Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Brendan Mulholland Kiwi Village Idiot


I thought I would publish this letter I sent to Brendan Mulholland the former head of NZ Crown Lands. Sadly too many arms of government have these types of people in positions of power and the damage they do is enormous. 

Brendan Mulholland
Former Head of Crown Lands
Current Position- Advisor- Crown Lands
New Zealand

In 1994 you made the sole decision to do all you can to support Ngai Terangi Iwi obtain ownership of Matakana island's 10,000 acres of forestry land. 

I recall you saying the land was sacred and it needed to be protected. Then when the Maori team of TeKotukutuku needed your help with OIC and LSP support for American group Blakely to purchase half or 5000 acres of sacred Matakana land you again assisted in that effort with great zeal. As you would recall Don Shaw on behalf of NgaiTerangi said in writing the Waitangi claims would cease if they got ownership of the sacred Matakana land. Blakely the tree loving indigenous loving Americans were written up as close to God and were shown as the white knight. 

Today my warnings to you have proven correct. NgaiTerangi own not one part of Matakana Island land you helped them obtain. After TKC sold half the sacred land to Blakely the 5000 acres they kept they sold 3 years ago. All the money went to the leaders of the tribe- Chairman, secretary, accountant and various tribal leaders, Shaw, Ingham, Ngatai, Neill, Palmer etc. They simply ignored their duty to the people they were claiming to look after. I warned you of this. The only genuine Maori, Waitangi claimant Sonny Tawhiao was found in a back seat of a burnt out car just prior to the Privy Council decision because he was screaming the Maori leadership were stealing from the people.

Brendan I write this to you because again and again people with government power like you fuck up. In simple terms you are an idiot with too much power. All of your efforts to help them drowned out what I was saying. And if you had listened Matakana would today be owned by a New Zealand company. Instead I read Blakely are going to develop Matakana. And just in case your brain cannot process what that means, the profit from 5000 acres of Matakana could be as high as NZ$10 billion. Matakana Island is now foreign owned and you Brendan Mulholland help them get it. 

Your stupidness and reckless use of government power resulted in the murder of the only genuine Maori. Although promises were made in writing to the government and High Court that Matakana Waitangi claim would end that too has not been honored. You failed to listen and you failed to put any safety systems in place to protect NZ coastal land. 

I attach the link below which carries all the documents and details of what happened.

You will feature in our film 'The Fiduciary Disguise'.

Christopher Wingate
http://www.blogger.com/profile/16358512562693562856

Govt housing plan misses mark


The NZ Herald just did an article on housing http://www.nzherald.co.nz/opinion/news/article.cfm?c_id=466&objectid=10844195

I did one last week in Australia- it's the same problem and requires the same solution.

Affordable Housing vs Red Tape That Politicians Control

It’s not all greed and self-interest with people wanting to own their own home. Shelter is a basic need. People buy homes for security and peace of mind. And with rents going through the roof, millions of Australian's are not happy the politicians are failing to do something. 

What can be done?

The red tape surrounding land development is something our politicians can immediately unlock. 

I did a paper a few years ago on the subject. The proposal basically demonstrated 

1. Government could rezone selected land all around Australia for affordable housing

2. Landscape these new areas ready for housing

3. Invite housing companies to tender for construction contracts

4. Provide low cost funding for new home owners on say 3% interest- which is above what Government can get funding for. 

And if they did this, which we should demand they do, the economy would have billions of dollars in localised economic stimulus. Not only would this make the politicians look good but millions of tenant shackled people would be free of the endless cycle of rising rent. It would be a win/win for all involved.

The proposal would see caveats on titles of these new developments to protect the existing property values. 

The net result is new home buyers could get land at $60,000 and a house at say $140,000. 

So for $200,000 people would get a completed landscaped home at an affordable price. 

Manufacturers of building products affected, in varying degrees by the current downturn in home construction would receive a welcome ongoing boost. As for restaurants, cafes, child care centres, transport and just about all parts of our economic society theyy would gain a boost from this economic stimulus.

