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Mike Butler
Property investor and manager, author of The First Colonist --
The life and times of Samuel Deighton 1821-1900, former contract
writer for the New World Encyclopedia, chief sub-editor of the
Hawke’s Bay Herald-Tribune (1986-1999).
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NZCPR
Guest Forum
Mike
Butler
21
August 2011
Treaty
payouts near $2.5b and continue to grow
This is Part I of a four part
report. To read the full report: Money
for Nothing - Treaty Settlements 1989-2011, analysis and
commentary,
click
here >>>
The total
redress paid under Treaty of Waitangi settlements is
approaching $2.5-billion and will continue to increase,
according to information from the Office of Treaty
Settlements. Eleven settlements with a total financial redress
amount of $216.64-million are awaiting legislation and 29
settlements totalling $2.078-billion have been completed. A
further 14 agreements in principle totaling more than
$220.5-million await progress, and a further 20 in negotiation
are moving towards agreements in principle.
The
$1-billion figure is controversial in the ethereal world of
treaty settlements because that is the figure that triggers
ratchet clauses in the 1995 Waikato-Tainui $170-million
settlement and that of the same amount by Ngai Tahu in 1998.
Once triggered, those clauses would provide both tribes with
17 percent of settlements over $1-billion.
The
Treaty Negotiations Vote in this year’s Budget contains a
multi-year appropriation of $1.4-billion for the five-year
period 2011 to 2015. If
that $1.4-billion is added to the total paid to date of
$2.078-billion, it appears that the current National-Party-led
government expects the redress of historical settlements to
total $3.478-billion
There
has been no clear statement from the Treaty Negotiations
Minister Chris Finlayson or the Office of Treaty Settlements
whether the ratchet clauses have been triggered. An Office of
Treaty Settlements report from early last year put the total
settlement redress at $958,289,025, which was under the
threshold, and included a helpful breakdown of 28 settlements
to that date with an amount for each. (1) A check on their
latest report from this year (2) shows no total and no
corresponding table, which may indicate that the office has
gone coy on the total redress paid to date.
While
Waitangi Tribunal reports are publicly available at www.waitangitribunal.govt.nz,
and settlement deeds may be accessed at www.ots.govt.nz,
because information is presented with a large amount of other
information, I have assembled a spreadsheet
that summarises details of the 29 settlements totaling
$2.078-billion that have been completed.
I
compared my list with the 2010 Office of Treaty Settlements
list to see where the differences appeared. One area of
difference relates to the 2008 Central North Island
settlement. My addition of the components of that deal yields
a total of $874-million, while the Office of Treaty
Settlements puts the figure at $149,564,340. My figures, which
derive from Office of Treaty Settlements deeds and summaries,
list $223-million in accumulated rentals, $455-million rentals
for 35 years from 2008, plus $196-million worth of land.
Settlements
completed since the 2010 list was published relate to the
Waikato River, which transfer $400.8-million to five tribes
over 27 years.
Last
year’s Office of Treaty Settlements four-month report
included $12,207,780 to Ngati Manawa and $9,568,260 to Ngati
Whare, both of which are awaiting legislation so therefore
have not been completed. My spreadsheet does not include those
settlements.
To
compare apples with apples, if you take the 2010 Office of
Treaty Settlements four-month report figure of $958,289,025
and deduct the amounts of $12,207,780 to Ngati Manawa and
$9,568,260 to Ngati Whare, and add the $400,800,000 Waikato
River settlements, the total is $1,337,312,985.
Therefore,
the total settlement redress is over $1-billion whichever way
you look at it. Any other version would have to involve
“creative” accounting.
While
news reports include a total financial redress figure, in the
millions, often without further explanation, the deeds on the
Office of Treaty Settlements site detail the components of
each settlement.
For
instance, the $170-million total redress amount for the 1995
Waikato-Tainui Raupatu settlement includes about 200
unimproved properties, plus another 200 improved properties.
