Auckland Unlimited

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Tātaki Auckland Unlimited
Tataki Auckland Unlimited
PredecessorAuckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development (ATEED) | Regional Facilities Auckland
FormationDecember 2020
TypeCouncil-controlled organisation
PurposeRegional Economic and Cultural Development
HeadquartersLevel 4, Aotea Centre, 50 Mayoral Drive, Auckland 1010
Location
Region
Auckland
Parent organization
Auckland Council
Websitehttps://aucklandunlimited.com/

Tātaki Auckland Unlimited is the council-controlled organisation (CCO) of Auckland Council that serves as Auckland's economic and cultural agency. The organisation runs major assets such as the zoo, theatres, stadiums, galleries and other facilities. It was formed in December 2020 from the merger of Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development (ATEED) and Regional Facilities Auckland. It self-funds some of its operations but is subsidised by the council for the majority.

Background

Auckland Unlimited was formed from the merger of Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development (ATEED) and Regional Facilities Auckland in December 2020, following a review of Auckland's council-controlled organisations.[1] The review recommended that the two CCOs be amalgamated on the basis that they had similar goals and performed similar activities, some of which overlapped. The review concluded that having these functions all performed by a single entity would lead to cost savings and efficiencies, as well as a single coordinated programme for delivery of these functions.[2] The council followed through with the recommendation – reducing the number of CCOs from five to four – and councilors voted to call the new organisation "Auckland Unlimited," with its Te Reo Maori name introduced as Tātaki Auckland Unlimited.[3] At the time of merger, the two organisations had a combined annual budget of $175 million, with the new organisation expected to yield $6.7 million in annual cost-savings over the first decade of its existence.[4]

Purpose

Auckland Unlimited is charged with supporting the Economic and Cultural development of Auckland. From one of its predecessors (Regional Facilities Auckland) it has acquired responsibly for many of the major regional facilities of Auckland such as Auckland Zoo, Auckland Art Gallery, the Aotea Centre, and various major sports facilities. From ATEED, it has acquired responsibly for major events as well as various other activities to support the Auckland economy.[5]

The organisation's

statement of intent
lists its strategic responsibilities as being:

  • "Enhancing Auckland as a culturally vibrant city for all"
  • "Expanding economic opportunities for all Aucklanders"
  • "Achieving social, economic, cultural and environmental return on Tataki Auckland Unlimited's investment"
  • "Enhancing Auckland's local, national and global reputation and appeal"
  • "Increasing capital invested into Auckland for economic and cultural outcomes."[6]

Organisation

Owned Facilities

Source:[6]

Controversies

Wayne Brown

2022 Mayoral Campaign

In his 2022 Mayoral Campaign, candidate Wayne Brown was heavily critical of Auckland's council-controlled organisations - including Auckland Unlimited. He campaigned to "Take Back Control of Council Organisations", declaring that "Panuku & Auckland Unlimited are expensive organisations that need to prove their worth. They must be accountable and deliver real benefit for ratepayers or be shut down. [...] Auckland Unlimited is a sprawling empire that needs to be refocused back to top priorities."[7] He was also reported as promising to stop ratepayer funding for the organisation, calling it a "tourism promotions company" and - at other times - a "travel agency"[8] while questioning why the council was "subsidising" it.[9] Upon assuming office as mayor, however, he was quoted as saying that he was "pleasantly surprised" with the organisation after attending a governing body briefing presented by the CCOs.[8] During the campaign an article on the news website - Stuff - was critical of Brown's position on Auckland Unlimited and his depiction of it as a "travel agency," pointing out that the organisation runs major Auckland assets such as "the zoo, theatres, stadiums, galleries and other facilities and self-funds 44% of its operation."[10]

Art Gallery Controversy

In December 2022, Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown once again clashed with Auckland Unlimited over its management of the Auckland Art Gallery. The organisation presented its quarterly report to the CCO Direction and Oversight committee of the council's governing body; the presentation reportedly made mention of the fact that the Art Gallery missed its target of 13,000 visitors between July and September, and only had 9516. This reportedly led to the mayor making various "disparaging" remarks about the Art Gallery, including "How do we get to have 122 people looking after a few paintings in a building that nobody goes to?" and "9500 wouldn't run a dairy in terms of turnover." Auckland Unlimited later clarified that the 9516 statistic referred to the visitors to paid exhibitions and that the Art Gallery received 54, 812 total visitors over that period.[11]

References

  1. ^ Council, Auckland. "Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development (ATEED)". Auckland Council. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  2. ^ Council, Auckland. "Review of council-controlled organisations (CCOs)". Auckland Council. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  3. ^ "Auckland Council's new cultural agency name Auckland Unlimited". NZ Herald. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  4. ^ Niall, Todd (2020-10-21). "ATEED chief Nick Hill to head merged Auckland Council agencies". Stuff. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  5. ^ Council, Auckland. "Economic and cultural development". Auckland Council. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  6. ^ a b "Statement of Intent". aucklandunlimited.com. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  7. ^ "Kia ora. Why vote for me?". Wayne Brown for Mayor. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  8. ^ a b Niall, Todd (2022-11-03). "Auckland mayor Wayne Brown warms to council agencies after first encounter". Stuff. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  9. ^ "Auckland mayoralty: Wayne Brown's policies to fix the Super City". NZ Herald. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  10. ^ Niall, Todd (2022-09-19). "Auckland mayoralty: Wayne Brown's 'fixes' put under the microscope". Stuff. Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  11. ^ Niall, Todd (2022-12-06). "Mayor Wayne Brown compares Auckland Art Gallery visitors to dairy customers". Stuff. Retrieved 2023-01-16.