Recent news of gloom in mining, retail, and construction has motivated me once again rethink tabling that paper and I am keen to hear from anyone keen on helping lobby the politicians. 

Let’s hope those in power can rise above the institutionalised bureaucratic narrow band of short-sighted thinking and make this proposal a reality. The country needs it and so do our kids and families who need a home they can call their own. 

http://lawisanass-wingate.blogspot.com.au/2012/10/affordable-housing-vs-red-tape-that.html

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

The privatisatisation of local electricity supply

In 1999, Jane Kelsey wrote,
The privatisatisation of local electricity supply companies and state-owned generators was also very lucrative and open to abuse to market power by transnationals. Driven by theory, governments had progressively dismantled the integrated state electricity system since 1986. This involved separating transmission from generation, splitting the state-owned generator into competing companies, and converting the elected non-profit power boards into profit-driven electricity supply companies. The Labour government began the process by corporatising the electricity department in 1986.
The local power boards were transformed into electric power companies in 1990, and into commercial electricity supply companies with diverse ownership structures in 1993.

A rash of hostile takeover bids and friendly mergers followed; during this time, supplying electricity seemed almost a sideline.
The main foreign-owned players were Alberta-based TransAlta and Utilicorp from Kansas. The companies raised their electricity prices to cover debt servicing and profit requirements.
The government expressed concern that electricity companies were abusing their monopoly over the power-lines and supply contracts to block the entry of competitors. The Electricity Industry Reform Act 1998, passed in July under urgency, prohibited any company from owning both electricity line businesses and retail or generation businesses from 1 May 1999.

Labour opposed the move, claiming the government had taken “an electricity industry that was working pretty well in practice and ripped it to bits, because it was not working well in theory”. The existing companies, supported by ACT, complained that the split reduced their value and amounted to expropriation. TransAlta  threatened to pull out of the country if the government proceeded with the plan.
At the same time, the change created new opportunities for mergers and takeovers (at grossly inflated prices), consolidating control of electricity into fewer, and increasingly transnational, hands.

The government also split the state-owned generator into two companies, Contact Energy and ECNZ; ECNZ was later split into three companies.Contact Energy was publicly floated in March 1999. Some 175,000 local investors applied for priority registration. But the government had decided there had to be a 40 percent ‘cornerstone’ shareholder. Only two companies were in the final bidding – TransAlta and US-based Edison Mission Energy. TransAlta was already the country’s largest energy retailer, with 530,000 customers, and was returning a dividend of around 6 percent. In October 1998 the Ministry of Consumer Affairs condemned its customer contracts as ‘onerous and harsh on consumers’.

The Commerce Commission cleared TransAlta to take up to 50 percent of shares in Contact Energy. That would have given the company one million of the country’s 1.6 million electricity customers, control over two-fifths of New Zealand’s generating capacity, and rights to nearly half its gas production.
The strategic stake went instead to Edison, for $1.21 billion…

… Contact Energy ended up nearly 62 percent overseas-owned. In addition to Edison’s 40 percent, another 18 percent of shares were reserved for offshore institutions, 14.4 percent for New Zealand/Australian institutions and 27.6 percent for the New Zealand public. Investment anlyst Brian Gaynor calculated that half the shares issued to offshore institutions  were sold for instant profit in the first three days. He partly attributed the priority given to offshore buyers to “broker self-interest”, estimating  that they earned $7.6 million on the 109 million shares issued to northern hemisphrere institutions (much higher than the proportionate income from Australasian sales).

Gaynor questioned why government officials put so much effort into selling the country’s assets to foreign interests , thus worsening the balance of payments , instead of working to stimulate export growth. 
The government insisted that the changes would lower electricity prices to consumers (although Commerce Minister  John Luxton said ‘it was not promised that householders would necessarily get cheaper power’). But they failed to do so, as the companies sought to recoup their excessive spending.  
In anticipation of winning the Contact Energy bid, TransAlta had paid $171 million for the retail business of Orion, owned by the Christchurch City Council; the operation was independently valued in 1997 at around $13 million. In March 1999 TransAlta announced price rises of between 5 and 15 percent for it’s 530,000 customers. Energy Minister Max Bradford blamed the line companies for abusing their  monopoly and not passing on savings from the transfer of metering costs to the retail companies.Orion backed off its suggested price increase. TransAlta did not. Bradford insisted that competition among the supply companies would eventually force prices down, so only the monopoly line businesses needed regulation.

