Regional Councillor Wilson under fire for ‘serving Otaki poorly’
Nigel Wilson, the Greater Wellington Regional Councillor for the Kapiti area, has come under a blistering attack from the former Kapiti deputy Mayor Ann Chapman.
In her latest column, Ann Chapman says Mr Wilson has damaged Otaki by his ‘neglect and absence’ when the urgent transport needs of the area were being considered by the Regional Council.
The criticism comes as part of her larger arguemnt that the GWRC is shamefully neglecting Otaki’s needs.
Here’s her column —
The Three O’s — Otaki, Others and Outrage
By Ann Chapman
Recently the Greater Wellington – The Regional Council produced their Proposed Wellington Regional Transport Plan for 2011-2021.
Boring you may think but important for Otaki in what it doesn’t say and how it does not provide for our future needs. We are mere ‘others’ – of no importance in their future plans. This is a 10 year plan for the future of the region and Otaki is not there. We don’t rate a mention until after 2021.
Otaki it seems, is viewed as an outlier – of little or no importance. GW does not rate us. We contribute to the rates pool and get poor return for that.
They may argue that we get a bus service. Well yes. But does it work for us? They may argue that they have provided safety for out town in the form of river works. Well yes but Otaki and the rest of Kapiti brought priority to complete that works programme otherwise we would still be waiting for the stop banks to be completed.
‘How dumb is that?’
If Otaki is not to be isolated further after the by-pass is built it needs proper adequate public transport and planning for that needs to start now, not in ten years. Under this current plan out for consultation the GW don’t propose to start looking at our future needs until 10 years hence. How dumb is that? How lacking in forethought is that?
In spite of many years of my own advocacy, that of council’s and now repeated harping by Penny Gaylor (Otaki Community Board )on about the need to double track the rail network to Otaki we are classed as ‘others’.
To provide for our growing population, to be ready for future development and to sit aside the work being done on our economic development in the ‘Clean Tec’ campus along Riverbank Road, our future needs must be planned for now.
Residentially-focused Eastbourne gets into the regional council’s frame. We do not, even though we are classed as the major urban growth area of for the region.
We have a strong education focus and a major developmental potential linked to the rural productive land and local food concepts. Eastbourne does not. It raises the question as to whether Eastbourne residents – in their secluded iconic environment- pay higher rates than us and are therefore classified as more worthy.
In the submission to GW, KCDC noted ‘It is difficult to see given the strategic focus on Otaki, that a future network plan could argue that this area should have the ‘other’ category applied to it. It is important to note that this classification system hides the fact that that the Wairarapa towns have a rail service within this ‘other’ category.’
Planning needed for rail network
Otaki needs for GW to be planning our future rail network now not in ten years time when it will be too late. GW failed the community when it did not come out fighting for the Western Link and have been silent on the proposed Otaki By-pass.
It should have and could have double tracked the rail corridor at the same time as the Waikanae link was done. That would have made sense economically and strategically and provided for our future potential growth. To recognise the need in ten years time is too little too late. This is unacceptable to the Kapiti Coast District Council and should be inacceptable to the Otaki people.
‘O’ for Outrage
The final O is for outrage. We should be! We need to be if our town is not to be left behind at the whim of the Greater Wellington Regional Council.
And where was our regional councillor when this document was developed and argued. Did he alert us? Where was he when submissions were being heard? Was he listening?
No he wasn’t even there. I understand he was on his annual lengthy jaunt to New York. Does that warrant another “o” andanother outrage? Yes it does.
Nigel Wilson has served us poorly in this matter. Perhaps it is not high profile enough for him. Perhaps Otaki does not matter to him.
And so my questions are Mr Wilson – what are you going to do now to repair the damage you have done to this town in your neglect and absence? Where will you advocacy be now? And will you support us?
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