A proposal that aims to reconcile longstanding grievances associated with land in Tauranga's city centre, set to undergo a major transformation in the coming years, is being shared with the community for feedback.
Te Papa peninsula, including the site where our future civic precinct will be built, has a long and complex ownership history dating back more than 150 years.
In 1838, the land was acquired from mana whenua by the Church Missionary Society - CMS, to be held for the benefit of Māori, in the face of increasing land demand by settlers.
However, much of the area was then reluctantly gifted by the CMS to the Crown in the 1860s, despite the objections of mana whenua, who argued that if it wasn't to be used for its original purpose, the land should be given back. In 1995, the Crown transferred the civic precinct area to the Borough of Tauranga, to be used for municipal buildings.
With plans now in place to transform the civic precinct into a vibrant community space called Te Manawataki o Te Papa, Tauranga City Council is proposing to set up a new ownership structure for the land to help reconcile past events and provide certainty around its future use.
The proposed solution would see a new Council Controlled Organisation Charitable Trust established and jointly governed by Council and Otamataha Trust. The Trust represents mana whenua from Ngai Tamarāwaho, Ngāti Tapu and Te Materāwaho – the descendants of those who released the site to the CMS.
Site A of the Civic Precinct highlighted in the map above. Image: Tauranga City Council.
As part of the arrangement, the CCO would purchase the land now known as ‘Site A' of the Civic Precinct from Council for a nominal amount.
Council would lease the land back from the CCO on a ‘peppercorn lease' basis.
Council would continue to own and be responsible for any improvements made to the existing buildings on the land, the construction and ownership of any new buildings and structures, as well as the day-to-day operation of the activities on the site.
Commission chair Anne Tolley says the proposal is 'a logical solution” and timely next step towards recognising and reconciling past grievances.
'As we prepare to transform this area into a place where people will come together to learn and share stories about our city's past, the time is right to help shape our future by doing what is just and fair.
'The intention is that this proposal will help to restore the mana of the whenua to hapū and iwi and provide certainty for how the land will be owned and used in the future, for the benefit of everyone in the community.
Tolley says the alienation from the land that mana whenua experienced has been recognised by the Waitangi Tribunal as being undertaken in a way that breached Te Tiriti o Waitangi and its principles.
'The proposed pathway seeks to restore the original relationship of trust that our ancestors, both Māori and the CMS, entered into,” she says.
'The relationship with mana whenua will be pivotal to the success of many of the outcomes to be achieved on the civic precinct site and this proposal would mean that we as a council and a community can move forward with our exciting plans for the city centre, knowing that we've done the right thing.”
Tolley says the new ownership structure would have minimal cost implications on the ratepayer, so from the wider community's perspective 'there is nothing to lose and everything to gain” from what's being proposed.
'We think this is the right thing to do and the community now has a chance to tell us what they think.”
For information about the history of the land, what's being proposed, and to share your thoughts, please head to our website - www.tauranga.govt.nz/CCOproposal
Feedback closes on Tuesday, September 6, 2022, with the Commission expected to make a final decision on the proposal at a Council meeting on Monday, October 3, 2022.
About future plans for Te Manawataki o Te Papa
In June this year, the Commission committed to a $303.4 million investment in the city centre over the next eight years to develop facilities at the civic precinct site that will include a civic whare - public meeting house, library, and a museum and exhibition centre, subject to achieving 50 per cent of the required funding from non-ratepayer sources.
4 comments
Decentralise
Posted on 25-08-2022 07:42 | By Kancho
I still don't get why a relatively small area needs to be crammed full of civic and public buildings. Many cities have shown the way to decentralise holdings and functions which makes a lot of sense. Council buildings, universities, sports areas a built and developed with transport links , parking area and amenities where land is more available. Narrow minded planning for narrow bits of land
land
Posted on 25-08-2022 08:40 | By dumbkof2
Yes Kancho well what do you expect with unelected people running the place. Spend spend spend seeme to be the motto
Pretend to listen
Posted on 25-08-2022 12:24 | By an_alias
Come on Tolley and Co have done ZERO listening in every process they have done. Well apart from doing whatever the govt tells them to do.
Kancho
Posted on 25-08-2022 18:19 | By Johnney
Stop talking sense. The powers to be don’t like doing sensible stuff. It’s not in their DNA.
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