Now, I'm not part of the tribe who automatically thinks that Auckland Transport is a bunch of ideological toss-pots who want to force us out of our cars.
I'm the sort of urbanist that gets there's a limit to the number of cars that can use our roads, and when that limit is hit then you have offer choices so we can all get somewhere.
I don't reflexively hate cycleways or bus lanes. I comprehend congestion charges and I'm excited for the Central Rail Link and even Light Rail. Mostly because I've seen the good a co-ordinated public transport system has done elsewhere in the world.
But AT's 24/7 parking charges change is beyond the pale.
Having developed the city centre with apartments, it will inconvenience residents who have been trying to take their cars off the roads by living in town. It's going to cost ratepayers. Either directly, such as the residents who reckon it will cost them $11,000 a year to park their car now. Or by funding a bureaucracy to run resident parking schemes.
It's said it will affect hospo workers. It won't stop punters who tend to cab or even use public transport into town because they're on the lash. The people it will really affect are the minimum waged workers who need to get in and out of the city outside public transport times - and who are least able to afford it.
But the most chilling part of the story is that the mayor and the Council are powerless to stop it, even though they've helped to cause the problem.
Councils fund council controlled organisations but they don't run them. In this case, the Council looked to reduce its funding so AT unilaterally increased its external fundraising by hiking the parking charges.
But that is AT’s constitutional right. The main Council body, including the elected representatives, have no operational control.
Rodney Hide designed them that way so politicians couldn't get the filthy, compromised hands on big assets.
Which is why I've always laughed about National's plan for council controlled operations to run all our water.
Councils may own and fund CCOs, but they certainly don't control them.
Just look at Auckland Transport.
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Andrew Dickens: I'm looking forward to Budget Week
Andrew Dickens: The new Government deal is Three Waters lite
Andrew Dickens: There's worry the Government cuts will go too far
Andrew Dickens: We need to put perspective on the current state of our economy
Andrew Dickens: The media model is broken because of fear
Andrew Dickens: New Zealand knows the price of everything and the value of nothing
Andrew Dickens: Let's put SailGP on at an appropriate venue and move on
Andrew Dickens: Did the Government know that their pre-election promises were unaffordable?
Andrew Dickens: National's state of the nation address was blame game politics
Andrew Dickens: This weekend showed the Greens are fast becoming unelectable
Andrew Dickens: The Government has to learn perceptions stick
Andrew Dickens: Is this what we can expect for the next three years?
Andrew Dickens: There's big stones in the path to coalition
Andrew Dickens: Enjoy this respite from criticism of New Zealand, it won't last
Andrew Dickens: New Zealand is confused
Andrew Dickens: We've got an incompetent cohort of politicians
Andrew Dickens: National has abandoned their plans for social investment from 2017
Andrew Dickens: I don't know why National is so wedded to these tax cuts
Andrew Dickens: Luxon shoots himself in the foot, time and time again
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