"Oh, not another leaky building story!" an exasperated colleague complained to me in 2001.
I thought I was on to a big story at the time, but he didn't seem as keen. It was all so gloomy, he said, who really wanted to know? Couldn't I find something better to write about than a block of Ponsonby leakers? It was, after all, the start of the good times, after the awful 1990s, and house prices seemed to be just starting to take off.
Remuera couple John and Helen Osborne have just beaten Auckland Council in the Supreme Court, so there can be good news in all this, right?
Yet the other side of this is that whether we are property-owning ratepayers, landlords or tenants, we're all dragged unwittingly into this rotten homes mess, a national disaster which PwC estimated in 2009 could cost $11 billion to $22 billion and affect 22,000 to 89,000 dwellings.
The council is partly funded by rates, so any losses for a territorial authority are losses for us all.