Uprooting the Dunedin City Council from its traditional home
in favour of a meeting in Middlemarch was either "democracy
in action" or an unnecessary distraction, councillors argued
yesterday.
The council voted to take the meeting to the township,
despite arguments it would take too much time from a field
trip to see the work of the area's community board.
The council is understood to have held its full meeting
outside Dunedin only once since amalgamation in 1989, when
Mosgiel and St Kilda were amalgamated into the Dunedin
council.
Mayor Peter Chin told a council meeting yesterday the Strath
Taieri Community Board had last year invited the council to
hold a meeting in the town.
The Taieri Gorge Railway had offered seats for councillors
and staff.
Cr Kate Wilson, who lives in Middlemarch, said the community
board was keen for councillors to see the work it was doing.
Cr Bill Acklin questioned why the trip should be complicated
with a meeting.
He was backed by Cr Richard Walls, who said the only other
meeting outside Dunedin had been in Port Chalmers in 1998,
marking Otago's 150th year.
That was appropriate, but the trip would be "tacked on" to
the meeting, and councillors would not have time to properly
see the board's work.
Cr Michael Guest said it would be a chance for residents to
see the council at work.
A recommendation to hold the meeting in Middlemarch, on March
29, was carried.
It will be held at the Strath Taieri community Centre.
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