Compromise or Harden Up?
Must be election time in Auckland. Why? Apart from the fact in front of my keyboard I have my voting papers (for: Mayor, Ward Councillors, Local Board and District Health Board – and which make some depressing reading (the pamphlet of candidate choice is not that inspiring)), the Isthmus is still going on about their berms in front of their properties being mowed.
This stems from a decision on the 2012-2022 Long Term Plan deliberations (the LTP is now operative/in effect) that to save $3.2m from the Council budget, the former Auckland City Council area residents will no longer have their berms mowed by a Council contractor. The Isthmus like: Franklin, Papakura, Manukau, Waitakere, North Shore and Rodney will now have to mow the berm that is in front of their properties.
The rest of the City is wondering what is the Isthmus moaning about when for years if not decades everyone else just mowed their berms when they mowed their lawns. The most common reason I hear from the Isthmus is that the $3.2m of a service cut was not passed on in rates savings. Rather than parts of the Isthmus have been stung with a string of some of the highest rate rises in all of Auckland over the last three years.
At the end of the day we can keep going around in circles and most likely tell the Isthmus to harden up and join the rest of us in wider Auckland.
Or we could seek a solution. Councillor Casey and candidate Mark Donnelly both mooted an idea, one that I also submitted on to my submission to the 2012-2022 Long Term Plan. The Solution?
- Proper funding of the Local Boards for local services
- Allow individual Local Boards to pick whether they want contractors mowing the berms in their area
Basically if a Local Board wanted to pay a contractor of their choice to mow their areas’ berms rather than have the residents do so then they are free to choose. However, the cost would come out of the Local Board’s budget. This means the Local Board would have to decide how to raise the money for this service. The most obvious one would be a targeted rate to pay for the service.
But that way the Local Boards could choose whether they wanted the berms in front of houses mowed by a contractor.
While this does not address wider issues such as the 10-10-10 rate rise and loss of earlier berm mowing on the Isthmus it is a remedy to allow Local Boards decide local decisions.
What do you think? Leave your thoughts below
Related articles
- Editorial: Grass move leaves city greener, but scruffier (nzherald.co.nz)
- Ask Phoebe: Owners now looking after berms (nzherald.co.nz)

After seeing 40 years employment with Auckland City, I can assure you there has always been the constant “mow” or “not mow” the berms.
There has also been the “delay the maintenance” of city assists
Don’t do sewer separation, leave it till later ! That might save on that years rates but in the long run it always cost more.
Another example —- Grafton bridge…. meant to be twice as wide, but in those early it was never thought people would go that far out of town.
Build the rail link from the early 1920’s but the cost !, then Robbies proposals. Cost too much !
Now the go ahead, but lets wait !
CRD