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Welcome Candidate information briefing Elections 2019

Welcome Candidate information briefing Elections 2019. Information for tonight. Emergency exits Toilets Please hold questions until the end of the presentation The presentation slides and other information available on Council’s website Electoral Commission information available

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Welcome Candidate information briefing Elections 2019

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  1. WelcomeCandidate information briefingElections 2019

  2. Information for tonight • Emergency exits • Toilets • Please hold questions until the end of the presentation • The presentation slides and other information available on Council’s website • Electoral Commission information available Please switch your mobile phone to silent mode/turn off Thank you

  3. Welcome and introductions • Miriam Taris • CEO, Western Bay of Plenty District Council • Dale Ofsoske • Electoral Officer, Independent Election Services Ltd • Kirstie Elder • Governance Manager, Western Bay of Plenty District Council • Debbie Brown • Bay of Plenty District Health Board

  4. Tonight’s programme • Council overview • Miriam Taris • Electoral process • Dale Ofsoske • What if you are elected? • Kirstie Elder • Bay of Plenty District Health Board presentation • Debbie Brown

  5. Council overviewMiriam Taris – Council CEO • The purpose of local government • Principles we’re required to operate within • The District • People, land, community • Governance • Council and Community Boards • Operations • Services, assets and finances, structure

  6. Purpose • To enable democratic local decision-making and action by, and on behalf of, communities • To promote the social, economic, environmental and cultural well-being of communities in the present and for the future

  7. Principles • Transparency and accountability • Have regard to community’s interest now and in the future • Impact on well-being • Māori contribution to decision making • Collaboration with other local authorities • Commercial transaction – sound business practices • Prudent stewardship – effective planning • Sustainable development approach

  8. The District • Estimated population approx. 49,200 • 18% Maori • Median age 44.8 years • 0-14 years 20%, 65+ 19% • 58% rural, 42% urban • 212,000 hectares • 202 kilometres of harbour • 55 kilometres of ocean beach • Outstanding soil conditions for primary production • Rich tapestry of small thriving communities • Three wards: • Katikati/Waihi Beach • Kaimai • Te Puke/Maketu • Strong sense of place People Land Community

  9. Governance • Council • Mayor and 11 councillors elected from 3 wards • The ‘doing work’ – workshops and council committees: • Operations and Monitoring, Policy, Regulatory Hearings, District Plan, Long Term and Annual Plan, District Licensing, Rural, Community, Joint Governance, Joint Road Safety

  10. Governance • Community Boards: • 20 elected members from 5 communities • Represent and advocate for their community • Consider and report on matters referred by Council and its Committees • Maintain an overview of services provided by Council within the community • Prepare an annual submission to Council for expenditure • Communication • Responsibilities delegated by Council or its Committee

  11. Operations • Services • 40 services – animal control and recycling centres, to safe drinking water, playgrounds and pensioner housing • 1,056kms of road, 141 bridges, 160kms of footpath, 327kms of wastewater pipes, 32 sports fields, 42 hard courts… • Majority paid for by rates • Other income to fund activities not everyone uses, for example dog registration fees fund animal services such as dog shelters

  12. Operations • Assets and finances (2017/18) • $1.37b of physical assets • $1.29b of equity • $38m of capital expenditure • $98m of net debt • $61m of rates income • $149m total income • Rates covered 74% of the operational cost of running the District

  13. Operations • Structure • The role of Chief Executive • Five operational groups • CEO • Infrastructure services • Finance and technology • Policy, planning and regulatory services • People and customer services

  14. Future focus • Changing legislative environment • Growth • Climate change • Provincial growth opportunities • Post-Treaty settlement environment • Funding and financing

  15. Electoral process Dale Ofsoske – Electoral Officer

  16. General electoral information • Western Bay of Plenty District • Population approx. 49,200, electors 37,000 • Election day • Saturday, 12 October 2019 • Elections held for • Western Bay of Plenty District Council • Bay of Plenty Regional Council • Bay of Plenty District Health Board • Held by postal vote • ‘Pseudo-random’ order candidate names

