MPs visit high-tech businesses

Petridish shared workspace founders Kate and Jason Lindsey (foreground) with visiting Labour MPs ...
Petridish shared workspace founders Kate and Jason Lindsey (foreground) with visiting Labour MPs (from left) Clare Curran, Willow-Jean Prime, Tamati Coffey and Deborah Russell. PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH
Labour's economic development caucus visited Dunedin yesterday, MPs viewing a range of high-tech and digital businesses and stockpiling ideas to take home with them.

"Coming from Northland it is really useful to see what is happening in other areas and then take that back up north and share it with my community," list MP Willow-Jean Prime said.

"Last week I went to the opening of a collective space in Kaikohe which is in its infancy and developing the idea and having seen [Stafford St shared workspace] Petridish, I will be taking that experience back and sharing it with the people in Kaikohe."

MPs started their tour at Petridish, visiting digital games company Runaway, before moving to Innov8HQ.

They also received a briefing on the new Dunedin Hospital, before meeting Mayor Aaron Hawkins, Dunedin City Council representatives, and the Otago Chamber of Commerce.

East Coast-based list MP Kiri Allan planned to follow Ms Prime's example and apply the examples of Petridish and Runaway to her own area.

"It's quite epic what they are doing, so we're asking what sort of support do you need?

"Then the question is how do we take the model that they have here and how can we look to develop that in our regions?"

The visit was organised by Dunedin South MP Clare Curran, who said she wanted her colleagues to see the digital economy burgeoning in Dunedin.

"Now that we have announced the Centre of Digital Excellence this week, a national project but based in Dunedin, that is setting the groundwork for the careers of the future."

New Lynn MP Deborah Russell, who chairs Parliament's finance and expenditure select committee, said it was easy for politicians to think New Zealand ended at the bottom of the Bombay Hills, even though she was in Wellington every week.

"We can't just focus just on Auckland or just on Wellington, we have to build the whole of the country," she said.

"We can't do everything everywhere but we can build hot spots of excellence, and Petridish is a wonderful example of that."

Comments

Dunedin lacks the infrastructure to support large scale growth in any business sector let alone high tech. The mayor and DCC have ignored improving the infrastructure focusing instead on green initiatives that provide no real financial benefit to the population of Dunedin. Consequently, potential employers won't make capital expenditures on buildings or facilities in Dunedin because of the aging infrastructure. Additionally, the housing shortage combined with a lack of acceptable housing severely limits the pool of qualified employees willing to move to what is essentially third-world living conditions. Unfortunately, the city of Dunedin is in a death spiral that has no recovery. Building the new hospital will provide a temporary reprieve. The government needs to build a new hospital to stimulate the economy and lower the unemployment rate. RIP Dunedin!