The list includes a polytech campus, Waikato University
campus, railway land, courthouses, Corrections property,
police stations, power stations, Crown forests, CoalCorp
property, ECNZ property, Ruakura AgResearch, CYPFS properties,
NZ Post properties and so on, that are leased by Crown
entities for 31 years. Details of the ongoing rental income
are not available, so it is not obvious the extent to which
Waikato-Tainui were given several hundred cash cows to benefit
from as they wish.
In
addition, because the tribe has had $170-million worth of
commercial and residential property transferred to tribal fee
simple ownership with current valuations, from day one of the
settlement the iwi corporation could buy further properties,
which is where the government further obliged by offering the
right of first refusal over government-owned properties in the
tribe’s area of interest.
The
settlement recipient corporation could get a valuation on a
prospective purchase, borrow against 60 percent of that
purchase, and use equity in settlement properties to complete
the purchase. Almost immediately the iwi could buy 42 more
properties worth $10-million each. With the benefits of the
property boom over the past 10 years, the initial $170-million
would have grown to around $500-million, with on-going stream
of rental income reducing debt, further increasing capital
gain.
Commercial
property investment in general can be a minefield, dealing
with fair-weather-friend lenders, tenants with shaky
businesses, and an ever-changing economy. The newly created
tribal corporations have been protected from all that with
freehold properties given to them (no mortgage), and
gold-plated leases with government tenants for years to come.
There is also the implied “insurance” that if anything
comes unstuck, the government could be blamed under the treaty
principle requiring active protection.
Unfortunately
for Waikato-Tainui, internal
bickering between the revered 155-year-old Kingitanga
movement, embodied by the then Maori Queen, Dame Te
Atairangikaahu, and new democratic forces, followed this
sudden influx of prosperity.
Five
years after the tribe's $170-million settlement, its
$245-million asset base had been eroded by 16 per cent, and
the tribe struggled with a
$24-million debt.
Details of the tribe’s woes came with news of an
$8.6-million debt that was forcing the sale of the Auckland
Warriors rugby league club. Tainui had invested $6.27-million in
the Warriors. (3)
Later
settlements with other tribes extended the right of first
refusal period to 50 years, while the RFR period in
settlements awaiting legislation has been extended to from 100
years to 169 years. Later settlements include interest on the
settlement amount to cover a time delay between settlement and
legislation.
Cultural
redress appeared from 1997, in the South Island tribe Ngai
Tahu settlement. The cultural showcase of that deal involved
vesting Aoraki Mount Cook in Ngai Tahu that gifted it to the
Crown (a sometimes confusing term which is shorthand for the
executive function of the government of the day which should
represent the people of New Zealand).
Seventeen
cultural redress sites were transferred to Ngai Tahu, runanga
were appointed to hold and administer seven areas, historic
reserves were created at seven areas, statutory
acknowledgements and deeds of recognition were extended over
64 mountains, lakes, rivers, wetlands, and lagoons, 14 topuni
(overlay of Ngai Tahu values) were created, as were a number
of nohoanga camping areas, which are one-hectare sites at
traditional food gathering areas for use of Ngai Tahu members
for 210 days each year.
How
Ngai Tahu, with a population of less than 3000 in 1840, came to be regarded as owners of the
South Island, is an interesting debate that has, in official
eyes, been won by Ngai Tahu. Originally a Poverty Bay-Hawke’s Bay tribe, Ngai Tahu arrived
in the South Island sometime in the 17th century, when
they merged there with another former North Island East Coast
tribe Ngati Mamoe. Both newcomer tribes supplanted the pre-existing Waitaha
(also known as Moa Hunters). Another North Island tribe, Ngati
Toa, invaded in 1828, inflicting heavy casualties, forcing
Ngau Tahu to retreat. Ngati Toa was involved in northern South
Island land transactions with the New Zealand Company around
1840.