  17. Key election dates • 19 July Nominations open • 16 AugustNominations close • 20 September Delivery voting packs, voting opens • 12 October Close of voting • 17 October Declaration of results • 22 October Elected members come into office

  18. Elections required • Western Bay of Plenty District Council • Mayor elected ‘at large’ • 11 councillors elected from 3 wards • Katikati-Waihi Beach (3) • Maketu-Te Puke (4) • Kaimai (4) • 20 community board members elected from 5 communities • Katikati (4) • Waihi Beach (4) • Maketu (4) • Te Puke (4) • Omokoroa (4)

  19. Elections required (cont) • Bay of Plenty Regional Council • Either Western Bay of Plenty General Constituency (2) • Mauao Māori Constituency (1) • Bay of Plenty District Health Board • 7 members elected ‘at large’

  20. Electoral systems • Two electoral systems used • First Past the Post (FPP) • Vote by ticking candidate names • Candidates with highest number votes wins • Used for Western Bay of Plenty District Council and Bay of Plenty Regional Council • Single Transferable Voting (STV) • A form of preferential voting • Vote by ranking candidate names in order of preference (eg 1, 2 ,3) • Used for Bay of Plenty District Health Board

  21. Electoral roll • Two electoral rolls compiled • Resident electoral roll (37,000 electors) • New Zealand citizen or permanent resident • Aged 18 or over • Resided continuously in New Zealand for one year or more • Resided at an address for one month or more • Provided by Electoral Commission • Ratepayer electoral roll (250 electors) • For non-resident electors • Updated every three years • By application, not automatic

  22. Candidate eligibility • Candidate for Council, Community board, DHB • ANew Zealand citizen • Over the age of 18 • Enrolled on any parliamentary electoral roll • Can stand for multiple positions • Mayor, council, community board and DHB • If elected to more than one position take highest position • Cannot stand for district council and regional council • Any council employee elected must resign as employee before taking up position • Applicable mayor or councillor • Not applicable community board or DHB

  23. Candidate eligibility (cont.) • Elected members (or spouses) with contracts with council • Over $25,000 in one financial year • May require approval from the Office of the Auditor-General • Additional restrictions for DHB candidates • Clause 17, schedule 2, NZPHDA eg undischarged bankrupt • Can stand for only one DHB anywhere in NZ

  24. Nomination process • Nominations open Friday, 19 July 2019 • Council nomination papers available from • Council’s Main Office and 4 libraries/service centres • phoning 0800 922 822 • www.westernbay.govt.nz • Cannot nominate yourself • Need to be nominated by two electors from area (eg Ward)

  25. Nomination process (cont.) • Each nomination requires • Nomination paper • $200 deposit • 150 word candidate profile statement • Recent passport-size colour photo • Evidence of citizenship • Nomination deposit refunded • If poll > 25% lowest successful candidate (FPP) • If poll > 25% final quota (STV) • Candidates able to have affiliation • Group or organisation or can be independent

  26. Nomination process (cont.) • Unacceptable affiliations • might cause offence • likely to confuse or mislead electors • is an election slogan • Nominations close noon, Friday 16 August 2019 • Required to include • statement on principal place of residence • statement on all positions standing for

  27. Campaigning • Can occur anytime (now) • Election signs permitted • on private property • not on council roads or State Highways • removed by midnight Friday 11 October • Candidates or their agents must not collect voting documents from electors (e.g. rest homes) • Be mindful of election offences

  28. Campaigning (cont.) • All election advertisements must show contact details of authorising person • Signs, notices, pamphlets, webpages, vehicles etc • Excludes posts, tweets, messages • Social media is a great way to campaign • Instant, far-reaching, free • Promote yourself and policies - state policies, run polls, encourage people to vote, key dates etc • Council’s media channels off-limits • Must be politically neutral, monitored