Back in 1998, Bradford had proposed only light-handed regulation: ‘to enhance the credibility of the threat of price control’, the Commerce Commissionwould be given powerto limit prices, where it was efficient to do so, and after a lengthy period of review. By May 1999 he had been forced to introduce legislation that could regulate monopolies generally, with specific provisions for line  companies.  The Commerce Commission would be required to authorise  a price for line company charges by 31 December 1999 for the largest companies, and dates in 2000 for the rest.” – “Reclaiming the Future“, August 1999
.
There are many lessons to be learnt from the de-regulation and privatisation of the electricity industry in this country…
  1. In buying up companies, the new owners raised electricity prices for consumers so as to re-coup the costs of their multi-million dollar investments.
  2. Many of the electricity companies wound up in overseas investors’ control. As Brian Gaynor said, this made our Balance of Payments much, much worse – for no discerible, logical gain.
  3. Competition did not bring “cheaper power prices”. There simply was no competition.
It probably occurs to many people that, thirteen years later, another National Government is on-course to repeat the same mistakes.
“Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it”

Max Bradford Promises- Sell the power grid- bills will come down

I recall the Bradford promises made at a time when I felt I was the only person in NZ screaming the warnings. Something must be done to stop the madness that continues year after year. I share with you some of my thoughts on this subject.

Government is a trust structure and politicians are entrusted the power to manage that structure on behalf of the people who have conferred that power for the purpose of good management. Yet year after year we witness complete incompetence being dished out by our political leaders and nothing is ever done to rectify the problem.

Some may recall that in 1999 I took a civil litigation case from the New Zealand Court of Appeal to the Privy Council in London on the issue of fiduciary responsibilities. Back door dealings, false affidavits, fraud and corruption saw the ownership of Matakana Island transferred to the private hands of the leadership of Ngai Te Rangi under a company called Te Kotukutuku.

With claims the land was sacred and full of burial sites they gained the gullible crowns sympathy yet by 2007 forgetting the claims of sacred and return of traditional critically important land- they sold the lot for $75m. Of course none of that money ever went into the hands of Ngai Te Rangi iwi, it went into the pockets of their leadership some of whom are playing a part in today’s Waitangi negotiations.

In 2007 I also wrote an 88 page paper titled Fiduciary Protection Law for the NZ Ministry of Economic Development. Constitutional law expert Professor Rick Bigwood of Bond University thinks my propositions are unique and ground breaking and Oxford University have offered to have draft fiduciary legislation.

In my writings I highlight the most important fiduciaries in society are the politicians yet they operate behind outdated laws known as Crown or Sovereign Immunity. The immunity comes for the ancient concept that the King can do no wrong in his management. But they screw up all the time and get away with it leaving the taxpayer with the bill.

Matakana and the Bradford decisions are just 2 of thousands that have ruined our once great nation. Politicians argue they need the immunity otherwise every man and dog would be suing them. Doctors and other fiduciary professionals once made that same argument yet as they have been made to account we have seen their professions improve their duty of care.

I think people would agree that it’s time for democracy to be modernised. Crown Immunity could be forcibly backdoor implemented on politicians via their political parties who decide party policy at meetings under a party member proposal and then vote system.

The idea would be to lobby the public and existing members and get them to flood these meetings proposing new party rules regarding the removal of immunity and the introduction of fiduciary law. Once it’s party policy then it’s a short step to legislation.

