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Posts Tagged ‘John Carter’

Hide blatantly misleads on local boards

Posted by Phil Twyford on March 5th, 2010

The Government must know they are pushing the super city up hill in the face of an increasingly sceptical public and news media. This morning’s Herald declares:

The way it is shaping up, the single mayor and council will be a puppet show, purely for democratic appearances, while the real decisions are made by people the public has not elected and will never see. It cannot stand.

The Herald was talking about what it calls the Orwellian-named Council Controlled Organisations, but the issue of local boards is just as troubling to the Government right now, with widespread suspicion that the boards will be paper tigers. A good indicator is the level of  Government spin.

Rodney Hide and his associate minister of local government John Carter are going around town saying their local boards will have the power to “make by-laws”, when they have specifically ruled out the local boards having any rule-making powers.

Have a listen to Hide on BFM’s The Wire yesterday. Breathtaking spin. And select committee chair John Carter has been trying to pull the wool over the eyes of submitters all week with this line about local boards being able to make by-laws.

The sad truth of the Hide super city model is that the local boards can only advocate to the Super Council for a by-law, and lobby them to pass it, just like any other lobby group in Auckland can. In fact, the government banned the local boards from having any regulatory powers in their second super city bill passed last year.

The Super Council is only allowed to delegate certain non-regulatory powers to local boards in areas like parks and libraries, except where a coordinated approach outweighs the benefits of a local decision, except where decision making would be more effective if integrated with other Council decisions, and except where the impact of a decision goes beyond the local board area.

You could drive a truck through all those exceptions. Does anyone really think the new Council will willingly delegate powers downwards to local boards?

Rodney  Hide can spin all he likes about how local boards “are key to encouraging Aucklanders to become more actively engaged” but that won’t happen if the government leaves local boards as toothless talkshops.


Local boards get to choose colour of carpet

Posted by Phil Twyford on February 26th, 2010

John Trust Me Carter has been reassuring angry Aucklanders since the middle of last year that the Government is going to give real powers to local boards. There are many undemocratic aspects of the Government’s super city agenda but for my money this is the one that people care most about. And if it is not sorted out, it is the thing that will do the Nats most damage across the Auckland electorates.

Mr Carter has been at it again this week at the select committee, repeatedly assuring submitters the boards will get real powers and inviting them to hear a briefing from officials this afternoon on the Government’s plans for board powers.

We’ve just had the briefing. Newsflash: Local boards will get to choose the colour of the carpet at the local library but will have precious little else in the way of real powers.  Actually to be fair, they will also have the power to shift park furniture around and allocate the graffiti clean up budget.

The Government has failed again to deliver on its promise to empower local boards in the Auckland super city.

Key, Hide and Co are turning Auckland democracy upside down. Local boards elected by local citizens wont be able to pass a by-law. And yet, the new transport and water corporate structures whose initial directors are appointed by Rodney Hide will be able to make by-laws independently of the elected Council.

The boards wont have any regulatory powers at all, not even the power to regulate dogs, brothels, and liquor licensing that Rodney Hide promised in April last year.

On any issue that matters the boards will have only the power to talk among themselves, and beg the Super Council to do something.

They will be able only to “propose” local by laws to the super council, and “give input” to regional by laws and plans. They won’t be able to hire staff, own property or have any legal status.

They won’t be able to move a bus stop or paint a yellow line on the side of the road. These things and the great majority of the Auckland Council’s operations will be handled by powerful corporate entities that operate completely independently of local boards.

What is left: libraries, local parks and facilities? Officials told the select committee that libraries and facilities will be run on a regional basis, but local boards can have input into things like design and fit out. In other words they get to choose the carpet.  Welcome to the new face of local democracy.


So who is going into Cabinet

Posted by Trevor Mallard on February 25th, 2010

Intense discussion opposite between Tremain and Foss – the Hawkes Bay rivals for Heatley’s job.

Favourite possibly Nathan Guy but after today’s repeat of yesterdays procedural shambles I will renew my call for Key to bring Hone Carter into cabinet and make him leader of the House.


Nat tempers fray one hour into two week hearing

Posted by Phil Twyford on February 22nd, 2010

We are one hour into two weeks of select committee hearings on the third super city bill. Twelve submissions have been heard so far, and all twelve have raised fundamental objections to the Bill and the Government’s super city project.

