Kirsten Wise has a challenger for the Napier mayoralty - city councillor Richard McGrath.
McGrath says instead of sitting back and listening, he’s going to stand for change in the October local body elections.
“I don’t think we are going in the right direction for our community. People are struggling with the cost of living and want to see their council spend money appropriately,” McGrath said.
“Napier council has ignored its core infrastructure for too long, putting nice-to-have projects ahead of its needs.
“How did the new library get promoted ahead of the new hill reservoirs, or more water bores?”
Construction of the new civic centre which includes a new library is expected to start by the end of June. The lead contract, recently awarded to Hawke’s Bay consortium MCL Stead, is worth $70m plus.
McGrath was voted in during a byelection in 2014 and says the council needs to prioritise water, roads and infrastructure.
“I didn’t vote for the Long Term Plan last year knowing the library was in there ahead of water.
“I don’t get why some projects are leap-frogged ahead of the basic needs. Yes, we do need balance, but I don’t think we have that right now.”
He considers himself approachable and said he will always be available to speak and listen to the Napier community.
“Your thoughts matter to me. Together we can be solution-focused, delivering the right projects at the right times for our Napier families.”
SUB HEAD: Councillor changing sides from NCC to HBRC
Meanwhile, Hayley Browne will not be standing for a seat at the Napier City Council.
Instead, she is turning her attention to the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council.
She says she is ready to step up in her career.
As deputy chair of the Hawke’s Bay Climate Action Committee, which Napier City Council has recently pulled out of, she helped oversee the development of the first Climate Change Risk Assessment.
“I want to work on the big issues and one of those is climate change. I’m realistic about the tough challenges but I can see a pathway forward.
“Our region is full of people who care, who innovate, who step up. I’m standing to help us channel that energy into long-term solutions that serve everyone.”
Browne is a second-term councillor.
SUBHEAD: 2025 local election timeline
July 4 - Candidate nominations open and roll opens for public inspection
August 1 – at 12 noon, Candidate nominations close and roll closes
August 6 – Public notice of candidates’ names
September 9-22 – Voting documents delivered
October 7 – Last day for posting vote by mail. After this date votes must be returned to council’s secure ballot boxes.
October 11 – at 12 noon Election day – voting closes midday
October 11 – from 12 noon Progress results
October 16-22 – Declaration of results
October/November – Elected members’ swearing in ceremonies
LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.