logo
South Wairarapa Plans To Spend Almost $30m On Water Infrastructure

South Wairarapa Plans To Spend Almost $30m On Water Infrastructure

Scoop03-06-2025

South Wairarapa District Council is set to spend almost $30 million on capital water infrastructure projects in the next two years, with all to be delivered in-house until a new water services entity is established.
Significant projects on the horizon for the council included upgrades to wastewater treatment plants in Greytown, Martinborough, and Featherston, pipe renewals, and capacity upgrades to enable growth.
The council's Management Services Agreement with Wellington Water Limited was set to expire on June 30 but the council has voted to keep operational expenditure with the water management entity for another year and do its capital expenditure programme in-house.
This vote was done in public exclusion and the report has recently been released.
The report said the council would need to build a team to deliver South Wairarapa's full capital expenditure programme for at least the next two years, however, the proposed Wairarapa-Tararua entity could start as early as July 1, 2026.
Over the first two years of the council's 2025-34 Long-Term Plan, its capital investment programme totalled $10.85m and $18.31m respectively, the report said.
'The expected benefits of us managing capital expenditure in-house are anticipated to be more cost control, cost efficiency, on-time delivery, local contractor delivery, and optimisation of the programme leading into the new entity in which our forward investment programme will be a factor for negotiations,' the report to council said.
'The risks are that there might be some delay while we source resourcing, and this may impact on relationships with the community and the regulator, but this should be able to be managed with proactive and comprehensive communications.'
The report said the relationship between the council and Wellington Water had been 'fraught' and councillors had voted in public-exclusion in December to exit the relationship with Wellington Water on June 30, 2025.
Councillors had instructed staff to explore options for interim arrangements, citing dissatisfaction with Wellington Water's performance.
The report said the Local Water Done Well process had provided 'additional impetus to consider an early exit from Wellington Water by SWDC'.
'Earlier exit carries the potential for upside in terms of both improved levels of service in the short to medium term, and for being better prepared for the transition into the new entity, if well executed,' the report said.
'There are also risks to an earlier exit including being able to procure sufficient resources to replace Wellington Water and the distraction from the Local Water Done Well transition work that managing an early transition could cause.'
In January, council chief executive Janice Smith and Deputy Mayor and Wellington Water Committee representative Melissa Sadler-Futter met with Wellington Water Board chair Nick Leggett and chief executive Pat Dougherty and gave them informal notice that the council intended to exit the relationship on June 30 but that this could be extended 'depending on practicality'.
The report said council staff then requested information to assist with this transition but Wellington Water staff had been 'disappointingly' slow to respond, 'in part because our requests distract Wellington Water resources from other matters such as planning for the new Wellington Regional entity'.
Initially, council staff were asked to look at a full-service external provider option taking both operational and capital expenditure away from Wellington Water but councillors voted at the end of April to take back capital projects only.
At a Wellington Water Committee meeting on Friday, Dougherty said Wellington Water was working to transfer all capital projects back to the council by July 1 and was 'starting to get systems in place to look at how we transfer responsibilities for operations and maintenance by July 1, 2026'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'We are not a shop': Council hits back at critics
'We are not a shop': Council hits back at critics