Unfortunately Government members seem to have forgotten that select committee hearings are the people’s forum, a time for people to turn up and have their say. Government members are irritable. Deputy chair Tau Henare openly ridiculed one submitter. Committee chair John Carter interrupted the submission of an elected councillor saying her views were inaccurate.  Taurange MP Simon Bridges said he was deeply offended by one submission.

My advice to Government members: pace yourself, there is a lot more of this to come.  Sit back and listen, you might learn something.


Urgency again…

Posted by Chris Hipkins on September 15th, 2009

The House has just gone into urgency for the second week in a row so that the government can ram through more of Rodney Hide’s Super City agenda. Once again the government is proving how incompetent it is at managing the flow of work through the House. There is a pattern here. For weeks on end we debate legislation introduced by the last Labour government until a National/ACT bill comes up and then Brownlee hits the nuclear button.

Whenever we go into urgency select committee meetings get cancelled. As a result, bills that are currently before select committees are likely to be delayed, meaning that we’ll end up with another gap in the House programme. Then when they are all reported back, no doubt the government will go back into another frantic round of urgency. It’s just plain incompetence.

Brownlee’s justification for urgency this time around sounded pretty pathetic too. He tried to argue that the Student Loan (Repayment Bonus) Amendment Bill was urgent because students would soon be enrolling for 2010. He obviously missed the fact that it is the graduates, not the prospective students, who will benefit from it. Time Brownlee handed over the reigns to someone competent. John Carter would do the trick.


Wilkinson hides… Mapp misleads…

Posted by Trevor Mallard on August 26th, 2009

Good old Hone Carter is now being held up as a model MP for his calling the contract being offered to the Chorus people a crock. I hope all National Ministers follow his lead. And for that matter the backbenchers too.

Thanks to the NDU for releasing the material to make it clear that Wayne Mapp acting for Wilkinson misled the House today.

So she’s chicken, he’s fibbing and only Hone looks good over there… again.


Nat MP John Carter tells telco workers “Don’t sign”

Posted by Clare Curran on August 24th, 2009

Reliable sources say that Northland National MP John Carter has personally told telco workers given an ultimatum to sign up to Visionstream as dependent contractors not to sign the contract.

Meeting with telco techs last week in his electorate, Mr Carter was apparently very concerned about their situation, and told them they’d be fools to sign the contract and would be broke with 12 months.

He allegedly said “this model is not in the interest of New Zealand, nor in your interests too (the telco techs)”.

He also pledged to take up the issue with Steven Joyce, the Minister responsible for telecommunications. I wonder whether he’s done that.

Now John Carter is an MP who’s obviously sympathetic to his constituents. But if he’s saying to them “don’t sign the contract with Visionstream” that’s another matter. What conversations are taking place within the government right now and with whom? Did any conversations take place this weekend with Mr Key while he was in Australia?

There’s plenty of evidence from Australia that the dependent contractor model is bad news for the workforce generally.

And is it true that Chorus is widely viewed as not handling this issue well?

Telecom has acknowledged that some customers may be affected. Orcon has issued a service warning to that effect.

Telecommunication workers are striking acrosss the country today. There is enormous momentum building in this industry.

As Trevor Mallard and I said in the open letter to Telecom Chair Wayne Boyd last week:

“We do not believe that Telecom customers, effectively most of New Zealand’s citizens,  will be well served by Chorus allowing its employees to become dependent contractors.

“New Zealanders, will not, and should not, put up with poor service and system faults that are not quickly fixed. If alternatives exist, people will go looking for them.”

Leaving aside all the issues around the effect of the  dependent contractor model on the individual worker’s inability to make a decent living; the effect on NZ’s skilled workforce by those who leave the industry; and the fact that it appears Visionstream is going to try and extract the same amount of work from less people and make them work harder and longer for less money overall (that’s what they call productivity).

Leaving aside all those issues; just what signals does this dispute send as the government is about to release  (hopefully) its intentions around rolling out ultrafast broadband across much of the country. It’s seriously not a good look.

Update: JohnKey is reported in the Dom Post this morning as saying more money will be put into rural broadband, responding to the fierce criticism coming from the rural and provincial sector about the inequities in its urban-focussed broadband rollout. Which makes it much more likely that Telecom will be part of that delivery, given its reach acrosss the country.

