Broad range in 17 finalists for local govt EXCELLENCE awards
Broad range in 17 finalists for local government EXCELLENCE Awards
From a weed blitz to mountain biking and innovative economic strategy, finalists in the 2017 Local Government New Zealand (LGNZ) EXCELLENCE Awards span a broad range of outstanding council leadership initiatives.
The awards, now in their fourth year, recognise and celebrate the key role local government plays within New Zealand communities.
From 56 applications, 17 finalists for five awards have been named, with winners to be announced at the LGNZ conference dinner in Auckland on 24 July 2017.
LGNZ President Lawrence Yule says local government plays an essential role in driving residential, community and economic activity throughout New Zealand and the finalists in the EXCELLENCE Awards showcased outstanding leadership being provided by councils throughout the country.
“Local government is at the centre of every community in New Zealand, helping shape the environment in which we work and play,” Mr Yule says.
“Being named as a finalist is a great achievement and reflects the vision shown by councils and the innovative work being done by staff. The finalists include some exceptional projects that are having a profound impact on communities.”
Local authorities were
invited to submit award applications in five
categories:
• Fulton Hogan EXCELLENCE
Award for Community Engagement
•
Creative New Zealand EXCELLENCE Award for Best Creative
Place
• Air New Zealand EXCELLENCE Award
for Environmental Impact
• Chorus
EXCELLENCE Award for Best Practice in Infrastructure
•
Crown Fibre Holdings EXCELLENCE Award for Best Practice
Contribution to Local Economic Development
Judges for the
awards are former Wellington Mayor Kerry Prendergast, Chair
of EQC Sir Maarten Wevers and The New Zealand Initiative’s
Director, Dr Oliver Hartwich.
For
more information on the finalists visit lgnz.co.nz/news-and-media
The 17 finalists in the LGNZ EXCELLENCE
Awards 2017 are:
Fulton Hogan EXCELLENCE Award for
Community Engagement
• Hutt
City Council – Transformation Taita - Aiming to create a
brighter future for all young people while building a
stronger community, Transformation Taita offers access to
facilities, resources and activities to those who need it
most.
• Queenstown Lakes District
Council – QLDC Winter Morning Road Reports - Throughout
winter, seven days a week, QLDC provides early morning
reports on road conditions throughout the district to
thousands of people across multiple communications
channels.
• Tasman District Council –
Moturoa/Rabbit Island Reserve Management Plan (RMP) - An
innovative approach when developing a new RMP for one of the
region’s best-loved recreational spaces resulted in
meaningful community consultation and genuine buy-in from
stakeholder groups.
• Thames-Coromandel
District Council – Our Coromandel Summer Magazine - With
inserts into rates bills largely discarded, this high-end
magazine targets the 60 percent of ratepayers who live
outside the district, encouraging them to visit more often
and stay longer, while keeping them informed about what’s
happening in the region.
• Waikato
Regional Council – Healthy Rivers: Plan for Change/Wai
Ora: He Rautaki Whakapaipai - Healthy Rivers Wai Ora is a
courageous collaborative approach to improving water
quality, empowering communities to own the problems - and
solutions - in arguably New Zealand’s most important
catchment area.
Creative New Zealand
EXCELLENCE Award Best Creative Place
•
Napier City Council – City Vision: Small City, Big Ideas -
This overarching strategy for projects in the City Centre,
Ahuriri and the Waterfront areas is guiding Napier to an
integrated future where opportunities are seized and the
city is both beautiful and memorable.
•
Waikato District Council – Placemaking Programme - This
programme is reclaiming public spaces by encouraging groups
and individuals to develop artistic and cultural ideas for
projects as diverse as delivery of library services through
Little Libraries, and knitting poppies for trees to mark
Anzac Day.
Air New Zealand EXCELLENCE Award
for Environmental Impact
•
Environment Southland – Southland Dairy Effluent Advisory
Group project - A partnership between Environment Southland
and milk producers, and the dairy industry body, sees dairy
farmers who need assistance to comply with discharge
consents given the help they need before they become
seriously non-compliant.
• Palmerston
North City Council – Green Corridors Palmerston North -
More than 150,000 native trees have so far been planted as
part of this project to connect the Tararua Ranges to the
Manawatu River through a corridor of native plants alongside
streams and tributaries, improving water quality and
bringing birdlife back to the city.
•
Waikato Regional Council – Velvetleaf biosecurity response
- Velvetleaf, one of the most damaging invasive pest plants,
was the target of an intensive incursion response in 2016
leading to management plans for infestations and biosecurity
plans that are now used nationwide.
Chorus
EXCELLENCE Award for Best Practice in Infrastructure
Management
• Waikato District
Council – Waikato District Alliance - The Alliance is the
largest purely roading group in the country, with an
integrated team of council staff, contractors and suppliers
working together to improve asset management, and renewal
and maintenance services to the community – dramatically
improving response times.
• Hamilton
City Council – Rototuna Reservoir – supporting growth
and building resilience in Hamilton -
More than just a
water storage solution, Rototuna Reservoir and its pumping
equipment and bulk mains are integrated in planned land use,
and designed to ensure resilience for Hamilton in case of
emergency.
Crown Fibre
Holdings EXCELLENCE Award for Best Practice Contribution to
Local Economic Development
•
Hastings District Council – Papakainga Development Policy
& Implementation Project 2007-17 - Leadership by the council
has seen strategic issues that were preventing development
of Māori land investigated and resolved, enabling
well-supported developments to get up and running.
•
Hauraki District Council – Economic Development Strategy
“Toward 2025” - “Toward 2025” builds on the highly
successful strategy adopted in 2013, using a range of
proactive and practical intervention projects to focus the
community on achieving development goals that have already
seen more than $100 million in investment coming to the
region, including major international investment.
•
Rotorua Lakes Council – Rotorua Mountain Biking Strategy -
The strategy to establish Rotorua as a globally recognised
mountain bike destination has seen visits to the
Whakarewarewa Mountain Bike Park increased from 55,000 in
2005 to 250,000 in 2016, with resulting job growth coming
from increased investment in retail and support
businesses.
• Selwyn District Council
– Izone Business Park Development - The Izone Business
Park is New Zealand’s largest fully consented and
development-ready industrial park with 68 new businesses
employing 1,200 people. Another 800 jobs are forecast as
development work is completed by land purchasers.
•
West Coast Regional Council – Untamed Natural Wilderness -
The West Coast’s exciting new brand has dramatically
boosted tourism in the region, and is an ideal antidote to
the decline in other major economic sectors that was
damaging the social fabric of local communities.