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Mayor of Tauranga

Mahé Drysdale was elected to be the Mayor of Tauranga after the 2024 local body elections. 

About Mayor Mahé Drysdale

Mayor Mahé Drysdale

As Mayor of Tauranga, Mahé’s vision is to see Tauranga fulfil its potential, so it becomes known as New Zealand’s best city. 

Our city’s population is growing, so he is focused on delivering the infrastructure and facilities that the Tauranga community needs and wants, while ensuring that every ratepayer dollar is spent smartly and efficiently.

Financial acumen

Mahé brings experience in accounting and financial management to the governance table having worked in investment and advisory roles for both Hobson Wealth and Forsyth Barr Limited. He has a Bachelor of Commerce degree from University of Auckland in accounting and commercial law. He also completed a Graduate Diploma of Commerce in information technology. He worked in an accounting firm early in his career and is an ACA with Chartered Accountants Australia & New Zealand (CAANZ).

Sporting achievements

Mahé is a two-time Olympic Champion in 2012 and 2016 in the single scull and won the World Championship five times, so knows what it takes to set and achieve ambitious goals on the global stage.

Mahé was Flag Bearer and Team Captain of the New Zealand Olympic Team at the 2008 Games. He was the Supreme Halberg Award Winner in 2006 and winner of the Sportsman of the Year at the Halberg Awards 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012, 2016. He was inducted as a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit (M.N.Z.M) in 2009. 

Since retiring from professional sport, Mahé has been a mentor and leader.  He has been a strong advocate for elite athletes as a co-Chair of the Athletes Co-operative, which has sought to improve terms and conditions of elite athletes with High Performance Sport New Zealand. 

A long-standing connection to Tauranga

Mahé was raised in Tauranga, attending Tauranga Primary School, Tauranga Intermediate and Tauranga Boys' College before heading to Auckland for his sixth form and then direct to University in Auckland. He took up the sport of rowing at university – he went on to have a very successful 22-year career in the sport.

His grandfather, the late Sir Robert Owens, served as Mayor of Tauranga (1968-1977) and Mount Maunganui (1971-1974).

He is married to Juliette and has three children.

Mahé welcomes the opportunity to be involved in the community and for people to share their views. 

How to contact the mayor

Correspondence for the Mayor of Tauranga

Email mayor@tauranga.govt.nz if you have any general correspondence for the Mayor of Tauranga.

Media queries for the Mayor of Tauranga

Email communications@tauranga.govt.nz if you have a media query for the Mayor of Tauranga.

Follow the mayor on social media

Post a letter to the mayor

Mayor Mahé Drysdale
Private Bag 12022
Tauranga 3143

Invite the mayor to an event

Email maree.king@tauranga.govt.nz if you would like to invite the mayor to an event.

In your invitation, please describe the event, including:

  • Event name 
  • Date and time of event
  • Location 
  • An idea of who will be attending.
  • Duration of the event
  • Desired duration of the mayor’s attendance
  • Whether you would like the mayor to give a speech – if so, what you would like him to talk about and how long you would like the speech to be? (three to five minutes is the average length of a speech).

The mayor’s Executive Assistant will check his availability. If the mayor is not available, the mayor’s office may suggest that the invitation be extended to another Tauranga City Council elected representative.

For enquiries, please contact us on 07 577 7011.

For general council enquiries contact Tauranga City Council.

News

Council considers additional cost savings for Annual Plan 2025/26

With community feedback on board, Tauranga City Council’s Elected Members are this week considering how the Council should prioritise investment and reduce costs in next year’s annual plan.

Deliberations on the draft Annual Plan 2025/26 commenced on Monday, following a month-long consultation period.

Council received 968 submissions on the draft Annual Plan 2025/26, as well as the Local Water Done Well proposal that was consulted on at the same time. Sixty-eight people spoke to their submissions at hearings earlier this month.

Tauranga Mayor Mahé Drysdale says a wide range of community views were heard during the consultation process and it’s now up to the elected members to prioritise the Council’s investments and budget for the next year, with an ongoing focus on reducing operating costs.

“During consultation, we heard from people excited about the progress being made in Tauranga, while others told us that current facilities in Tauranga are not meeting the needs of our growing community. We also heard concerns about the scale of proposed rates rises,” says Mahé.

