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Porirua City Council welcomes 3 Water reforms

Porirua aerial

Porirua Mayor Anita Baker has welcomed the decision today that ownership of 3 Waters in New Zealand will remain in the hands of councils.

A working group established last year made recommendations to the Government on the future of drinking water, wastewater and stormwater, including local councils retaining ownership of infrastructure, and a new shareholding structure.

These reforms were announced at Pātaka in Porirua on Friday by the Minister for Infrastructure, Grant Robertson, and Minister of Local Government, Nanaia Mahuta.

Porirua City Council will be part of Entity C, covering 36 councils in the lower North Island.

Ms Baker says when plans for reforming the management and governance of 3 Waters were unveiled last year, Porirua City Council took the task of evaluating the proposal seriously, weighing it against the city’s current and future needs.

"It was a wake up call for us," she says.

"Without reform, this Council does not have the resources or capacity to deliver 3 Waters to an acceptable standard in the future and so we knew change had to come if we were to maintain water quality, infrastructure and services that our residents deserve.

"We therefore reviewed the 3 Waters reforms not in isolation, but in the context of what we know is an unsustainable status quo.

"We thank the Government for listening to councils’ concerns and making these important, necessary, governance changes that will create financially robust water entities."

The reforms are expected to begin 1 July, 2024 and will include regional representative groups and co-governance with mana whenua.

Porirua will receive a $21.4 million support package as part of the reforms.

29 Apr 2022