New Plymouth council boss on leave following secret emergency meeting

4:51 pm on 28 June 2022

The chief executive of the New Plymouth District Council is on leave following a secret emergency meeting held last week.

Craig Stevenson.

New Plymouth District Council chief executive Craig Stevenson Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin

RNZ understands the behind-closed-doors meeting - held via Zoom on Thursday rather than on council premises - dealt with an employment issue.

New Plymouth District Council (NPDC) chief executive Craig Stevenson, who earns about $370,000 a year, is the only person directly employed by the elected councillors.

No agenda was published ahead of the meeting, but one went up online at about 3pm Monday.

It said the public-excluded meeting dealt with the Terms of Reference for an Investigation Subcommittee, but all other details were withheld.

Mayoral candidate Murray Chong was upset with the secrecy surrounding the meeting.

"We've been told we can't say anything. I'm biting at my tongue to say something but I can't, we've been bound. I think there's a heck of a lot more to it than people realise."

New Plymouth councillor Murray Chong.

File photo: New Plymouth mayoral candidate Murray Chong Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin

Chong was pissed off some councillors appeared to know more detail about the issue than others.

"The fact that I know some councillors do know what's going on and some councillors don't, I think is pretty p*** poor.

"We need to be more transparent because I can't do my job unless I know what's fully happening and some councillors do actually know what's happening.

"I don't agree with that at all, but that's the direction of what the mayor [Neil Holdom] wants."

Chong promised to be more transparent if he was elected mayor.

New Plymouth mayor Neil Holdom, left, and deputy mayor Richard Jordan.

File photo: New Plymouth mayor Neil Holdom, left, and deputy mayor Richard Jordan. Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin

Mayor Neil Holdom referred RNZ's questions about the meeting to the council communications team

Mayoral candidate Dinnie Moeahu confirmed he took part in the meeting.

"Yes, there was an emergency meeting held last Thursday, and at this stage I can't comment until further notice when we've been given more information."

The council's only current Maori councillor Dinnie Moeahu says the time for a Māori ward had come.

New Plymouth mayoral candidate Dinnie Moeahu Photo: Robin Martin

Fellow challenger for the mayoral chains, Sam Bennett also referred RNZ's questions to the council communication's team: "the NPDC will be in touch with you directly in regard your inquiry".

In a statement the council said only that: "the chief executive was currently on leave and an interim acting chief executive was in place".

The head of the council's communication department, Jacqueline Baker, had stepped into that role, it said.

Sam Bennett believes the time is right to throw his hat in the leadership ring.

File photo: New Plymouth mayoral candidate Sam Bennett Photo: RNZ / Robin Martin

Council chief executive Craig Stevenson did not return RNZ's calls or messages.

In recent months, the NPDC has lost two senior executives who would be normally have been expected to stand in the chief executive's absence.

Former deputy chief executive Kelvin Wright left council in May to take the top job at the regional development agency, Venture Taranaki.

At the beginning of the year, infrastructure boss, David Langford, took up the role of chief executive at the Whanganui District Council.

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