Mayor of Hamilton

The mayor is the leader of the council. Their job is to promote a vision for the city and lead the development of the council’s plans, policies and budget. The mayor appoints the deputy mayor, establishes committees for particular topics, and appoints chairs for those committees. This is a single transferable vote (STV) election, so you vote by ranking the candidates on your ballot paper. Compare the candidates and their policies to decide who to vote for in the Hamilton City Council mayoral election.

Climate change and resilience

Climate change poses a huge challenge for communities as more frequent extreme weather events require us to rethink how we live and where. Local authorities are at the forefront of efforts to respond, with responsibilities for environmental planning and regulation, as well as civil defence. Many councils have plans to reduce emissions in their area and are working to help their communities adapt to a warming world.

Climate change and resilience

Climate change poses a huge challenge for communities as more frequent extreme weather events require us to rethink how we live and where. Local authorities are at the forefront of efforts to respond, with responsibilities for environmental planning and regulation, as well as civil defence. Many councils have plans to reduce emissions in their area and are working to help their communities adapt to a warming world.

  • Ensure climate change action by encouraging recycling and responsible use of electricity, water and plastic products.

    Ensure that Hamilton's earthquake-strengthen certification system for buildings meets national earthquake-prone building (EPB) standards.

    Reduce car emissions by promoting one zero car day per week, carpooling, more use of public transport and a remote workday per week.

  • Enhance civil defence systems to prepare for natural disasters, prioritising local safety over global climate agreements.

    Promote evidence-based policies and reject unproven human-caused climate change claims to avoid wasteful spending.

    Strengthen flood defenses to protect Hamilton from extreme rainfall, ensuring resilient infrastructure without costly CO2 taxes.

  • Adapt by planting trees and reducing carbon emissions.

    Commit to being carbon neutral by 2040.

    Create our own kaitiaki guardians and homeguard.

  • Eliminate single-use plastics from council operations to protect life from devastating pollution.

    Establish circular economy hubs to reduce waste and strengthen community resilience.

    Invest in riparian planting and wetland restoration to reduce flooding whilst supporting native wildlife.

  • Replace short-term political planning with long-term planning to protect limited resources and the environment.

    Build civic readiness for emergency response ensuring residents, organisations and businesses are prepared to respond effectively.

    Build climate resilience and fit-for-purpose infrastructure to handle extreme weather events including storm water systems.

  • Provide flood relief from storm water overflow.

    Replace council fleet with electric vehicles.

    Repurpose earthquake prone buildings with refitting.

  • Design, build and maintain robust infrastructure that can handle the most extreme weather and survive many natural disasters.

    Protect against cyberattacks and solar activity risks by avoiding over-reliance on internet-connected or controlled infrastructure.

    Use realistic modelling to predict risks and prevent policy-based evidence-making being used to justify schemes such as managed retreat.

  • Ensure climate change action by encouraging recycling and responsible use of electricity, water and plastic products.

    Ensure that Hamilton's earthquake-strengthen certification system for buildings meets national earthquake-prone building (EPB) standards.

    Reduce car emissions by promoting one zero car day per week, carpooling, more use of public transport and a remote workday per week.

  • Enhance civil defence systems to prepare for natural disasters, prioritising local safety over global climate agreements.

    Promote evidence-based policies and reject unproven human-caused climate change claims to avoid wasteful spending.

    Strengthen flood defenses to protect Hamilton from extreme rainfall, ensuring resilient infrastructure without costly CO2 taxes.

  • Adapt by planting trees and reducing carbon emissions.

    Commit to being carbon neutral by 2040.

    Create our own kaitiaki guardians and homeguard.

  • Eliminate single-use plastics from council operations to protect life from devastating pollution.

    Establish circular economy hubs to reduce waste and strengthen community resilience.

    Invest in riparian planting and wetland restoration to reduce flooding whilst supporting native wildlife.

  • Replace short-term political planning with long-term planning to protect limited resources and the environment.

    Build civic readiness for emergency response ensuring residents, organisations and businesses are prepared to respond effectively.

    Build climate resilience and fit-for-purpose infrastructure to handle extreme weather events including storm water systems.

  • Provide flood relief from storm water overflow.

    Replace council fleet with electric vehicles.

    Repurpose earthquake prone buildings with refitting.

  • Design, build and maintain robust infrastructure that can handle the most extreme weather and survive many natural disasters.

    Protect against cyberattacks and solar activity risks by avoiding over-reliance on internet-connected or controlled infrastructure.

    Use realistic modelling to predict risks and prevent policy-based evidence-making being used to justify schemes such as managed retreat.