
Tauranga Mayor Mahe Drysdale is yet to move to the city he leads because he says he can鈥檛 find a home in his desired school zone.
After being elected in July, Drysdale said he would commute from his current hometown of Cambridge, but aimed to be living in Tauranga by the end of the year.
A ratepayers' representative said the mayor needed to move to Tauranga 鈥渢o live up to his truths鈥.
Drysdale lives in Cambridge with his wife, Juliette, and their three primary school-aged children, but finding a house within their preferred school zone in Tauranga was 鈥減roving to be very challenging鈥, the mayor said.
Drysdale told Local Democracy Reporting the couple were still working on their housing situation.
鈥淭he schools are all overloaded. You鈥檝e got to buy in zone or rent in zone and trying to find houses to either rent or buy in the school zones that we鈥檙e keen on is proving to be very challenging.鈥
Drysdale would not say which school zones they wanted to live in but said they had made the schools they were interested in aware of their situation.
The couple were 鈥渁ctively searching鈥 and would move to Tauranga as soon as they found a home, he said.
鈥淲e continue to actively look for a suitable home, but as yet (despite a couple of offers) we have been unable to secure one.鈥
Mount Maunganui is a popular suburb for its schools, says Jon O'Connor of Bayleys. Photo / Mead Norton
Bayleys residential sales and projects manager Bay of Plenty Jon O鈥機onnor said Tauranga had several suburbs traditionally sought after because of school zoning.
These included The Avenues, Tauranga South and Mount Maunganui.
鈥淗owever, the same can be said for most of our inner-city suburbs.鈥
鈥淲e understand our schools鈥 rolls are under increasing pressure as more people relocate to the sunny Bay of Plenty from other regions.鈥
Housing stock was also 鈥渓ighter than usual鈥 because of strong sales at the end of 2024.
All but five schools in Tauranga were projected to grow in 2025, according to the Ministry of Education鈥檚 provisional school roll data from late January.
Ministry Te Tai Whenua (Central) haut奴 (deputy secretary) Jocelyn Mikaere said the ministry did not have official classroom capacity information.
Most schools in Tauranga were zoned and might operate ballots if they had additional capacity for out-of-zone students, she said.
Tremains Tauranga director and head of sales Hayden Duncan said that in his experience people in the Bay of Plenty were more driven by lifestyle choices than school zones when buying homes.
鈥淲ithin Tauranga, one thing we are spoiled for [choice] is an amazing selection of high-quality schools, both public and private.鈥
He said the city didn鈥檛 have issues like the sought-after Double Grammar School zone in Auckland that pushed up house prices.
鈥淚鈥檓 sure there are some people that buy into specific school zones, but not enough to drive values up in one particular area over another.鈥
Mount Maunganui Ratepayers, Residents and Retailers Association president Michael O'Neill. Photo / Alex Cairns
Mount Maunganui Ratepayers, Residents and Retailers Association president Michael O鈥橬eill said it came back to the mayor鈥檚 commitment to the people that he would move here.
鈥淚f it doesn鈥檛 happen then the locals are going to see that as a bit of electioneering, a mistruth you could say. Therefore, that level of trust and respect starts to deteriorate.
鈥淵ou really want a local who understands the people, mixes and works with the people to be representing your needs at the council table.鈥
鈥淗e said he would shift here, he said he鈥檇 do it ASAP, and he needs to make that happen, in my view. He needs to live up to his truths.鈥
Drysdale grew up in Tauranga and said he stayed with his mum in Mount Maunganui during the week, so he wasn鈥檛 commuting daily.
It was a 鈥減retty easy commute鈥 from Cambridge, he said, and one he did before becoming mayor when he was a financial adviser at Forsyth Barr in Tauranga.
Drysdale joked with P膩p膩moa ward councillor Steve Morris that on a bad day, Morris鈥 commute to the city centre was worse because it could take an hour or more.
It was hard from a family perspective because he wasn鈥檛 around as much as he鈥檇 like, said Drysdale.
Juliette and their children would come to stay during the week and if the couple had weekend commitments.
鈥淸We鈥檙e] trying to make the best of it, but it鈥檒l be ideal when we鈥檙e all back in the same city together.鈥
鈥淥ur wh膩nau is committed to moving to Tauranga.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a significant move to uproot your family, and when we do secure a suitable property, we will make that move.鈥
- LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE