Archive for December, 2009

Wards and Boundaries Submission

The Chief Executive Officer
Local Government Commission
Email: info@lgc.govt.nz

From: Grey Lynn 2030

Submission on proposal for wards and boundaries for Auckland Council

1.    This submission is made by Grey Lynn 2030 – transition community.

2.    Grey Lynn 2030 is a participatory community organisation aimed at facilitating and supporting focus groups working towards creating a positive, connected, sustainable, resilient community through practical action.

3.    We take our terms of reference from the Transition Initiative which is a positive response to the twin challenges of climate change and peak oil. The Transition Town movement helps people to reskill and take more responsibility. There are currently 55 Transition Towns throughout New Zealand.

4.    Grey Lynn 2030 is based in Grey Lynn, Auckland, encompassing the surrounding neighbourhoods that form part of the Western Bays Community Board area (including Westmere, Ponsonby, Freeman’s Bay, Kingsland, Herne Bay and St Mary’s Bay). We have over 700 supporters.

5.    We have monthly meetings at the Grey Lynn Community Centre and active focus groups which are presently:

  • Gardening (Community Gardens such as the Wilton St community Garden, projects to encourage local composting facilities, urban food production and seed sharing);
  • Green Screen – monthly screenings of DVDs at the Grey Lynn Community Centre for those who want to be entertained and learn more about sustainability and the environment;
  • Local government group (who liaise with the local community board and the Auckland City Council);
  • Traffic calming;
  • Waste Away Group (this group recently ran a successful eWaste Action Day); and
  • Water Group (working on regenerating local streams)

6.    Grey Lynn 2030 is a local movement with a wide support base.  We have many active members representing a wide range of interests.  As a grassroots organisation access to local political representation is vital to our effective functioning and continued growth.  Representation needs be local and accessible to reflect the particular needs and aspirations of our distinct local community.

Key Points

7.    The Auckland City ward and local boundaries must be determined to ensure “communities of interest” are maintained and encouraged and to ensure effective local representation for the new council and local boards. The Local Government Commission’s (LGC) proposal currently fails to achieve these objectives.

8.    The LGC’s proposals undermine the potential for greater community engagement in local government at a time when groups like Grey Lynn 2030 are demonstrating the importance and desire of local communities to be engaged and actively involved in local issues.

9.    We believe that Auckland is currently “under governed” at local level, a situation which will be exacerbated if the LGC’s recommendations are adopted. As proposed a local board member will represent an average of 12,740 people which is completely inadequate to ensure effective representation.

10.  Given that Councillors will no longer be on the Local Boards, and that the proposed structure and high population ratio to councillors will effectively place councillors at some distance from local communities, the role of boards will be critical in ensuring effective representation and communication with local communities.   Given that there is no second tier in the structure, Local boards will be expected to perform the vital role of conduit between councillors and the wider community.   For this reason, we submit that commensurate with their large size and responsibilities, all Boards should have 8 or 9 members.

11.  Grey Lynn 2030 strongly urges the LGC to introduce a system of roughly equal sized single member local wards as much as is practicable throughout the new Auckland Council.

12.  It is absolutely vital that the new Auckland Council has representation, engagement and confidence from all significant communities across the whole region.

13.  Multimember wards will strongly tend to eliminate substantial geographical and ethnic communities, to make the elected representatives more remote and reduce access to the new Council. All councillors should therefore be elected from single member wards as we consider this is the best way to ensure that, in the makeup of the Council, there is a genuine reflection of the ethnic, socio-economic, political and geographical diversity of the Auckland Region.

14.  We support the Royal Commission’s original recommendation that there be 20 – 30 Local Boards.  It is not clear why the LGC has chosen to ignore this recommendation in favour of only 19 Local Boards.

15.  We are concerned that there are very high differences in population per councillor in the proposed wards which deviates unnecessarily from the principle of one person one vote. It is essential that all votes should be seen to be of roughly equal value.   Differences of up to 17,219 and 24.3% deviate too far from the +/-10% population rule.  We would strongly urge changes that would achieve much closer to equal representation while maintaining effective communities of interest.

16.  This submission focuses on recommendations in relation to the proposed “Maungawhau – Hauraki gulf ward” where the Grey Lynn 2030 community is located.

Waitamata– Hauraki gulf ward

17.  The name Waitamata – Hauraki Gulf would be more appropriate to this geographical location.  The name Mangawhau is associated with Mt Eden and is not representative of the wider area or the actual location and is therefore likely to create confusion.

18.  We propose that the Waitamata – Hauraki Gulf Ward is determined so that is has a population of approximately 74,000 and creates a more logical community of interest within this area by removing parts of Mt Albert Ward and all of the Parnell (because Parnell identifies so closely with Hobson Bay, Remuera and the Eastern Bays) but with the addition of the area around the zoo South of Old Mill Road.

19.  The ward would then have a Waitamata Board with 2 subdivisions:  Western Bays (rest of current Western Bays Community Board area in the new ward) with 4 members; and the distinctive new area, which is mainly in the CBD and Newmarket, to be called something like Karangahape  with 4 members, a total of 8.

20.  As proposed by LGC there should also be a Waiheke local board of 5 members; and a Great Barrier local board of 5 members.

21.  We support a Waitamata Local Board with 2 subdivisions and 8 members because this would be the minimum required to represent the local communities of this unique area.  This ward brings together areas of medium to high density housing including historic residential zones and the CBD – areas of financial and cultural significance to greater Auckland, that are already facing significant developmental and sustainability issues.  This area also hosts many people who visit to work and play in the area including tourists.  We believe the 5 members proposed for the “Maungawhau” ward would not be able to adequately serve and represent the interests of this population including the community of Grey Lynn 2030.

Drafted by Pippa Coom and Mandy McMullins for the Grey Lynn 2030 Steering Committee

Friday 11 December 2009

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Age of Stupid news

We had a really successful movie fundraiser earlier in the year when we hosted the  Age of Stupid at the Bridgeway. Since then we have been receiving the director Franny Armstrong’s Age of Stupid updates. We liked this one so much (8 Dec 09)  we thought we would post an edited version on our website.

Hello from the Climate Express, a special UN train trundling round Europe picking up TIPs* and taking them to the “most important meeting in human history” which, as we all know, starts in Copenhagen on Monday. Every carriage is packed full of people interviewing each other (see The IndependentNew York Times), the outside is painted with climatastic sayings, every platform sign now includes a pun and the station announcers are having the best day of their working lives. Now I know what it feels like to be in Harry Potter.
Lizzie and I have squatted a first class carriage so people keep mistaking us for someone very important and bringing us coffees (in real, non-disposable cups) and briefing papers (printed double-sided on recycled paper). We’re screening Stupid in carriage 7 later tonight and then doing a press conference in the bar. Could be good. Meanwhile, Team StupidShow, are somewhere on the North Sea sorting through the biggest cable tangle known to mankind.
We’re shooting the first piece for the Stupid Show here on the train, though are slightly bemused at having to use a camera again after all these years. What were all those little buttons for again? Lizzie just bumped into Cristina from WWF Italy who have already organised more than 100 screenings in schools, town halls and local cinemas all around Italy. Apparently the film is very popular with teenagers who are “Very astonished” and then “Become thinking”.

On the telly

A couple of hundred people watching on a train is all well and good, but around 15-20 million will see the film during the next two weeks of Copenhagen as Stupid will be broadcast on primetime national TV in…. wait for it…. Finland (7th Dec, YLE), Norway (12th – NRK), Netherlands (14th – Nederland 2), Belgium (18th – VTM) and UK (14th – BBC4, 10pm). And then in the New Year it will be on in the USA, Canada, Greece, Cyprus and Poland. Plus, weirdly, Thailand and Israel, have already been and gone. Full TV listings: http://www.ageofstupid.net/tv
On the streets of Beijing
But forget the telly, we got news this week that we have seriously hit the big time. Yup, Stupid is the new hot seller pirate DVD on the streets of Beijing, where you can pick yourself up a copy for 7 yuan (about 75p). Haha. Check out the attached scan, kindly sent by Stupid researcher James who is out that way working on a new doc. Love the way they’ve taken the free poster from the website and not bothered to take off the “An Indie Screening” headline. Could cause a little confusion.
Better five years late than never
We are extremely excited – even by our extremely excitable standards – to say that, with no thanks to the Chinese pirate DVD, and almost exactly five years since the first 17 people invested in December 2004, the first funders payment will be winging its way into your bank accounts before Christmas. It’s not going to be a huuuuuuuuuuuge amount – don’t book those Caribbean flying holidays just yet – but it’s not nothing and it’s the first of ten yearly payments, so a moment’s reflection is called for methinks.
Thank you. All investors and crew should receive an email from our accountant Kevin Lyons at MKL checking your bank details in the next few days. If you haven’t heard by the end of this week, please contact him on Kevin.Lyons@mklp.co.uk to make sure you’re on the list.

And finally…. The Stupid Show

Lots more details of the Stupid Show following in the coming days, but the headline is that the first live show will be this Friday at 8pm Copenhagen time.
Gonna stop writing now as a rather tasty looking local, organic, vegetarian lunch has just been delivered to our table here on the Climate Express. Gotta love the low carbon future.
See you,
Franny & Lizzie

* Terribly important people

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