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A couple of advisors at the Christchurch City Council have ripped into the Government鈥檚 plan for regional councils and have said to councillors that they reckon there鈥檚 a better way.
Or more correctly, two better potential ways. Instead of having local mayors run regional councils for two years and, during that time, work out how they鈥檙e going to get by without a regional council. At a briefing meeting yesterday, two principal policy advisors put two options on the table for councillors to think about.
Option 1: Amalgamate the Christchurch, Selwyn, and Waimakariri councils to create a new super city. Which I've been a fan of for quite some time now.
And Option 2: Keep all three councils and have the city council take over ECAN鈥檚 regional council functions.
The reason these two council advisors have put these two options up for discussion is that they think having local mayors run ECAN for two years and work out a new structure for local government is a 鈥渨eak鈥 idea, which wouldn鈥檛 do any favours for Christchurch ratepayers.
And I get what they鈥檙e saying, because as soon as you get three mayors around the table, they鈥檙e just going to be interested in what鈥檚 in it for them, aren鈥檛 they? Which is the same approach these policy advisors are taking. They鈥檙e on the city council pay roll and so they have to think about what鈥檚 best for Christchurch city.
And I like their idea of a supercity.
But every time a supercity is mentioned, some people are quick to point to Auckland as an argument against it. The Auckland supercity brought together seven city and district councils and the regional council back in 2010. But a supercity in the greater Christchurch area would be nowhere near the same scale. We鈥檙e talking here about just three councils: Christchurch, Selwyn and Waimakariri.
We鈥檝e done amalgamation before on a much smaller scale. Back in 2006, Banks Peninsula Council amalgamated with Christchurch city.
The issue then was that Banks Peninsula didn鈥檛 have a big enough population to get the rates it needed to operate properly. Selwyn and Waimakariri don鈥檛 have that problem 鈥 they鈥檝e grown massively since the earthquakes. Selwyn, especially.
But half of the people living in Selwyn come into Christchurch every day for work and school, and they contribute nothing towards the cost of the running of the city. They鈥檙e using the city鈥檚 roads and so many of the other facilities that they pay nothing for.
Add to that the relatively small distance between Selwyn, Christchurch and Waimakariri, and amalgamation is a no-brainer.
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