OPINION
Three Waters - two options, one decision
There’s a lot of information flying around at the moment about Government reforms proposed for our waste, storm and drinking water. I get calls all the time asking what the difference is between Labour’s Three Waters reforms and National’s Local Water Done Well, so I thought it might be helpful to summarise them in this column (based on the information publicly available).
Three Waters reforms
The Three Waters reforms will see all water assets - including water treatment plants, pipes carrying water, wastewater plants and stormwater pipes and drainage areas - move from local council management and ownership across to a centralised management structure. Assuming the current Labour policy is retained, this will result in the transfer of ownership (in the traditional sense) of the councils’ Three Waters assets to the new Entity A, with councils being shareholders of that entity. These assets will no longer be owned by councils or appear on council balance sheets. In return, councils can expect to receive funding under the Government’s ‘No Worse Off’ tranche of funding. However, the amount is yet to be determined.