Syd Adie says calls for the
Dunedin Ratepayers and Householders Association to become
"more militant" were a personal attack on his leadership
style after 20 years' involvement in the organisation.
Mr Adie said yesterday it was the call - by Stop the Stadium
member Peter Attwooll - that prompted him to walk out
part-way through the association's public meeting on Monday
night.
The meeting was to decide the association's future, and Mr
Adie attended as a member despite resigning as chairman in
May.
Mr Attwooll, the husband of former STS president Bev Butler,
also attended, and told the meeting the association was "too
polite" and "would have to get more stroppy and more
militant", Mr Adie said.
Mr Attwooll is not a member of the association.
Mr Adie said he left the meeting because he did not want to
"have a personal slanging match" with Mr Attwooll in front of
new members.
"I just thought it was a personal attack on me for not being
stroppy enough and not being militant enough," Mr Adie said.
He rejected that approach, preferring to treat Dunedin city
councillors with respect while arguing against the increasing
burden on ratepayers.
Mr Adie said he had previously had good relations with Stop
the Stadium, despite the two groups' differences, and was
"quite surprised" by the comments.
"I don't think you achieve anything by being militant - there
are other methods."
However, Mr Attwooll said he had "enormous respect" for Mr
Adie, the incident had been a misunderstanding and he had
followed Mr Adie from the meeting to try to explain his
comments.
"The last thing I would want is for him to take offence," Mr
Attwooll said.
True colours
This mob are now running roughshod over whoever they like. They have the gall to accuse the council of the same tactics. I notice they are the same bunch who ran at the last election and were soundly thrashed. Even poor old Syd has had enough of the "axe grinding" politics they extol.