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March 6, 2026
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Wellington’s Mayor and councillors need to be looking at options other than job losses when reviewing the council’s spending.

Council staff were given a high-level briefing yesterday (Thursday 5 March) about the work of a group of councillors (the Revenue and Financial Value Working Group) who have been looking at ways of reducing operating expenses and raising revenue to limit rates rises in 2026/2027.

Duane Leo, National Secretary for the Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi, said this is no time for to making job cuts - we are strongly urging the mayor and councillors to safeguard the jobs of dedicated council workers and look elsewhere for operational savings.

The working group has made no recommendations about staffing levels but the briefing to staff said job losses could not be ruled out. Any decisions about job cuts would be made in June once the Council has adopted its annual plan, after a period of public consultation.

"Job cuts would undermine the city just at a time when it’s trying to recover from the aftershocks of the Government’s brutal cuts across the public sector including jobs in Wellington’s health and science sectors," Leo said.

"Wellington has been battered by Government-initiated job cuts and the impact is being felt right across the city. Councillors should not be voting to pile more misery on the city they were voted in to serve.

"We fully understand the need to soften rate rises during these tough times, but rather than cutting jobs, the council should look to other options.

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