fbpx
星期六, 11 月 16, 2024

No such thing as a free lunch at Auckland Council committee

Howick ward councillor Maurice Williamson. File photo supplied
  • By Laura Kvigstad, Auckland Council reporter
    Funded by New Zealand on Air

An Auckland Council committee chair has shown his colleagues there is no such thing as a free lunch under council’s budget pressures.

At the Planning, Environment and Parks committee on March 2, chair Richard Hills cut the free lunch of the committee as discretionary spending.

This followed the Governing Body making a resolution to encourage cuts to discretionary spending from council, council controlled organisation and local boards the week prior.

At the time of last week’s resolution, Hills was concerned that councillors did not have a common view of what discretionary spending was.

Before going to lunch, Cr Wayne Walker, who moved the resolution to encourage cuts to discretionary spending, asked who made the decision to cut lunch.

Independent Māori Statutory Board member Tau Henare said to Walker, “come on man, you get paid enough.”

Walker later questioned why councillors had not been told prior.

Hills told Walker that he had emailed councillors a day earlier.

“I decided that lunch is discretionary at least in my committee… other chairs can (make that decision),” Hills said.

Howick ward councillor Maurice Williamson quipped that the email actually came in the night before but congratulated Hills on the decision.

“I am happy to pay, delighted to pay. Parliament used to have a tab and you did not even pay [at the time]. You just walked up and grabbed something and they put it on your tab,” Williamson said.

Williamson complained that there was not many choices for food around the Town Hall.

“I crossed the road to a food court thinking wow and it is just nothing but Chinese food. There is nothing like a roll or a pie or a sandwich.”

“If we could have the ability to get the food in I am fine but I do not want it for free.”

Another councillor shouted Uber Eats before the committee continued.

By clicking to accept for Times Online to be translated into Mandarin, you accept and acknowledge that it has been translated for your convenience using 3 rd party translation software. No automated translation is perfect, nor is it intended to replace human translators and are provided "as is." No warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied, is made as to the accuracy, reliability, or correctness of any translations made from English into Mandarin. Some content (such as images, videos etc.) may not be accurately translated due to the limitations of the translation software. The official text is the English version of the website. Any discrepancies or differences created in the translation are not binding and have no legal effect and should not be relied on by you for any decision-making purposes. If any questions arise related to the accuracy of the information contained in the translated website, refer to the English version of the website which is the official edited version.

点击同意将《时代在线》翻译成中文,即表示您接受并确认,该翻译是使用第三方软件为您方便起见而 提供的。请注意自动翻译并非完美无缺,也不旨在取代人工翻译,只能作为参考而已。对于英文到中文 的任何翻译的准确性、可靠性或正确性,我们不提供任何明示或暗示的保证。由于翻译软件的限制,某 些内容(如图片、视频等)可能无法准确翻译。   英文版本是本网站的官方正式文本。翻译中产生的任何差异或错误均不具有约束力,不具有法律效力, 您不应依赖由自动翻译软件生成的版本做出任何决策。如果对翻译后的网站中包含的信息的准确性有任 何疑问,请参阅本网站的官方编辑英文版本。

- 广告
- 广告

更多信息来自《泰晤士报在线

- 广告

最新

- 广告
- 广告