  29. Campaign expenditure • All positions have candidate election expenditure limits • Based on population size of area • e.g. mayor: $30,000, Bay of Plenty DHB: $60,000 • Expenditure limits include GST • Can’t add limits together • Electoral expenses and electoral donation form required • Completed forms available for public inspection for 7 years • Care to ensure accurate (declaration)

  30. Results • Voting closes noon, Saturday, 12 October • Progress results 2.00pm (98% votes) • All candidates contacted, media advised • Preliminary results (100% votes counted) Sunday morning • All results available on www.westernbay.govt.nz • Final results Thursday, 17 October • Public notice, Monday 21 October • Take office, Tuesday 22 October

  31. Resources • Candidate Information Handbook • Electoral legislation • Local Electoral Act 2001 • Local Electoral Regulations 2001 • Attend a council meeting • Read agendas and minutes (www.westernbay.govt.nz)

  32. Contact us • Electoral officer • Dale Ofsoske • Level 2, 198 Federal Street, Auckland • phone: 0800 922 822 • email: dale.ofsoske@electionservices.co.nz • Deputy electoral officer • Kirstie Elder • Western Bay of Plenty District Council • Barkes Corner, 1484 Cameron Road, Tauranga • phone 07 571 8008 • email: kirstie.elder@westernbay.govt.nz

  33. What to expect if you are elected? Kirstie Elder, Governance Manager

  34. Working together • Local Governance Statement • Code of Conduct • Standing Orders • Local Government Act • Staff delegations • Council and Committee delegations • Other legislation

  35. Once elected • Advice of results • Induction/swearing-in (Council and Community Boards) • Training and support • Equipment provided • Meeting times/expectations • Remuneration • Impact on private life • Reading, reading, reading…

  36. Bay of Plenty District Health Board Debbie Brown, Senior Advisor Governance and Quality

  37. Presentation to Western Bay of Plenty District Council Elections Evening Debbie Brown, Senior Advisor Governance and Quality

  38. What is a DHB? Formed through an Act of Parliament – NZ Public Health and Disability Act 2000 Crown Entity Publicly funded from taxation Independent Board – 7 elected at large from the community – 4 appointed by the Minister The Chair reports directly to Minister Ministry of Health’s role – Advice to Minister and monitoring of DHB performance

  39. Our Vision, Mission and our Values • Healthy, Thriving, Communities • Enabling communities to achieve good health, independence and access to quality services • C ompassion • A ll One Team • R esponsive • E xcellence

  40. BOPDHB’s Geographic Region

  41. Population 243,500 32% are under 25 19% aged 65+ (forecast to reach 24% in 2026) 25% identify as having Maori Ethnicity There are 18 Iwi across the region, the most of any DHB in New Zealand

  42. Population 28.6% of BoP residents live in Dep 9 and 10 (NZ average 20%) More than half the children in BOP live in the most deprived areas

  43. Basic Statistics Two main hospitals – Tauranga (rebuilt 2006 – 2012) and Whakatane (new build completion 2014) Community facilities across Tauranga and Whakatane as well as at Opotiki, Murupara and Te Kaha Inpatient Mental Health facilities in Tauranga and Whakatane

  44. Basic Statistics • BOPDHB Income 2019-20 - $730m • Costs - Payments to own provider (hospitals) - Payments to third parties • Challenges - Services closer to home - Demand/ vs Capacity

  45. Where does the money go? Provider – to run Hospitals, Community Services and employ staff Primary – GP services, pharmaceuticals, laboratory testing, NGOs, Kaupapa Maori services Aged Care – Home Support, Rest Home and Hospital level Respite, Palliative Care

  46. BOP Priority Populations • Maori • Young children (First 1000 days) • The Vulnerable • Children and Youth • Older People • People with severe long-term mental health needs and/or addiction issues

  47. THANK YOU

  48. Please join us for light refreshments

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