Sunday, March 3, 2024

#8 Role models




Kia ora my name is Jack Karetai-Barrett and I’m a year ten student at Whakatane High School. This months article is going to be about Youth Councils throughout Aotearoa and using your voice to be part of making change. 


Last month, I was elected as the co-deputy chair of the Whakatane District Youth Council. The other co-deputy chair is Jasper House, and our chair is Charlotte Billings.


In Aotearoa, Youth Councils give young people a chance to share their ideas with local leaders and decision-makers. They help young people get involved in their communities, learn leadership skills, and make sure their voices count in decision-making for the future of the community. For most people who get involved in political roles, it is becuase there is something in their community that they want to see changed. But you also have to be interested in whats best for the whole community, not just the things that are important to you. 


The things that matter the most to me in my role on the youth council, are waste management, mountain biking, and recreation spaces for kids. It’s the importance of those things in my life that made me want to get involved. But since getting involved, I’ve started to get really interested in all the different jobs our council does in our community. 


According to LGNZ, (Local Government New Zealand) a Council's role is “to enable democratic decision-making by and for communities and to promote their social, economic, environmental and cultural wellbeing. In practice, this means everything from footpaths and lighting and the supply of freshwater/wai to resource management and environmental health and safety.” 


According to the Whakatane District Council website, our council’s “vision is to be known as the place of choice for people to live, work and play.”

They also say:


“In achieving our vision:

  • Our community will be safe and surrounded by people who are friendly and caring

  • Businesses will be thriving

  • There will be respect for and pride in our history

  • We will be successful guardians of our natural environment


Our purpose is to lead the Whakatāne District to sustainable economic, social, environmental and cultural well-being.

As a District Council we will achieve this through:

  • Good governance, leadership and advocacy

  • Integrated, long-term planning

  • Effective and reliable community infrastructure

  • Outstanding service delivery”


The important thing to understand about a council’s role in the community and their aspirations, is that their vision has to be funded somehow, and no one is ever happy with how much they have to pay for things. Councils are funded by several different sources, the first and the one all adults seem to complain about the most is “rates”. Rates are paid by people who own land. The more land you own and the more the land is worth, the more you have to pay - that seems fair to me.


There are so many rates! General rates, targeted rates, differential rates, uniform annual general charges, and water rates. Mum says theres also another rate that we have to pay to the Regional Council. You can learn about how all the rates are caculated on the LGNZ website - it is very helpful.  As well as all the rates, there are development contributions, subsidies and grants, and fees and charges. 


A council has so many responsibilities, and quite a few different sources of income to pay for everything. But how do they choose what to pay for? Every three years, we have an election where we elect the people who represent what matters most to us at the table where all the decisions are made. They also set the future plans for the community, and figure out where they can get money from and how the money will be spent. When I read the letters to the editor of the Whakatane Beacon, it looks to me like people just vote so they have someone to complain about. But actually, I know some of our councillors very well, and I know how hard they work and how much they care about our community. I think we should complain less and have more conversations about whats important to us. 


At the moment, the Councils long term plan is being renewed. At our Youth Council meeting we learned that the council has to renew it’s long term plan every three years to make sure it’s still heading in the direction the community wants it to go. As members of the public, no matter if we’re a school kid, or retired, or anywhere in between, we’re allowed to make a submission on the long term plan, to make sure that our councillors understand whats important to our community. The council will read and hear all the submissions, set it’s long term plans, and then find the money that it needs to achieve it’s plans for the community. Last time we had a long term plan, I went with my mum to talk about mountain biking, but nothing really came of that. I felt a bit cynical, but mum reminds me that COVID happened, lots of weather events happened, and Whakaari happened. Those all happened unexpectedly, so the Council's plans and priorities had to change since the community's needs had changed. I’m going to have another go this year to talk about mountain biking, and how important our recreation spaces are in the community for us kids. But the thing thats most important to me right now, is what I learned from attending the EQC public meeting at the War Memorial hall last month. They taught us that we need to prepare for an earthquake that could be as high as a 9 on the Richter scale, and cause a really big tsunami. I think our council needs to make preparing for that its number one priority. It’s hard to prepare for, but it’s really important that we do. 


I hope that you take the time to have a look at the Council's long term plan, and make a submission. You can find the plan and the online submission page on the Council website. If you don’t like using a computer, then you can visit the Council and someone will help you.  If we can’t be bothered to let the Council know whats important to us, then we probably shouldn’t complain afterwards when we’re not happy with the decisions they make. 


I would like to give a shout out to Andrew Isles and Toi Iti (BOPRC) for being amazing role models for me. They have shown me how being involved in something like Council gives you the chance to have your say. Please have your say by Friday 12th of April 2024. You can make your submission online,  send your submission in, or you can ask to speak at a meeting to the Councillors!


Kia ora, my name is Jack Karetai-Barrett, and this is my article on my role models.

