
Letters to the Editor: DCC, heritage and Gaza
The Dunedin City Council has nearly chalked up four decades of moving beyond the legacy of the pre-1989 local body amalgamation.
With amalgamation of the St Kilda borough, it was promised a new South Dunedin Public Library would be established. What a battle that has been, to see this promise honoured.
Then, until 1989, with Green Island being a separate borough, the sewage from the Dunedin City hill suburbs, directed down Kaikorai Valley, could not continue on into another borough for treatment, so was (ingenious idea at the time) channelled through a pipe, via the original 1870s Caversham railway tunnel and through South Dunedin to Musselburgh.
Since 1989, the much larger Dunedin City Council has had the opportunity to rectify this anomaly. Even with the lobbying from the cycling fraternity in recent decades to upgrade the original 1870s Caversham railway tunnel and turn it into an integral part of a new cycle way, the lobbying has certainly not fast tracked the removal of the sewage pipe.
Come on DCC bureaucracy, stop treating the South Dunedin community with the blatant contempt that has become all too obvious. None of our local streets should be subjected to repeats of contaminated flood waters such as those of our respective residents in Surrey St, who have been putting up with this diabolical situation for several decades now. The cumulative four decades of bureaucratic culture in the DCC reminds one of the phrase: to push water uphill. Heritage and housing
Re Lyndon Fairbairn's comments (Opinion ODT 2.7.25) in "A masterclass in how to block progress" I would note that Dunedin is renowned for its heritage appeal. Christchurch, sadly, has very few heritage places to retrofit.
The current carbon copies of homes crammed in together, built in 10+ Dunedin suburbs, diminishes the streetscape of each suburb. They do not enhance the heritage look and feel of Dunedin as a whole.
As a past developer, I budgeted for the cost of "red tape", that you say, "stifle progress". As a prudent financier I totally concur with the councillor, who claimed we were "leading the industry". The checks and balances were made to protect others.
On one hand you say, "once New Zealand's fourth largest city, Dunedin is falling behind" yet at the same time also urge, "the needs of a growing population". Which is it?
The comments about Dunedin having poor housing catastrophises, is unnecessary and harsh. As a prudent landlord who ensures that each apartment is totally Healthy Homes compliant, I find it alarming to read your evaluation of Dunedin rentals and see that as not becoming from a professional man like yourself.
I have seen so many two-storeyed wooden lookalike, little boxes. Are we creating the slums of the future?
We must make retrofitting our first option to protect our heritage established by the early pioneers (who fled from a lack of space, overcrowding and oppressive conditions) and give people appealing, interesting, architecture that will meet Healthy Home requirements, to live in.
[Abridged — length. Editor.] Fitting session
How ironic that David Seymour accuses Te Pāti Māori of "insane views" and being in Parliament to "wreck it" (democracy) when it is his party's Regulatory Standards Bill that is the real wrecking ball for democracy. Likewise Shane Jones calling the Otago Regional Council the "Kremlin of the South Island" when it is his party trumpeting the fast-track legislation which is attempting to sideline the democratic process. When the cap fits. Painting a reminder of respected literary figures
Congratulations to Quinn Bailey and others involved in the Connect[ed] exhibition at the Dunedin Public Art Gallery. ( ODT 3.6.25).
The painting that features prominently behind Quinn is worthy of a bit more mention than the title, Artist and Dunedin Writer Friends . This work by the late Dunedin artist Ivan Hill was featured at the Artists and Writers Exhibition back when the gallery was still located at Logan Park circa 1994. Ivan depicts himself floating downward with a glass of wine and surrounded by tumbling kereru to join his writer friends.Those featured include George Griffiths, Hone Tuwhare, Errick Olssen, Peter Olds, Cilla McQueen, Brian Turner and Roger Hall.
If Ivan were alive today he would take great pride in knowing his work would feature in this worthwhile health/art concept It's a scandal
Page 3 ODT 24.6.25: $16m support package for Ukraine. Headline below: Housing project cuts 'perfect storm' for rise in homelessness. People living in tents locally while our government scatters money frivolously. Scandalous. Mayor's letter post-Gaza vote slap in face
Thank you for your article on the mayor's letter ( ODT 3.6.25): it does help mitigate the shock at this slap in the face for it not to be swept under the rug.
As one of those who got the ball rolling, the main thing I'd like readers to understand is that we came to the Dunedin City Council with this, to ask them for cross-party support.
To the question "is it appropriate for council to be requesting the government to ask their own MPs to support a minor opposition party's Bill?" I'd say emphatically yes, it is. Because council were given a clear roadmap. They were told: "Only six more coalition MPs are needed to give this an urgent first reading at central government. Thanks to a new tool, Standing Order 288, MPs can vote their conscience. We don't believe a good conscience stops deadlocked at political party lines. Here at local level, you're also a broad political church. You have community backing. So you have an opportunity here, with somewhat lower stakes, to light the path for the higher-ups."
