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Tamah Alley

Central Otago District Council (Councillor)
Otago Regional Council (Council / Vincent Community Board)
Total Interests
22
Declared interests
Categories
4
Interest types

Appointments to organisations 10

Alexandra Community House Board

Pecuniary Interest Register – for period 1 March 2023 to 29 February 2024 - Tamah Alley (page 1)

Alexandra Community House Board

Otago Regional Council Pecuniary Interest Register (2024) (page 1)

Business South (Central Otago)

Pecuniary Interest Register – for period 1 March 2023 to 29 February 2024 - Tamah Alley (page 1)

Business South (Central Otago)

Otago Regional Council Pecuniary Interest Register (2024) (page 1)

Central Otago Wilding Conifers Control Group

Pecuniary Interest Register – for period 1 March 2023 to 29 February 2024 - Tamah Alley (page 1)

Central Otago Wilding Conifers Control Group

Otago Regional Council Pecuniary Interest Register (2024) (page 1)

LGNZ Zone 6 Chair

Pecuniary Interest Register – for period 1 March 2023 to 29 February 2024 - Tamah Alley (page 1)

LGNZ Zone 6 Chair

Otago Regional Council Pecuniary Interest Register (2024) (page 1)

Southern Lakes Trails

Pecuniary Interest Register – for period 1 March 2023 to 29 February 2024 - Tamah Alley (page 1)

Southern Lakes Trails

Otago Regional Council Pecuniary Interest Register (2024) (page 1)

Data Sources & Attribution

Attribution

Profile images are sourced from Wikimedia Commons and are used under their respective licensing terms. All images are freely licensed for use.

Interest declaration data is compiled from official government sources and public records. For the most current and complete information, please refer to the original sources.

About This Data

New Zealand elected officials are legally required to declare their financial interests publicly. Councils must maintain registers of their members' pecuniary interests under the Local Government Act 2002 (introduced November 2022), while Parliament maintains annual registers for MPs. These declarations include employment, shareholdings, property interests, gifts, and potential conflicts of interest. The legal framework promotes transparency, public trust, and helps citizens identify when elected officials may have competing financial interests in public decisions.

This information has been extracted from official pecuniary interest register sources using AI technology and reviewed by an imperfect human. Please report any errors or omissions to [email protected].

• Each entry includes links to original source documents

• Data is regularly updated as new registers are published

• All information is sourced from official government publications