Got Questions? You’re Not Alone

Whether it’s at the supermarket checkout, on the sidelines of my kids’ sports games, or while out door knocking, people often ask me the same things.

To save you hunting for answers, I’ve brought them together here. From rates and water meters to protecting our soils and my thoughts on amalgamation, you’ll find clear text responses to the questions I’m asked most often.

I’ve also included short videos where I talk through the bigger topics in more detail, like how council debt works and what I’ve been doing over the past eight years on Council.

You’ve been on Council for 8 years, what have you been doing?

People often ask me what councillors actually do beyond the headlines and the meetings.

In this video, I explain why I fought for live-streaming (so you can see council decisions for yourself) and how important I believe it is to stay deeply connected to our community, which I do through my roles with the Disability Reference Group, Positive Ageing Trust, Multicultural Advisory Group, and our business associations.

If you’d like the fuller picture of my background, you can see more detail on the initiatives I’ve led here…

How on earth did Hastings end up with more than $400 million in debt?

That’s the question I get asked most often on the campaign trail, and it’s the one I answer in this video.

From drinking water upgrades after the Havelock North water crisis, to the costs of growth, community calls to protect what we love, and of course the massive impact of Cyclone Gabrielle - this is the context behind the numbers you keep hearing.

This video isn’t about what I’ll do next ...that comes in my next video.

But before we can talk about solutions, we need to be honest about how we got here. I want you to have the full picture, because leadership should start with trust and transparency.

You can see my plans for how we address our debt and rates here…

What are you going to do to reduce Hastings’ rates and debt?

In my the video above, I explained how Hastings ended up with more than $400 million in debt. This time, I’m sharing what I’m doing about it.

For me, the plan is simple: cut what doesn’t deliver, protect what does, and keep Hastings moving forward.

This video is just the starting point. You can also explore my detailed plans:

 Other frequently asked questions

  • Residential water metering shouldn’t be introduced right now. Installing meters in every home would cost $20-30 million, and Hastings is still reeling from the hundreds of millions we’ve had to shoulder after Cyclone Gabrielle. That’s why, as part of the Long-Term Plan working group, I supported taking meters off the table for now.

    Households already pay for water through our rates. The bill is spread across everyone, no matter how much you use. Meters wouldn’t mean paying for water for the first time, they’d just change it to “the more you use, the more you pay.”

    The problem is that higher use isn’t always about waste or luxury, it can be about need. A big family in Camberley may end up paying more just to cover everyday showers and laundry, while a household in Havelock might use the same amount of water on a swimming pool or a green lawn. That’s why any move to metering must build in fairness.

    In the meantime, water use continues to be a key focus, with Hastings using around 44 million litres a day in summer – that’s about 18 Olympic swimming pools. That scale shows why every leak we fix and every litre we save makes a real difference, because we can’t take our water for granted.

    Hastings already uses strategic meters across the network to track leaks, and repairing those saves far more water for far less cost than dropping a new bill on every kitchen table.

    Longer-term, yes, water meters will almost certainly be part of our future. Our consent limits and growth pressures point that way. But they should only be introduced when they’re fair, affordable, and backed by the community – not by loading $30m debt onto households before Hastings can afford it.

  • Pressure on councils to deliver value is entirely fair. Families across Hastings are hurting from the rising cost of groceries, fuel, power – and rates. But rate capping is a blunt instrument that takes away local choice without fixing the real problem.

    In the very places on which this idea is being modelled (New South Wales and Victoria) capping rates has led to deferred infrastructure, crumbling services, and less local say. That’s the path Hastings can’t afford, especially during cyclone recovery.

    Here in Hastings, we’ve shown what happens when decisions are made locally, with our people. When New Zealand was in the grips of a housing crisis, our Council brought together government, iwi and private industry to unlock millions in external funding and speed up housing delivery. The result? The number of people in emergency accommodation reduced by more than 75%. That’s fewer kids growing up in motels and more homes for seniors to downsize to, creating supply for families.

    Rate capping would hand bureaucrats in Wellington the power to override what Hastings people ask for in their own community. If locals want to prioritise fixing pipes, building housing infrastructure, or protecting services, those choices could be blocked if they fall outside a government-set cap.

