'Intolerable risk to life': Crown Manager kept on to oversee $70m Wairoa flood works with two feuding Councils

The Government has intervened after a warning Wairoa residents would be exposed to an “intolerable risk to life” from severe weather if critical flood protection work does not continue at pace. A Cabinet paper outlined disagreement between councils and mana whenua on the $70 million project. As a result, the Government has extended the Crown Manager’s term looking over the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council and Wairoa District Councils. A spillway, paid for by $70m of Crown funding, is expected to be completed next year. It aims to protect the town from the impacts of severe flooding it has faced in recent years. Crown Manager Lawrence Yule, former Hastings Mayor and ex National MP, has been re-appointed to oversee the councils for a further year. His term now has an end date of February 13, 2027. Yule is being paid at a rate of $1,100 a day. Cabinet papers, proactively released by the Department of Internal Affairs, show Local Government Minister Simon Watts noting further intervention was “required” to support the area’s flood protection works. Yule was appointed as Crown Manager in August 2024, following concerns the two councils could not work together to improve flood protection, river management, and emergency preparedness, the papers say. The papers, on behalf of Watts’ office, state without further Government intervention, the Minister believed there will be an “unacceptable risk that the recent momentum gained in progressing the Wairoa flood protection project will be lost, and the project will not be completed by the expected completion date of May 2027.” “Failure to implement timely flood protection works would result in a significant part of Wairoa township being exposed to an intolerable risk to life from future severe weather events,” the paper stated. While good progress has been made on the flood protection project, the paper noted momentum has been “slower than expected”. Delays were blamed on “complexities with land acquisition and poor project and design management oversight by HBRC [Hawke’s Bay Regional Council].” In a statement, Yule confirmed a resource consent has been granted, detailed design is progressing at pace, and a contractor is ready. “After three years of planning, engagement and determination, Wairoa is about to see the physical delivery of flood protection begin,” the Crown Manager said. Technical investigation, concept design, and consenting work has progressed on the project. Construction has not yet started, but is forecast to be completed in mid-2027. A Government notice on the New Zealand Gazette in relation to the re-appointment said failure to implement flood protection works “would leave a significant part of the town being exposed to an intolerable risk, and therefore uninhabitable.” This risk would create an unaffordable burden for Wairoa ratepayers through the Wairoa District Council and Hawke’s Bay Regional Council," the notice read. Councils and mana whenua disagreed on how the work should be progressed. In an interview with Newstalk ZB, Wairoa Mayor Craig Little welcomed the reappointment of the Crown Manager as “really good” and something that “gives a lot of confidence.” Little believed after the Wairoa River burst its banks in June 2024, “people lost confidence in the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council. They really didn’t have much of a social license here in Wairoa to operate.” He claimed too many decisions were being made outside of Wairoa. Last year, it was reported a class action lawsuit was lodged against the regional council in relation to past flooding.The Mayor added Government intervention had been positive, as “it’s been a hell of a job” as families have been having to move out of the way where the river bypass will go. Little promised construction would be starting “very, very soon”. “It’s a huge project and Wairoa will be at ease once it happens,” he said. “This is the first river protection work we’ve ever had, that’s a big one for Wairoa. This is so important for ou...