Politicians would hate it but the public would love it. But once in place, then and only then could we test our political leaders honesty, capability and potential hidden agenda.

http://lawisanass-wingate.blogspot.com.au/2011/03/matakana-island-trust-fraud.html

Monday, October 22, 2012

Important News- Independent Constitutional Review Panel established

Dr Muriel Newman 
Contact Muriel:
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei


Last week the Waitangi Tribunal released a report proposing that more money should be given to the kohanga reo movement. In spite of over $1,000,000,000 of taxpayers’ money being spent on the movement over the past 20 years, the Tribunal alleged there had been wide-ranging breaches of the Treaty of Waitangi and called on the government to apologise for not doing more. They have also recommended that the legal costs incurred by the Kohanga Reo National Trust in taking this claim against the government, should be paid for by taxpayers.
This new report by the Waitangi Tribunal follows hard on the heels of their report on the Maori Council’s claim for fresh water. Even though the Tribunal has no jurisdiction to hear new historic claims lodged after 1st September 2008, they took the case and unsurprisingly found that Maori had some proprietary ownership rights to a public good resource that is owned by no-one!
The fact is that the Waitangi Tribunal plays a central role in the Treaty of Waitangi grievance industry. This insatiable gravy train, with its increasing demands for separatism - power, money and public resources - is being driven by the iwi elite, their lawyers and consultants.
With the support of National, the Maori Party’s aim is to cement separatism in place, by replacing our present constitutional arrangements with a new written constitution based on the Treaty of Waitangi as supreme law. Such a move would replace parliamentary sovereignty with a legal document to limit what our elected Parliament can and can’t do - transferring supreme power into the hands of unelected judges, who cannot be dismissed.
In other words, love them or hate them, under our present constitutional arrangements, if we don’t like what our supreme lawmakers – our democratically elected Members of Parliament – are doing, we can vote them out! That’s because under New Zealand’s present constitutional arrangements, our Parliament is supreme. It can make laws concerning anything - although any law that it does make, cannot bind a future parliament. That’s why it is a well-established convention, that major constitutional change requires a mandate of voters through a binding public referendum process. Any major constitutional change, that does not gain the approval of citizens through a binding referendum, should be deemed illegitimate.
With that in mind, the process for implementing constitutional changes that result from the Maori Party’s review, has set alarm bells ringing. During the launch in December 2010, the Deputy Prime Minister Bill English explained, “Of course, we will keep in mind that enduring constitutional changes generally require a broad base of support. Significant change will not be undertaken lightly and will require either broad cross-party agreement or the majority support of voters at a referendum.”
These weasel words mean that they are not planning to hold a referendum on any constitutional change recommendations at all. If they were, they would be shouting it from the rooftops, because making major policy decisions through a public referendum process is a popular thing for any government to do. 
Instead, they are planning to garner the support of vested interest parliamentary parties, and impose constitutional change onto the country through a vote in parliament.
 The reason is practical. Any government that tried to impose a Treaty based constitution onto the country through a public referendum would face defeat. New Zealanders do not want to live in a separatist nation. We want to live in a country where our future is determined, not by the colour of our skin or the accident of our birth, but by the contribution we make as individuals.
As a result, we need to take a stand against any plan to replace our constitution without the express approval of the public through a referendum process - anything less is completely and utterly unacceptable!
These concerns and more led the New Zealand Centre for Political Research to launch the Independent Constitutional Review - an alternative people’s review to counter the Maori Party’s $4 million taxpayer-funded “consideration of constitutional issues”. Their sham review is being conducted by a stacked Advisory Panel, which will put forward a pre-determined recommendation to the government next September, for a new written Treaty-based constitution.
The majority of New Zealanders – Maori and non-Maori alike – are overwhelmingly opposed to a race-based future. That’s why we are fighting back.
The Independent Constitutional Review website at ConstitutionalReview.org will be the focal point for our campaign.  It contains a wide range of background information - on the constitution, the plans by the iwi elite to gain constitutional status, the government’s deceitful review process, and what it all means for our future. The website outlines numerous ways that supporters can get involved and help, including how to donate to the campaign and how to volunteer and assist. 
We launched the Declaration of Equality, to create a movement for change. Our vision is a country where all New Zealanders are equal in the eyes of the law, with special treatment based on need, not race. There would be no race-based seats and no race-based laws. The Waitangi Tribunal, which has outlived its useful life, would be abolished. And the Treaty of Waitangi - which is part of our past, not our present, nor our future – would be returned to the archives of history.