    What I support is genuine accountability, not caps. Hastings’ ratepayers deserve to see where every dollar goes, to hold us to account, and to expect discipline with their money. As Mayor, I’ll keep squeezing waste out of the budget and make every dollar work harder, but I won’t back a cap that forces Hastings to ask Wellington for permission before we can invest in our own future.

  • Yes, I support retaining Māori wards.

    In 2021, we asked our community whether Hastings should establish a Māori ward, and more than 70% of submissions said yes. Council followed that clear direction.

    That’s why I’m disappointed that, at a time when rates are already under pressure from cyclone recovery, our community is being asked to fund another referendum on a decision we’ve already consulted on.

    For me, Māori wards are not about division, they’re about fair representation. Almost a third of Hastings residents are Māori, and having Māori voices at the council table strengthens decisions for everyone. I’ve seen that first-hand this term, with Māori ward councillors being some of the strongest advocates for keeping rates affordable and supporting low and fixed- income families.

    This referendum is now in the community’s hands. Whatever the outcome, I’ll keep working to be a Mayor for all of Hastings.

  • I’ve long believed Hawke’s Bay would benefit from a stronger regional voice. Back in 2015, when amalgamation first went to referendum, I was running a business in Napier and living in our family home in Hastings. Even then, before I had ever considered entering local politics, I could see how much sense it made for our region to come together.

    Cyclone Gabrielle proved it again. When we spoke as one voice, central government listened and millions in funding followed. We’re already moving that way. Hastings provides IT services for other councils, we’ve got the Mātariki Governance Group driving shared economic development projects, and water reform and building consenting are potentially shifting to regional entities. It’s fair to ask why we still need five separate councils.

    But here’s the key: any move toward amalgamation must be staged, and it must protect our local voice. One strong regional council can deliver infrastructure and advocacy better, but communities still need a say in the decisions closest to them.

    As Mayor, I’ll back practical regionalisation that reduces duplication, while making sure Hastings people keep the local representation they deserve. One voice where it makes sense, local voice where it matters.

  • Hastings is both a food bowl and a growing district. It’s the balancing of these two positives that we can’t afford to get wrong.

    We’re on the right track with the new 30-year Future Development Strategy, but there’s more work to do. It commits around 60% of our future homes to intensification. That’s up rather than out, so more homes are built within our existing suburbs, where pipes, roads and services already exist. For ratepayers, that’s the single biggest rates saver we’ve got, because it avoids kilometres of costly new infrastructure and protects the soils that employ and feed us.

    But zoning alone doesn’t guarantee homes get built, or that they’re the right types. Our ageing population needs more single‑level, accessible homes. Young families need affordable first homes. Māori whānau are calling for more papakāinga. That’s why a balanced strategy matters. We need carefully staged greenfield alongside intensification, so we meet demand responsibly without undermining productive land. Already, this approach has helped move hundreds of people out of emergency accommodation into permanent homes – proof that careful planning delivers real results.

    The same discipline applies to industrial land. The strategy protects key areas at Irongate and Omahu, where infrastructure and transport links already exist. That avoids scattering industry across productive land and makes sure jobs grow in step with housing. Getting that balance right is just as important as where we put homes, because families need both roofs and reliable work close by.

    The next step is uptake. Through Council’s Strategy and Recovery work, Local Area Plans are being developed with communities. To make medium‑density genuinely attractive, people need more than a section and a roof – they need green spaces, public transport, and local shops and jobs nearby. Creating those conditions is what will really unlock uptake.

    Looking ahead, we need ever better tools. Regional spatial planning gives us the chance to map our soils more precisely so we’re protecting the most productive land but not needlessly locking up land that could responsibly house families. In plain terms, it’s about drawing the map properly; knowing which paddocks grow our food best, and which areas can take homes without sacrificing what feeds us.

    While more rural housing may well be part of the solution in the future and is appealing for some, spreading it widely before a spatial plan is completed means the potential for higher costs for everyone else (through expansive new infrastructure), and risks losing the very soils that underpin our economy. That’s why spatial planning and soil mapping matter.

    We’re on the right track, but we need to keep refining. Government expectations, market demand, and climate risks are constantly shifting. Our job is to keep our plans agile and disciplined. That way we can protect the land that feeds us, while delivering homes and jobs so our kids can build their futures here.

Do you have a question not answered on this page?