“Taking this feedback on board, we need to consider how to get the balance right. Our population is growing, so it’s important that the city continues to progress and that we prioritise the infrastructure and facilities our community needs and wants, while keeping rates increases as low as we can.”

Mahé says since coming into office, elected members have given the organisation a clear direction that it needs to reduce costs and make financially prudent decisions that deliver value for money on every dollar spent or invested.

“We need to be smart and efficient with every ratepayer dollar we spend. It’s pleasing to see the organisation responding to this call for action and we’re now looking at what additional savings we can achieve for 2025/26.”

Mahe Drysdale
Tauranga Mayor Mahé Drysdale

The updated draft Annual Plan 2025/26 presented to Council for consideration this week includes the following proposals:

  • A further $10 million reduction in operating costs across council’s day-to-day activities, to add to the $28 million already found, reducing Council’s overall expenditure by $38 million.
  • A further reduction in the planned capital programme spend for the year, with the originally $544 million budget first reduced to $505 million and now proposed to be $498 million.
  • Rates were initially looking at a 20%+ rise, because of the need to fully-fund depreciation on Council assets, but the $28 million reduction in spending brought that back to 12% and the additional $10 million in savings now provides a 9.9% average rate rise option, depending on any additional investment/financing decisions.
  • Total Council expenditure of $589 million for the 2025/26 financial year.

Mahé thanks the staff for their efforts in responding to the challenge laid down by elected members.

“Saving 10% of discretionary spending within a 9-month period is an impressive effort. This has had an impact on the organisation, including the confirmed disestablishment of 98 roles over the past few months. This is hard, but under the circumstances, it is the right thing to do.”

He says the $10 million in further savings will be realised through an ongoing reset of the organisation in the coming months, with possible further staff reductions to come.

“We don’t apologise for being prudent with ratepayers’ money and are pleased with the organisation’s response so far, finding $38 million in savings without sacrificing levels of service.

"Making these changes now will lock-in savings for following years as we continue to push for efficiency and look to deliver lower rates increases in future, while continuing to provide the infrastructure the city desperately needs.

“We acknowledge this has been a tough time for staff and we feel for those who have lost their positions,” Mahé says.

The Council will now consider the additional savings proposed, as well as decisions that result from submissions, to arrive at a final proposed rates number.

Once deliberations on the Annual Plan 2025/26 are finished, the financial aspects of the decisions made will be confirmed at a Council meeting on 10 June.

Final adoption of the Annual Plan 2025/26 and the rates resolution will occur on 26 June.

Breakdown of savings achieved to date:

  • Projects reprioritised or delivered in-house                                         $ 3.2 million
  • Reductions in consultancy use and greater use of internal services    $ 3.9 million
  • Employee cost reductions (including training)                                    $ 9.1 million
  • Uptake-related kerbside collection cost reduction                               $ 0.9 million
  • Interest-related finance cost savings                                                    $ 2.0 million
  • Increased user fees                                                                               $ 2.3 million
  • Reduced engagement and education costs                                           $ 1.5 million
  • Other organisation-wide cost reductions                                              $ 5.1 million

           Total                                                                                                      $28.0 million
 
Breakdown of additional savings (subject to deliberation decisions):

  • Further employee cost reductions (including training)                        $ 3.2 million
  • Interest and depreciation savings                                                         $ 2.2 million
  • Process improvement savings                                                              $ 3.8 million
  • Additional and updated savings estimates                                           $ 0.8 million

           Total                                                                                                      $10.0 million
 
Other key items being discussed by Council this week:

  • Local Water Done Well – following discussions, an open workshop on the financial model is scheduled for 24 June. A decision on the preferred delivery model is expected to be considered at the Council meeting on 15 July 2025.
  • Aquatic Projects – the Memorial Park Aquatic Centre project is currently on hold, pending the outcome of site investigations currently underway, with results expected to be available in early-August. A proposal to retain the Ōtūmoetai Pool was approved by Council this week, along with support in principle for a proposal from the Mount Maunganui Aquatic Centre Trust to expand the college pool to a 50-metre outdoor training pool.

More information about topics being covered during this week’s deliberations can be found on the agenda on Council's website.

Posted: May 28, 2025,

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