until we have
that.
Wade-Brown: But I think there's the other issue is
not just reacting to sea-level rise, but all of us doing
what we can to reduce the emissions. And cities are showing
incredible leadership in that. Our greenhouse gas emissions
have gone down despite population increase, and economic
growth. We've got one of the biggest, the most productive
wind farms, and our buildings — we're working together
with about 25 different building owners to reduce
energy.
Yeah, but people are worried about their
house prices now, aren't they, and it's political dynamite,
or political suicide, depending on what decisions you make.
Would you want to hand it off to—
Wade-Brown:
We need to have shared scientific advice, but the decisions
about how best to deal with different beaches, whether you
plant them, whether you put back a sea wall, whether you
have a bigger sea wall, they are going to be specific to
different communities.
Dalziel: It's democratic
decision-making because it's not just about identifying the
hazards, it's actually identifying the nature of the risk.
And you don't have to respond to risk by retreat. You don't
have to respond to risk by mitigation. You don't have to
respond to risk by adaptation. But you will have to respond,
and it will be one of those three options. You'll mitigate
in some way. So we have higher floor levels for our houses
in areas that are exposed to flood risk. There are
adaptations. There are different ways that we can put in
place. There are different types of buildings that are able
to be moved if they need to be. You know, there are all
sorts of things that we can have a deeper conversation
about, but if we don't have an agreed position on the
science, then that makes it extremely challenging for
individuals who live in our coastal suburbs, and they live
in all of our cities—
Wade-Brown: Which is why they
choose to live— but it's not just the sea-level rise, it's
the increased storms and the amount of rainfall, so we
actually have to manage our storm-water
systems.
We need to move on. Sorry, cos we've got
a few things I need to cover.
Wade-Brown: Storm
water and sewage are interesting to mayors. I'm very
sorry.
We are going to cover off some other
issues. Lianne, the Government's pushing ahead with the
Christchurch Regeneration Bill. Your old party says it gives
too much power to Gerry Brownlee. He keeps that power for
the next five years. Doesn't that stick in your
craw?
Dalziel: No, it doesn't because what this
is doing is enabling a conversation to occur around what
happens after a recovery situation in a city faced with what
we've been through, and so—
But he decides how
that conversation ends, surely.
Dalziel: No, no.
Things have changed. So I think that there is a bill that
has been introduced, and we are still talking to central
government about it, and there will be changes, I think,
made to the bill as it goes through. But it's who initiates
the regeneration planning process that has fundamentally
changed. It is initiated by Regenerate Christchurch, which
is jointly appointed by government, and the fact that it has
an independent board that then is reporting to the
government but is not... and reporting to council in equal
terms, I think has changed the landscape, and offers the
potential for other cities to enter into a collaborative
relationship with central government.
All right.
Len, I want to ask you about the review of Auckland assets,
which is currently underway. You've previously promised that
you will not sell off strategic assets. But is it time? Has
it come to the point where you do need to sell a few
things?
Brown: Look, I absolutely am committed
to those promises - that's particularly the airport shares
and the port shares. We own our port one 100%, and we own
our port about 22%.
But what about some other
stuff that you could afford to sell off?
Brown:
Hang on. We've seen 100% increase, really, in the last five
years in the capital value of those two shareholdings, so
that's the first thing. And last year, we received, as
ratepayers, $95 million worth of dividends. So for me, as a
commercial benefit alone, they're great as an investment for
our community. Secondly—
What about things that
you don't think are strategic assets? Could you afford to
sell some of them?
Brown: We're doing that
already. Every year, we sell down about $100 million worth
of property that's surplus to requirements. We have a
property portfolio, Aucklanders, of around $2 billion. And
so we are selling in a strategic way about $100 million of
that every year to off-set our need to borrow. And so that
$100 million goes into buying other assets — libraries,
pools, footpaths, whatever.
It's something you're
doing. Celia, are you keen on pandas in Wellington or
not?
Wade-Brown: (LAUGHS)
Because the
messages seem to be a little mixed.
Brown: I'd
like some pandas.
Wade-Brown: We're very keen on free
pandas. If the Government was going to provide pandas, we'd
be delighted, I'm sure. The question is — who would pay
and how much? We've just opened the most amazing exhibit,
the 'meet the locals' at the zoo.
So you're not
prepared to kick in any money for the pandas, but you'll
take them if they're on the Government's
ticket?
Wade-Brown: We'd be very happy. We would
provide the bamboo, I'm sure.
Brown:
(LAUGHS)
All right. Well,—
Brown:
That sounds like a good deal — bamboo for
pandas.
On another subject. Sorry, Celia, I just
want to ask—
Wade-Brown: We have had
conversations—
I just want to ask whether you'd
kick money in to help the Phoenix
survive.
Wade-Brown: We already work very
closely with the Phoenix. We're looking at some high
performance facilities, and I have got my little Phoenix
shirt. Sorry, I put the other side first.
Brown:
Excellent.
But no money for
them?
Wade-Brown: We've got an economic
development fund that, if it stacks up, we will support. And
I am expecting both Mayor Brown and Mayor Dalziel to support
keeping the Phoenix in the A-league.
All right.
Very quick question, Len — transport. Phil Goff reckons
that Transport Accord, all that's going to do is stop
something for another year. Is he right? Have you played
into the Government's hands with that
one?
Brown: Oh, look, there's a number of views
on this. But if there was one thing that we needed to do
after five years, was really get very clear understanding
with the Government, sit with them and all of the agencies
to stop the argument, and be very clear on a line — what
we want to do in terms of investment into Auckland
transport. So for me, putting aside the city rail tunnel,
the Waterview tunnel, the second harbour crossing, all that,
this will actually be the deal that will open up all of the
investment. A very clear message from the Government and the
Council to the business sector in our community, we are
united in the way in which we're going forward to deal with
the problem of transport in Auckland. It is exactly the
right thing to be doing.
All right. Very quickly
before we go, who is standing at the next election?
Lianne?
Dalziel: I haven't quite made up my mind
yet. Obviously, when you take on the role of mayor in a city
like Christchurch in the situation that it's in, you do want
to see things through. And I guess, in many respects, it
will depend on where we're up to, the Regeneration Bill will
be passed in April next year.
So probably yes? So
probably yes? You're leaning on the side of
yes?
Dalziel: Probably leaning on the side of
yes.
Celia?
Wade-Brown: Probably yes.
There's lots of great projects I want to see through —
film museum, making the war museum permanent, seeing that
jolly plane land direct from Asia.
Len Brown, are
you standing next— ?
Brown: I'll probably make
a statement soon.
Okay, well, what would stop you
from standing? Phil Goff?
Brown: Look—
(LAUGHS) I've been the mayor, by the end of this term, for
nine years. And I mean, it's been brilliant, but it is
hugely challenging, and also hugely challenging in your
personal life. And so I will be making a decision and a
statement soon.
Could you beat Phil
Goff?
Brown: Oh, I'm not going to get into that.
I mean, the one thing I will say, and my colleagues will
agree with me here, is that these roles are challenging and
to anyone who wants to put their hand up for this job, I say
the very best to you, whether I'm competing against you or
not.
All right. Thank you all very much for
joining us this
morning.
ENDS