The Anti-Labour writers.

The Editor,
Gisborne Herald,
Gisborne.

Dear Editor, Letter: The Anti-Labour writers.

Some newspapers unfortunately seem keen on featuring zealous right-wingers and proponents of Friedman’s free market capitalism. These do not provide objective, in depth analysis, facts, or alternatives, just criticisms denigrating those not of their faith.

For example, headlines in at least one major paper on some of Richard Prebble’s ‘articles’ include: ‘The Jacinda Tidal Wave has gone out.’ Once election results were clear, his next article was headed ‘Jacinda Ardern will regret this coalition of losers.’ On 28th September, another item was headed: ‘Don’t count on this coalition lasting.’

Perhaps Mr Prebble’s strong bias is affecting the messages from his crystal ball. Maybe it is cracked?

Next is Mike Hosking who has reportedly headlined the following: ‘Will today’s Government deal even be workable?’ Then another, more scary, ‘Already a mess, we are all in trouble.’

Perhaps they share the same crystal ball?

To cap it off, a sports writer today (Sunday) is headlined ‘Did Jacinda Ardern ‘curse’ the All Blacks?’ What nonsense! The article then ‘explains’ that the ABs have always lost when there’s been a woman as PM. Biased? Surely not, it simply ignores the numerous times that they have lost when there’s been a male PM!

Democracy for Aucklanders please.

22.8.17

The Editor,
NZ Herald
Dear Sir, Letter to the Editor:
Democracy for Aucklanders please. (published in NZH 23.8.17)

The jousting for the Treasury seats is underway. All NZ adult citizens can vote for Parliament.

But Aucklanders were denied their democratic rights by this government when it removed our local government system in 2010, although other districts, like Wellington were allowed their rights and voted against the amalgamation proposals.

So where does democracy begin and end for Aucklanders, one third of this country’s taxpayers?

It seems it is at the whim of the government.

But worse, the council ‘model’ that has been imposed upon us is dictatorial, bureaucratic, business-oriented and not fit for purpose.

Not one political party has shown any concern, policy or plan to rectify this pseudo- democratic farce.

None have suggested that the “Council Controlled Organisations” should be brought back within a co-ordinated council as business units, or alternatively that they should have directly elected people’s representatives as well as some appointed business people.

On Sunday, Jacinda Ardern said: “…politics is a place where we can do good, and that she “ … refused to accept the status quo.”

It would therefore be good to hear how she and other parties intend to change the status quo and re-democratize Auckland’s governance.

The Political Slogan Wars.

The Editor,
NZ Herald,
Auckland.

Dear Sir,

Letter to the Editor: Political Slogan Wars.

What does the National Party slogan “Delivering for New Zealanders “ mean?

Consider what has been “delivered” over the past nine years.

Tens of thousands of migrants and speculators forcing up house prices and putting a strain on schools, hospitals and other infrastructure.

Unacceptable numbers of poor and homeless. Insufficient funding for schools, healthcare, and hospitals.

No progress on the planetary emergency of global warming. Underfunding of the Department of Conservation and permitting private exploitation of minerals in our National Parks and marine areas. Our ever-increasing international debt. The rapid expansion of the dairy industry involving the taking of huge amounts of water and huge pollution problems for streams and ground water.

The privatisation of public assets such as State houses, and now public hospitals. The loss of local government democracy for Aucklanders.

I don’t remember ordering any of that. Do you?

Labour says “Let’s do this.” Do what? How? By when?

So far several thematic proposals without detail, costings or overly understated estimates.

Labour has been in opposition for nine years and even after that can’t come up with clear, well-researched plans for us to consider. Hardly likely to inspire confidence.
Just hope?

The Business of Water.

Posted 14.8.17. Unpublished elsewhere at this date.

There has been a lot of discussion and concern expressed in recent times about water, its ownership, its use and abuse.

It would have been very helpful if there had been either an expert Commission set up to carefully examine this matter, or that one or more of the political parties had provided some comprehensive, protective policies.

Instead, we have very little of substance from the incumbent government and half pie, somewhat tentative noises from most of the ‘opposition’ parties.

Water is the gold of this millennium. It is critical to the life us all.

Even with the huge amount of water on this planet, only 1% of it is fresh water, and half of that is already polluted, with pollution levels increasing across the world.

Equally scary is that with climate warming, our glaciers, major sources of many rivers, are shrinking at an unprecedented rate.

Some important people commented recently in articles that water is a necessity of life, a ‘public good’ and a human right, and so must remain in public ownership.

Over a number of years I have urged all Parliamentary parties to pass an Act enshrining this principle. Such (‘entrenched’) legislation would require a two-thirds Parliamentary majority vote to abolish public ownership of water, subject also to a public referendum with a two-thirds majority in favour.

