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Tauranga councils tussle over who should keep paying the near $1m bus stop security bill

Author
Kiri Gillespie, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Sat, 25 Mar 2023, 10:14am
Security officers pictured in 2021 at Tauranga's main CBD bus interchange on Willow St. Photo / George Novak
Security officers pictured in 2021 at Tauranga's main CBD bus interchange on Willow St. Photo / George Novak

Tauranga councils tussle over who should keep paying the near $1m bus stop security bill

Author
Kiri Gillespie, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Sat, 25 Mar 2023, 10:14am

The Bay of Plenty Regional Council is looking to 鈥渞oll back鈥 from the ongoing cost of providing security at key Tauranga bus stops and has asked the city council to foot part of the significant bill.

The regional council has spent more than $1 million for the security services at Mount Maunganui, Greerton, and CBD bus stops. It has done so since January 2021 to help聽.

A Public Transport Committee meeting this week heard the regional council would now transition away from funding this security service which, in 2021,聽. The committee heard the most recent bill cost between $800,000 to $900,000 a year.

There had been聽聽involving groups of young people targeting drivers and passengers.

Incidents included a young man聽, a teenage girl being聽, death threats and racial abuse.

In May 2022,聽聽these bus stops for health and safety reasons.

At the meeting, councillor Lyall Thurston questioned fellow committee member and Tauranga City commissioner Stephen Selwood about the city council鈥檚 lack of financial support to fund the security.

Bay of Plenty Regional Council Public Transport Committee member Lyall Thurston. Photo / Andrew Warner

Bay of Plenty Regional Council Public Transport Committee member Lyall Thurston. Photo / Andrew Warner

鈥淚n terms of the provision of security services at Farm St and Durham St, we know there was some pushback from TCC with regards to cost sharing on this and I see it鈥檚 an item on the agenda for the upcoming meeting with you guys ... is this an item to be discussed again? Maybe the commissioner may be able to help in terms of cost-sharing the security services on Farm and Durham St? We are carrying the costs at the moment, I understand, as a gesture to you Mr Commissioner.鈥

Selwood, who had just arrivedat the meeting moments earlier, said he was unaware of the conversation.

Regional council director of transport Mike Seabourne told the committee the security update was an operational cost 鈥渨e are looking to reduce鈥.

鈥淪taff believe that by having [design elements] in place and slowly rolling back from it, we can potentially reduce the whole service altogether and reduce the total operation cost, that鈥檚 our first step.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a bit of testing and understanding before we completely roll back out of it. We are required to provide a secure service as a council. It鈥檚 part of our costs in terms of the regional council鈥檚 responsibilities but at the same time, we will be looking to reduce the costs to council.鈥

Thurston added: 鈥淲ith a cost-sharing proposal to TCC鈥.

Committee chairman Andrew von Dadelszen said the security issues that initially prompted the need for security had 鈥済reatly reduced鈥. He said it was possibly due to the relocation of the CBD bus interchange moving from Willow St to Durham St later in 2022.

Tauranga bus drivers have faced a flurry of abuse at bus stops. Photo / George Novak

Tauranga bus drivers have faced a flurry of abuse at bus stops. Photo / George Novak

鈥淚 had it from a constituent of mine saying that it might have been because it鈥檚 close to the Works and Income offices that undesirables don鈥檛 want to mingle around there too often in case they lose their benefits,鈥 von Dadelszen said.

After a pause in the meeting, von Dadelszen said: 鈥淚t has gone dramatically down because of the shift, that鈥檚 all I鈥檓 saying.鈥

Councillor Jane Nees said it was imperative to 鈥渒eep a close eye on things鈥.

鈥淚f we continue to have media reports on incidents, that will reinforce the feeling ... that is not necessarily that safe.鈥

The matter was expected to be discussed further in a Tauranga Public Transport Joint Committee meeting on April 5.

Bus stop security was not the only matter for discussion among committee members, who signed off on a bus network refresh, signalling the removal of buses from Totara St, plus a new flagship service linking Tauranga Crossing, Greerton, Cameron Rd, Tauranga CBD and Mount Maunganui.

The changes will now go out for community engagement.

During the discussion about the refresh, Nees referred to anticipated road works expected to take place as Tauranga City Council carries out Stage 2 of its Cameron Rd upgrade.

Nees addressed Selwood, saying she wanted the city council to look at priority measures to help buses get ahead of traffic congestion.

鈥淚 have to admit Commissioner Selwood, that I have a little bit of sympathy for mayor Brown in Auckland with what seems to be permanent road cones and safety measures which are shutting off whole lanes all over the city. I just wonder if they need to be so permanent and so extensive because there doesn鈥檛 seem to be a lot of people working around some of those road safety measures.鈥

Earlier this week聽, Auckland Transport, to reduce its 鈥渦njustifiable鈥 $145 million spend on road cones and traffic management in the hopes of filling a massive budget hole.

Selwood said he shared Nees鈥 frustration 鈥渁long with most Tauranga City residents鈥.

He described the situation as a 鈥渢rade-off鈥 between meeting statutory health and safety requirements and the time it took to set up work sites.

鈥淭he trade-off is obviously the backlog on the traffic, the counter is that they don鈥檛 open up so many work sites but then it would take longer to do the job. So that鈥檚 the balance we are all frustrated by. I think the core issue is whether or not the requirement for health and safety has gone too far in my mind ... but we must comply.鈥

The committee proposed to instruct staff to report back on customer segmentation and initiatives to increase patronage.

However, councillor Ken Shirley said he was 鈥渟taggered鈥 the regional council, which has been running public transport since 2001, did not already have the information at hand.

鈥淚 would鈥檝e thought that would be the starting point 20 years ago. I鈥檓 just staggered we don鈥檛 know. It鈥檚 costing a fortune and we don鈥檛 know what the customer base is.鈥

Despite Shirley鈥檚 concerns, he and the rest of the committee signed off on the resolution for staff to report back.

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