A group of the country鈥檚 top public law academics is urging the Government to change an entrenching provision in the controversial Three Waters legislation they say could set a 鈥渄angerous precedent鈥.
Last week, politicians debated under urgency various stages and amendments to the Water Services Entities Bill - the first in a suite of laws to enact the Three Waters reforms.
Among those was a provision, proposed by Green MP Eugenie Sage, to ensure there was an obligation to maintain public ownership and control of water services and significant assets, something the public has been concerned about.
Sage said her Supplementary Order Paper (SOP) responded to 鈥減ublic concern that we avoid privatisation of water services and we maintain them in public ownership鈥.
It also retained the 鈥渟ignificant revenue involved in operating these services, significant investment involved鈥.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 want overseas companies taking the services and operating them primarily for profit.鈥
The Green Party had advocated for such a provision at the committee stage and Labour had also urged cross-party support - writing to all parties - but was unable to convince National and Act.
As they could not get the support to entrench the provision at the 鈥渟uper majority鈥 threshold of 75 per cent, they settled at a threshold of 60 per cent to overturn such a provision in future.
Labour supported the SOP, while also acknowledging there was a 鈥渃onstitutional threshold鈥 for using entrenching provisions, typically reserved for electoral laws that had wide support.
鈥淲e know that while this particular SOP may not pass the constitutional threshold, there is a moral obligation of people who believe that privatisation should not occur to support that particular SOP,鈥 Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta said during Wednesday鈥檚 debate.
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鈥淐ore to the design features of this water reform was to ensure that we had a public model for water service delivery that would safeguard against privatisation.鈥
National Party justice spokesman Paul Goldsmith said while his party did not support the Three Waters reforms, they also had no desire to see the assets privatised.
However, they did not agree with the use of an entrenching provision and they were concerned about the potential precedent.
鈥淚t is something only used in electoral law-type matters and not applied in a policy setting, rather casually.
鈥淥ur view is they should fix it straight away otherwise it could undermine confidence.鈥
Goldsmith said they were also concerned about how the change occurred while the House was sitting under urgency, during which there was less debate and scrutiny.
鈥淓ntrenched provisions in law should be reserved for matters largely above politics, and when used they should be subject to careful scrutiny and debate,鈥 Goldsmith said.
鈥淭he exact opposite has happened in this case.鈥
Goldsmith raised the hypothetical of if National had set a 60 per cent majority to repeal a law such as Three Strikes.
鈥淟abour and the Greens would be outraged,鈥 he said.
The issue has sparked the attention of public law academics, who have today published an open letter in the Herald airing their concerns.
Authors include Professor Janet McLean, Professor Paul Rishworth, Professor Andrew Geddis, Associate Professor Dean Knight, Associate Professor John Ip, Dr Eddie Clark, Dr Edward Willis and Dr Jane Norton.
They said they understood the concerns around privatisation, but objected to the way the 鈥渁mendment was introduced, the absence of a proper debate about its effects and the unfortunate precedent it may set鈥.
Previously, the only statutory provisions that required special majorities - rather than a 鈥渟imple majority鈥 of over 50 per cent - related to core provisions of the Electoral Act.
鈥淭hese provisions, which may properly be viewed as fundamental to our system of representative democracy, have had unanimous bipartisan support over many Parliaments,鈥 they said.
鈥淭he just-adopted provision entrenching the protection of water entities from privatisation does not meet the same constitutional threshold.
鈥淲e urge the Government to think about the dangerous precedent that this legislative action may set.
鈥淚t extends the use of entrenchment protection from a very limited range of matters fundamental to our constitutional system to a matter of contested social policy.
鈥淣ot only does this move invite similar attempts in the future, it also risks undermining the seriousness with which entrenchment is taken by Parliament and the public generally. "
A spokeswoman for Mahuta said the Government supported the SOP because it was a 鈥渂ottom line鈥 that community-owned water infrastructure remained in public ownership and was not privatised.
The Government had sought support from Opposition Parties for such protection before introducing the bill but they would not commit to enshrine it in law, she said.
鈥淭he intent of the scope of the entrenchment protection from the Greens is narrowly confined to privatisation of water assets, not the whole bill.
鈥淭he entrenchment threshold of 60 per cent to overturn privatisation protections is also set at a lower level than that usually required for constitutional changes, which must meet a higher bar of 75 per cent.鈥
Eugenie Sage told the Herald she did not believe the SOP she introduced could be precedent-setting. It was necessary to protect against privatisation, she said.
She said it had not been done in a covert manner, as the Greens had long sought such a provision. The Greens had also voted against the House sitting in urgency.
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