Which makes one ask, is this a good time for the eyes of the country to be focussing on how Telecom treats its workers, whether it can deliver adequate, let alone quality, services and whether it will have a workforce at all to roll out broadband?


Climb down on super city second tier?

Posted by Phil Twyford on June 29th, 2009

Just maybe, the Government is preparing for a climb down on the Auckland super city’s second tier. It has been probably the most vexed aspect of the Government’s super city model. And much as I would like to see Messers Key, Hide and Carter die in the ditch over such an unpopular and misconceived policy, it is good for Auckland if they are about to throw this particular doozie overboard.

To recap: the Government rejected the Royal Commission’s recommendation of six local councils with the power to deal with local issues.  Instead they proposed 20-30 local boards with very limited local powers, and the job of community engagement. These have been widely derided as toothless talkshops (by me and many many others). In fact I struggle to recall anyone who has publicly defended the Government’s second tier other than Rodney Hide. Almost everybody else has weighed in against them, most notably two of the Commissioners Justice Peter Salmon and David Shand, but also Lawrence Yule of Local Government NZ, the three horsemen (Mayors Len Brown, Bob Harvey, Andrew Williams), both the Fairfax and APN community newspaper chains, and an array of campaigners and community groups, plus Labour and the Greens.

Local Govenment Minister Rodney Hide wasn’t quite running up the white flag when I pressed him on this last week at question time, but Judith Collins saying the local boards had better be more than ‘tea and scone clubs’ was a hint that support for his second tier was leaking away.  Hell, John Key was backing away the week before.

The climb down is now well underway with John Carter (the kinder, gentler face of reform) telling Radio NZ he’d ‘learned a huge amount’ through Auckland community meetings and discussions on the issue and ‘it’s helped focus my mind on the things that matter for people.  And where I started some six or eight weeks ago, I’ve shifted personally, myself, a lot.’  And then telling the Eastern Courier how important it is to get the lower tier right, how people  were telling him they wanted fewer boards than the 20-30 being proposed, and how they needed to be given their own budgets.

That is heartening. I have no doubt the select committee is going to hear plenty of submissions on this issue so the Government will have no shortage of advice on how to get this aspect of the super city right. For the record, Labour wants to see empowered and resourced local councils with the ability to deal with the important local issues  – to keep the local in local government:

1. fewer local councils than the 20-30 proposed in the bill

2. governance and policy making responsibility over local services and assets

3. control over their own budgets

4. powers and responsibilities mandated in law (not delegated at the discretion of the Auckland Council)

It remains a mystery why the Government got it so horribly wrong in the first place, thinking they could ram through these changes without the public really noticing, under the cloak of blaming the region’s Mayors who, ironically, have been doing a pretty good job of keeping local government local. As the Commission argued, if you are going to centralise the big regional functions in the super city, then you must balance that with an empowered second tier of local governance that has the mandate and the capability to do the local stuff well.


New Minister?

Posted by Trevor Mallard on June 4th, 2009

While I don’t think anything will be gained by adding a new Minister outside Cabinet because I think that NZ governments have traditionally had too many ministers and that the last few in don’t do enough work and cause too much trouble I think John Key will appoint a new Minister.

All the goss round the buildings is that it is likely to be Nathan Guy. I hope it is. The guy is good. And he is a good guy -even if Dazza disagrees.He does a lot of covering for Gerry Brownlee and is generally well regarded. But it will leave their house team very very light taking him out of the Chief Whips role. Their two experts Carter and Guy would be outside Cabinet but not whips – the worst of all possible worlds.

The next most likely candidate is Foss but if Key had imagination he would appoint Borrows who appeals to the oldies he started to burn off last week.


Ministers chairing select committees

Posted by Chris Hipkins on May 22nd, 2009

I was interested in the government’s recent decision to appoint John Carter as chairperson of the special Select Committee that has been established to deal with the second part of the Auckland Super City legislation. It’s highly unusual for a government minister to chair a select committee, and almost unprecedented for a minister to chair a select committee that is considering items of business they have ministerial responsibility for (Carter is Associate Minister of Local Government).

