Rotorua is set to become New Zealand's first bilingual city.
It comes after the Rotorua Lakes Council unanimously agreed to support the idea, drafted by Te Tatau o Te Arawa, with further support from Te Puni Kōkiri.
"This is the heartland of Māoridom," says Mayor Steve Chadwick. "37.5 per cent of our population identifies as being Māori.
"The other aspect that was a great building block for us, was the partnership with Te Arawa that we cemented in the first term of this council. That showed we have a strength of partnership at the council table, and without that I don't think we had the capacity to ever lead this initiative through council."
Te Tatau, which represents the diverse voices of Te Arawa and provides advice to the Lakes Council, will draft a report detailing work, associated costs and funding for the Bilingual Rotorua project.