Alliance Party: Moa Point Inquiry Too Narrow – New Zealand Needs A National Infrastructure Reckoning
The Alliance Party says the Crown inquiry into the Moa Point wastewater disaster needs a wider focus.
Alliance Party local government spokesperson Ethan Gullery says the inquiry’s scope is limited primarily to Wellington’s governance under the Local Government Act.
He says the inquiry fails to examine the national policy and funding decisions that have driven wastewater failures across the country.
“Moa Point did not fail because of Wellington alone,” says Mr Gullery.
“It failed because successive governments, over 40 years, chose to treat infrastructure as a cost to be minimised rather than a public good to be maintained. This inquiry needs to grapple with that national reality, or we will simply be back here again when the next pipe bursts in another city.”
Mr. Gullery says the figures behind the crisis are damning.
According to recent performance reviews, New Zealand records thousands of sewage overflows nationwide annually, while approximately one-third of the country’s wastewater plant consents have expired, meaning they often fail to meet modern environmental or public health standards.
“This is a public health issue as much as it is an engineering one,” says Mr Gullery.
“Untreated sewage discharging into our coastal waters is the predictable consequence of neoliberal governments that kept rates and taxes artificially low by deferring the maintenance bill onto future generations.”
“We are now those future generations, and the bill has come due.”
The Alliance notes that the government’s own National Infrastructure Plan, released earlier this week, identifies a $275 billion pipeline of projects and a maintenance backlog that has left New Zealand ranked near the bottom of the OECD for asset management.
“You cannot solve a national problem with a series of fragmented local inquiries,” says Mr Gullery.
The Alliance is calling for a comprehensive national infrastructure audit and a fully funded, state-led investment programme, including:
A National Infrastructure Commission with Teeth: Empowered to assess the full national picture across water, transport, and energy with binding timelines and public reporting.
100% Public Ownership of Water: Amending the Commerce Act so water provision can no longer be a commercial activity, ensuring services are under democratic community control.
A State-Led ‘KiwiWorks’ Programme: Rebuilding in-house public engineering and construction capability so New Zealand is not dependent on expensive private contractors to fix crises.
“The inquiry should ask not just what went wrong at Moa Point, but who decided that underfunding was acceptable for so long,” says Mr Gullery.
“The answer to that question isn’t just in a Wellington council chamber, it’s in the Treasury briefings and Cabinet decisions of governments going back to the 1980s. The Alliance is the only party prepared to stop the rot by returning these essential services to 100% public ownership.”
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