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NZR review
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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to gt12 on last edited by
    #549

    @gt12 said in NZR review:

    @Kiwiwomble said in NZR review:

    @gt12 said in NZR review:

    The Pilkington report laid out that it sees the political games of the PUs fltering into the boardroom where other key stakeholders don't get representation (e.g., Super franchises, players), and basically says that the PUs are misusing funds (redirecting may the term) to focus on high performance rather than community rugby (like, only 21% of their spend vs 59% on high performance).

    i think its a bit harsh to say that spending on high performance is misusing funds, until NZR has the balls to come out and say the NPC is no longer a important competition then i think trying to do well in it (short of overspending which some have)....doing well raises interest, attracts more sponsors and new players, more money in the door etc

    I can't be bothered going back to the report, but it explained situations where money earmarked for local club rugby was redirected for high performance NPC.

    ok, that is more clearly unacceptable, as long as thats the level they are being critiqued for rather than just trying to well in the NPC

    gt12G 1 Reply Last reply
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  • mikedogzM Online
    mikedogzM Online
    mikedogz
    wrote on last edited by
    #550

    The Super rugby franchises don't get a vote do they? That could probably change in the future.

    KiwiwombleK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • WingerW Offline
    WingerW Offline
    Winger
    replied to nzzp on last edited by
    #551

    @nzzp said in NZR review:

    That is resounding.

    Unless someone has more info, I don't see a lot of difference in them. Insisting on 3 board members with PU experience is very different to representing a particular PU on the board.

    I hate how the NPC has been undermined over the years by NZR. They have treated it shamefully and it's no surprise that it is a shadow of its former self.

    Nor do I. Pilkington wanted 100% and he got 95%. Still an outcome for reform

    The thing is it still will be very hard to attract / find outstanding Board members. They just don't exist. Esp not to focus on NZ rugby (and low remuneration). It will be made much harder with these diversity requirements

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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to mikedogz on last edited by Kiwiwomble
    #552

    @mikedogz said in NZR review:

    The Super rugby franchises don't get a vote do they? That could probably change in the future.

    arent most (all?) for the franchises partially owned by at least one or two of the local PU's?

    edit: as of 2021

    Blues: 38.5% ARU 21.5% NHRU
    Chiefs: PU's 50%
    Crusaders: PU's 100%
    Highlanders: ORFU 7% SR% 4.7% NORFU 1.3%
    Hurricanes: WRU 50% HKR 3%

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  • antipodeanA Online
    antipodeanA Online
    antipodean
    wrote on last edited by
    #553

    So effectively what we have is PUs determined to live in the past and misuse the money provide to them.

    WingerW 1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • gt12G Offline
    gt12G Offline
    gt12
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by gt12
    #554

    @Kiwiwomble said in NZR review:

    @gt12 said in NZR review:

    @Kiwiwomble said in NZR review:

    @gt12 said in NZR review:

    The Pilkington report laid out that it sees the political games of the PUs fltering into the boardroom where other key stakeholders don't get representation (e.g., Super franchises, players), and basically says that the PUs are misusing funds (redirecting may the term) to focus on high performance rather than community rugby (like, only 21% of their spend vs 59% on high performance).

    i think its a bit harsh to say that spending on high performance is misusing funds, until NZR has the balls to come out and say the NPC is no longer a important competition then i think trying to do well in it (short of overspending which some have)....doing well raises interest, attracts more sponsors and new players, more money in the door etc

    I can't be bothered going back to the report, but it explained situations where money earmarked for local club rugby was redirected for high performance NPC.

    ok, that is more clearly unacceptable, as long as thats the level they are being critiqued for rather than just trying to well in the NPC

    I went back to have a read (from p. 38, discussing roles and its relationship to funding):

    Agreed frameworks of accountability are not consistently adhered to, and the formal NZR corporate strategy insufficiently assigns roles and responsibilities. Both parties need to be able to hold each other to account. For example, we were informed that, in some cases, funds granted for the community game have been rerouted into high performance.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • WingerW Offline
    WingerW Offline
    Winger
    replied to Chris on last edited by
    #555

    @Chris said in NZR review:

    NZRPA your move.

    The top dog will likely be told to pull his horns in

    ChrisC 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • WingerW Offline
    WingerW Offline
    Winger
    replied to antipodean on last edited by
    #556

    @antipodean said in NZR review:

    So effectively what we have is PUs determined to live in the past and misuse the money provide to them.

    Can you explain the big difference between proposal 1 and 2

    antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • antipodeanA Online
    antipodeanA Online
    antipodean
    replied to Winger on last edited by
    #557

    @Winger said in NZR review:

    @antipodean said in NZR review:

    So effectively what we have is PUs determined to live in the past and misuse the money provide to them.

