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Andrew Dickens: Our water infrastructure simply isn't getting better

Author
Andrew Dickens ,
Publish Date
Tue, 2 Sept 2025, 6:15am
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, Minister for Auckland Simeon Brown and Auckland City Mayor Wayne Brown at the announcement of Local Water Done Well in Auckland. Photo / Alex Burton
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, Minister for Auckland Simeon Brown and Auckland City Mayor Wayne Brown at the announcement of Local Water Done Well in Auckland. Photo / Alex Burton

Andrew Dickens: Our water infrastructure simply isn't getting better

Author
Andrew Dickens ,
Publish Date
Tue, 2 Sept 2025, 6:15am

The Government鈥檚 new plan for water services is called Local Water Done Well. It鈥檚 all about keeping control in the hands of local councils and communities, rather than shifting everything to big centralised bodies. 

Which was what Three Waters did. Eventually Labour caved and the policy got renamed 10 Waters because there would be 10 regionalised bodies, but even that was not popular. And of course there was the troublesome identity politics around M膩ori co-governance that freaked a lot of people out.

So now, Councils have to submit Water Services Delivery Plans showing how they鈥檒l manage drinking water, wastewater, and stormwater safely, sustainably, and affordably. 

There鈥檚 still strong oversight from regulators, but the focus is on local decision-making, community accountability, and better outcomes for everyone. 

So Councils must submit their Water Services Delivery Plans (WSDPs) to the Secretary for Local Government and the deadline is the third of September. These plans outline how each council will deliver and fund water services - that鈥檚 tomorrow and it鈥檚 looking like it鈥檚 going to be a bust 

And the big sticking point is funding, which was at the core of Three Waters. Three Waters was going to force water services to be amalgamated, the assets used to borrow against, and the loans paid off by water rates, not rates.

Local Water Done Well allows for that to happen too, but the difference is that it has to be done voluntarily by the councils, and they don鈥檛 want to do that. 

Here鈥檚 a concrete example: Thames Coromandel is a nightmare water services situation. The area is mountainous and the weather events extreme. There鈥檚 hardly any ratepayers and the population expands immensely in the summer.

The Thames Coromandel Council wanted to join forces with Tauranga and Western Bays to form a bigger regional body to fund water off their existing assets. 

Tauranga doesn鈥檛 want the hassle of Thames Coromandel and so the deal hasn鈥檛 happened. The estimation is that this will put 500 to 600 dollars onto the Thames Coromandel rates. We all want better water, but we all want lower rates.

We鈥檒l find out tomorrow what鈥檚 going to happen with water but at the moment it looks like the policy should be renamed Local Water, done not very well and not funded.

After all the talk about water reform we鈥檙e right back at where we started from and you, the ratepayer, will have to pay for it. 

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