Tania Te Rangingangana Simpson, new Chair of the Waitangi National Trust Board. Photo: Supplied/Waitangi National Trust
Tania Te Rangingangana Simpson, new chair of the Waitangi National Trust Board.
The new chairperson of the Waitangi National Trust Board says she intends to hit the ground running in what will ultimately be a short term.
Tania Te Rangingangana Simpson ONZM becomes the first wāhine to hold the role of chair since the trust's establishment in 1932, replacing Pita Tipene who stepped down last month after serving for the maximum length of nine years.
Simpson has served as a trustee of the Waitangi National Trust since 2017 and as deputy chair since 2021, representing the descendants of the chief Pomare. Like Tipene, she too is approaching the nine-year term limit, but she said there is still time for her to help strengthen the governance and assist the continued development of Waitangi.
"So that just means I need to not waste any time but to use the time wisely. It also means thinking about succession and thinking about what will happen at the end of that term and supporting the board through its processes to prepare for that.
"So the time may be short but I think we can achieve a lot during that time."
The Waitangi National Trust is the guardian of the Waitangi Treaty Grounds and facilitates the annual Waitangi Day celebrations.
Simpson (Ngāpuhi, Ngāi Tahu, Tainui) currently serves on the boards of Auckland International Airport, Meridian Energy and Waste Management New Zealand. Her previous roles include board positions with the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, AgResearch and Tainui Group Holdings.
Simpson said she is looking forward to taking on what may come in the new role, saying there is important work to do.
"[I'm] pleased that we have a woman chair so that it demonstrates to other women and to younger women that these positions are open to them to pursue."
Simpson said she prefers a collaborative style of leadership, something she plans to extend to the government despite heightened tensions during the last two Waitangi commemorations.
"While there may be heightened discussions around aspects of Te Tiriti o Waitangi and how that is given effect to in our current world in particular in government processes, Waitangi itself continues to be the place for that kind of dialogue to occur and the place for all New Zealanders and in particular the parties to the treaty to come together and talk."
The trust has enjoyed a good working relationship with government over the years, with the government continuing to support Waitangi through projects and development funding, she said.
The trust is much more focused on maintaining Waitangi as a special, tapu place where the treaty was signed and were the spirit of partnership was agreed, she said.
"We look after that place and space and the wairua of that place in order that the parties can come together and experience it and reflect and talk about what it means to us today."
Simpson said ultimately the dialogue between Māori and government is a good thing and Waitangi is an appropriate place for it to happen.
"It is an interesting time, an interesting juncture in the development of our nationhood in that we are having conversations nationally around the place of Te Tiriti o Waitangi, around what the treaty promised, about what it means and how we will reflect that within our national systems and structures."
Orginisations like the Waitangi National Trust and the Waitangi Tribunal which are close to the treaty and its history have a role to play in working through those discussions and getting to a good conclusion, she said.
Lisa Tumahai, the former chair of Ngāi Tahu and representative on the board of the people, Pākeha and Māori, living in the South Island, will step into the roll of deputy chair.
The chief executive of Waitangi Ltd Ben Dalton said Simpson's appointment is not only a landmark for the trust but a testament to her unwavering dedication to the kaupapa of the treaty.
"Her leadership will help deepen the understanding and relevance of Waitangi for generations to come," he said.
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