Why vote for me?
Wellington is great, but it could be better. It needs a revitalised city council with new councillors who have experience in both the business and voluntary sectors, and who listen and respond.
A recent editorial in the New Zealand Herald said that Auckland deserves "candidates with ideas, vigour and independence", but then lamented that "it is a shame that, in the main, they will have to settle for less."
Wellingtonians in the Eastern Ward don't have to settle for less, and here's your chance.
Top 5 Issues
- A revitalised council
•Councillors with energy, fresh ideas and independent minds who listen and respond
•A council that is fair, transparent and open
•A council that is in touch with its communities - Better transport options
•Improve accessibility by encouraging walking, cycling and public transport (buses, ferries, and modern trams), rather than expensive, destructive and long-drawn-out road “improvements”
•Speeding up bus journeys with an uncongested route along the whole of the Golden Mile
•Providing better bus interchanges at Kilbirnie, Miramar and the hospital
•Making it safe for pedestrians and cyclists to cross Cobham Drive & Calabar Road
•Developing a modern tram system to link the eastern suburbs right through to the region’s railway network
•Supporting the Great Harbour Way walking and cycling route around the region’s coastline - A fully sustainable city
•Proper assessment of the environmental and social effects of major projects, such as the Kilbirnie bus barns redevelopment, the Marine Education Centre and transport changes. (The poorly-located Indoor Community Sports Centre shows the consequences if this assessment doesn’t happen!)
•Implementing the climate change action plan and achieving carbon neutrality
•City Council leadership in sustainability strategies
•Analysis of the effects of peak oil on the city and the eastern suburbs
•Supporting sustainable urban form and urban growth
•Ensuring that the city is financially sustainable, including the level of rates - Environment and heritage
•Safeguarding beaches, parks and reserves
•Extending the Eastern Walkway through Fort Dorset to Seatoun beach
•Opening up the Miramar Peninsula’s heritage sites to the public
•Building on the possum-free status of the Miramar Peninsula as a “mainland island”
•Respecting the area’s built and natural heritage
•Establishing a recreational walkway along Kilbirnie’s drainage reserve - Local communities
•Safeguarding local council facilities such as libraries, community centres and sports fields
•Supporting the revitalisation of Kilbirnie and Miramar town centres
•Helping local community initiatives such as community gardens
Personal Profile
I’m a Wellingtonian and a New Zealander by choice, living on the Miramar peninsula for 19 years with my partner Anne – I can’t imagine living anywhere else.
I was born and brought up in England, moving to Wellington 25 years ago. I have worked mainly in the transport area in both the private and public sectors, and I’ve been a Returning Officer at a number of General Elections.
I have a lot to do with the city and regional councils through their community activities, and through making submissions as an individual and on behalf of a number of voluntary bodies.
I recently took Wellington City Council to court because of the poor planning of the Indoor Community Sports Centre, and achieved significant improvements for sustainable transport.
I see the city from the perspectives of a resident, a ratepayer, an employer, an employee, a volunteer, a walker, a bus and ferry passenger and a driver.
My current activities include:
- Executive Officer of the Rail Heritage Trust of New Zealand,
- National Vice-President of Living Streets Aotearoa Inc.,
- Environmental Sustainability representative on the Wellington Regional Transport Committee,
- Trustee of Trans-Action and a member of Public Transport Voice,
- Member of the Wellington Engineering Heritage Chapter of IPENZ,
- Member of the Wellington City Council Safe and Sustainable Transport Reference Group,
- Volunteer at Mary Potter Hospice.
Authorised by Mike Mellor of 11 Newport Terrace, Seatoun, Wellington 6022
Questions answered by Mike Mellor
Question
Mike Mellor's Reply
Margot
First, I think some background may be helpful.
The agencies
Transport in Wellington is split between several different bodies. The New Zealand Transport Agency is responsible for State Highway 1, from the airport along Cobham Drive and through the Mt Victoria tunnel; the Greater Wellington Regional Council plans and supports bus operation (except commercial services, the relevant one here being the Airport Flyer, run independently by NZ Bus); and Wellington City Council provides local roads, the bus tunnel, bus stops and shelters, and the trolleybus overhead. So any approach to traffic issues requires a lot of co-operation – WCC on its own can’t do a lot.
Current plans
Transport improvements for the route to the airport are in the Ngauranga to Airport Corridor Plan (http://www.gw.govt.nz/ngauranga-to-wellington-airport/) jointly prepared by NZTA’s predecessor Transit NZ, GWRC and WCC. That plan includes, within 10 years,
- Investigating duplicating the Mt Victoria tunnel and four-laning Ruahine St and Wellington Rd;
- Investigating improvements to walking and cycling through Mt Victoria tunnel;
- Investigating ferries to Miramar wharf;
- Improving the Cobham Drive/Troy St roundabout;
- Undertake feasibility study on high-quality public transport system in the CBD;
- And smaller improvements to public transport, walking and cycling.
And after 10 years,
- Duplicating Mt Victoria tunnel and four-laning Ruahine St and Wellington Rd;
- Implementing a step-change in public transport in the CBD.
In addition, WCC has had plans to install traffic lights at the Ruahine St/Goa St intersection, which would of course have to be implemented jointly with NZTA.