In
the mid 19th century, Ngai Tahu sold most of the
South Island in at 10 deals: 400,000 acres of Otago for
₤2400
on July 31, 1844; 20 million acres from Otago to Nelson for ₤2000 on June 12, 1848; 230,000 acres of
Bank’s Peninsula in at least three deals for a total of £650
from 1849-1856; over seven million acres of Southland for
₤2600
on August 17, 1853; one million
acres of North Canterbury for £500 on February 5, 1857; 2.8
million acres of Kaikoura for ₤300 on March 29, 1859; seven million acres on the west coast for ₤300
on May 21, 1860; and Stewart Island for ₤6000
on June 29, 1864. (See
for further details -
“Grievances, Waikato-Tainui,
and history”.)
At
the Ngai Tahu settlement signing on November 21, 1997, Prime
Minister Jim Bolger said: “It
will allow Ngai Tahu as a tribe to develop a workable economic
base and become an economic force in the South Island and New
Zealand.” There was no reference to two earlier final
settlements of Ngai Tahu grievances, one in 1906 involving a
grant of 142,463 acres of land to settle 4063 “landless”
Maori, and the other, the Ngai Tahu Claim Settlement Act 1944,
which awarded ₤300,000,
payable at a rate of ₤10,000
a year for 30 years. (“Final
settlements repeated”)
While
the Ngai Tahu deal was being negotiated, the Bolger National
government proposed a $1-billion limit for the settlement of
all historical claims known as the fiscal envelope. Tribal
spokesmen of the day vehemently rejected such a limitation in
advance of the extent of claims being fully known and the
fiscal envelope was dropped before the 1996 election. The 1995
Waikato-Tainui $170-million settlement was described as “17
percent”, which was its proportion of the then set-aside
$1-billion.
As
already mentioned, that $1-billion has blown out to $2.078-billion,
with a further $216.64-million waiting to be transferred
immediately, a further 14 agreements in principle totaling
$228-million awaiting progress, and a further 20 in
negotiation moving towards agreements in principle, according
to the Office of Treaty Settlements.
National
Party led governments have settled 16 of the 29 settlements so
far with a further 11 awaiting legislation. As the
privatisation party, it is logical for the National Party to
be a major player in such settlements, although it is
interesting to note that numerous politicians who would
otherwise oppose privatisation, support privatisation of state
assets to Maori entities. The National Party also has a number
of key members married to key iwi members throughout the
country, so will always be more sympathetic to Maori demands.
There
is excitement in the corporate iwi world, if a conference
titled “Nga Whetu Hei Whai, Charting Pathways for Maori
Industry Futures” set down for August 29 and 30, is anything
to go by. Speakers are expected to highlight industry
opportunities for Maori and international examples of tribal
and indigenous trade and industry development will be presented.
Twelve
panels will provide strategies in, dairy,
sheep and beef, energy, ICT, and technology, forestry,
property development, health and aged care and horticulture.
Strategies for 30 or 40 years will be discussed.
However,
there is little sign of excitement beyond the individuals
directly involved in settlements or tribal business. Only
around 50 percent of registered members are interested enough
to vote on whether to accept settlement deals. Non-Maori are
by definition excluded from the grievance settlement process.
The directors of today’s tribal corporations have slim
ancestral links to the people who suffered up to 171 years
ago. Years down the track, these corporations
will have as much benefit to non-corporate Maori as non-Maori
private businesses have to Pakeha.
It’s
money for jam for those in the business.
To
download and read the full report - click the following link:
MONEY
FOR NOTHING - TREATY SETTLEMENTS 1989-2011, ANALYSIS AND
COMMENTARY
Sources:
1.
Office of Treaty Settlements Four Monthly Report November
2009-February 2010. http://nz01.terabyte.co.nz/ots/DocumentLibrary/FourMonthlyReportNov09toFeb10_final.pdf
2.
Office of Treaty Settlements Nine Month Report July 2010 –
March 2011. http://nz01.terabyte.co.nz/ots/DocumentLibrary%5COTS9monthreportJul2010toMar2011.pdf
3.
Rough tackles in
Warriors' hardest game, New Zealand Herald, http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=152646
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