Candidate raises data debate

Good Local editor Roy Pilott has refuted suggestions that a mayoral candidate colluded with one of the newspaper’s journalists to present information which was not publicly available.

Pilott said the figures in question were obtained as a result of The News asking council staff for them.

Mary Anne Gill’s report in The News last week on a council debate about a third bridge for Cambridge contained traffic figures sought earlier at the meeting by councillor Susan O’Regan but which staff were unable to provide.

Susan O’Regan

Gill, who was at the meeting, requested and received them from the council’s communications department later in the meeting.

O’Regan, who was at home and on Zoom for the meeting, is one of four Waipā mayoral candidates. Another mayoral candidate, Chris Woodhams, wanted to know how The News obtained the information and sent a number of emails on the issue to the editorial and advertising department.

In one to the advertising department, he wrote that council staff did not have information sought at the meeting by the councillor and an “Official Information Request” was being processed for the statistics.

“…you published stats this week requested by Susan [O’Regan]…I fear the only way these stats came to The News is via a personal briefing with a councillor,” he wrote.

Chris Woodhams

Woodhams has raised concerns with The News about its coverage and said 10 prominent local people he had approached had suggested it was biased.

He earlier complained that two stories last week about the third bridge for Cambridge were negative and that a story asking other mayoral comments for their views on his bridge suggestions, published the previous week, did not seek further comment from him.

O’Regan said the first time she saw the figures was when she read The News on Thursday. Staff provided her and other councillors with more detailed figures on Friday.

More Recent News

Building a champion

24 April 2025 The original article has been changed. Timmo’s ITM is still owned and operated by Clayton and Nicky Timmo and not Jack Mathis’ brother. Timmo’s joined ITM in 2004 and after nearly 40…

Kennedy fluoride move greeted

Anti-fluoride campaigners are claiming another victory as the United States administration takes an increasingly negative view of the use of the chemical. The latest move has seen US Health Secretary Robert Kennedy announcing plans to…

Board neutral on water option

The consultation process surrounding the formation of a seven-council controlled water authority has been described as a bitter pill to swallow. Te Awamutu-Kihikihi Community board member Sally Whitaker said she felt like Waipā District Council’s…

Creativity on show

Te Awamutu Creative Fibre group members will show off their mastery in town next week. An array of products, many of them made from scratch using centuries-old skills, will be available for purchase, including a…