Category: News

A News Post on something that has happened

The Price Keeps on Rising

Art Sculpture Price Tag Keeps on Rising

 

I suppose this is a lesson on not giving a Public Authority a “lead” on a public art project as this Herald article from Bernard Orsman shows below:

 

Cost of State House sculpture rocketed to $1.9 million

A leaked drawing of the State House Sculpture by artist Michael Parekowhai.
A leaked drawing of the State House Sculpture by artist Michael Parekowhai. Source: NZ Herald
A leaked drawing of the State House Sculpture by artist Michael Parekowhai.

The cost of the State House sculpture on Auckland’s Queens Wharf blew out to $1.924 million before being scaled back to $1.5 million, papers show.

Documents released under the Official Information Act to the Herald show the original plan was for the project to be finished in the first few months of this year. The completion date was later revised to February 2015 and is now some time beyond that.

Auckland Council announced plans for the sculpture in March last year, to be funded by a $1 million donation from Barfoot & Thompson, marking the company’s 90 years in business.

The documents show the cost of the sculpture – a “scaled version of a Mount Eden state house” by renowned artist Michael Parekowhai – had reached $1.9 million by May 2013.

Images of the sculpture have been shared with councillors but not the public, causing widespread criticism.

In February, Parekowhai told council public art manager Carole Anne Meehan he did not want early concept drawings and photos of a model to be “distributed publicly by anyone attending” a council meeting.

But several images were leaked to the Herald. They show a typical state house with external stairs leading to a platform offering multiple views of the chandelier filling the interior.

They also show a skylight, to allow cruise ship visitors berthing at Queens Wharf to peer inside the brilliantly coloured and intricate glass garden of native birds, flowers and insects inside the house that will glow softly at night.

A council source said if the council wanted to stuff up the sculpture it could not have done a better job.

Today, council chief operating officer Dean Kimpton said there was no fault with the process, but acknowledged it would have been better to have released images earlier.

He said the design had gone through a number of iterations, saying images and construction dates would be made public in mid-December.

“It is what it is. The design process has taken longer … and we have got a great result from Michael [Parekowhai]. I think the public are going to love it. I’m not anticipating a public backlash,” he said.

Asked about ratepayers underwriting up to $500,000 after the cost ballooned above the initial $1 million budget, Mr Kimpton was confident of attracting sponsorship once images, a story to wrap around it and a building deadline were made public.

He confirmed rumours that other suppliers were being considered for the chandelier, including glassworks in the United States and New Zealand, “but it is likely to be constructed in Italy”.

The documents show that Parekowhai was recommended “after careful consideration” as the “only candidate” for the artwork in late November 2012 after a shortlist of 11 potential artists, whose names were redacted, was drawn up.

Said Ms Meehan on November 26, 2012: “This is the right moment for a significant commission for Auckland by him [Parekowhai], as national and international recognition of his work is climbing.” She also recommended moving the sculpture from the cityside of Queens Wharf, a location “sabotaging” its potential, to the water’s edge at the end of the wharf.

The latest breakdown for the $1.5 million project, includes $705,000 for the chandelier, $415,000 for the building, an artist’s fee of $225,000 and $155,000 for a contingency and development costs.

A council document, dated May 15, says the project is a given and will not go out for public consultation in the new 10-year budget.

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Source: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11347859

 

  • $1.5 million project, includes
    • $705,000 for the chandelier,
    • $415,000 for the building,
    • an artist’s fee of $225,000 and $
    • 155,000 for a contingency and development costs.

The whole thing seems Gold Plated and an absolute disaster in handling since day one! Misinformation and lack of clear concise information from Council is certainly not helping either and this will feed on to other projects whether it be public art or something else.

 

Penny Bright’s House Not Sold – Yet – The Continuing Saga

Council’s Move Next

 

The Auckland District Court has ruled that the Council is free to apply at the High Court to sell activist Penny Bright’s house to collect the Rates arrears going back to 2008.

From Radio NZ

House can be sold over unpaid rates

Updated at 6:38 pm on 24 October 2014

The one-time mayoral candidate and self-styled anti-corruption campaigner owes $33,000 after not paying rates since 2008.

Ms Bright has long declared her refusal to pay rates, saying the council is declining to disclose financial information which she has requested.

She went to the Auckland District Court asking for a stay on an earlier judgment allowing the Council to sell her half-million dollar home.