In January, I was awarded the Youth Environmentalist of the Year award from Forest and Bird.

I invited some of the people who have  helped me in my life; those people were Richard Hamer, Graham Henton, Becs Mackay, and, of course, Mum. I want to tell you a little bit about them.


If it wasn’t for Richard, I might still be a couch potato. Back in 2020, I was around 65kg. I ate, went to school, did minimal exercise, went home, ate, and went to bed, then repeated that same process the day after. We had a lot of changes in our lives through that time with moving to a new home, and the deaths of my poua and koro. I was not very happy. Around that time, Richard Hamer reached out to me and Mum and told us about the holiday programmes he was doing through BlueLight Whakatane. He talked about mountain biking, and I thought that sounded stupid and would be a waste of time. I tried to convince Mum I didn’t want to go, but she knew it would be good for me, so she made me go anyway. I started with a really bad attitude, and I didn’t like it at all. The climb up was just terrible for me; I couldn’t even ride up the loop uphill. I walked for a while; it felt like forever, and then, all of a sudden, we’re at the top! Finally! Richard let me go ahead and lead everyone down, and he told us how to ride different parts of the tracks, and I loved it! I was riding so fast, and it was just the best. Once we got to the bottom, I finally understood why we did the uphill. From that point on, I loved mountain biking, and it’s how I’ve become the best version of myself. Richard Hamer does so much in our community and he does not make a noise for attention for himself. Most people in our community will have had something made better by his work, without even knowing it was because of him. In two weeks time my and my mates are racing in the North Island Mountain Bike Champs - thank you Richard! 


Mr.Graham Henton was my environmental teacher at Whakatane Intermediate School a few years ago, and if it wasn’t for him, I would have probably never even cared about the local urban environment. Just another kid throwing their rubbish around, not caring about what happens to it or what happens to the environment. Mr. Henton taught us about our local environment, our town-based native species, and how to be a kaitiaki for our communities. In the class, we got to go on walks to the lagoon, clean up the spaces around our school, test water quality and think about our impact. We got to look at the native birds and other species around the lagoon, and it was amazing. It was by far the best class I ever had in intermediate. In my first year, I was given top year seven in enviro, and then in year eight, I got the syndicate award from Whaea Helen. Together Mr Henton and whaea Helen have given me a feeling of duty to care for our urban area They helped me to understand the whakatauki: Toitū te marae a Tāne, Toitū te marae a Tangaroa, Toitū te tangata. If the land is well and the sea is well, the people will thrive. I can see that I will spend my whole life thinking about how to help people thrive, just like Mr Henton and Whaea Helen taught us. 



I first met Mrs. Becs Mackay through Waste Zero, and at the Mountain Bike Club. I was in intermediate and was still quite introverted, so I didn’t know her very well. I would see her at Onepu during the MTB club nights, and she would always make sure to say hello. She was always very encouraging and sometimes rode with me, even though I was a lot slower than her then. In year nine, Mrs Mackay turned out to be my social studies teacher, and I had to stop calling her Becs. If you know my mum then you know I have grown up thinking a lot about the world and why things are the way they are. Mrs Mackay gave me the opportunity to write about all that thinking and that is what made me start this column in the first place. In Social Studies we got to learn about everything we wanted, and it was my favourite core class. She would always make the learning fun. My favourite task we had was that we had to make a business plan and factor in every single thing we would need if we started one today. I never knew how many different insurances there are! Me and my mate Mason decided that we could make a mountain bike park since Whakatane could definitely use one (hint hint) I really liked Social Studies and all the things we learned. The thing I will always remember is that Mrs Mackay, even though she is not Maori, has worked really hard to understand our history, and taught it properly to our class. If we learn and our kids learn, maybe we can make the world a better place than it is right now. 


My Mum is also in the photo that Troy Baker from the Beacon took. My Mum is Dr. Mawera Karetai. Mum says she is an academic doctor, not a useful one. But she is very useful. Mum does so much amazing work that not many people know about. As well as all that work, she works hard to give me a happy and good life. She works hard to give lots of people a happy and good life. I learned duty from my Mum, and the people who are my role models have given me the opportunity to do my duty. My mum is the best, she stops the wheels from falling off my bike and my life.


Lastly, I want to thank Linda Conning and the Forest and Bird volunteers who give time to our natural environment. I was thinking about the Lorax - “Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing's going to get better, it's not”. Thank you for caring and wanting things to get better. Linda, thank you for the award and making me think about the people who have encouraged me to be my best self. 


There are lots of other people who have cared about me and helped me to be my best. Today I just wrote about the people in the photo. Maybe I will write about more of them another day. I would like to write about Kyle MacFarlane and Jonny Evetts, who make everything seem like it is going to be fine. It is really important to have role models.



Jack


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#10 Youth Council

Kia ora my name is Jack Karetai-Barrett and I’m a year ten student at Whakatane High School. This months article is going to be about Youth ...