The only other examples I could find of ministers chairing select committees are Peter Dunne (currently chairing the Emissions Trading Scheme Select Committee) and David Carter, who briefly chaired the Finance and Expenditure Select Committee (FEC) in the late 1990s whilst also holding a ministerial warrant (he was Associate Minister of Revenue at the time).

Does the new National government’s decision to establish two special select committees, chaired by ministers, to deal with potentially controversial legislation signal a shift in the conventional separation between the legislature and the executive? Should we be concerned that the executive is dominating the legislative process right down to the select committee level? My gut feeling is we probably should be.


Hide sidelined as Carter gets pushed to the front?

Posted by Phil Twyford on May 21st, 2009

Is Rodney Hide becoming an embarrassment to the Government over his handling of the super city?

Rodney got kneecapped at Cabinet over his nominations for the transition agency with senior National Party sources telling the Herald there were concerns about conflicts of interest over Mr Hide’s proposed appointees. Now we have Associate Minister John Carter being wheeled in to chair the Auckland select committee, which is very unusual. You don’t normally have an associate minister who has been actively involved in the policy development deployed to chair a committee charged with scrutiny of the bills. Carter is also fronting the Nats’ raft of taxpayer-funded public meetings – see the caption competition below.

Then this morning Hone Carter tells Radio NZ he’d been asked to chair the select committee  ‘because I am the face now at the, ah, grassroots level of what the Government’s doing and so it is important that I get fully informed.’

Hide has never been a popular figure. His arrogant approach to the super city clearly has the Government worried. It’s only a few weeks since his bull in a china shop impersonation prompted John Key to shuttle around hosing down Auckland mayors with his “I’m listening” mantra.

Check out this week’s incendiary editorial in The Aucklander – APN’s community paper, slamming the Government’s approach to the super city. And the Suburban Newspapers’ ongoing campaign. With the Hikoi shaping up as a fine demonstration of public anger next week, how long will it be until the Nats’ Auckland MPs take a delegation to the leader’s office?


Caption competition

Posted by Phil Twyford on May 21st, 2009

bennett2

This pic was taken last night in Waitakere at a public meeting on the super city hosted by Paula Bennett MP.

Who can think up the best caption? Tonight I will post a caption that reveals what they were in fact laughing about.

(Photo: John Chapman)


Hone Rehabilitated

Posted by Trevor Mallard on May 20th, 2009

John Carter is emerging as the new Mr Fixit for the National Party. Fresh from saving Gerry Brownlee’s bacon he has now been assigned to mind Melissa Lee. An even bigger task.

As someone whose career has had some ups and downs myself it is great to see.

John was nearly dropped as a candidate in 1996 after his Hone phone call with John Banks in 1995. Last year he was, along with Williamson and Worth told that it was likely that he would be pushed to make way for the younger talent in Key’s reshuffle later this year.

Now it is likely that not only will he make Cabinet but he will lead the House from the front bench. Just goes to show there is room for a battler even in the Nats. Street savvey is just as important as the ability to flit from cloud to cloud.


Credit to John Carter and Darren Hughes

Posted by Trevor Mallard on May 16th, 2009

Coming to the end of the Wednesday sitting. Government has made enormous progress since John Carter took over house leadership from Gerry Brownlee. Carters experience has been invaluable and if Key works on the basis of talent he will be in Cabinet for Wayne Mapp or Kate Wilkinson when Key reshuffles later in the year.

I was pretty worried when Michael Cullen left. I’m now confident that with the young ginga we have someone who can run the house in government. He has done a great job over the whole sitting day.


Times change

Posted by Chris Hipkins on May 13th, 2009

Today Gerry Brownlee announced that the new National government will allocate funding in this year’s Budget to continue the tax exemption for the profits of non-resident operators of offshore rigs and seismic vessels.

Here is what John Carter said about that exemption when Labour introduced it in 2004:

“But I question today whether it is appropriate for the Government now to try to signal its desire to see more exploration by, in effect, giving a tax break. That is what this legislation proposes to do. In that regard, we are seeing Dr Cullen, who to date has been reasonably prudent fiscally, adopting a far more reckless attitude. It is an attitude that we see from his colleague Jim Anderton, whereby a Government picks winners in its mind and goes out there with legislation that then gives a tax advantage to that particular commercial activity over and above another.”

How the times have changed…