Behind every amalgamation proposal are thousands of people who work for the councils involved. Understandably, one of the most common questions during reform is what happens to council staff. This is a fair concern, and it deserves a straight answer rather than reassurance that glosses over the reality.
The honest starting point
The honest answer is that the detail is not yet settled for the current round of reform. The proposals are still developing, no enabling legislation is in place, and much depends on the model each region adopts. What follows is based on how mergers have worked in practice, including the Auckland experience, rather than on a finished rulebook.
Services still need to be delivered
The first thing to understand is that amalgamation changes who employs people, not whether the work needs doing. Roads still need maintaining, consents still need processing, libraries still need running and water still needs delivering. The vast majority of frontline and operational roles continue, because the services they support continue.
In a merger, staff from the previous councils typically transfer into the new organisation. The work moves with them. This is why councils often reassure staff that day-to-day service delivery will carry on through the transition.
Where change tends to happen
The roles most affected by a merger are usually not frontline ones. They are the duplicated functions that two or more separate councils each used to run.
Senior leadership. Several councils each had their own chief executive and senior management team. A merged organisation needs one, so leadership structures change.
Back-office functions. Areas such as finance, human resources, communications and IT are where duplication is most obvious, and where a single organisation may need fewer people doing the same task.
Systems and processes. Merging different payroll, consenting and asset systems is a major task in itself, and it shapes how teams are organised in the new entity.
A note of realism on savings
Amalgamation is often promoted on the promise of doing more with fewer staff. The Auckland experience is a useful caution here. Despite that promise, the number of staff on the payroll after amalgamation ended up higher than the combined total of the eight councils beforehand. A merger can reduce duplication in some areas while adding roles in others, particularly during a complex transition.
What staff and communities can do
If you work for a council facing reform, the most useful thing is to follow the detail of your region’s proposal as it develops, including any transition and workforce planning. Councils have signalled a commitment to working closely with affected teams. The change is real, but for most people it is a change of employer and structure rather than the disappearance of the work itself.