Mayor will stand again

Waipā district mayor Susan O’Regan is planning for a second term and will seek re-election in October.

Cambridge News January 16 2025

The News sought comments from mayors in the Good Local Media readership area following Paula Southgate’s announcement she would not seek a third term in the Hamilton mayor’s office.

“It’s no real secret,” said O’Regan, 52. “There’s such a need for continuity with water reform.”

O’Regan, with other mayors, has been involved in leading the exploration of options for water reform.

Waipā and Waitomo were the first district councils to agree to sign the Waikato Water Done Well agreement last year to investigate the establishment of a council-controlled organisation (CCO) to deliver water and wastewater services.

Mayor Susan O’Regan at a recent meeting.

Seeing through the Long-Term Plan, the council’s submission against Global Contracting Solutions’ application to build a waste to energy plant on Racecourse Road, Te Awamutu, reestablishing the youth council, and Cambridge Connections were all on O’Regan’s agenda.

“It’s not like it’s business as usual,” she said.

O’Regan was elected mayor in 2022, succeeding Jim Mylchreest, after serving the council as Kakepuku Ward councillor for two terms. In her second term O’Regan chaired the council’s Strategic Planning and Policy Committee.

Cheers – Susan O’Regan and husband John Hayward start their celebrations after the mayoral victory.

Judge Valley Dairies, which O’Regan runs with her husband John Hayward, has won multiple Waikato Farm Environment Awards.

Jacqui Church – Waikato mayor

Waikato district mayor Jacqui Church will become the first female incumbent to stand for re-election in the district.

“I would like to do a second term, if people think I have done a good job,” she told The News. “It’s a privilege to serve the people.”

The biggest issues in her district were water infrastructure and affordability, she said.

“Affordability is not something we can fix,” she said. But it is something the council can be mindful of.

“With water the opportunity is ongoing. There’s a real opportunity in the Waikato for longer term bipartisan agreements,” she said.

Max Baxter

Ōtorohanga Mayor Max Baxter will hang up his mayoral chains this year.

When Baxter leaves the council offices in Maniapoto Street for the last time in October he will have completed four three-year terms or 12 years in the role.

“After 12 years I have decided that we have achieved all we set out to do,” Baxter, 60, told The News.

He and his team had worked hard to turn Ōtorohanga District Council into a high-performance territorial authority.

“We are doing extremely well,” he said.

“It’s time for someone else to take it on and put their impression on it.”

Baxter was elected mayor in October 2013, after Dale Williams decided not to stand again and moved away from the district.

Baxter will continue with his business interests. He is owner and director of Stanleigh Farms Ltd, a dairy operation which follows environmental best practice, and founding executive director of pyrolysis plant operator Waro Preta GP Ltd producing biochar for agricultural use.

John Robertson

Waitomo district mayor John Robertson intends to hold on to his mayoral chains for another term.

“I am planning to run again,” Robertson,73, said.

He will have served the district for two terms, or six years, by the time the election results are announced on October 14. He was elected in 2019, succeeding Brian Hanna.

“There’s a lot going on in local government, including the water reform, and we have got some big decisions to make.”

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