News & Events
News & Events
Local Government Reforms
Simplifying Local Government
The Government is proposing to simplify local government by changing how regional decision‑making works. Under the draft model, mayors would form a new Combined Territories Board (CTB), replacing elected regional councillors. The CTB would then develop a Regional Reorganisation Plan to improve how councils collaborate and deliver services across each region. The proposal aims to reduce duplication, improve accountability, and make it easier for communities to understand who is responsible for what. Public consultation on the proposal closed on 20 February 2026. You can find MPDC’s submission here.
Rates Capping
The Government is proposing a national rates cap to help keep annual rates increases more affordable for communities. The cap would generally limit increases to 2–4% per person each year, with councils needing approval from a regulator to go higher in exceptional situations like natural disasters. A transition period begins in 2027, with the full system in place by 2029.
You can read MPDC’s submission here.
Door opens for papakāinga development in Matamata-Piako

A significant update to Matamata-Piako District’s district plan comes into effect today, as Plan Change 54 - Papakāinga becomes operative on 6 November 2024. This change aims to clear the way for quality papakāinga development in the district, supporting the social, cultural, and economic wellbeing of tangata whenua.
Te Toa Horopū ā Matamata-Piako Councillor Gary Thompson said while there were existing rules in the district plan, ongoing issues and challenges were identified by tangata whenua about the use and development of their land in the district. “The challenges included a growing Māori population and a shortage of quality affordable housing and inability to live on ancestral land”.
Councillor Thompson said it was also felt there was inadequate recognition of kaupapa and mātauranga Māori in resource management planning and decision making, multiple ownership of land and associated challenges, limited resources, and lack of capacity or capability to navigate process to develop papakāinga. “The plan change update aims to address these challenges and the unique housing and development needs of the Māori community, enabling land to be used more efficiently and meaningfully”.
Plan Change 54 includes the creation of a new Māori Purpose Zone with two precincts. Papakāinga tahi/Precinct one enables houses to be built on marae or Māori freehold land and Papakāinga rua/Precinct two, housing to be built in areas where there are already papakāinga. The plan change would also enable development on Māori freehold land, general land owned by Māori and Treaty settlement land if there was proof of ancestral connection and legal whānau ownership.
The change marks the final step in a collaborative process involving extensive consultation with tangata whenua, key stakeholders and the public. It was initially notified in November 2022, following a project launch hui in 2019 at Kai a Te Mata Marae with representatives from various iwi authorities, including Ngāti Hauā, Ngāti Paoa, Ngāti Hinerangi, Ngāti Korokī Kahukura, Raukawa and Rangitaa Turner from Te Puni Kōkiri and key stakeholders. The final decision was announced in July 2024, and with no appeals lodged, becomes operative 6 November, enabling papakāinga to be developed in our district more freely.
You can read more about Plan Change 54 – Papakāinga at mpdc.nz/papakainga
Glossary of te reo Māori terms
Kaupapa - a strategy, policy, or cause
Mātauranga Māori - Mātauranga Māori is about a Māori way of being and engaging in the world – in its simplest form, it uses kawa (cultural practices) and tikanga (cultural principles) to critique, examine, analyse and understand the world.
Tangata whenua – in relation to a particular area, means the iwi, or hapu, that holds mana whenua over that area.
Papakāinga - A development by tangata whenua on ancestral lands in their traditional rohe and established to be occupied by tangata whenua for residential activities and ancillary social, cultural, economic, conservation and/or recreation activities to support the cultural, environmental and economic wellbeing of tangata whenua.
Note: for the avoidance of doubt, tangata whenua is not limited to iwi or hapῡ organisations. It includes:
Māori landowners who whakapapa to the whenua and their whānau; and
Individuals and whānau who are a member of iwi or hapῡ who are tangata whenua
Rates increase for 2022
Reforms
What do you stand for?

Our communities are made up of all sorts of people and we stand for all sorts of things. We asked some locals (pictured) what they stand for; from sending less waste to landfill, to creating vibrant and accessible CBDs for our families to enjoy and fostering equity, inclusion and diversity so all members of our community can thrive - we all have a vision for what we'd like our district to look, feel and be like. What do you stand for?
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Provincial Growth Fund Article Count: 11
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Updates on the MM Swim Zone roof