That's why Cr Garey said the mayor's letter undermined the whole idea. Councillors were directly asked to consider a conciliatory approach and they chose to make it party political and divisive.
Faced with the ethical dilemma of "might this give a party we disagree with a windfall?" versus "how can we help alleviate locals' suffering?" detractors decided the former was more important.
It was irrelevant who had introduced this Bill. We all would have preferred the sitting government to put forward their own legislation well before more than the combined tonnage of Dresden, Hamburg and London in World War 2 was dropped on Gaza.
It is a small strip of land roughly the size of Invercargill but home to 2.1 million people, half of whom are children.
Address Letters to the Editor to: Otago Daily Times, PO Box 517, 52-56 Lower Stuart St, Dunedin. Email: editor@odt.co.nz
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Otago Daily Times
2 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
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"If you have a look at the types of organisations that get support from the class-4 gaming industry, it's such a broad spectrum of the community. "They help us with rent. They help us with insurance. They help us with staff salaries so that we can get staff out into the schools to support kids being active." "Without that, I think it will have such a significant effect on what it means to be a community in New Zealand." The proposed Online Casino Gambling Bill threatens to further chip away at the available pool of funds. The licensed online casinos would not be compelled to make community funding grants as the Bill stands. Former New Zealand Cricket boss Martin Snedden is leading the charge to get into the ear of the decision-makers. Submissions close on August 17 and McGowan encouraged sports organisations to engage in the process. "The flow-on effects for this could be catastrophic for community activity and sport," McGowan said. Kinley said it was important to impress upon the government the challenges "sport will face across the sector if this should be approved in its current form". "If clubs and sports can't access other forms of funding to support the community game, it'll be passed back to participants," he said. "So potentially the cost of participating in sport will increase, which is something that none of us want to see. "If we have less people participating in all sports because of financial difficulties, that could be potentially quite detrimental to society as a whole." McLean said hockey was in the same boat. "Class-4 gaming funding is really important in terms of supporting what we can deliver to the community," he said. "We want hockey to be as accessible as possible. "Anything that risks reducing the amount of class-4 funding that's available is obviously of concern ." Costs rising The other half of the battle to keep the books in balance is the rising expenses. Everything has gone up from the halftime oranges to the user charges for Dunedin City Council grounds and facilities. The latter has been quite a hike. McGowan said user charges have more than doubled since 2018. He has seen Southern Football's bill grow from $42,202 to $98,119 in 2025. It has been reluctant to pass that extra cost on to members and has instead opted to reduce the number of fields it uses to bring down the cost. Southern Football has budgeted a loss of $58,000 this financial period but that may double, McGowan said. The association cannot keep absorbing the costs. McGowan said he was going to have to have an awkward conversation with one club about its ongoing financial viability. It could lead to the club closing. He declined to say which one. Nation said the problem was widespread. "I think clubs are really having to have those conversations about their financials and how do we make sure that we are viable." Fewer volunteers The burden of helping bridge the gap between rising expenses and revenue often falls to volunteers, who are in dwindling supply. "They're there for the love of the sport and helping people out and not for the rewrite of their constitution and chasing up funding all the time," Nation said. "It's not a recipe for a great future. "I think there's a really core pool of volunteers that most clubs have. They may be ageing. "They may be struggling to bring people in. But I think the good clubs out there have got good structures in place, and they look after their volunteers, and they're doing well. "So it seems like for the level of people that are playing, it is pretty healthy across the board in Otago. "But I think there is a bit of a tipping point there ... and it's not going to take much to turn it to being a bit of an exodus." It is a gloomy assessment that Nation walked back a little by adding he does not believe the volunteer base has thinned as much in Otago as in other parts of the country. McGowan had similar thoughts. "We've got a very strong group of volunteers, some of them with considerable experience, who do an amazing job. And it's a big job now. "It's not like it used to be, where you'd just turn up on a Saturday and put the nets up. "They are running large organisations which have large cash flows. "We know our volunteers are required to do more and more, and it almost becomes like a second job for many of them. "I think it's got harder and harder, so I think we will start to see an impact on that pretty soon." Kinley said referee and coaching numbers were holding, but they did not keep statistics on overall volunteer numbers. "I would say that what I've found over the years, and this is a general comment, is that we tend to follow the things that happen in other areas of the country. 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Otago Daily Times
2 days ago
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Councillors deadlocked over ‘huge' removal of carparks in Albany St
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Otago Daily Times
2 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Jim O'Malley claims he's been targeted by council boss
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