ZB ZB
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Listen to NAME OF STATION
Up next
Listen live on
ZB

John MacDonald: Time for a Ministry of Works comeback?

Author
John MacDonald,
Publish Date
Tue, 10 Oct 2023, 12:26pm
(Photo / File)
(Photo / File)

John MacDonald: Time for a Ministry of Works comeback?

Author
John MacDonald,
Publish Date
Tue, 10 Oct 2023, 12:26pm

Remember the old Ministry of Works? Reckon we need it back again?

I reckon we do. Because we have another example today of what happens when you rely on governments and individual organisations to run big infrastructure projects.

So think of all the drama over the new stadium in Christchurch. Think of all the money wasted on the Auckland Harbour Bridge cycleway that went absolutely nowhere. The City Rail Link blow-outs. KiwiBuild.

You name any big infrastructure project in recent times and it seems that we have just become hopeless at doing stuff we used to be brilliant at.

So the latest example that we’re hearing about is the big Scott Base rebuild. Which has been put on hold because the Government and Antarctica New Zealand can’t agree on a deal with the contractor.

What’s happened with this particular project, is Antarctica New Zealand got just over $500 million from the New Zealand Government to rebuild Scott Base.

But, as always happens with these things, the cost of the whole thing has headed northwards and they haven’t been able to come to an agreement with the contractor.

This is Leigh's Construction, by the way. A very successful Christchurch-based outfit, which really came into its own after the earthquakes.

And it is the preferred contractor for the work. Which involves the new structures for the base being built in Timaru and eventually being shipped down to Antarctica.

And the reason this work is all happening in the first place, is because Antarctica New Zealand wants to make sure it’s set-up for research work at Scott Base for the next 50 years. So it’s come up with this plan for three new inter-connected buildings and to upgrade the wind farm down there.

I do get the sense that maybe they’ve done the usual thing and gone for the gold-plated option and told themselves that they’ll make it work come hell or high water.

But that wing-and-a-prayer approach doesn’t seem to be working and we’re finding out today that things have come to a halt. And they’re going to do a review - not exactly sure yet what that’s going to involve - but it is going to be done by internal and external experts.

Which, as you and I know, will involve more money.

It's amazing that work even started in the first place without an agreed contract. Which is why I reckon these big public projects need to be run by an outfit that knows how to run these kinds of things. An outfit like the Ministry of Works.

Because, back in its day, the MOW did all sorts of stuff. It built railway lines, tunnels, hydro dams, motorways. It was also involved in other things like airport developments.

It was originally known as the Department of Public Works. Eventually it became the Ministry of Works. And it operated from 1870 until 1993 - when Jim Bolger’s National government dished out its policy work to other government departments and created a new State-Owned Enterprise, with two divisions: Works Consultancy Services and Works Civil Construction.

Three years later they were sold off and that was the final chapter in the Ministry of Works story. But who says it couldn’t make a comeback?

Because, when you think about it, it is crazy that we expect the likes of Antarctica New Zealand to run its project and do all the negotiating and procuring. Then we expect every other outfit using public money to do the same with their big projects. All working in complete isolation from each other.

We’ve got Waka Kotahi doing the roads. We’ve got Transpower doing all the electricity infrastructure stuff. We’ve got local councils doing their thing. And we’ve got outfits like Antarctica New Zealand and the government running the big Scott Base rebuild project.

But if we had something like the old Ministry of Works, that could all be co-ordinated. I’m not saying it would be free of political interference. That would be impossible.

But how many more examples do you need, to show that we have lost our way when it comes to big infrastructure?

Waka Kotahi is a prime example of an outfit trying to do too much and failing. Imagine if its job was just the road safety stuff and we had another nationwide infrastructure agency building and maintaining the roads.

Building all the state houses the government wants to build. Building new motorways. And, yes, even building the new base in Antarctica.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you