OPINION
The long-awaited report on the Future of Local Government has been released. The final report is the outcome of two years of data gathering, brainstorming and consultation that left no stone unturned in a quest to answer the question “What now, for the local government sector?”. After stripping the Three Waters services away from councils, that was the question we all asked ourselves and the Government responded by commissioning this review.
It should have been done prior to the Three Waters debate but we can’t turn back the clock. Many local government people, myself included, were sceptical about the Government’s sincerity and commitment to the review and thought the review was little more than a PR exercise to pacify and keep the sector happy. If you had asked me a month ago, I would still have said the report was headed for a dusty shelf in the mire of Wellington’s bureaucracy.
But after reading it, I have changed my mind and I now have some hope that parts of it at least, will be actioned by whichever government is in power after the October election. There are 17 recommendations in the report that address a broad range of issues and the solutions offered are promoted as a collective offering that will contribute to a better future for local government. There are two biggies for me: future funding of councils and the re-organisation of councils’ structure (aka amalgamation).