Otago Daily Times

time7 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

'We are not a shop': Council hits back at critics

The Waimakariri District Council adopted its 2025/26 plan on Tuesday. Photo: David Hill / North Canterbury News Waimakariri councillors have taken aim at online critics, as they locked in an average rates rise of 4.98%. ''We are not a shop,'' councillor Tim Fulton said. ''We can turn down the lights, but the obligation to our community doesn't change.'' The Waimakariri District Council adopted its annual plan at a meeting today, with the backing of Mayor Dan Gordon and nine councillors. During the meeting, councillors took aim at comments online that said the council needed to rein in its spending and be run more like a business. Cr Joan Ward said the council provides a variety of services, including roading, infrastructure, pools and libraries. ''We are not a business. When you compare what we offer with your power bill, so much is received for the community for much the same expense.'' The Waimakariri district is continuing to support growth. Photo: Waimakariri District Council In moving the motion to adopt the annual plan, Deputy Mayor Neville Atkinson said transparency has become ''a buzz word''. Power bills have gone up an average 11% this year and insurance an average 22%, compared to the council's 4.98% rate rise, he said. ''I don't know any business which is as transparent as a government agency like us.'' Councillor Paul Williams, who has been critical of council spending, abstained from the annual plan vote and didn't comment during the debate. The annual plan consultation received 787 submissions, with the bulk on the council's proposed waters services model, designed to meet the requirements of the Government's Local Water Done Well legislation. A water services delivery plan has since been prepared for a beefed-up internal business unit to manage water services, after 97% of submissions backed the proposal. The council plans to spend nearly $90m on capital projects over the next 12 months to support the ongoing growth. During the meeting, Mayor Dan Gordon paid tribute to Mr Atkinson, who plans to retire at the election. ''I could not have asked for a more loyal deputy behind me. I've had someone who gives extraordinary advice and support.'' ■ LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

Hansells to continue in Masterton after buyout
Hansells to continue in Masterton after buyout

RNZ News

time7 days ago

  • RNZ News

Hansells to continue in Masterton after buyout

Hansells has been bought by a subsidiary of the business which forced it into receivership. Photo: RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly Food manufacturer Hansells will remain operating in Masterton after it was bought by a subsidiary of the business which forced it into receivership. Hansells went into receivership in April . At the time, its director said that was because it could not meet conditions that came with purchasing the Hansells brand from Walter and Wild. In a statement on Tuesday, Walter and Wild said it had acquired the business under its new entity Hansells Acquisition Limited. It said the move will allow the operations to continue in the Wairarapa town. The receivership process has been managed by BDO Auckland. "This transaction represented the best outcome given the situation which had the added benefit of minimising disruption to employees and the community," Andrew McKay from BDO Auckland said. Walter and Wild chief executive Harry Hart said the deal involved a a restructured financial foundation that "offers certainty to workers and their families".

Ohakune Water Plant Highlights Need For Affordable Water Solutions
Ohakune Water Plant Highlights Need For Affordable Water Solutions

Scoop

time15-06-2025

  • Scoop

Ohakune Water Plant Highlights Need For Affordable Water Solutions

Touring the new Ohakune Water Treatment Plant (WTP) with other elected members Mayor Kirton reflected on its $10.4 million cost and Council's impending decision on how to provide future water services under the Government's Local Water Done Well (LWDW) reforms. LWDW requires all councils to decide how they will continue to deliver safe, reliable water services sustainably into the future - either alone or in partnership with other councils. Mayor Kirton said the new plant was funded in part through the Government's Tourism Infrastructure Fund (TIF) which was created to help smaller councils like Ruapehu manage the pressures of increasing visitor numbers. 'Funding support through the TIF was critical in getting this much needed project underway' he said. 'It helped address the gap left by our small ratepayer base and supported our efforts to ensure sustainable visitor growth. Unfortunately, the TIF and similar funding mechanisms are no longer available, making future upgrades much harder to afford.' He said the rising cost of delivering water infrastructure is a key issue as Council considers who to partner with to deliver future water services. Advertisement - scroll to continue reading "Construction of the plant was impacted by the COVID19 shutdowns and the massive infrastructure inflation that followed that saw water systems increase by over 28% and the final build cost increase significantly. 'We're now being asked to do more with less. The Government is encouraging smaller, rural councils like ours to work together to achieve affordability and long-term sustainability of water delivery. The most cost-effective option on the table is a five-council Water Services Council-Controlled Organisation with Palmerston North, Horowhenua, Rangitīkei, and hopefully Whanganui. We're currently asking our communities what they think about this option.' Mayor Kirton urged people to take a moment to complete the short survey on Council's website. 'This is about ensuring safe, affordable water services for the future.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store