In his decision Judge Simon Menzies said Ms Bright’s position is that she refuses to meet her rates payments, not that she is unable to.

And he said her argument that the council should reveal how it spends its money has no bearing on the court’s jurisdiction.

Auckland Council can now ask the High Court to go ahead with a sale process.

———–

Source: http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/regional/257740/house-can-be-sold-over-unpaid-rates

 

So the ball is back in Auckland Council’s court. That said CEO Stephen Town said he was not seeking a sale just yet as noted here: Penny Bright Not Going to Lose Her Home – Yet

The Saga continues

 

Penny Bright Not Going to Lose Her Home – Yet

Council Extends Options

 

From Auckland Council

Auckland Council CEO details options to prevent forced house sale

 

Auckland Council CEO Stephen Town has today written to Penny Bright making it clear that the forced sale of her house because of her long-term overdue rates arrears was not the council’s preferred course of action.

Legal proceedings to recover the $33,288.25 of her outstanding arrears would result in the sale of her Kingsland house. Ratings sales are rare as most ratepayers with overdue rates make suitable arrangements with council to pay.

Mr Town says that in her case, as with other outstanding rate arrears cases, the council would prefer to resolve the payment without having to resort to legal action.

In his letter, Mr Town has reminded Ms Bright of the options available to pay her rates which includes a rates postponement.

Council has provisionally assessed her rates arrears situation against the criteria for a postponement of rates and concluded that this option would be available to Ms Bright. This would be on the basis that she applies and is willing to meet and adhere to the requirements of a repayment scheme.

“Ms Bright has today indicated her interest in a rates postponement option. We have provided her with a way forward and the name of a senior council staff member who can assist. The ball is now in her court,” says Mr Town.

“The council has a responsibility to ensure there is a fairness and equity in the payment of rates for all ratepayers and we have tried for over seven years to encourage Ms Bright to pay her rates.”

To date, 20,051 Auckland ratepayers have qualified for a rates rebate and council has agreed to a rates postponement for 337 households.

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And the saga rolls on

 

Have Your Say on Legal Highs

Council Wants Your Say on Legal Highs

 

From Auckland Council:

Time to have your say on the sale of legal highs

 

Aucklanders are being urged to have their say on where psychoactive substances, commonly known as legal highs, can be sold in the city.

The council’s Local Approved Product Policy consultation, which will decide where the products can be sold, opens on Tuesday 28 October and proposes that:

  1. Licenses to sell legal psychoactive substances in all of Auckland (apart from the city centre) will not be granted in:
  • areas of high deprivation
  • neighbourhood centres
  • within 500m of a school teaching students year seven and above
  • within 200m of a school teaching students between years one and six inclusive
  • within 500m of a mental health or addiction treatment centre
  • within 500m of an existing psychoactive substances retail licence
  • areas identified as restricted areas.

 

  1. Licenses to sell legal psychoactive substances in the city centre will not be granted:
  • in areas of residential deprivation
  • within 100m of an existing psychoactive substances retail licence.

 

Councillor George Wood, chairperson of the Regional Strategy and Policy Committee says the council is working hard to ensure the proper, responsible balance is found.

 

“We have done extensive work on this draft policy, to try and minimise the risks to those most vulnerable in our community,” he says.

 

“Our vision, to become the world’s most liveable city, will be achieved in part through Auckland being a safe and healthy city. These proposed measures will help ensure that is the case.

 

“By setting up our policy on the sale of the products before they are licensed by government, we will be prepared for when they are once again legal to sell.

 

“And while we can’t stop their sale altogether, the council is being as responsible as possible by proposing these restrictions of sale.

 

“So we want as many people as possible to have their say on the policy, as the sale of these products has the potential to affect everyone in Auckland. Making your views heard now on this issue is absolutely vital.”

 

The consultation is open from 28 October-28 November and can be completed via shapeauckland.co.nz.

——ends—–

 

Head to Shape Auckland to have your say on where Legal Highs can be sold

 

Time for New Leadership at Vector

We should not get use to power failures

 

While the investigation goes on into what caused the fire at the Penrose Substation and the resulting three-day blackout on the Eastern Isthmus of Auckland it seems we need a new Chairman, and CEO of Vector – the lines company that delivers the juice to residents and businesses across Auckland.

