After nearly two days of rigorous debate, Auckland councillors have agreed on a budget that includes selling a 7 per cent shareholding in Auckland Airport.
This afternoon, councillors and Mayor Wayne Brown voted 14 votes to 6 with one abstention to approve all of the mayor鈥檚 first budget, which kicked off last year with savage cuts to community services, the arts and across the council group.
The deal will see more than $800 million of debt paid.
Councillors John Watson and Wayne Walker voted against selling the airport shares but agreed with the rest of the budget. Julie Fairey abstained.
The Vote
For:聽Wayne Brown, Desley Simpson, Andy Baker, Chris Darby, Christine Fletcher, Shane Henderson, Richard Hills, Daniel Newman, Greg Sayers, Sharon Stewart, Ken Turner, Wayne Walker*, John Watson*, Maurice Williamson.
Against:聽Josephine Bartley, Angela Dalton, Alf Filipaina, Lotu Fuli, Mike Lee, Kerrin Leoni.
Abstained:聽Julie Fairey *voted against airport share sale but for the remainder of the budget.
Brown said the budget had been passed with more relief than joy.
鈥淲e have to pass the budget and it has to balance, but this will have to be paid and more debt will require a harder adjustment,鈥 Brown said.
Councillor Kerrin Leoni said the city has been dragged around and under stress for months and was happy to have got to this point.
鈥漈his has been tough, incredibly tough,鈥 said councillor Shane Henderson.
The meeting was interrupted late this afternoon by two members of Auckland Action Against Poverty, Brooke Pao Stanley and Agnes Magele, hectoring councillors about selling the airport shares, the need to borrow money to plug the budget hole and inviting councillors to come and see living conditions on the ground.
Brown adjourned the meeting for the women to be removed, but following a request from governance director Phil Wilson for them to leave, they left on their own accord.
Councillor Mike Lee said it was a disappointing day, especially with the loss of councillor Lotu Fuli鈥檚 amendment to retain the airport shares.
鈥漈his is the first step to a complete sell-out and the sale of Ports of Aucklalnd. 鈥淪elling income-earning assets is a failed strategy and race to the bottom,鈥 Lee said.
Earlier, Auckland councillors voted down two alternative budget plans in a second day of debate over
The latest amendment by councillor Angela Dalton was lost by 8 votes to 13, the same result as the previous amendment from councillor Lotu Fuli.
Dalton proposed to adjust rates to 7.7 per cent, reducing cuts to $69.8 million, reducing debt to $120 million and restoring all local board funding.
Fuli鈥檚 plan was to retain the council鈥檚 airport shares and borrow a further $60 million in debt to plug the loss of income from holding the 18 per cent shareholding.
Despite getting the support of most left-leaning councillors, three councillors on the left - Shane Henderson, Richard Hills and Julie Fairey - did not back the plan.
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鈥楥op out鈥: Brown鈥檚 airport shares compromise slammed
Mayor Wayne Brown鈥檚 compromise to break the stalemate over Auckland Council鈥檚 budget by selling only part of its shares in the airport was earlier slammed as a 鈥渃op out鈥 as tempers rise around the debating table.
Disagreement over debt, rates rises and the financial management of council has dominated discussion as the聽budget debate聽entered its 10th hour and second day.
鈥淗ow is it we鈥檝e been able to be so financially imprudent for so long?,鈥 a visibly-frustrated Councillor Wayne Walker asked.
He said council鈥檚 expenditure relative to its income is 鈥渙ut of control鈥.
Councillor Greg Sayers said taking on more debt has been the approach under Mayors Len Brown and Phil Goff and claimed Aucklanders 鈥渁re sick of it鈥.
This morning鈥檚 session opened with Fuli saying council needed to keep the airport shares on behalf of Aucklanders.
That was backed up by Councillor John Watson, who called Brown鈥檚 proposal to sell only part of the shares a 鈥渃op out.鈥 Brown鈥檚 new proposal is to sell 8.09 per cent of the 18.09 per cent holding, which he said would achieve savings of $28 million next year, instead of $60m from selling all the shares.
Watson called that suggestion a 鈥渂ack door鈥 that will inevitably lead to a full sale of all shares in the future at a time when investors were 鈥渓ining up to by the stock鈥.
