One councillor said tall buildings contribute to global warming. Another said Auckland doesnât have a housing crisis.
Wayne Brown was already grumpy by the time the councilâs latest housing debate rolled around. Aucklandâs mayor had sat through a pair of lengthy, at-times fractious discussions to kick off his councilâs policy and planning committee meeting on Tuesday. The first focused on the councilâs submission on the governmentâs move on orders legislation, and he got into two separate fights. One was with the Auckland Ratepayersâ Alliance. âOne of the worst offenders for begging is the Auckland Ratepayersâ Alliance, who are out there begging online all day long,â he said. The second was with one of his regular combatants, WaitematÄ councillor Mike Lee. âYou escape to an island mate, I live in this,â he shot back at some loud heckling from the Waiheke resident.
Things didnât get much more harmonious when the topic got around to apartments. Councillors were there to talk over four options for the cityâs housing future, or to use the memorable parlance of the councilâs planning team, Scenarios A, B, C and D. Through door A, minimal change awaited. It was doing what the government commanded, no more, no less. That meant zoning for a capacity of just over 1.4 million homes , mainly by allowing apartments around five western City Rail Link stations, town centres and the city centre. It left 87% of the city untouched. Scenario B was doing a little more: putting more apartments near frequent bus routes and local centres like Sunnynook. It left 85% of the city untouched. C and D both meant comprehensive upzoning that spread intensification across Auckland.
Of course those two never stood a chance . The entire debate was between A and B, or more accurately A or A plus B. Conservative councillors wanted to only put out the least ambitious plan to local boards and mana whenua for consultation. The more progressive bloc wanted to send both options out, at least preserving the faint whiff of a more apartment-filled future.
Under Scenario B, the areas in white wouldnât change. This would be reduced further under Scenario A.
Brown sided with the latter group, mainly because scenario A would have meant allowing people to build apartments around train stations out west but not east. He didnât know why Mt Albert should get housing but not Remuera. âHow are we going to explain that? he asked. âIt looks completely irrational and I donât like doing things which are embarrassingly irrational.â
It didnât hurt that his political nemesis lives in the east. Brown has had a hankering to put apartment buildings near David Seymour for months now, and the urge has only got stronger each time the Act leader has willed his colleagues into watering down the governmentâs housing plans. âJust next door to where Mr Seymour lives would be a really good one. Iâm thinking of a 10-storey building there,â he said. âIt would be assessed on its merits through the resource consent process,â cautioned senior council planner John Duguid in response.
The case for the bare minimum
The group campaigning for scenario A made a host of arguments, but they mostly boiled down to âthis is what the people wantâ. A majority of submitters wrote in opposition the last time the council consulted on extra housing, two government backdowns ago. âWe do live in a democracy,â said Lee, to explain his vote. âWe have to take seriously what the publicâs view is.â
Thereâs debate over whether the people who make submissions to local government are really representative of the broader public . But Lee was at least basing his argument in fact. That tether to reality frayed as things went on. He argued that because tall buildings can give off warmth, they actually worsen global warming. âIf weâre worried about emissions and greenhouse gas emissions, well, a high-rise city actually generates more heat,â he said. Lee went on to argue that the idea building houses helps lower property prices is economic âgobbledegookâ.
Wayne Brown had a nice time during the debate.
Albert-Eden-PuketÄpapa councillor Christine Fletcher added that she didnât get why there was such a need to put downward pressure on house prices anyway. âRight now, at this very moment in time, we donât have a housing crisis,â she said. âGo and talk to any real estate agent in Auckland right now, and find out whether there are a glut of properties that are available.â
Fletcherâs fellow Albert-Eden-PuketÄpapa councillor Julie Fairey wasnât impressed. She spent her entire speech rebutting her colleagues, starting with Fletcher. âI was astonished we just had a claim that we donât have a housing crisis when earlier today we were talking about homelessness, which is at record levels,â she said. Lee was next. Fairey pointed out that while urban heat islands have nothing to do with climate change, vehicle emissions do, and you can cut those significantly by building densely close to jobs, shops and public transpâŠ
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