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Hawke's Bay councils finalise terms of cyclone recovery cost-sharing terms with Government

Author
CHB Mail,
Publish Date
Mon, 7 Aug 2023, 3:36pm
Flooding and a badly damaged bridge have closed SH50 in CHB.
Flooding and a badly damaged bridge have closed SH50 in CHB.

Hawke's Bay councils finalise terms of cyclone recovery cost-sharing terms with Government

Author
CHB Mail,
Publish Date
Mon, 7 Aug 2023, 3:36pm

A decision has been made on how some of the most urgent cyclone recovery costs for Hawke鈥檚 Bay will be shared between central and local government.

Hawke鈥檚 Bay鈥檚 five councils have confirmed the terms of an agreement worth up to $556 million, subject to consultation with communities in Hastings and Napier.

The cost-sharing agreement will have councils with Category 3 residential properties and central government adopting a 50/50 cost-sharing approach to the voluntary buyout of these residential properties, with the Government contributing up to an estimated $92.5m. Government and council contributions will be net of any insurance proceeds.

The $556m agreement also includes $203.5m to be put towards flood protection. Subject to design, interest in land and ability to build, the proposed flood protection works will benefit areas that are currently Category 2 from Wairoa to P艒rangahau.

These include key sites such as P膩k艒whai, 艑mahu, Waiohiki and Havelock North. Funding will also enable upgrades to specific pump stations and telemetry across the network. Also included in this figure is $70m specifically earmarked as the estimated cost of a fully funded flood protection scheme for Wairoa.

The remaining $260m will go toward specific transport infrastructure projects and programmes, which would include fully funding the Redclyffe Bridge replacement, the Puketapu, Matapiro and Aropauanui Bridge works in Hastings, Te Reinga Bridge works in Wairoa and critical roading recovery projects in Central Hawke鈥檚 Bay.

Further funding provisions would include culvert replacements, as well as additional support for transport resilience and repair initiatives across the region.

Hawke鈥檚 Bay Regional Council chairwoman Hinewai Ormsby says there is a plan for some of the difficult decisions that will still need to be made.

听鈥淲hile confirmation of an agreement with the Government is significant, there will be some hard mahi ahead for all five councils. As the only region-wide council, we have and will continue to work with the other four councils to help Hawke鈥檚 Bay get back on its feet stronger and more resilient against future events.

鈥淲hat lies ahead may be challenging for all councils, including the need to fund each council鈥檚 share of costs. We will need to ensure there is a plan to address some of the funding challenges and shortfalls that will inevitably exist.

鈥淚鈥檓 confident, just as we all pulled together in the wake of the cyclone and to get this settlement negotiated for all the people of Hawke鈥檚 Bay, that we can overcome those challenges and move Hawke鈥檚 Bay forward, together.鈥

Central Hawke鈥檚 Bay Mayor Alex Walker reiterates that recovery is a long journey, and this decision is just one of a series of jigsaw puzzle pieces that will need to be brought together.

鈥淩ight across Hawke鈥檚 Bay, the impacts of Cyclone Gabrielle are diverse, far-reaching and complex.

鈥淟ast week鈥檚 announcement and confirmation of the funding and policy support from the Government is a big step forward for those households most affected. A vital puzzle piece, but not one that fixes all our challenges. We will continue to look for opportunities to ensure Hawke鈥檚 Bay builds back stronger, more resilient and more sustainable than before.鈥

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