The general manager of Saatchi and Saatchi New
Zealand, the former chief executive of Silver Fern Farms and
a former High Court judge have been appointed directors of
the company that will run the Forsyth Barr Stadium, and other
Dunedin venues.
The Dunedin City Council announced the nine directors of
Dunedin Venues Management Ltd (DVML) yesterday, a group that
includes four Carisbrook Stadium Trust members, including
chairman Malcolm Farry.
Former judge Sir John Hansen, who will chair the board, has
already been involved in the stadium, having filled the role
of non-voting independent chairman of the stadium
stakeholders group.
Sir John will earn $24,000 as chairman and each director will
earn $16,000, plus expenses for out-of-town directors.
Dunedin Mayor Peter Chin said DVML would manage the council's
suite of venues.
"Initially, the Forsyth Barr Stadium at University Plaza will
be its focus but it will also manage, at a later date, the
Dunedin Centre complex following its major redevelopment and
the Edgar Sports Centre."
He did not rule out other venues being managed by the group
in future.
Mr Chin said there was no "1000-point plan" setting out the
company's role.
Council finance and corporate support general manager Athol
Stephens said in February the company would assume full
responsibility for marketing, promoting and staging events
and activities, maintaining the building, and operating it in
a sound financial manner.
Deputy mayor Syd Brown said yesterday a second company would
be set up, with the same directors, that would own the
stadium, and carry the debt of about $109 million.
Mr Chin said the Carisbrook Stadium Trust would retain its
responsibility for the development of the stadium, and all
directors of DVML, which would hold its first meeting in the
next few weeks, would become trustees of the trust.
Some of the directors lived outside the city but had such
strong links to Dunedin they were willing to take the time to
travel here to make their expertise available.
"We can consider ourselves to be especially fortunate to have
attracted their interest. There's a huge number of people
outside Dunedin who have a real loyalty to Dunedin."
• THE DIRECTORS
Chairman: Sir John Hansen, of Christchurch, former
High Court judge; managed New Zealand team in Hong Kong
International Cricket Sixes; former chairman of Rugby World
Cup final appeals committee; International Cricket Council
code of conduct commissioner.
Deputy chairman: Peter Stubbs, of Auckland, Simpson
Grierson partner; New Zealand Tourism Board former member;
performing arts convention and entertainment company the Edge
chairman.
Directors:
- Stewart Barnett, of Christchurch, former Silver Fern Farms
chief executive; Carisbrook Stadium Trust trustee.
- Bill Baylis, of Queenstown, Naylor Love Enterprises
chairman; Real Journeys Ltd chairman; Port of Tauranga,
Blackhead Quarries Ltd director; Carisbrook Stadium Trust
trustee.
- Peter Brown, of Dunedin, Port Otago general manager
commercial; Edgar Centre board member (Sport Otago
representative); Fortune Theatre Board deputy chairman;
Dunedin Heritage Festival steering group member.
- Malcolm Farry, of Dunedin, Carisbrook Stadium Trust
chairman, former Dunedin City councillor, Farry Group of
Companies, executive director.
- Peter Hutchison, of Dunedin, Fund Managers Otago chief
executive; chairman of Daffodil Enterprises, a Cancer Society
of New Zealand subsidiary; director and member of the
national finance advisory committee of the Otago Southland
division of Cancer Society.
- Jennifer Rolfe, of Auckland, Saatchi and Saatchi New
Zealand general manager; New Zealand Marketing Association
board member; Direct Marketing Council committee member; grew
up in Dunedin.
- Kereyn Smith, of Dunedin, Academy of Sport chief executive;
International Netball Federation vice-president; Carisbrook
Stadium Trust trustee.
david.loughrey@odt.co.nz
The board
They are on the board missy because they are good at this type of marketing, event and venue managment, that's why they were on the trust in the first place. This looks like a top class line up to me. I find it hard to disagree that this would be one of the best stadium management teams in the country, and the fees paid to them are far lower than they would receive on other boards throughout NZ.
Jobs for the boys
Why are nearly half the members CST trustees? What a joke, jobs for the boys and a couple of girls. So in addition to underwriting all the losses from this fiasco that is the plastic box and the ORFU, the ratepayer now has to shell out $152,000 per annum, plus heavens knows how much in expenses, to have this lot manage three small venues in a sporting, cultural and conference backwater. Hold on to your wallets people.
More interesting question ...
I have the same question I had about the CST - why are people from Christchurch and Queenstown (and Invercargill) spending hundreds of millions of dollars of Dunedin's money?
No risky event promotion please
Good luck to this new board. They face a challenge considering Dunedin’s small population. Let’s hope that they stick to venue hire and do not risk more ratepayers money in promoting events.