
By Farah Hancock of
A newly-appointed KiwiRail board director is associated with a company which donated to NZ First.
Scott O鈥橠onnell is one of the four directors of Dynes Transport Tapanui, which donated $20,000 to NZ First in July 2024.
The company is also involved in a project which recently received a Government regional infrastructure loan of $8 million.
Political scientist Bryce Edwards said even though party donations are not considered to be a conflict of interest, he believed it was a 鈥減erfect storm鈥 of factors, which can erode trust in the political system.
鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely this type of relationship that leads to, at the very least, a perception of a quid pro quo arrangement whereby donations give the donors special treatment in Government.鈥
Minister for Rail Winston Peters鈥 announcement of Scott O鈥橠onnell鈥檚 appointment to state-owned KiwiRail last week noted a conflict of interest plan was in place related to O鈥橠onnell鈥檚 business interests.
鈥淭he company鈥檚 road freight operation is primarily south of Oamaru, and as such Mr O鈥橠onnell will recuse himself from KiwiRail activities in this part of New Zealand,鈥 Peters said.
He said O鈥橠onnell 鈥渂rings actual experience to the role鈥 and would bolster KiwiRail鈥檚 freight expertise and that his commercial interests were disclosed during the appointment process.
Information about the donation was not included in Peters鈥 announcement.
鈥淒ynes Transport is a company, not an individual, and its donation was declared to the Electoral Commission and in full public view while Mr O鈥橠onnell鈥檚 directorship was considered,鈥 said Peters.
Dynes Transport was also a recipient of a Government loan for a transport hub project in Mosgiel.
The Southern Link Logistics Park received an $8 million loan towards creating an 鈥渋nland port鈥. The project would connect Dunedin鈥檚 Port Chalmers to Mosgiel by track and potentially cut 19,000 truck trips through Dunedin streets a year.
The hub would be developed by Southern Link Property Limited, which is owned by Port Otago and Dynes Transport.
NZ First鈥檚 Shane Jones announced the Government loan for the project days after a competing project was revealed.
Calder Stewart had plans for a 55-hectare development on heavy industrial-zoned land near Milton, which would be approximately 50 kilometres southwest of Dunedin. It would be connected to State Highway 1 and the South Island鈥檚 main trunk line and its development would be privately funded.
Jones told RNZ to the best of his knowledge he was not aware of another proposal for an inland port. He said five ministers were involved in making the decision regarding the Regional Infrastructure Fund loan, including National鈥檚 Nicola Willis, Chris Bishop, Tama Potaka and Simon Watts.
Conflicts of interest regarding donations were handled in a similar manner to Fast Track Applicants, said Jones, where only donations made to candidates directly were considered to be a conflict.
鈥淛ust because someone contributes to the party doesn鈥檛 necessarily mean that I, as a member of New Zealand First, one of five ministers would be in a conflict situation.鈥
KiwiRail鈥檚 executive general manager freight markets supplied a letter of support to Dyne Transport鈥檚 unsuccessful fast track proposal in April 2024.
Are party donations a conflict of interest?
A recent investigation regarding the handling of conflicts of interest and the Fast Track Approvals Act conducted by the Office of the Auditor General backed Jones鈥 stance, that party donations are not currently considered to be a conflict of interest.
The report, however, noted that further thought could be given to making decisions which tangibly benefit a party donor, rather than confer a generalised benefit, and recommended the Cabinet Manual could provide more guidance on the matter.
The Auditor General stated: 鈥淭hese issues are beyond my mandate, but I note that the recent Independent Electoral Review considers that there is a need to protect against the perception that large political donations are a way to obtain undue access and influence鈥.
Edwards said he believed situations like this can dent public confidence in the coalition government, 鈥渆specially because it鈥檚 a donation to the party that has the two ministers that have been making these decisions鈥.
He would like to see some debate about reforms to the way donations and conflicts of interest are handled.
He believed there was a case for more transparency around party donations when announcements about loans, or board appointments were made.
鈥淲e might even need to start talking about cooling off periods whereby, when companies make donations to political parties, especially those in government, they shouldn鈥檛 be eligible for Government contracts or funding for a period of time.鈥
He agreed with the Auditor General鈥檚 suggestion that new conflict of interest procedures could be instituted when companies or people who have donated to a party may benefit from government decisions.
RNZ has requested comment from Scott O鈥橠onnell.
-RNZ
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE