Celebrating 25 Years of Scoop
Special: Up To 25% Off Scoop Pro Learn More

Local Govt | National News Video | Parliament Headlines | Politics Headlines | Search

 

‘Wrong Time For A Pay Bump’: Whanganui Mayor On His Salary Increase

The Whanganui mayor says he'd reject the mayoral pay hike set by the Remuneration Authority if he could.

Mayors and councillors around the country get a 3.7 per cent pay rise from today, 1 July.

Mayor Andrew Tripe says it was the wrong time for pay bumps but the decision to lift elected member pay rates was made independently of councils.

“We have no influence on what [the Remuneration Authority] decides.

“We cannot reject any pay increase, either. If I could, I would.”

Tripe’s pay packet rises by $5537, from $149,641 to $155,178.

He said if it was up to him, the mayoral salary would not increase while the community was facing a cost-of-living crisis and the council was scrambling to pare back spending.

However, he noted the rise was the first for elected members since the 2022 local body elections.

From Monday (1 July), the pool of money allocated to pay Whanganui councillors increases from $576,061 to $597,375.

Deputy mayor Helen Craig will receive $62,357. Councillors chairing committees or advisory groups will get up to $58,823, and councillors with no special responsibilities will receive $41,571.

Tripe said the pay was “not anywhere near enough” for what councillors do.

“It has become a fulltime role and these people are working incredibly hard. The average elected member is doing 30-40 hours a week, often including weekends, yet the pay is commensurate with two to three days’ work.”

Tripe said mayoral and councillor roles were historically seen as “somewhat honorary”.

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading

Are you getting our free newsletter?

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.

“But these days you need strong financial capability, the ability to communicate and articulate your argument well, to mix with all of the community, and to read a vast number of documents across a vast number of topics.

“The roads, the pipes, the sewerage system, the water you drink, the libraries, the parks, the trees, the opera house, the town hall and other facilities are all run by this council. We do an extraordinary amount.

“Our pay rate is probably below the minimum wage if you averaged it out across the hours we do.”

The complexity and challenges facing elected members were growing by the year, Tripe told Local Democracy Reporting.

“We’re faced with incredibly tough decisions around balancing affordability with the aspirations and desires of our community when the cost of running a council has gone up significantly.”

For example, the cost of building a bridge had jumped 38 per cent over the past three years, and putting in water pipes and roads was up by 27-30 per cent.

Better pay would attract the diverse range of skills needed around the council table.

Tripe said he puts in between 50 and 60 hours a week as mayor.

“The mayoral role is expected to be full time – it’s well above that. It’s extraordinarily demanding but at same time rewarding because you can see the difference you can make.

“My earning capacity is more than the mayoral salary but I’m doing this because I love my community.”

‘A little battered’

Tripe, who is midway through his first three-year term in local government, said the abuse copped by elected members was damaging.

“The last 18 months have been like no other. It has been a baptism of fire for new members,” he said in his monthly mayoral message.

“We are in the midst of the most challenging time in local government in a generation. It has felt like being on a boat in the rough ocean – one moment in the depth of a wave and another on top of it.”

Hearings and deliberations on the council’s new Long-Term Plan, completed last month, had left him feeling “a little battered for a few days”.

“A small portion of our community is very happy to sit behind their keyboard and give abuse with very little understanding of what we actually do, and how we have genuine, heartfelt desire to make our community a better place.

“People don’t see how hard council officers and councillors work. I’m constantly thanking them for going the extra mile and above and beyond to work with our community.

“All this amidst unnecessary and unhelpful social media comments, to a point where some people who would be great councillors have no appetite to stand because of the unreasonable flack that they would get.”

The Remuneration Authority has said it will undertake a full review in the year ahead of the framework for deciding the remuneration, allowances and hearing fees covering the elected members of local authorities, local boards, and community boards.

The review will inform the determination effective from 1 July 2025 and apply to all local government members from the day after polling day for the 2025 triennial local elections.

© Scoop Media

Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
 
 
 
Parliament Headlines | Politics Headlines | Regional Headlines

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

LATEST HEADLINES

  • PARLIAMENT
  • POLITICS
  • REGIONAL
 
 

InfoPages News Channels


 
 
 
 

Join Our Free Newsletter

Subscribe to Scoop’s 'The Catch Up' our free weekly newsletter sent to your inbox every Monday with stories from across our network.