https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/AK2509/S00886/water-supply-comes-at-huge-cost-to-ratepayers.htm
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Water Supply Comes At Huge Cost To Ratepayers |
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The Dargaville Residents & Ratepayers Association (DRRA) is speaking out against the Kaipara District Council's (KDC) decision to commit millions in ratepayer funds to the Te Tai Tokerau Water Trust (TTTWT) scheme without any public consultation.
The KDC has signed a critical agreement with the TTTWT in a public-excluded session, effectively bypassing the democratic process and denying Dargaville residents a voice on a fundamental infrastructure and financial decision.
"This is fundamentally unacceptable. When financial commitments of this magnitude are made in secret, democracy itself is undermined," said a DRRA spokesperson. "The community has been stripped of its right to determine how our money is spent."
The DRRA has lodged a formal complaint with the Ombudsman against the Kaipara District Council for its failure to adequately consult, and we intend to lodge a complaint with the Auditor-General.
The arrangement with the TTTWT is best described as a Commercially-Driven Public-Private Partnership (PPP). However, the commercial elements create profound risks for the community.
The Monopoly Risk is profound: While the initial reservoir was heavily funded by government loans, the structure allows the Trust—a private entity—to control the access and pricing of a core resource. We are concerned about the TTTWT’s ability to charge what it likes, once industrial customers switch, which essentially grants it a monopoly position.
The Ratepayer Subsidy is massive: Dargaville ratepayers are now forced to pay an annual $675,000 debt servicing payment and cover a $1 million one-off contribution. This means household water bills are subsidising the infrastructure for high-value horticulture and large industrial users who will profit from the secure supply.
The Cost-Shift Crisis will hit household bills: As major industrial users switch to the TTTWT network, they will exit the municipal network, leaving fixed costs (like the initial $1.35 million regional council loan) to be spread across a smaller base of remaining household and small business customers. This guarantees higher per-unit water costs for those who stay on the municipal network. "We also note that some asset costs such as Mangawhai Wastewater scheme are shared across networks connected to a wastewater scheme, however as Mangawhai does not have a water supply scheme, which means Dargaville goes it alone with this huge increase in costs. How about reconsidering targeted rates, so the cost is distributed more fairly, afterall Dargaville residents have been paying for Mangawhais costly WWTP for years"
The DRRA demands that the Kaipara District Council immediately provide a transparent, public-facing report detailing every cost and risk associated with this deal and commits to genuine consultation before incurring any further financial obligations.
The Dargaville Residents & Ratepayers Association urges all concerned residents to contact their local Kaipara District Council representatives to demand a full public explanation of this agreement.
This commercial model runs directly counter to the recent national debate over water ownership.
The public outcry against the former government’s Three Waters reforms was fundamentally driven by the widely-held desire to keep water assets under local, democratically accountable ownership and away from commercialisation.
"The current Government, including Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, strongly supported local control of water," the spokesperson noted. "Yet, here in Dargaville, the local Council is using ratepayer funds to prop up a private Trust and a commercial model that sells water rights and is likely to prioritise profits over public needs. This is exactly the type of privatisation and loss of control that New Zealanders rejected."
The DRRA demands that the Kaipara District Council immediately provide a transparent, public-facing report detailing every cost and risk associated with this deal and commits to genuine consultation before incurring any further financial obligations.
While the TTTWT scheme promises water security for Dargaville, the financial fine print forces residential ratepayers to subsidise infrastructure primarily designed to benefit private commercial interests.
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