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Brown clashes with journalists but gets support for his budget

Author
Simon Wilson,
Publish Date
Thu, 15 Dec 2022, 5:22pm
Auckland mayor Wayne Brown. Photo / Michael Craig
Auckland mayor Wayne Brown. Photo / Michael Craig

Brown clashes with journalists but gets support for his budget

Author
Simon Wilson,
Publish Date
Thu, 15 Dec 2022, 5:22pm

Auckland Council has voted 20-1 to send mayor Wayne Brown鈥檚 annual budget for 2023/24 out for public consultation early in the new year.

But the meeting was not without controversy. During the meeting, Brown announced that Auckland International Airport will shortly be seeking capital investment to fund a new domestic terminal.

That prompted the company to suspend trading on the share market.

Council鈥檚 18 per cent shareholding in the airport makes it the largest single shareholder, but Brown does not have the authority to make announcements on its behalf.

He later said he was speculating and had no confidential knowledge of any specific plans by the airport.

But when Brown held a media conference during the council鈥檚 lunch break, he ended up clashing with journalists.

No, he said, he wasn鈥檛 embarrassed by his earlier comments. In hindsight, he was 鈥渘ot sure鈥 if it was unwise.

He also wondered why they hadn鈥檛 asked him about his 鈥渢errific鈥 achievement of the morning, in getting councillors to pass 鈥渢he most difficult budget in this council鈥檚 history鈥, with 鈥渁 resounding 20-1 majority鈥.

But council did not pass the budget. It voted to send it to public consultation. Many of the councillors who voted to do that made it clear they opposed some parts of the budget.

The morning鈥檚 debate had focused largely on three issues.

The first was Brown鈥檚 proposal to sell the council鈥檚 shares in the airport.

The mayor wants to sell the shares because while they鈥檙e worth about $2.1 billion, they do not return a dividend and the money could be used to pay down debt, saving about $88 million a year in interest payments.

Councillor Chris Darby said he had been asking about the strategic value of the shares and it turned out there wasn鈥檛 one. The shares were inherited from the old Manukau City Council and Auckland Council has never adopted a strategic purpose in holding them.

鈥滻t鈥檚 capital growth stock, not a yield stock,鈥 said Brown. 鈥淭hat works for pension funds that can sell when required. But I don鈥檛 see the benefit of holding a stock that pays nothing.鈥

Darby added, 鈥淚f you want to have $2.1 billion invested, go and put it in a diversified fund. You鈥檒l get better returns.鈥

Councillor Mike Lee said the shares were gifted to the council and prior to Covid had offered good returns. He was strongly opposed to their sale, as were some others.

But deputy mayor Desley Simpson seemed to be in favour.

She said, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think some councillors understand what officials are saying. Even if [the company] resumes paying dividends, and that鈥檚 not guaranteed anytime soon, there is still not likely to be any net benefit.鈥

Councillors鈥 second major concern related to transport.

The board of Auckland Transport voted this month to increase public transport fares by 6.5 per cent. Councillor John Watson questioned if that was advisable 鈥渨hen the Government subsidy is coming off鈥, which is set to occur on April 1 next year.

Lee asked if 鈥渓ong-suffering public transport passengers鈥 could have a say on this. But because it was an AT board decision, officials told him no.

According to councillor Shane Henderson, the mayor鈥檚 budget would one day be called the 鈥淒eath by a Thousand Cuts Budget鈥.

He said AT was cutting $21 million from its spending on the bus network, which would 鈥渢urn the buses into a basket case and people will just get back in their cars鈥.

But like almost all his colleagues, he supported the budget going out to consultation

The third major concern related to proposed cuts to community and arts funding.

Councillor Josephine Bartley was the only one fully to break ranks.

鈥漈his budget is too much about money and not enough about people,鈥 she said.

鈥淵ou look at what is proposed to be cut and it is always communities. Why is that? This budget shows that we undervalue the arts, we undervalue culture, and what is going on there? I look at schools during Covid and it was arts that people relied on to help get them through.

鈥滻 understand what you mean when you say put up alternatives. But that鈥檚 unrealistic. It鈥檚 not easy, we don鈥檛 have the information, I don鈥檛 think any of us have the expertise.鈥

She said she was especially upset to hear the advice of T膩taki Auckland Unlimited, the council鈥檚 events and economic agency, who told council the cuts will result in 鈥渟ignificantly heightened inequity of access for Aucklanders鈥.

She read out a list of events that might now be under threat, including Taiwan Day, Japan Day and Polyfest.

鈥淎ll of these things are the diversity of this city, the thing that makes this city great.鈥

Bartley was the only councillor not to support the budget going out to consultation. She wanted it rewritten now.

The draft budget proposes to fill an existing shortfall of $295 million.

Some $130 million of this will come from cuts to services, with the balance from a 4.66 per cent net rates increase, sale of the airport shares and a better return from the Auckland port.

Public consultation will begin in March.

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