So Option A or Option B? As I noted in my Governing Body Agenda to Set LTP Consultation post the Governing Body of Auckland Council will on Thursday set in motion … Continue reading Just 5,000 to be Surveyed on Transport Funding Options
So Option A or Option B? As I noted in my Governing Body Agenda to Set LTP Consultation post the Governing Body of Auckland Council will on Thursday set in motion … Continue reading Just 5,000 to be Surveyed on Transport Funding Options
How will we be consulted On Thursday the Auckland Council Governing Body will meet for the final time this year. In this final but crucial meeting though the … Continue reading Governing Body Agenda to Set LTP Consultation
Story has appeared in the Main Stream Media I have noted both from Transport Blog, and the Manukau Courier (online) that there is indeed a situation with both Otahuhu … Continue reading Updates on the Manukau and Otahuhu Transport Interchange Situation
But no we go re litigate everything else. What should have been a 45 minute debate turned into a 2:30 hour joke that only proves: that again the Governing … Continue reading Council: You Had ONE Job! UPDATED
That is the choice at the Governing Body today I have been plugging away at this issue since the presser came out on Friday but it is too important … Continue reading Respect our Intelligence and Collaborate/Empower Us OR Insult Us With More Tokenism

On Tuesday the Governing Body will meet in an extraordinary session to work through the amendment the Mayor will be tabling around the City Rail Link
The Presser from the Mayoral Office on the Situation:
Following discussions with Audit NZ, the Mayor is proposing an amendment in Council’s draft Long-term Plan 2015-2025 on the timing for construction of Auckland’s number one transport priority – the City Rail Link (CRL).
In its draft budget, Council has the CRL project commencing in 2015/16, based on an assumption government’s funding contribution for the project would also start next year, five years earlier than government has so far indicated.
On Tuesday 9 December, council will consider changing the assumption of timing of the government contribution to 2018/19. This will mean enablement works of $280 million will still take place in the first three years of the plan, but construction will not start until 2018/19. This will also delay the completion date to 2023.
Mayor Len Brown says:
“We have a track record of success with central government when it comes to the CRL – we have moved them from a position of total opposition to one of commitment for funding half the project from the year 2020,” says Mayor Len Brown.
“Yes, we still have to work with government on final timing, but I’m confident we can come to an agreement and get on and get this job done.
“I understand why Audit NZ feel that we need to take a more conservative approach to our financial projections and I am proposing that we develop the LTP based on a later timing of government contribution.”
Public consultation on the draft LTP begins January 23 next year. The final plan is due for adoption June 30, 2015.
—-ends—-
Now our Deputy Mayor did say this in response:
City RailLink to be put back by a couple of years. Disappointed that the government are taking so long to catch up with the Auckland reality which is that the link is vital to the economic future of our region. 30 years of waiting have made the 2-3 year delay tolerable but we have work to do with the relevant ministers to get the timing and the funding sorted.
….a deadend train station cannot generate the PT numbers without more trains in service! Auckland is 1/3 of New Zealand time the government treated us fairly.
My response was this:
Sorry to say Penny but the 2018 main project start date has long been predicted. Regardless of having the engineering capacity ready (which according to NZTA is 2018 any how by the looks of it) the extra three years would allow the financials that werent tolls or extra taxes to be sorted.
Recommendation: Pass a Notice of Motion on Tuesday that would allow no preference in funding options as “suggested” by the Council. But rather allow the ratepayers to pick an option of their own choice or creation (or even a do nothing) and the Governing Body to consider them all then put in place for the LTP in July next year.
Recommendation 2: Pass a Notice of Motion to overrule the Finance and Performance Committee in selling Lot 59 land in Manukau. Hold on to that land and allow the Development Auckland CCO to decide in September 2015 when it is onstream. I have a LGOIMA away with Council in anycase around the Manukau Interchange any how to see what the status of it is seeming AT is conflicted in either building it next year or having it delayed until 2021 owing to “budget cuts”
Note none of this disables the progress of the enabling works Downtown which should be budgeted for by now. But rather the main project in line with expectations and getting the actual alternative funding sources properly sorted (that yes I have presented on at the ADC in October)
Those Notice of Motions would respect the intelligence of the citizenry and allow us to decide how WE are to fund these transport projects. NOT what the Mayor wants and tries to shimmy on us through a perceived option of choice which is nothing but tokenism.
So if any Councillor has their wits about them they would introduce those Notice of Motions tomorrow and get them passed. Or Council will find a very hostile City come March next year when the Long Term Plan submissions close.
The Government has effectively come to the party, the Auditor General has made her ruling to which Council must oblige. Now respect our intelligence and allow us to choose the funding mechanisms freely seeming we are the ones in the end paying for it…
Main Project Start Date was as predicted but still a win for Auckland As it was picked up in the presser yesterday the Mayor will be putting forward … Continue reading The Weekend Analysis: CRL 2018 Start Date Still a Win for Auckland
A more surprising presser hit our inbox(es) late this afternoon. It is on the City Rail Link and the start date for the main project (i.e not the enabling works).
