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REBUILDING HOTEL

AFTER THE EARTHQUAKE. HOW MONEY WAS RAISED. STATEMENT FOR COMPANY. (By Telegraph.—Press Association.) NAPIER, Monday. A statement concerning the financing of the rebuilding of the Masonic Hotel et Napier has been issued by Mr. G. Ebbett, of Hastings, managing director of the company owning the hotel. "I have read statements made in Parliament and elsewhere publicly relative to the finance for the re-erection of the Masonic Hotel," said Mr. Ebbett. "I take them as having been reported correctly, and the three following statements call for some comment:—(l) The Public Trustee lent £15,000 on second mortgage of the property; (2) the fita'e Advances Superintendent lent £2l,!":0 on first mortgage of the property; tii) the Unemployment Board lent £8000 on third mortgage of the same property. "I take the first two together. As they stand, both are utterly wrong and most unjust, and constitute a very grave reflection on the Public Trustee and State Advances Superintendent, p.nd on the administration of their respective Departments. 'A Second Mortgage by Law.' "The Public Trustee, in the sense in which this statement is made, never at any time lent £15,000 or any other sum on second mortgage of this property. Prior to the earthquake he lent £40,000 on first mortgage of a property worth at that time £100,000, and he took good care to satisfy himself he was well secured. When the earthquake destroyed the building, he received £25,000 earthquake insurance, leaving him with a first mortgage of .£15,000. When the Rehabilitation Committee lent £21,000 to help re-erect the building, his became a second mortgage by law, whether he agreed or not. "The State Advances Superintendent, as such, never at any time lent any money on the security of this property. When the Treasury, on the recommendation of the Rehabilitation Committee, made the advance to help the rebuilding, it was arranged that the mortgage, in common with all other similar mortgages, should be taken by the superintendent as a matter of expediency. To infer that any settler or farmer or anybody else was deprived of even as much as one pound which he would otherwise have got is simply ludicrous. It is raised in complete ignorance, of the facts." Decision To Abandon Site. With reference to the Unemployment Board's loan, Mr. Ebbett said the company, after the earthquake, was left with the site and a heap of ruins, subject to a mortgage of £15,000. The Rehabilitation Committee offered to lend £21,000. The building could not be erected for less than £40,000. After vainly trying to raise additional money, the directors decided to abandon the site to the Public Trustee. It was left to Mr. Ebbett, as chairman, to call a general meeting of shareholders.

"Before that was done the chairman and deputy-chairman of the Unemployment Board visited Napier, but not at our request," said Mr. Ebbett. "The position was then this. Twelve months had gone by since the earthquake. With some two or three exceptions no attempt had been made to rebuild Napier, and there was no sign of any such attempt. Many had serious doubts whether it would ever be rebuilt, and the reason everybody thought he knew. The Masonic was considered to be the centre, the pivot round which everything revolved and the key to the whole position. Until it was commenced nobody else would commence, but let it once be begun and the whole atmosphere would be changed. Subsequent happenings have well proved this to be right, and to-day it is there for anybody to see. The Board's Stipulation. "The members of the board met the directors. 'What is being done about the Masonic? , they asked. 'We are abandoning it,' we said, 'we haven't the necessary money, we can't provide it and we can't get it. It would be stupid to commence unless we could see our way through, and we can't do that without at least another £8000.' '■'They said:,'lt is our function to promote employment. We can't go outside it, but if by some means we could get all this work commenced and at the same time help to start rehabilitation in Napier, we would consider it. Can you guarantee that £8000 will be spent in wages? We can't find money for anything else.' "We gave that assurance. As a matter of fact, the total wages paid to date is more than £16,000. Subsequently the board agreed to lend £8000 on third mortgage and on the condition that with the exception of a certain few specially skilled men, the whole of the labour should be drawn from the unemployed register in Napier. We think we were hardly treated, because we have to pay the £8000, and had things been hung up for another month, we should have got the biggest part of it in subsidy for nothing. "If there had been no Unemployment Board loan, the Masonic site in all probability would have been a heap of ruins to-day."

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19321101.2.51

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXIII, Issue 259, 1 November 1932, Page 5

Word Count
821

REBUILDING HOTEL Auckland Star, Volume LXIII, Issue 259, 1 November 1932, Page 5

REBUILDING HOTEL Auckland Star, Volume LXIII, Issue 259, 1 November 1932, Page 5

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