Water entity CEOs (from left): Jon Lamonte, Vaughan Payne, Colin Crampton and Michael Brewster. Picture / WSR Herald montage
OPINION: The Public Purse is a brand new fortnightly Herald column centered on the general public sector and the way taxpayer cash is spent.
Buried within the Water Companies Entities Invoice handed in December and adopted by three extra items of laws – the final of which can revise the primary – is a comforting requirement.
Clause 162, subclause 1(a) says the water companies entities’ annual studies should embody the remuneration obtained or payable to every of the chief executives and board members in that monetary yr.
Good. When these new public entities are established to run our storm, waste and ingesting water companies, they’ll be obliged to reveal what they’re paying their execs with, you recognize, ratepayers’ cash.
You may suppose that the Division of Inner Affairs (DIA) would take in the spirit of this regulation and inform the general public what it’s already paying the 4 institution chief executives it employed earlier this yr to launch the brand new water companies entities (WSEs).
However it has higher issues to do as officers race headlong to a deadline of August 31, when the Home rises for the election interval, by which era the Authorities’s intention is that each one of its water payments can have hurtled by way of Parliament and be snugly bedding in.
The Herald requested the entire remuneration for the brand new chief executives below the provisions of the Official Data Act (OIA), however the DIA, which is main the water reform, refused the request for privateness causes.
It did, nevertheless, verify that the salaries sit inside a variety of $602,500 to $815,500 per yr, which suggests a really tidy pay rise for at the very least three of the 4 executives in query.
Simply final yr the 2 highest-paid executives in public water companies had been Jon Lamonte, on $585,000 and working Watercare for the Auckland Council, and Colin Crampton, on $455,000 who runs Wellington Water for six councils in that area.
Jon Lamonte.
As a part of the Authorities’s contentious plan to reform and enhance the supply of Three Waters companies, it’s consolidating the belongings of some 67 native councils into 10 new WSEs – however we’re getting forward of ourselves. Keep in mind it additionally claims it’s going to decrease the worth.
In January, when the DIA employed Lamonte and Crampton to run new water companies entity A (Auckland and Northland) and entity C (east coast North Island and the highest of the South Island) respectively, the plan was for simply 4 new WSEs. In January and March, it employed a complete of 4 institution chief executives.
Colin Crampton. Picture / Mark Tantrum
Auckland and Northland‘s entity A is by far the most important of the brand new our bodies, and it’s probably that Lamonte’s wage now falls within the high half of DIA’s vary, which might quantity to a pay rise of anyplace from 20 per cent to 40 per cent. Not unhealthy, when you think about that the Auckland and Northland entity will cowl a inhabitants of 1.7 million, solely a smidgeon bigger than the inhabitants of 1.6 million Lamonte coated at Watercare.
The pay of the opposite three executives seems extra extraordinary nonetheless. The Northland and Auckland entity is the one WSE which has not shrunk because the chief executives’ hiring.
Recall that final yr, then Minister of Native Authorities Nanaia Mahuta advised Parliament that the 4 new water companies entities had been of very appreciable “nationwide significance”, and that their chief executives can be paid accordingly.
Nanaia Mahuta. Picture / Getty Photos
In setting their wage vary, the Authorities would look to different public organisations of the same scale, she stated.
She cited Transpower, New Zealand Put up, the Accident Compensation Company, Kāinga Ora, Watercare, Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Company, and KiwiRail.
Chief govt salaries for these organisations ranged from $585,000 on the backside finish (which, by the way, represented Lamonte’s earnings working Watercare in fiscal yr 2021/22) as much as the $1.345m that the DIA gauged was paid to KiwiRail’s chief govt Greg Miller (this roughly corresponds to his 21/22 wage throughout 12 months, excluding efficiency pay).
However right here’s the hitch. If you happen to’ve been following this muddy outdated water enterprise, you’ll know that in April, just some months after legislating to create 4 new water companies entities and after hiring their institution chief execs, the Authorities scrapped that plan as insufficiently native (learn “very unpopular”).
The Water Companies Entities Modification Act, now making its means by way of Parliament, will disestablish the 4 previously-planned WSEs, and the roles of their chief executives (with the notable exception of the Auckland and Northland chief govt, whose submit is preserved). And it paves the way in which for 10 new WSEs, all – aside from Auckland and Northland – significantly smaller than the sooner configuration, with fewer clients to serve, and fewer belongings to handle.
9 of the ten entities willneed to be established by July 1, 2026, a delay of two years. Auckland and Northland alone stays on the unique reform schedule of “go stay” by July 1, 2024.
Regardless of the delay and the diminution, the DIA confirmed (below the provisions of the OIA) that there have been no revisions to the institution chief executives’ salaries.
When Crampton took the job of working entity C, it was anticipated to cowl a inhabitants of some 955,000, unfold throughout the highest of the South Island and alongside the east coast of the North Island.
If he finally will get the job of working entity G, the revised Wellington entity (inhabitants 516,000), his operation wouldn’t be very considerably bigger than that coated by his outdated employer Wellington Water. Regardless of that, his pay has risen between 32 and 80 per cent.
Waikato Regional Council CEO Vaughan Payne.
The DIA’s third chief govt rent, Vaughan Payne, is equally on pay scaled to an entity the dimensions and significance of which now not applies. When he was engaged in January, entity B comprised the central North Island, together with Waikato and Taranaki. It coated 799,610 clients. Beneath the revised 10 entity plan, entity B shall be shrunk to Waikato and canopy a inhabitants of simply 364,799 clients.
Till final December, Payne made $375,000 to $395,000 as deputy chief govt operations on the Authorities’s still-struggling, merged super-polytech, Te Pūkenga (his function was disestablished).
The fourth new water govt, Mike Brewster – an Australian who beforehand ran Tasmania’s TasWater by way of a interval of appreciable reform – is just an interim rent on a 12-month fixed-term contract. He began work in March as a stop-gap after the candidate to run entity D pulled out of the method.
As such his job was to “assist the transition” for entity D, which then coated the majority of the South Island and a few 854,000 clients. The most important South Island entity now anticipated is entity I, which would come with the West Coast and Canterbury and soak up 607,000 clients.
Michael Brewster, CEO of Water Companies Entity D.
Whether or not Brewster, Payne and Crampton are finally employed to run any of the brand new WSEs, and on what pay, shall be as much as these our bodies’ institution boards, that are anticipated to be shaped someday between the passing of the present modification invoice and July 2026.
It didn’t need to unfold this manner. When the chief govt job search started in August final yr, the ink was nonetheless drying on some 90,000 public submissions on the Water Companies Entities Invoice that was but to create the roles. Even a cursory look at that massive quantity of suggestions prompt severe opposition, to not reform per se, however to this plan for it.
It was a possibility to pause and rethink. As a substitute, the DIA splashed $501,000 on a seek for 4 executives (which appears fairly extraordinary, contemplating that two had been discovered already working the identical council-owned water belongings they had been employed to take over).
The Authorities’s reconsideration didn’t come till April 2023, after Chris Hipkins succeeded Jacinda Ardern as Prime Minister, and public discontent threatened to fester all the way in which to an October election.
Even now, Opposition events Nationwide and Act vow to repeal the water reforms if given the chance.
Within the meantime, the brand new chief executives stay on the DIA’s books, its 4 best-paid staffers, all of whom make significantly greater than the $538,000 earned within the final fiscal yr by the division’s personal chief govt.