    Can you explain the big difference between proposal 1 and 2

    Proposal 2 cements the ability of PUs to continue the behaviour highlighted a few posts above yours (https://www.forum.thesilverfern.com/post/946052)

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • ChrisC Away
    ChrisC Away
    Chris
    replied to Winger on last edited by
    #558

    @Winger said in NZR review:

    @Chris said in NZR review:

    NZRPA your move.

    The top dog will likely be told to pull his horns in

    It will be interesting,I would think it will be hard for NZPA to back down after the statements they have made.
    That would make look toothless to some degree.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • gt12G Offline
    gt12G Offline
    gt12
    wrote on last edited by gt12
    #559

    The report outlined that as NZ voting structures stand, a minority of unions can block change (9/27) due to voting share being determined by club numbers. @Duluth I didn't see this mentioned in proposal 1 or 2, have you seen anything about it?

    Interestingly, it looks like proposal 2 has some less direct ways that the PUs continue to exert influence beyond the 3 seat requirement on the board.

    Edit: They have increased their role on the stakeholder council to 50% meaning they can effectively stop that functioning if they are consolidated in their actions. can't find exact numbers of how many people will be on this.

    They have also increased their role (edit, maybe not exactly theirs) on the appointments board to 50%, meaning they can block anything that doesn't pass muster with the PUs. Edit: The chair does not have a casting vote.

    I can know start to see why the NZRPA is acting this way - the board will look less PU heavy but to get there, you will still have to be heavily political and directly endorsed by the PUs to get there.

    OK, I think I worked it out - the appointments panel (6 members) is where they maintain power a lot of behind the throne. It deals with recruitment and payment of board members, making suggestions to the NZRU board. By increasing their stake to 50% and with no casting vote, the PUs do have outsized control over the composition of the 'independent' board.

    nzzpN WingerW gt12G 3 Replies Last reply
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  • nzzpN Online
    nzzpN Online
    nzzp
    replied to gt12 on last edited by
    #560

    @gt12 said in NZR review:

    I can know start to see why the NZRPA is acting this way - the board will look less PU heavy but to get there, you will still have to be heavily political and directly endorsed by the PUs to get there.

    3/9 on the board now must have PU experience, so 6/9 are independent.

    But the selections panel should appoint the other 6. Is the panel makeup different in Proposals 1 and 2? I didn't think it was - open to be corrected though.

    gt12G 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • WingerW Offline
    WingerW Offline
    Winger
    replied to gt12 on last edited by
    #561

    @gt12 said in NZR review:

    The report outlined that as NZ voting structures stand, a minority of unions can block change (9/27) due to voting share being determined by club numbers. @Duluth I didn't see this mentioned in proposal 1 or 2, have you seen anything about it?

    Interestingly, it looks like proposal 2 has some less direct ways that the PUs continue to exert influence beyond the 3 seat requirement on the board.

    They have increased their role on the stakeholder council to 50% meaning they can effectively stop that functioning if they are consolidated in their actions.

    They have also increased their role on the appointments board to 50%, meaning they can block anything that doesn't pass muster with the PUs.

    I can know start to see why the NZRPA is acting this way - the board will look less PU heavy but to get there, you will still have to be heavily political and directly endorsed by the PUs to get there.

    But this

    CRFU's Winchester said PUs had a "genuine desire'' to have one proposal but everyone couldn't get on the same page. If Proposal 2 is endorsed "history will be created''. He reflects on history and the PUs always having a voice on the NZ Rugby board. He is now stating that under 2 all directors on the board would be scrutinised by a recruitment company, followed by scrutiny by an advisory panel. Followed by an appointments panel, which will be a mix of independents and advisors - he says the PUs won't influence it.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • gt12G Offline
    gt12G Offline
    gt12
    replied to gt12 on last edited by
    #562

    @gt12 said in NZR review:

    The report outlined that as NZ voting structures stand, a minority of unions can block change (9/27) due to voting share being determined by club numbers. @Duluth I didn't see this mentioned in proposal 1 or 2, have you seen anything about it?

    Interestingly, it looks like proposal 2 has some less direct ways that the PUs continue to exert influence beyond the 3 seat requirement on the board.

    Edit: They have increased their role on the stakeholder council to 50% meaning they can effectively stop that functioning if they are consolidated in their actions. can't find exact numbers of how many people will be on this.

    They have also increased their role on the appointments board to 50%, meaning they can block anything that doesn't pass muster with the PUs. Edit: The chair does not have a casting vote.

    I can know start to see why the NZRPA is acting this way - the board will look less PU heavy but to get there, you will still have to be heavily political and directly endorsed by the PUs to get there.