As part of our “people’s review” - and to counter the Maori Party’s biased Advisory Panel - we would like to announce that we have now established an Independent Constitutional Review Panel (ICRP). Made up of a group of New Zealanders of diverse political backgrounds, we share a common concern that an out-of-control Treaty industry has become a serious threat to New Zealand’s prosperity and integrity as a viable nation.
Our panel is led by David Round, a constitutional law and Treaty expert from Canterbury University. He is joined by Associate Professor Elizabeth Rata from Auckland University, Professor Martin Devlin from Massey University, Professor James Allan from Queensland University, journalist and author Mike Butler, and myself - Dr Muriel Newman former MP and founder of the NZCPR think tank. Other members will be added to our Panel over the next few months.
The ICRP Chairman David Round has now issued our first press release. Responding to the Waitangi Tribunal’s kohanga reo report, he has called for the Tribunal to be abolished: “The Waitangi Tribunal’s report on kohanga reo makes it clear why the Tribunal should be abolished. The Tribunal is now clearly nothing more than a grandly-named Maori lobby group. Its recommendations are pure politics. Governments have poured over a billion dollars into kohanga reo over the last two decades, and that was only a part of wider taxpayer support for the Maori language. We might reasonably expect a word of thanks for this generosity. But instead the Tribunal …demands, not just more funding, but an apology for not doing enough. To demand an apology for not being more generous is not just ungracious and ungrateful, but downright arrogant. The tribunal is behaving like a greedy bully.” The full release can be seen HERE.
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator is ICRP member James Allan, the Garrick Professor of Law at the University of Queensland. I met Professor Allan a decade or so ago when I was a Member of Parliament and he was teaching constitutional law at Otago University. In light of the Maori Party’s plan to replace our present constitutional arrangements with a new written constitution enshrining the Treaty of Waitangi, I invited him to share his views:
“I think it would be a disaster for New Zealand to move to a written constitution of the sort almost certain to be offered. And I would run a mile from incorporating or entrenching the Treaty into any such instrument, not least because overwhelmingly no one knows what it means when applied to any specific issue. So all you will be buying is the views of the top judges, instead of your own, the voters.  That’s not a trade I would ever make.”
In his article Professor Allan explains that introducing a written constitution would radically weaken our democracy: “That’s the point of a written constitution.  It trumps parliament. It overrides parliamentary sovereignty.  It enervates democracy. Now that may be a good thing if you reckon you can get a more favourable deal out of a committee of ex-lawyer judges in Wellington than you can out of the democratic process. But for democrats like me it is an appalling prospect.”
He describes how constitutions are vulnerable to being ‘filled up’ with new meanings by judges, and how they are increasingly regarded as a ‘living tree’, in that their words stay the same, but their meaning can change over time:  “The exact same thing can be said of the Maori Party’s push to have a written constitution that incorporates the Treaty of Waitangi. The latter has little content in its few short paragraphs. Talk of its ‘principles’ inherently involves a lot of ‘stuffing it full of latter day content that no one at the time imagined or intended’. And if, as is overwhelmingly likely, the top New Zealand judges adopt the same sort of ‘living tree’ interpretive approach that we see today in Canada, Europe, and amongst most or many of the top judges in the US and Australia, then there is absolutely no predicting in advance what may be imposed on Kiwis some time down the road. Remember, the words can stay exactly the same but their imputed meaning can change and alter as the top judges see fit.” You can read the full article HERE.
 If you haven’t supported our  campaign as yet - by signing the Declaration of Equality, donating, volunteering to help, informing your contacts about what is going on - then please make a start. Four years ago when we saw the Maori Party’s radical coalition proposal for iwi control of the foreshore and seabed - through the repeal of public ownership - we thought the National Party would come to its senses and never let it happen. We were wrong. The law was passed under the radar of public opinion, with most New Zealanders kept in the dark.
The same strategy – keeping it all under the radar of public opinion – is being used for the Maori Party’s plan for constitutional change. But the ramifications are so serious that they threaten to divide our country forever. Please do what you can to spread the word. It should be the Declaration of Equality that the government adopts, not a Treaty-based constitution.
I will leave the final word on the Maori Party’s plan, to Professor Allan: “So in my opinion, expressed from over here in Australia, this is a terrible idea. It needs to be knocked back. And I have my fingers crossed that you can all achieve that outcome.”
http://www.nzcpr.com/weekly349.htm

