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Home » ‘Grinch’ mayor may save Taranaki’s Winter Festival
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‘Grinch’ mayor may save Taranaki’s Winter Festival

By Press RoomDecember 3, 20253 Mins Read
‘Grinch’ mayor may save Taranaki’s Winter Festival
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‘Grinch’ mayor may save Taranaki’s Winter Festival

A new mayor who dresses up as the Grinch for Christmas says his cutback-council may revive New Plymouth’s cancelled winter Festival of Lights.

Mayor Max Brough campaigned on cost-cutting and a rates cap, to reign in council spending and debt.

Brough dressed as the Grinch in New Plymouth’s Christmas Parade on the weekend and has a light-up likeness of the Dr Suess character at his desk.

But as the Government announces new rules to cap rates, the mayor said the winter festival may be back in 2027.

The previous council, which Brough slammed for loose spending, ‘paused’ the winter festival in February’s annual plan budget saying the half-million-dollar cost couldn’t be justified.

The festival is a mini version of summer’s Festival of Lights in Pukekura Park, and attracted thousands downtown for illuminated artworks, music and food-trucks during the chill nights of Puanga Matariki.

Amigo & Amigo’s interactive ‘Curiosity’ is one of a dozen works lighting up for five weeks from December 20. (Source: Local Democracy Reporting)

The Grinch mayor said his new council discussed the winter festival informally soon after the election.

But councillors hadn’t been sworn-in so couldn’t meet the deadlines of companies that tour the lights around the motu.

“It’s not just a local thing, where we go and get lights and set them up.”

Councillors definitely want to revisit options for 2027, said Brough.

“Maybe we can do something at a smaller scale.

“If there’s an opportunity to do something on the Winter Festival with TAFT [Taranaki Arts Festival Trust] I’m hoping we can cobble something together.”

He wanted to avoid raising hopes too high.

“Right now, it’s probably not even 50-50, to be honest.”

Brough said new Councillor Gina Blackburn pointed out the free festival’s popularity with young families, as winter darkness means tamariki can see the lights earlier in the evening.

Meanwhile the summer Festival of Lights begins on December 20.

Twelve new installations include Lisa Reihana’s Te Wheke-a-Muturangi, and interactive works from by Amigo & Amigo and Beamhacker.

Amongst 70 events over five weeks are Lost Tribe Aotearoa, Rā Charmian, Caravãna Sun, Mazbou Q, kiwi rockers Racing and New Plymouth’s People of the Sun.

For kids there are foam parties, glow-activities and a tots-to-teens music night.

There’ll be acrobats, a Full Moon Gong Journey, and outdoor movies Cool Runnings, The Mountain and Mamma Mia! Sing-Along.

Glowing row boats will be back on the lake and there’s a treasure hunt with prizes

New Plymouth District Council says around 155,000 attended last summer’s festival, 44% of them from outside Taranaki.

A report from BERL found economic impact of $15.8m total expenditure around the Festival of Lights, with $8.1m added to Taranaki GDP.

LDR is local body reporting funded by RNZ and NZ on Air

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