Such legislation would prevent the commercialization, privatization and foreign control of our water supplies.

Fresh water, its ownership and control, is far too important to simply leave to politicians to meddle with.

Fran O’Sullivan is one of many deeply worried about the effects of urbanisation and farming intensification on our water. Those factors are leading to major, and possibly permanent destruction of much of our fresh water.

She, like many others, has strong proof of this catastrophe, including from this Government’s scientific adviser, Sir Peter Gluckman.

All of this points up the abject failure of the Government to deal with these problems and take strong remedial action, including the need for strong measures to ensure that dairying and industry are required to drastically up their game.

However, the farming lobby is very powerful and the Government relies on their support, and for the income produced overseas from milk products, which, together with housing speculation makes the economy appear falsely strong. The environment thus takes a battering.

The Adern Labour Party is also clearly intimidated by the influence of the dairy industry.

There are associated current commercial incursions into this public necessity through powers (under the RMA) which allow private companies to become “requiring authorities” and “network utility operators” with the powers of local authorities and government relating to water and compulsory acquisition powers under the Public Works Act!

Other concerns have also erupted previously related to some of the key issues as some local authorities and Watercare have looked at, or been using water, as a commodity which could be used as a tax/rate/profit-making device – a bit like the infamous old ‘salt tax.’

Some of the principal problems with that approach include treating water as a “commodity” not as a right and essential to life.

Immediately one moves from the human need and right to have good potable water at the lowest possible cost, to instead treat it as a privately owned/supplied commodity, one is rapidly moving to privatisation and profit making out of the “gold of this millennium.”

So legislation also has to prevent public owners of supply and reticulation from being able to do things as previously exemplified by Metrowater and proposals relating to Watercare (largely pushed by the then Auckland City Council).

Lessons from privatised water in the UK provide more than enough warning. It’s a case of rob the public to enrich the company’s investors.

In an article in the ‘Guardian’ some time ago, columnist Nick Cohen, didn’t mince his words. “How long,” he asked, “will it be before the stench from the monopolistic exploitation of water – the very stuff of life – reaches the public’s nostrils?”

Thames Water, Britain’s largest water company, proposes to increase its water levies on the millions of households it supplies, to build a multi-billion pound “super sewer.” (Thames Water is basically controlled by a consortium led by the Australian bank, Macquarie.)

Clearly a new sewer is needed, but what is being criticized is that this company has paid out 1.2 billion pounds in dividends to its investors. It has not provided funding from its ongoing levies over the years, but has instead paid out maximum dividends, while ignoring infrastructural needs. It has been high prices, high dividends and low infrastructural investment.

Significant comment comes from Jonson Cox (a former CEO of other water companies), who is now head of Ofwat, the water regulatory body. His view is that former colleagues were using “morally questionable” practices.
.
A ‘Guardian’ editorial suggested that regulators “…are worried that the whole dubious edifice of public utilities being owned by private monopolies is in danger of being discredited by obscure company structures, opaque tax regimes and a widespread perception that the customer is being ripped off.”

More than one observer has railed against the water companies, noting among their practices: widespread tax avoidance, high levels of ‘commercial confidentiality,’ loaded their books with debt and provided massive returns to their shareholders.

What seems surprising is that anyone (especially an intellectual newspaper) should expect any different sort of outcome. To give over the precious public natural resource of water to a monopoly, is to give that monopoly a licence to rip off the public. What is even worse is that most of the shares in UK’s water companies are not held by the public, but by private equity. To add a final insult to injuries, many of these shares are foreign-owned, so the profits go off shore.

The public are captives to their suppliers, and either have to pay increasingly exorbitant prices, or reduce their consumption of this vital necessity of life, so that hygiene and other health factors are affected for an increasing number.

Why should water, a necessity of life, be owned by a few profit-takers instead of the tried and true publicly owned, publicly controlled, non-profit making bodies which we have traditionally had in New Zealand.

The price of water depends ultimately on the ownership of that water and its distribution. And the price of that is constant public vigilance to ensure that this vital asset remains publicly owned, with direct accountability through a publicly elected Board and with the traditional requirement that it be a non-profit organization – something that needs to be constantly hammered home to governments and councils by all of us.

The “Opposition” Parties.

18.7.17

(Published in the NS Times, but not the NZ Herald.)

The Editor, The ‘Opposition’ Parties.

It seems that the various parties arguing for voters, are much more concerned with trying to demolish the other non-government parties, trying to one up them and take votes from them, rather than focussing on the government they say they want to replace.

So the tug of war between them goes on, in fact escalates, while the government party can sit back, unscathed, enjoying the pantomime.

National, will likely be laughing all the way to the ballot box.