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Parliamentary Debates (Hansard) - New Zealand Parliament

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16 May 2009 Local Government (Auckland Reorganisation) Bill 3655<br />

We on this side of the Chamber are saying no. We are here on a Saturday morning<br />

trying to protect the public assets of Auckland, which were built up over generations of<br />

hard-working Aucklanders who have said that they want assets they can all share in.<br />

They want swimming pools. They want parks that their children can play in. So here we<br />

are today, on a Saturday morning, saying that we will not let Rodney Hide run his<br />

agenda through this <strong>Parliament</strong>—we will not do that.<br />

National had the option to send this bill to a select committee. It could have done<br />

that. Why has it not done that? I want to see a member of National get up and say why<br />

the people of Auckland do not deserve a chance to make submissions on this bill. Why<br />

do they not have the opportunity to say they believe their public assets are important<br />

and that they want to ensure their children have parks to play in? That is the opportunity<br />

National should be giving Aucklanders today, and it has taken that right away.<br />

SIMON BRIDGES (National—Tauranga): I move, That the question be now put.<br />

Hon MARYAN STREET (Labour): I want to take the opportunity that Charles<br />

Chauvel’s amendment presents to bring home again why we are here today. The point<br />

about this whole debate is that the people of Auckland have not been given a chance to<br />

have a say on things that will affect their daily lives—things that will intimately affect<br />

the way their lives are governed in the wider Auckland region. That is why we are here.<br />

I am delighted that members of the public have taken the opportunity of the Committee<br />

sitting on a Saturday—in outside terms; in temporal terms—to come and see why we<br />

are doing this.<br />

Let me be completely explicit and transparent about this. The Government worries<br />

that our amendments are frivolous and vexatious, and that we are wasting the time of<br />

the Committee. Nothing could be further from the truth. The point is that this<br />

Government is trying to railroad issues through this House that the people of Auckland<br />

have not had a chance to examine through the usual democratic process of making a<br />

submission to a select committee. That is why we are challenging the faults, the deficits,<br />

and the liabilities in the legislation that is in front of us.<br />

My colleague Charles Chauvel has introduced an amendment here that goes to the<br />

heart of the matter. It is about the protection of public assets. There is no protection for<br />

public assets in the bill before us on the whole super-city structure that is being<br />

promoted by the Government, against the recommendations of the royal commission.<br />

There is no protection for public assets to remain as public assets. Let me just be clear<br />

what we are talking about here. We are talking about assets that people in local<br />

communities have agitated for, campaigned about, petitioned on, donated money<br />

towards, and been rated for, for years and years. They are places like the Long Bay<br />

Regional Park. They are places like Little Shoal Bay Foreshore Reserve in Northcote.<br />

They might be places like Rocket Park in Mount Albert. They might be places like<br />

Mountford Park in Manurewa—a very fine park named after a very fine Labour<br />

councillor, in fact. They might be places like the regional botanical gardens in<br />

Manurewa.<br />

Those kinds of local assets, regionally and locally held on behalf of the people for<br />

the public’s enjoyment, are many of the things that make our local communities as rich<br />

as they are. If we go to libraries and swimming pools—and if the members opposite<br />

would care to read the amendment, they would see those facilities are listed on it—we<br />

will realise this is a question of equity. This is a question about who gets access to<br />

books and sporting facilities unless they are held in the public domain for the use of the<br />

public. Those assets must be protected. It must be possible for poor families who do not<br />

have facilities on their doorsteps and swimming pools in their backyards to have access<br />

to the local facilities that have been built up over time, after having been petitioned for,<br />

argued for, and funded by local people.

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