14 Nov 2025

Councillor Duncan coming at you again on this Friday, now with a clearer insight that our new Council is fast slipping back into the party line of the status quo, and that I could be wasting my time for the next three years. But I do hope I’m wrong, and I have been wrong before.

How can I speak so soon, you say? Well perhaps you can call it my more finely tuned political senses, but when everything from strategic Chamber seating arrangements to loaded prospective committee engagements, to just the way key information is starting to be ambushed upon us – one could be forgiven for mistaking that Deputy Mayor Kevin Taylor had won the election instead of John Funnell.
I really wish the elected member induction sessions the past few weeks could have been audio-visual recorded, because they could be educational for both the public and newly elects should they wish to go back and rewatch. These included what must have been a very expensive four-hour session with a lawyer flown in from Wellington, who talked about things from how local government works to conflicts of interest (and yes, the JMA incident did get passing mention).

Taupo District Council has been the most dysfunctional Council I have ever been associated with in my 25 years plus of experience in local government, and I am not saying that just to be mean. I do not mean dysfunctional in the way of some other Councils which aren’t even able to make major decisions, but that it currently functions to serve its staff first and then only afterward constituents, and that the decision-making process is fundamentally flawed with any voices of dissent systematically getting bypassed or ignored. I did not get to communicate this in person to the other elected members, because despite our supposed ability to ‘free and frankly discuss’ in these sessions and our (kindergarten style) prompt cards intended to help us get along, true to form I never got to finish.
Okay enough complaining, so how do we actually fix these things? Like I set out in my three campaign priority pledges, things have to start happening from the ground up. That includes stuff as simple as ensuring things get put in writing all of the time, and handing some of the Delegated Authorities from staff to elected members as I submitted to them just yesterday (and the referenced sample here). I also believe that for transparency’s sake, a default setting should be that any meeting of elected members in formal Council meetings, Workshops or Committees will get audio-visual recorded (the only exceptions being by justified exclusion).

So right now it seems to me that the circus is on the brink of setting up to carry on largely as before, and anybody with any brains in my position would quite probably want to get the heck out of it as soon as they possibly can. But these are still very early days and I don’t want to be too pessimistic, and of course as a Christian I still do believe in Miracles.
Apart from all that, this week we have:

Fires galore but whose to blame? Well after last week’s devasting local fires and heroic efforts, I am quite interested if the raging fires in Tongariro National Park could have been prevented. Surely there are some lessons to be learned, and were perhaps any previous warnings being ignored? I am no expert in this field, but it is fairly obvious to me that fires can start from any number of means and are only to be expected to happen sooner or later. So let’s see if we get a decent debrief, or (yawn) if it will simply be down to finger pointing at the nefarious person who might have started it.

But at least the Turangi airfield seems to have loudly demonstrated its community usefulness after all, as per this LifeFM report with comments from airfield operator Mike Fransham. This follows the controversy following Taupo District Councils abrupt withdrawal of support last Christmas, when I do not recall this aspect of its potential benefits being very significantly flagged.

Lakeside landgrab? #2… I reckon it is a universal truth everywhere that having deep pockets can avert getting run over by the wheels of bureaucracy, and also grease it in your favour. But is that really what is going on with the Te Kopua Street reserve in Acacia Bay? Media coverage of this issue is ongoing with this latest LakeFM piece, and I am still somewhat perturbed how it came to be. So far all I can get out of staff is a promise that this will be relooked at next year along with a whole bunch of other encroachments, which doesn’t come across as very satisfactory to me.

Elected members needing protection? So says this item about a couple of wahine Maori elected members feeling insecure and receiving threats But I say it isn’t just wahine Maori who are feeling uncomfortable, and I believe that we are at a certain point of time in New Zealand society when some things are starting to come to a head. I think the Renumeration Authorities offer on Councils behalf of $4500 plus $1000 annual maintenance to pay for home security is a little high though, because my own didn’t cost nearly that much – perhaps I should seek an upgrade? I remember as a teenager receiving bomb threats from political activists on the family telephone, that is a story for another day but it did help me realise that public figures do sometimes attract unwanted attention.

My advice to elected members or anyone feeling vulnerable: 1/ Get your address out of the White Pages asap; 2/ install security lighting; 3/ install camera surveillance; 4/ consider worst case scenario of home invasion and what means you have at your disposal to immediately respond. Online haters can be blocked easily enough, and realise that people may say a lot of things on a keyboard they would never say in person (just like alcohol does). In South Africa people get used to living in wire fenced fortresses, I don’t want that to happen for New Zealand but we are definitely heading in that direction.

Whipping it good: New Hamilton Mayor and former deputy school principal Tim Macindoe apparently isn’t taking any prisoners with the way he wants to run his Council, as this report in the Waikato Times sets out. I can tell you that is not the way things the new Mayor of Taupo is running things – nor would I particularly want him to – but who knows, perhaps he may change his mind over time. I still remember one of my intermediate schoolteachers fresh out of teacher training, whose demeanor was vastly different at the end of the school year when detentions became as common as the lollies she originally handed out.

What does this have to do with Council? I say that the latest scandal involving NZ Police has everything to do with local government, and I am not just saying that because we have an ex-senior policeman as our Deputy Mayor. In this report author Bryce Edwards argues that repeated abuses of office are not only systemic, but that the ramifications of the revealed corruption and collusion will extend well beyond just the NZ Police. I really hope they do, because this countries reputation as one of the least corrupt places in the world is in my opinion quite misguided. One journalists interesting observation:


Even men and women of apparent integrity found themselves along for the ride in 1930’s Germany, and they were people not so different from us. So the warning is clear – don’t just follow the programme because everybody else is.
I reckon that for Councils, one symptom of malaise is a lack of transparency and accountability. For Taupo, I say the demolishing of a perfectly good Council building and the appalling treatment of Council staff who refused the Covid-19 jab were very big mistakes to which we never heard any official acknowledgement. Because to truly learn from a mistake, acknowledgement first needs to happen.

Inspiring speakers influence: Young politician William Wood of Palmerston North recently gave an inspired speech at a Council debate to speak against the presence of un-elected representatives on Council committees (his argument won the day), something which both myself and Mayor John Funnell also pledged against. I must say though, William speaks as if he were in the house of Parliament than just little old Palmerston North City Council, and I expect he will go far in politics. Interesting sidenote: Unlike at Taupo District Council, elected members there are apparently permitted to attend and vote on committees even if they are not official members.
Friday quiz about a man with nothing left to lose: Marvyn Heemeyer – was he a villain or a hero?
NOTE: I probably won’t be doing the next Fri update until week after next