From the NZ Herald

Get used to power cuts, Vector chairman says

Power cuts are a part of life and Aucklanders should get used to it, says Vector chairman Michael Stiassny.

Vector bosses spent much of yesterday’s annual meeting in Auckland discussing the fire at a substation in Penrose on October 5 that cut power to 85,000 customers.

Mr Stiassny and Vector chief executive Simon McKenzie were unable to say what caused the fire until an investigation was completed, possibly early in the new year.

Only then, Mr McKenzie said, could the company discuss compensation for households and businesses, some of whom were without power for several days.

Compensation could take the form of the “Vector promise” of $50 for households and $200 for businesses. It would be premature to speculate on compensation above that, he said.

Coralie van Camp, a Vector shareholder and longtime critic of the power network company, told the meeting that people could have died due to poor maintenance at the substation.

She criticised Vector for paying out too much in dividends instead of investing in maintenance.

Mr Stiassny called it a serious incident that could have been worse, but said the company and electricity users could not afford a gold-plated network.

It would cost $500-$600 million for Vector to upgrade each of its 14 substations to achieve reliability above 100 per cent. State-owned Transpower, which provides bulk electricity to Auckland, would have to spend more, he said.

The company produced figures showing people in the affected areas had 99.8 per cent reliability of power in the past 15 years.

…..

Source and full article: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=11346810

 

$600 million to so-called gold plate the network which actually translates to a power network that rivals the European Union, parts of the USA, and Japan where they don’t get such systemic failures (if they do they are super rare unlike ours which is about every 2-4 years). That is around six years worth of those AECT dividends that you get in your letter box around September each year if we calculate the current dividend out at $335/household.

So the question you need to ask yourself is the following:

  • Still want that dividend and risk the major failures we get every two to four years and throw out what food you had in the freezer?
  • Forsake the dividends for three years to fund 50% (and Vector uses other sources to get the other 50%) and bring the network up to EU standard where such failures would be super rare

 

Getting our network up to the specifications similar to the EU where we have redundancy capacity ample enough is not gold plating, it is good investment and good business. And if the Vector Chairman, CEO, and Government Energy Minister can not see that then they all need to be sacked immediately.

Consider ourselves lucky we do not operate large Nuclear Power Stations which are reliant on an external feed to keep the reactors online. As the USA and Canada found in their last cascading failure when you lose the external feed the reactors need to be shut down for safety reasons making the power situation worse as you take more supply offline….

 

Santa Sacked – No More

Iconic Santa [was] ‘Retired’

 

 

Update: Santa will be back up this year after generous donations

From Mayor Len Brown

Santa is staying. Huge thanks to Mansons TCLM, Sky City and HOTC. Auckland at its best.

 

More here from Stuff: http://www.stuff.co.nz/auckland/10654571/Aucklands-Santa-saved-from-retirement?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

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When I saw this Tweet from Bevan last night I thought it was a joke:

The email is accessible by clicking the links inside the Tweet.

 

But alas this is no joke. Heart of the City has “retired” the iconic Santa this year due to “funding” issues amongst other things.

From Radio New Zealand

Santa victim of Auckland cost cutting

Updated 43 minutes ago

Heart of the City says it can not afford the $180,000 costing of putting up Santa and his reindeer on the Queen Street’s Whitcoulls building.

The giant Santa first went up on the Farmers Hobson Street department store in 1960, and after a brief stint in Manukau City, has been an annual fixture in Queen Street.

Listen to more on Morning Report ( 4 min 10 sec )

The Queen Street Santa
The Queen Street Santa Photo: PHOTO NZ

 

Chair of the ratepayer-funded agency, Terry Gould, said its five year relationship with Santa has to end.

“Funding from other sources has progressively been withdrawn, leading to much discussion around the boardroom table about spending priorities,” he said.

……

Source and Full Article: http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/regional/257567/santa-victim-of-auckland-cost-cutting

The audio can be heard here:

 

It was speculated last night on how much wider is the financial problems with Heart of the City after they sacked former CEO Alex Swney for tax evasion charges. The timing just does not seem right over the Santa sacking or retirement mess.

However, if Santa is to be retired I do like this suggestion:

can we have a giant Xmas tree with white lights in Aotea Square? Also one in Manukau and every other metropolitan centre. Ta!

Hope yet folks for a brighter 2014 Christmas