THE BIG question raised
by the Maori claim to water rights is this: are we one people, or are we not?
That risk is
heightened when the Maori agenda has been driven in recent years by the iwi
leaders group, which speaks for tribes with substantial business interests and seems
less concerned with enhancing the wellbeing of Maoridom overall than with using
its political influence to secure business opportunities that will further
enrich its own members.
The Maori Council,
which took the water rights claim to the Waitangi Tribunal, is now making a
belated attempt to wrest back some of the influence it has lost to the iwi
leaders.
The council
purports, unlike the iwi leaders group, to represent all Maori, including the
large body of Maori who have no active tribal affiliations. But while it might
seem promising that a nominally more representative Maori body is now asserting
itself, the attitude of the council’s leaders – particularly its belligerent
co-chairman Maanu Paul – gives no reason for optimism. Mr Paul seems determined
to drive a wedge between Maori and Pakeha New Zealand, treating their interests
as mutually exclusive.
The irony is that
the Maori leaders who rail against Crown injustices have European blood as well
as Maori. They have chosen to align themselves with their Maori side and are
entitled to do so. But no matter how much they might wish to, they can’t disown
part of their own heritage.
Their Pakeha
forebears were complicit in the injustices suffered by their Maori forebears
which they now demand redress for. They should accept that for better or worse,
we are an indivisible people. Genetically, there’s a bit of European in
virtually every Maori and culturally, there’s a bit of Maori in most Pakeha;
you can’t grow up in New Zealand and not absorb it.
Abraham Lincoln
famously said that a house divided against itself could not stand. To translate
that into New Zealand terms, we are all in the same waka and should be paddling
together.
A PERSON of my
acquaintance is about to have a new house built. He tells me that one of the
costs incurred is $1200 plus GST for something called roof edge protection.
This is a new rule
that requires scaffolding to be erected around the perimeter of the roof while
a house is being built so that workmen won’t fall off.
My informant has
been in the building trade for nearly 50 years, most of that time as a builder
himself. In all that time he has never known a tradesman to fall off a roof.
The roof on the
house to be built for him has a slope of 8 degrees. It would have to be coated
with coconut oil for someone to slide off. No matter: the law still insists on
edge protection.
Now, consider
this. The roof on my house has a slope of about 20 degrees, yet there’s no law
to prevent me clambering around on it while I clear dead leaves from the
spouting, even though I’m far more likely to lose my footing than an
experienced roofer.
But the building
trade is a soft target. It’s relatively simple to impose nitpicking
requirements on builders, the cost of which then gets passed on to their
clients. Do-it-yourselfers like me, though far more likely to incur injury, are
a much tougher proposition.
Now, multiply the
$1200 that my informant has to pay for roof edge protection by the number of
houses under construction (about 20,000 in an average year) and you have a $24
million impost on new home buyers – great for the scaffolding business, but a
dead weight on the economy otherwise. No wonder building costs are far higher
in New Zealand than across the Tasman.
THE
straight-talking politician sometimes seems an endangered species. Government
ministers in particular seem reluctant to speak their minds for fear of hurting
someone’s feelings. So it was refreshing to see super-Minister Steven Joyce
spelling out home truths in Northland last week when he said people couldn’t
keep saying “no” to mineral exploration and in the same breath, ask where the
jobs were.
Mr Joyce’s message was blunt:
Northlanders can either help remove barriers to job creation at home or they can watch
their families fly off to Western Australia.
John Key was equally firm in standing
his ground on the water issue. A bit more straight talking like that and people
might be less inclined to dismiss him as the smile-and-wave prime minister.
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