Subsequent to the Ngauranga to Airport plan being agreed, NZTA announced unilaterally the Government’s plan to skip the investigation stage and go straight into the Mt Victoria tunnel, Ruahine St and Wellington Rd changes, but as the last phase of the massive Wellington Road of National Significance scheme (http://www.nzta.govt.nz/network/projects/wellington-northern-corridor/). There are no proposed changes to other parts of the plan, so the balanced approach of its proposals has been lost.
In addition, the transport situation was changed significantly by WCC’s decision to add to the traffic problems by building the new sports centre on Cobham Drive, with 95% of its users planned to arrive by car. (I took WCC to court to get improvements to this.)
So the only definite physical changes planned for the next few years are the Cobham Drive/Troy St roundabout (required to be completed before the sports centre opens), and perhaps Goa St lights.
The SH1 plans are probably some years away from being designed, let alone built, and will be very disruptive and expensive when they do happen, and Ruahine St and the adjacent Town Belt and Wellington Rd will be very different places. They are also likely to generate more traffic, so we will probably end up where we started (or worse). Most cities around the world have learned that trying to road-build your way out of traffic congestion is generally futile and expensive.
What I will work towards, in conjunction with the other agencies
I’d put in the Goa St lights, the Cobham Drive roundabout changes and the walking, cycling and public transport improvements listed above, but otherwise I’d take a different – faster, cheaper and effective - approach. Experience round the world shows that where there are public transport and general roads along the same corridor, speeding up public transport improves speed for all users; trying to speed up general roads without doing at least the same for public transport makes the situation worse for all concerned.
In conjunction with GWRC, I’d improve public transport between the eastern suburbs and the CBD, with faster, more direct and more frequent buses on a simplified route structure with good transfer facilities. That would reduce much of the pressure, particularly at commuter times. The CBD public transport improvements in the Ngauranga to Airport plan are an essential part of this.
Second, I’d talk to the airport about reducing the large number of taxis on this route. Improvements to the Airport Flyer have helped, and need to go further.
Third, I’d encourage walking and cycling, by means such as improving the Mt Victoria tunnel environment (Hataitai has a lower rate of commuting on foot or by bike than suburbs a similar distance from the CBD, largely because of the unpleasantness of the Mt Victoria tunnel), and better cycle tracks.
Fourth, I’d recognise that people want to cross SH1 as well as travel along it, and seek ways to reduce the significant barrier it creates for pedestrians and cyclists. Otherwise, it encourages car use for short journeys, something which most people are agreed should be avoided. As things stand the only safe way to get the short distance from Miramar to the centre or Kilbirnie is to drive or catch a bus, which is ridiculous.
And last, I’d look at ferries from Miramar wharf – the current ferry from Seatoun is an excellent way to travel, but offers a very limited service.
And in the longer term, modern trams connecting the eastern suburbs with the CBD and the region’s railway network will definitely be the way to go.
Your questions
So, to go back to your specific questions:
Exiting from Hataitai towards the Mt Victoria tunnel:
Reduce traffic along SH1 by making the bus service more attractive in speed and frequency, and by improving facilities for walking and cycling – the CBD is not that far away. Goa St lights would help break up the traffic flow to help Hataitai users get into the tunnel – but any changes to the Basin Reserve to smooth the flow of eastbound traffic, as envisaged by NZTA, could have just the opposite effect.
The roundabout by the sports centre:
This will be improved before the centre opens, and improved public transport will ease the congestion – particularly with the sustainable transport initiatives agreed by WCC as part of the Environment Court settlement.
Traffic to the netball courts:
Reduced traffic by the initiatives outlined above and traffic lights at Goa St will ease the situation.
Sorry that this is such a long answer, but I hope it helps.
Mike Mellor
check out other candidate's answersLynne
We need to take three main steps:
1. We need to make recycling easier. Initiatives such as Target Sustainability http://www.targetsustainability.co.nz/ and TerraNova http://terranova.org.nz/, both in Christchurch, should be fostered by WCC.
2. We need to make people stop and think before they dispose of recyclables. Higher landfill charges coupled with better recycling facilities at landfills would mean that the environmentally correct thing to do also become economically right. (We also need to make sure that higher landfill charges don\'t mean an increase in ilegal dumping.)
3. We need to lobby central and regional government for more emphasis on recycling. As Robert Ayres says in Industrial Metabolism, 94% of the resources used to make products are wasted before the product is sold (including the fossil fuels used in very long supply chains), 4.8% is wasted within 6 weeks (because of the high proportion of throwaway or short-life products), so after 6 weeks only 1.2% of the original resources are still in use in the product. Even recycling all that 1.2% is the small tip of a very large iceberg, and we need to build recycling into the initial design of the product, not worry about it just at the end. The Germans can do it, so we can too.
check out other candidate's answers
- 2007
- 2010
Wellington City Council - Eastern Ward
Results - Final
- Leonie Gill
- 2866
- Ray Ahipene-Mercer
- 2775
- Simon (Swampy) Marsh
- 2480.19
- Allan Probert
- 1453.8
- Rob Goulden
- 1317.95
- Taima Fagaloa
- 1042
- Mike Mellor
- 774
- Amanda Nicolle
- 480
- Mike Fiechter
- 210
- Tony Travers
- 179
- Rosemary Russell
- 102

Ray Ahipene-Mercer
Taima Fagaloa
Mike Fiechter
Leonie Gill
Rob Goulden
Simon (Swampy) Marsh
Amanda Nicolle
Allan Probert
Rosemary Russell
Tony Travers