Rotorua Lakes Council is being threatened with legal action by free speech advocates who believe a decision over public submissions breaches the Bill of Rights.
On Wednesday, Rotorua Lakes Council voted to progress its Submissions Policy which included the ability to remove public submissions if they were deemed offensive, discriminatory, or contained personal threats.
In the meeting, mayor Tania Tapsell said there had been a 鈥渟ignificant increase鈥 in submissions containing this type of language.
The policy was adopted with three councillors opposing it.
Councillor Robert Lee said he believed the council needed a submissions policy but he could not support it in its current form. He said submitters would not read it and it would create an extra workload for council staff.
鈥淧art of the submissions-making process I think comes back to catharsis. People want to be heard ... There is a risk to our reputation in so far as what we鈥檙e doing may be perceived as impinging upon free speech.
鈥滻n a sense, you鈥檙e asking the public to meet what are approaching legal standards for their submissions.鈥
He said he was aware the Free Speech Union had taken an interest in the policy.
Councillor Conan O鈥橞rien said he could not support the policy because 鈥減rinciples of free speech mean so much more鈥 and he criticised the lack of public consultation on the policy.
鈥滻t鈥檚 inadequate and incomplete in my view.鈥
Councillor Don Patterson also opposed the move.
Councillor Rawiri Waru supported the policy and said it was a matter of having a respectful dialogue.
鈥滶ven freedom of speech has respect.鈥
After the meeting, the Free Speech Union said it believed the decision represented 鈥渁 clear violation of the speech rights of submitters鈥 to the council and was a breach of the Bills of Rights Act.
Union chief executive Jonathon Ayling said, in his opinion, the policy was 鈥渃learly aimed at suppressing submissions the council simply does not want to hear鈥.
Ayling said he believed it was 鈥渋nsulting鈥 there had not been public consultation.
鈥淐oncerns were raised about the perception of this policy and the reputational risk it poses to the council. Such concerns are entirely justified.鈥
In his view: 鈥淜iwis have the right to be heard by their representatives and to raise concerns with their elected representatives on matters of policy. Representatives have an obligation to hear these concerns, even when the representatives believe the views expressed, or the manner in which they are expressed, are offensive or derogatory.鈥
The union was preparing legal filings against the council on this issue, he said.
In response to the legal threat, Tapsell told the聽Rotorua Daily Post Weekend: 鈥淚f legal action is to eventuate, council will respond as appropriate.鈥
In response to the union鈥檚 allegations the policy violated the speech rights of submitters, breached the Bill of Rights Act, and aimed to suppress submissions, Tapsell said: 鈥淭his is simply untrue.鈥
鈥漈his policy has already been legally reviewed, prior to adoption, and there are no issues.鈥
In an interview with 九一星空无限talk ZB broadcaster Mike Hosking yesterday morning, Tapsell pushed back on the suggestion policy had been snuck through to give the council more powers.
Asked by Hosking whether the decision was 鈥渁 bit nefarious鈥 and secretive on the council鈥檚 part, Tapsell replied, 鈥渁bsolutely not鈥.
鈥淚n fact, it was thoroughly debated and explained at a council meeting, which is fully public and transparent,鈥 Tapsell said.
鈥淚t is the council鈥檚 job to set policies and bylaws. This is a really simple one that just provides some guidelines for anyone wanting to make a submission on how to and what to include.鈥
Tapsell said all submissions were still accepted by the council but she acknowledged it had seen an increase in submissions that 鈥渕ay include a couple of extra creative words鈥. The council would offer the submitter the opportunity to use more appropriate language, otherwise, the submission may not be published on the council鈥檚 website like others.
鈥淒on鈥檛 forget that we are a council that needs to publish this publicly. So if we鈥檝e got quite a lot of F words in something then no, we won鈥檛 use that.鈥
Tapsell said the submission policy would provide clarity on putting forward submissions.
Hosking questioned a potential 鈥渟lippery slope鈥, asking: 鈥淲hat if it goes beyond the F word, to a thought, an idea? You suddenly say 鈥榓ctually that idea, along with the F word, that particular idea you鈥檙e putting forward, we don鈥檛 like that either so you might want to revisit that鈥?鈥
Tapsell replied that she could accept the concern based on the hate speech Bill going through Parliament 鈥渂ut this is absolutely not it鈥.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really clear, there鈥檚 a super high threshold and all we鈥檙e doing is ensuring that ... nothing is unfairly denied by providing clarity on what should not be there.鈥
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