Mayor Wayne Brown is now proposing a partial sale of his council’s shares in Auckland Airport in a compromise on his budget proposal to patch the city’s $325 million financial deficit.
It comes after the proposition of a partial sale appeared to garner support from councillors prior to a lunch break. The mayor originally proposed selling all of the council’s Auckland Airport shares — worth around $2 billion.
“Please take this proposal seriously,” Brown said.
“I’ve moved my new proposal to do a partial sale of the airport shares. This is an option available to us because we did consult on it, it has been audited, and it was supported.”
Auckland’s mayor is now proposing a sale of 8.09% of the council’s 18.09% stake in the airport in order “to realise around $1 billion and to pay down debt”.
Additionally, he has proposed an average rates increase of 7.7%, one per cent above inflation. Brown’s original proposal in March suggested an increase of only 4.66%.
The mayor also proposed the chief executive find another $5 million worth of cuts to spending in the coming financial year.
“There is a slight change recognising the broad support for discontinuing Kauri Kids, by allowing for local board support to enable their local continuation.”
The mayor said he would refuse to compromise by taking on substantially more debt, a suggestion by some advocates, calling it “the essence of financial mismanagement”.
“I believe this proposal is the best, prudent, achievable, and balanced budget for Aucklanders,” Brown said. “I’ve compromised on every funding lever.”
The meeting was paused in order for councillors to review Brown’s new proposal.
The new proposal comes after the mayor said councillor debate on the budget proposal could take several days, as three representatives with perceived conflicts of interest in Auckland Airport say they’ll vote on whether to sell the council’s shareholding.
An extraordinary meeting of the governing body began at 10am, with all councillors in attendance at Auckland’s town hall.
“This is a very hard budget and I want to ensure we work through the processes robustly,” the mayor said.
“It may end up taking a couple of days. I’ve got no problem with that. We’ll simply adjourn to another day. But I’m also encouraging everyone to make the best use of their time.”
It came ahead of the vote on Brown’s final budget proposal and the potential sale of airport shares. The council owns 18% of the airport as its biggest single shareholder.
The mayor has said the shares are worth about $2.2 billion and argues selling them is preferential to raising rates or cutting more services. That decision has sparked drama as councillors re-examine their financial holdings in the airport.
All councillors had a five-minute opportunity to address the budget before the meeting broke for lunch just after 1pm.
Several councillors continued to express uncertainty about their position on selling the airport shares, but it appeared support was growing for a partial sale.
In his address, North Shore councillor Chris Darby proposed a partial sale if the council could also undertake a “robust process” to understand the airport’s “strategic value”.
“I’m actually prepared to consider a tranche of $500 million. I don’t say that lightly. I’ve examined this very, very hard,” he said.
Albert-Eden-Puketāpapa councillor Chris Fletcher said she didn’t want to sell the airport shares but that “history will not record us well if we fail to prioritise and address our inability to live within our means.”
“In the interest of being constructive, and not wishing to be a drongo, financially illiterate or a dipsh*t, I welcome the opportunity to safely express our preferences,”
Fletcher, a former mayor of Auckland City Council, said she could support a partial sale instead as did Waitākere councillor Shane Henderson.
“Whatever happens today, it will be a compromise. We’re all going to have to swallow some dead rat, a dead rat or two, and that’s fine. That’s what compromise is all about.”
Finance committee chair and Howick councillor Maurice Williamson continued an impassioned plea against keeping the airport shares.
“We do not need to own an asset that is not washing its face,” he said.
All councillors to vote on airport share sale
Albert-Eden-Puketāpapa councillor Julie Fairey said she had been cleared by the Auditor-General to participate and vote on the fate of the council’s airport shares.
Fairey’s husband, suspended-transport minister Michael Wood, sparked scandal after it was revealed he held shares in Auckland Airport despite holding a portfolio that oversaw its operations. He had been instructed 12 times to sell the shares.
“The shares my spouse holds – noting it’s a very small shareholding – are in the process of being disposed of,” the councillor said today.
“I have now received written advice from the office of the Auditor-General and from council’s legal team that, in their view, my situation does not represent a conflict of interest – as I cannot reasonably expect financial loss or gain from these decisions and that I am, therefore, able to participate under the act.
“The budget votes today are the most significant decisions I have had the opportunity to vote on so far. To that end, I will be participating in the meeting on all items today.”
Darby and Albany councillor Wayne Walker also said they would vote on the airport shares after receiving advice from the Auditor-General.
Darby said his wife holds shares in the airport via a managed portfolio.
Walker’s involvement in shares relates to a family trust that holds $3 million in airport shares, which the councillor said he does not benefit from.