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Ready to home-print. The latest and previous issues of LETTERBOX.
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Click... print... and distribute to letterboxes near you!
Ready to home-print. The latest and previous issues of LETTERBOX.
(Reminder - When distributing, please respect "no circulars notices")
Security was called to remove a “disruptive” councillor from the debating chamber during the fluoride debate. Waipu ward councillor Ken Couper was ordered from the chamber following a terse exchange with Mayor Cocurullo, but refused to do so, saying, “you will have to physically remove me”. The Mayor adjourned the meeting for 10 minutes, which resumed without the disruptive Cr Couper.
We cannot recall a previous
occasion where security has been called to remove a member from the chamber. While
councillors sometimes have acrimonious exchanges, very rarely does it escalate
to the point of calling security to remove a belligerent councillor from a meeting.
A motion put by the WDC’s Chief Executive to revoke earlier decisions by councillors to ignore a directive by the Director General of Health that requires the Council to fluoridate its water supply has been voted down by councillors. At a meeting held on the 12th of February, Mayor Cocurullo used his casting vote to break a 7-7 deadlock.
The extraordinary meeting was
called after the Council received a letter from the Director General of Health
on the 30th of January. That letter restated their position that it
was an offence under the Health Act for a local authority to contravene a
Ministry of Health direction.
A staff report prepared for the meeting said the council had received legal advice that councillors may be held personally liable for any losses incurred as a result of their “unlawful” action or imprisonment!
A consortium made up of the Northland Regional Council (NRC), the Port of Tauranga, and the Ngāpuhi Investment Fund Limited (Ngāpuhi) have made a conditional offer to buy out the minority shareholders of Marine Maritime Holdings (MMH, formerly Northport), which is listed on the NZ stock exchange. The offer price of $5.60 a share is a 73% premium to the $3.24 last sale price before the offer.
Should the offer go ahead, MMH
will be delisted from the stock exchange. The Port of Tauranga would own 50%,
NRC 43%, and Ngāpuhi 7%.
Currently, the NRC owns a 53.6%
controlling stake in MMH. The proposal would see it sell down its holding to 43%,
and it has stated that it may make a further 7% available to other Maori groups
which would reduce its holding to 36%. LETTERBOX has asked the NRC to clarify
whether it will be consulting with the public on the sell-down. We will publish
their reply in the next issue.
The deal effectively gives the Port of Tauranga control of the port and the substantial land holdings owned by MMH.
He says poor decisions have added
to rate increases. “Rates are out of control and the Government is taking
action for councils to do the basics brilliantly, rather than pursuing
expensive extras that burden ratepayers…”.
The specific changes include:
The 70,000 visitors “forecast” is
considerably less than the numbers presented to the public at the time the project
was promoted by Prosper Northland Trust, which had been formed to steer the
project. This is how they described it:
“Hundertwasser & Wairau Maori Art Centre is an unprecedented catalyst for growth in Whangarei District. The Deloitte Feasibility Study and Economic Impact Assessment have been reviewed and updated by leading Wellington-based consultants Crowe Horwarth, engaged by Prosper Northland Trust…This review confirms the Deloitte report as being conservative…Deloitte’s representatives stood in WDC’s Council Chamber in 2011 and expressed the utmost confidence that their findings would be vindicated. They found that even in the prevailing circumstances some 150,000 people would visit the art centre annually…