On Saturday, Tauranga City Council will have its first election since 2019. In February, 2021, a central government-appointed commission replaced a dysfunctional mayor and councillors.

The best-case scenario this weekend, local government expert Dr Andy Asquith told RNZ, is that the country’s fifth most populous city ends up with a council that is “marginally functional”.

RNZ spoke with others who said that’s all most local authorities can hope for, these days.

Across the motu, local government representatives are making headlines for being in trouble, or causing trouble, or both. This is against a backdrop of ballooning council costs, and the fastest rates increases in decades.

An independent review of local government, commissioned by the previous government and released last year, found communities were not well-served by the relationship between central and local government.

The coalition government rejected its recommendations, saying they were a distraction from the key issues […], such as the need to reform funding and financing, and planning for long-term economic growth, housing, and infrastructure.

  • deadbeef79000@lemmy.nz
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    2 months ago

    Shocked Pikachu JPEG

    No one votes to fund sewer maintenance until it’s their own back yard knee-deep in waste water.

    Tauranga is just lucky enough to have enough population and enough self interested representation to be the leader in the dysfunctional council race to the bottom.