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Election for Auckland Energy Consumer Trust

Election for Auckland Energy Consumer Trust


This email is directed at readers in Auckland, Manukau and the northern parts of Papakura.
It’s election time again. Not for Parliament, not for the City Council, but for the Auckland Energy Consumer Trust (AECT). The AECT is the trust that is owned by us, the electricity consumers in the central and south of Auckland City. Most of us are not aware of what the Trust does or why it is important to us. AECT owns almost 75% of the Vector, the lines company which brings the electricity to our houses.. By owning Vector, the Trust makes a profit. From this profit, AECT pays a dividend each year. In 2012 each electricity account holder received $320 – that’s $100 million going straight into the Auckland economy. Now it is the time for us to vote for the Trust - but at the last election only 16% of power account holders did. If you received your AECT dividend payment of $320 in the last couple of weeks you are eligible to vote and you should receive ballot papers in the mail between now and the end of the week.
C&R has had effective control of AECT since 2003. The C&R trustees oversaw the sell-off of 25% of Vector in 2005 despite an election promise to keep Vector in full public ownership. We consider that they are paying themselves excessively high trustee fees and huge amounts on consultants. It is definitely time for a change.
Please consider voting for all five YOUR POWER TEAM candidates, Glenda Fryer, Richard Leckinger, Tim McMains, Chris Olson and David Shand. Our candidates have a very good mix of governance, management and finance, technical and public service experience and all have an alignment with working for the benefit of you, the AECT beneficiaries. You can read more about YOUR POWER TEAM candidates and policies at http://yourpowerteam.org.nz/. LIKE the team on FB to follow the campaign - facebook.com/your power team for AECT 2012.
Your vote can make all the difference. When the voting envelope comes to your house, make sure that you vote and that you vote wisely. Return your papers in the freepost envelope promptly.
Thank you.

Friday, October 5, 2012

What's Wrong With NZ? The Bullet Points

Problem with trying to do business/do anything in NZ is the red tape
Too many unaccountable idiots in power
Too many lawyers trying to control everything
Too many Maori ruining business re RMA/council interference etc
Very poor accountability from Politicians and judges

Very poor journalism- zero investigative ability- they only play follow the lead and fail to think for themselves

Until those issues get sorted NZ will continue dying

Parents need to be held accountable but so do politicians and their agents managing the nation

The government sadly must take a hard line on beneficiaries given so many are just plain lazy in every sense. I grew up in Rotorua and saw the same problems of lazy no hoper parents not looking after their kids re food-clothing-guidance/mentoring-manors-emotional assistance etc.

Now that was from the mid 1960's and since then Maori agencies/Waitangi redress have had billions of dollars poured into them with very little to show for it apart from certain senior Maori now driving around in new flash cars and hanging out at plush offices where nothing really gets done.

Ordinary Maori require jobs- real jobs and not just be given weekly benefits which too many waste on junk food-smokes-booze-gambling-drugs- while their kids suffer...and so the cycle continues.

An elderly friend once said back in the 1930's to his work friends that welfare would turn NZ into a bludger nation and he was correct. NZ is now the 3rd most indebted nation in the OECD and currently borrows $300-400m every week to keep the nation going. This must stop.

But at the same time the government must remove red tape that is stopping new business from operating. I read a story about a Maori lady operating a small fish and chip business using fish she had caught and it was as if she had committed a brutal act- where as all she was trying to do was earn an income.

I saw how hopeless NZ is re government 1st hand re Matakana litigation and last year I spent 3 months researching and filming a documentary about the problems we face as a nation.

Not only do parents need to be held accountable but so do politicians and their agents managing the nation.