From Auckland Council – specifically the Office of the Mayor:
Following discussions with Audit NZ, the Mayor is proposing an amendment in Council’s draft Long-term Plan 2015-2025 on the timing for construction of Auckland’s number one transport priority – the City Rail Link (CRL).
In its draft budget, Council has the CRL project commencing in 2015/16, based on an assumption government’s funding contribution for the project would also start next year, five years earlier than government has so far indicated.
On Tuesday 9 December, council will consider changing the assumption of timing of the government contribution to 2018/19. This will mean enablement works of $280 million will still take place in the first three years of the plan, but construction will not start until 2018/19. This will also delay the completion date to 2023.
Mayor Len Brown says:
“We have a track record of success with central government when it comes to the CRL – we have moved them from a position of total opposition to one of commitment for funding half the project from the year 2020,” says Mayor Len Brown.
“Yes, we still have to work with government on final timing, but I’m confident we can come to an agreement and get on and get this job done.
“I understand why Audit NZ feel that we need to take a more conservative approach to our financial projections and I am proposing that we develop the LTP based on a later timing of government contribution.”
Public consultation on the draft LTP begins January 23 next year. The final plan is due for adoption June 30, 2015.
—-ends—-
In the 2012-22 LTP we assumed central government funding would commence from the year 2015-16 and the financial data for the 2015-25 LTP has carried that assumption through. The consultation document has been written with three alternative scenarios set out for public consideration:
Scenario One
Financial information
| $ million Year ended 30 June |
Prior years | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Total |
| Capital expenditure | 178 | 156 | 267 | 432 | 438 | 425 | 481 | 102 | -88 | 2,391 | ||
| Government contribution | 0 | 167 | 133 | 216 | 219 | 200 | 194 | 51 | -44 | 1,137 | ||
| CRL related closing debt | 163 | 155 | 295 | 528 | 778 | 1,047 | 1,318 | 1,343 | 1,271 | 1,243 | 1,215 |
Assumptions
Financial impacts
Scenario Two
Financial information
| $ million Year ended 30 June |
Prior years | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Total |
| Capital expenditure | 178 | 145 | 177 | 78 | 319 | 372 | 416 | 464 | 201 | 137 | 2,488 | |
| Government contribution | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 305 | 186 | 195 | 184 | 101 | 68 | 1,039 | |
| CRL related closing debt | 163 | 316 | 510 | 614 | 658 | 882 | 1,081 | 1,340 | 1,428 | 1,490 | 1,487 |
Assumptions
Financial impacts
……………
Again a simple explanation on how the City Rail Link works:
A Simple But Not Exhaustive Explanation of the City Rail Link
The City Rail Link and Auckland
As I explained to Rebekka’s dad the CRL works on the following premises:
As of current all Western Line trains run from Waitakere, Swanson and Henderson into Britomart on a trip that takes around an hour. Those trains must pass through Newmarket where there is a 3min stand down as drviers change ends to allow the Newmarket to Britomart leg of the trip.
The Western Line as a result mixes with the Southern Line and Onehunga Line trains causing congestion. To make matters worse those trains then get caught outside Britomart as they mix with Eastern Line Trains causing delays and congestion.The CRL would allow Western Line Trains from Mt Eden to travel down the 3.5km tunnel to Britomart skipping Newmarket and thus not running into Southern, Eastern and Onehunga Line Trains as a result. We also get two new stations on the CRL including Aotea which is going to be the busiest being in the middle of the CBD itself.Time savings go from 60mins to about 43mins there about from Swanson to Britomart via the CRL as a result. You will still get Swanson to Newmarket services that will then continue either on to Onehunga or even Papakura – the South to West services.As the Western Line services are removed from the Newmarket-Britomart leg this frees track space for Eastern, Southern and Onehunga Line trains allow their frequencies to go from 10mins to 5mins in the peak of peaks. This means a train from Papakura every 5mins in the peak if so needed. Result? Capacity increases and the allowances of new lines such as Airport and the North Shore (Botany would be serviced by a Sky Train concept).
That is how the CRL works – it services the bulk of Auckland….
………….
So a 2018 start date for the main project with the enabling works to start as soon as feasibly possible.
That date I have widely touted as a start date for the main project (2017-2018) since I wrote my Auckland Plan submission in 2011. The logic moving the main start date to 2018 in the agenda paper seems consistent in part to the reasoning I used for a 2018 start date for the main project.
It is good to see (although other questions on why so long to move the main start date to 2018 do come up) the Mayor seeking the amendment for the CRL start date via the 2015-2025 Long Term Plan. Now to get the true alternative funding sources that are not extra rates nor tolls sorted by 2018….
Next move falls to us the ratepayer and conversely the Government as well for their funding share…
In reply to a claim From Auckland Council, and Quotable Value: No basis for ‘wildly wrong’ valuation claims – Council & QV Auckland Council and Quotable Value say … Continue reading Council And QV Replies to Claims About Auckland Valuations
And we are going to be consulted on: Yesterday the Governing Body resolved the Draft Long Term Plan 2015-2025 for consultation between late January and early March next … Continue reading What the Governing Body Resolved Yesterday