Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Snow, Snow everywhere

After being warned by global warming alarmists that the ski fields would struggle to provide enough snow for skiing it now appears that there have been record snowfalls this winter. There is so much of the whitestuff in fact that the devices used to measure the depth of snow have proven to be inadequate.

Could it be that the hype surrounding anthropogenic global warming is just that – hype?

However, I suspect that the increased snowfall will be cited as another example of anthropogenic global warming. It is after all a non-falsifiable hypothesis for those who believe.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Land should be released: Commerce Committee

Not surprisingly the number one recommendation of the Commerce Committee enquiring into housing affordability was that land should be released if housing is to become affordable. The Committee noted that the median price of a section in Auckland has increased from $139,000 in 1992 to $443,000 in 2007 an increase of 218%.

In relation to the metropolitan urban limits (MUL) which places an artificial boundary around Auckland the report had this to say:

“We consider that interventions to constrain the supply of land for new housing force up
section prices. We believe that the Auckland Regional Council should carefully assess this
dynamic, taking into account issues such as infrastructure. We believe a more deliberative
approach that focuses on making more suitable land available for new subdivisions would
lead to lower section prices and more affordable housing.”

Many of us such have been saying for years that it is the politicians strangling the supply of land that has led to economic stagnation and the social ills that we see all too often in places like Manukau.

Compare the situation that we are facing in the Auckland region with a dynamic city such as
Houston, Texas where land supply is not constrained and housing rises only at the rate of inflation even with the inflow of refugees in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Hard Questions

I spent an hour or so with Edward Rooney of the "Aucklander" at Xtreme Entertainment in Botany discussing, Manukau City Council, crime, police, Len Brown, sport, John Walker and sending down a few bowls.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Police Problems Continue

The revelation in Parliament by National’s Chester Burrows a former policeman that police solved only five of the 53 aggravated robberies of South Auckland shops in the six months before liquor store owner Navtej Singh was fatally shot in a hold-up will come as no surprise to those familiar with the under-resourcing of the police in the Counties Manukau Police District.

This follows stories of lost files and files left unattended as a result of a combination of low staff numbers and inexperience. The average level of experience in the CMPD is just 5 years compared with 15 years in Invercargill.

In 2005 the then Police Commissioner Rob Robinson admitted that there were 11 “unassigned sex cases” after questions were raised in Parliament by ACT MP Rodney Hide. Police Minister George Hawkins admitted that that of the 11 “unassigned sex cases” 5 were cases of rape complaints. Mr Robinson also acknowledged at that time that there were1000 unassigned criminal complaints.

New Zealand has a low ratio of sworn police officers to population and crime and criminals will flourish unless there are more police on the streets of our cities.