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New Zealand 'late to the party' in building infrastructure, PM says

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Fri, 4 Oct 2024, 2:18pm

New Zealand 'late to the party' in building infrastructure, PM says

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Fri, 4 Oct 2024, 2:18pm

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon says New Zealand is late to the party in getting infrastructure built, and is open to help from the private sector. 

He said the Government was open to public-private partnerships in building critical health infrastructure on a case-by-case basis. 

He made his comments to media outside Ormiston Hospital in Auckland this afternoon, which he visited with Health Minister Dr Shane Reti to open a new extension at the centre. 

Luxon told reporters private hospitals often do specialist services and 鈥減ower through them鈥 and these procedures are outsourced to the private sector. 

There were major challenges in the public system and the Government is open to using the private sector to help with this, but he said this wasn鈥檛 a change from previous governments鈥 approach. 

The Government 鈥渨ants to get infrastructure built鈥 whether it is in health, education or transport, Luxon said. 

He said other countries do this and New Zealand has been late to the party. 

Reti said just over 10% of elective procedures are completed privately at the moment. There has been a very small increase in this over the past decade. 

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon address media outside Ormiston Hospital, Auckland. Photo / Sylvie WhinrayPrime Minister Christopher Luxon address media outside Ormiston Hospital, Auckland. Photo / Sylvie Whinray 

He said the Government was interested in discussions with the private sector about this. 

The press conference follows shortly after the Government announced it would consider creating a new entity to manage the country鈥檚 school property portfolio after a ministerial inquiry found the Education Ministry鈥檚 management of the portfolio lacked transparency, clarity and efficiency. 

The inquiry, led by former Foreign Affairs Minister and National MP Murray McCully, included scathing criticism of the ministry鈥檚 handling of the $30 billion property portfolio and found its ability to deliver cost-effective and timely development lacking. 

The inquiry also warned of a 鈥渟ignificant and unsustainable gap鈥 between delivery expectations and available funding given only 153 of the 488 school works projects were fully funded, meaning almost $3b of additional capital funding was needed. 

Education Minister Erica Stanford told media those projects will still be built, but they will require funding from future Budgets. 

Education Minister Erica Stanford and Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop speak to media about a scathing report into the Education Ministry's handling of school property management. Photo / Mark MitchellEducation Minister Erica Stanford and Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop speak to media about a scathing report into the Education Ministry's handling of school property management. Photo / Mark Mitchell 

Stanford attacked the previous Government for leaving 鈥渁 pipeline of unfunded projects鈥. Stanford said that the Ministry had itself realised there was a problem and begun looking into the matter before the change of government. 

The McCully inquiry鈥檚 primary recommendation was to establish a new entity separate from the ministry to 鈥渁ssume ownership and asset management responsibility for the school property portfolio鈥. 

This entity would take the form of a 鈥淐rown agent, Crown entity company, schedule 4A company, statutory entity, public benefit entity, or state-owned enterprise, based on further advice from the Treasury and the Public Service Commission鈥. Each of these structures comes with varying degrees of political independence. 

Stanford said that this proposal would go to Cabinet in the 鈥渃oming months鈥 

鈥淭here was a strong consensus that school buildings funded by taxpayers should be simple, functional, cost-efficient and based on repeatable or standardised designs. The ministry鈥檚 failure to execute in line with these principles drew strong criticism,鈥 the report says. 

Adam Pearse is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team based at Parliament. He has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2018, covering sport and health for the Northern Advocate in Whang膩rei before moving to the NZ Herald in Auckland, covering Covid-19 and crime. 

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