Just before the meeting adjourned at 5pm yesterday without any decisions on Brown鈥檚 latest proposal, Fuli tabled an alternative proposal, seconded by her Manukau colleague Alf Filipaina, to consider selling the shares as part of next year鈥檚 10-year budget, holding household rates to 6.8 per cent and increasing debt from the $100m in Brown鈥檚 proposal to $160m.
It is understood Fuli鈥檚 amendment has been worked up by 10 councillors opposed to the sale of the airport shares, valued at $2.2 billion.
If Fuli鈥檚 amendment passes today with 11 or more votes, it will seal the budget and Brown鈥檚 proposal will not proceed.
鈥淚鈥檓 proposing we will fill the gap with a general rates increase of 7.7 per cent for the average residential property,鈥 said Brown - 1 per cent higher than his previous figure of 6.7 per cent to hold the household increase at the rate of inflation,鈥 Brown said after tabling his latest proposal yesterday.
The new overall rate rise is 11 per cent, with businesses paying more than households.
He has also proposed cutting local boards鈥 discretionary funds by $4m and requiring council chief executive Jim Stabback to find another $5m in cuts.
Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown (left) wants chief executive Jim Stabback to come up with another $5 million of savings in his latest budget proposal. Photo / Jason Oxenham
Earlier in the day, council group chief finance officer Peter Gudsell said increasing debt is a short-term answer that could make the remainder of the year or next year harder and was not a prudent approach.
Gudsell said debt 鈥渞educes headroom to deal with future shocks鈥.
He called it 鈥渘ot a credible or prudent approach to financial management鈥 and said it would only defer decisions on how to close the budget gap.
In an unusual move, Brown gauged the mood of the room before lunch by giving each councillor five minutes to say what kind of budget they would like, adjourning the meeting for an 鈥渙pen workshop鈥 for councillors to speak freely without jeopardising their speaking rights during the formal business of the budget meeting.
Both sides of the airport debate gave impassioned speeches, with Mike Lee calling the sale the biggest asset sale in Auckland鈥檚 history and Maurice Williamson saying even the good times are bad for holding the shares.
Williamson said more costs are coming down the pipeline for the council, warning that he had been told the final cost of the City Rail Link will be $7.5b instead of $5.5b.
鈥淲e do not need to own an asset that is not washing your face,鈥 Williamson said.
Councillor Kerrin Leoni at yesterday's meeting. Photo / Jason Oxenham
Councillor Kerrin Leoni said the airport shares should only be sold as a last resort, and she would be happy to consider a small increase in council debt.
Several councillors said a lot of the issues - the sale of the shares, spending cuts, revenue and debt - would be better dealt with in the 10-year budget, which comes next year.
Deputy Mayor Desley Simpson said Aucklanders deserve a budget that doesn鈥檛 hurt too much, and that鈥檚 for both residential and business ratepayers.
She said inflation and Reserve Bank rate rises had heaped extra costs on the council.
While the council had expected these as potential costs, devastating weather in summer had made the situation much more difficult, she said.
Simpson said councillors should be careful in raising rates too much because of the cost-of-living expenses people are facing for things like transport and food costs and paying mortgages.
Councillor Richard Hills said he didn鈥檛 like any of the budget levers - spending cuts, raising debt, higher rates or selling the airport shares.
鈥淭he focus for me was reducing the level of those cuts to our community, reducing the staff cuts, reducing what I feel is mean cuts to what is going on in the city, the environment ... I could keep going on,鈥 he said.
The North Shore councillor said public feedback on the budget was the biggest on record, with more than 70 per cent of people saying they weren鈥檛 happy with the scale of the cuts.
Last month, Brown reduced suggested deep cuts to arts and social services, including the Citizens Advice Bureau, following public feedback.
In a late twist just hours before yesterday鈥檚 meeting, Albany councillor Wayne Walker declared he is the beneficiary of a $3m shareholding in Auckland Airport held in the estate of his late father.
Councillor Wayne Walker is a beneficiary of a $3 million parcel of Auckland Airport shares. Photo / Jason Oxenham
Walker and two other councillors with family links to airport shares, Julie Fairey and Chris Darby, were cleared by council staff and the Office of the Auditor-General to vote on the share issue.
Brown closed the meeting by saying it 鈥渋s a very hard budget and I want to ensure that we take our time to work through the process properly鈥.
鈥淚 have always said it may take a couple of days of constructive debate. There is no issue with that, we are simply adjourning to another day,鈥 he said.
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