    OK, I think I worked it out - the appointments panel (6 members) is where they maintain power a lot of behind the throne. It deals with recruitment and payment of board members, making suggestions to the NZRU board. By increasing their stake to 50% and with no casting vote, the PUs do have outsized control over the composition of the 'independent' board.

    Is there a full version of Proposal 2 anywhere? Going off the explanation from here, it's unclear what the PU representation on the stakeholder council will be.

    It seems that the appointments panel will have 6, but three of those come from the stakeholder council (so not necessarily PUs?), but it's unclear to me whether the PUs have control of the stakeholder council.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • gt12G Offline
    gt12G Offline
    gt12
    replied to nzzp on last edited by gt12
    #563

    @nzzp said in NZR review:

    @gt12 said in NZR review:

    I can know start to see why the NZRPA is acting this way - the board will look less PU heavy but to get there, you will still have to be heavily political and directly endorsed by the PUs to get there.

    3/9 on the board now must have PU experience, so 6/9 are independent.

    But the selections panel should appoint the other 6. Is the panel makeup different in Proposals 1 and 2? I didn't think it was - open to be corrected though.

    yes, for the appointment panel, who are very important in this process see page 99:

    Proposal 1 has 5 members: Two independents, one appointed by the NZR board and two by the Stakeholder Council.

    Proposal 2 has 6 members: Two independents, one appointed by the NZR board and three by the Council. There is no casting vote.

    Edit: As I understand it, the appointments panel recommends to the NZRU board, who recommend to the members (PUs), then the members vote. So, either way, the PUs still have the power to allow people on or not.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • S Away
    S Away
    SouthernMann
    wrote on last edited by
    #564

    What is the definition of PU experience. Does it have to be a former or current board member? Or can it be someone who has worked in a PU, a former club delegate with high-level business experience? Where is the bar?

    gt12G 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • nzzpN Online
    nzzpN Online
    nzzp
    wrote on last edited by
    #565

    Reflecting on this, the requirement for PU involvement in the past seems to indicate the PU don't trust the external board appointments. Possibly summed up that they didn't trust the conclusions of the Pilkington review.

    Proposal 1 was clearly rejected by the PU, and Proposal 2 clearly adopted.

    It's done now. I think a step forward; time will tell how good or bad it is.

    gt12G WingerW 2 Replies Last reply
    2
  • gt12G Offline
    gt12G Offline
    gt12
    replied to nzzp on last edited by
    #566

    @nzzp said in NZR review:

    Reflecting on this, the requirement for PU involvement in the past seems to indicate the PU don't trust the external board appointments. Possibly summed up that they didn't trust the conclusions of the Pilkington review.

    Proposal 1 was clearly rejected by the PU, and Proposal 2 clearly adopted.

    It's done now. I think a step forward; time will tell how good or bad it is.

    Now we see whether the NZRPA have the balls to follow through.

    WingerW 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • WingerW Offline
    WingerW Offline
    Winger
    replied to nzzp on last edited by
    #567

    @nzzp said in NZR review:

    Reflecting on this, the requirement for PU involvement in the past seems to indicate the PU don't trust the external board appointments. Possibly summed up that they didn't trust the conclusions of the Pilkington review.

    Proposal 1 was clearly rejected by the PU, and Proposal 2 clearly adopted.

    It's done now. I think a step forward; time will tell how good or bad it is.

    Agree. And maybe for good reason

    It's a shame our media is so poor. I haven't got time to look into all of this in depth but who do you trust to do a good impartial comparison

    Is this right
    Do people actually read and understand the report and the two proposals - or do they just rely on self-interested misinformation from particular parties? The two proposals were and are virtually identical in all material ways - the differences are minor. Proposal #2 represents a major step away and forward from the existing structure. We should all be embracing it and ignoring the self-interested detractors.

    Or this
    A sad day for NZ Rugby, unfortunately the PU's are fighting for survival, and banding together to make a stand. The future of the game looked dire before this decision, and now it's even worse, if that's possible.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • gt12G Offline
    gt12G Offline
    gt12
    replied to SouthernMann on last edited by
    #568

    @SouthernMann said in NZR review:

    What is the definition of PU experience. Does it have to be a former or current board member? Or can it be someone who has worked in a PU, a former club delegate with high-level business experience? Where is the bar?

    Reading proposal 2 now:

    d. That the NZRB must collectively have sufficient rugby knowledge and expertise relating to rugby at all levels of the game in New Zealand, including specific knowledge relating to the governance of community/provincial rugby. In order to satisfy this criterion, as it relates to community and provincial rugby at least three members of the NZRB who have served on the Board of a New Zealand Provincial Rugby Union.

    1 Reply Last reply
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