The New Zealand Herald

Auckland mulls $1b housing fund

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Hamilton City Council is ready to get the diggers rolling from the Government’s $1 billion housing fund, but Auckland Council is yet to stake a claim.

Hamilton has applied for $240 million of the $1b fund to fast-track infrastruc­ture for 2350 to 3100 homes in Peacocke and Rotokauri, described by Mayor Andrew King as a very convincing proposal with developers on board and diggers ready to roll.

The fund, set up by the Government in July last year, offered five councils low interest debt to fund such things as water and roading for new housing. The recipients are Auckland, Hamilton, Tauranga, Christchur­ch and Queenstown Lakes councils.

A spokeswoma­n for Mayor Phil Goff said the council was still in the drafting stage, but acknowledg­ed concerns about possible constraint­s of taking on more debt.

Bids for a slice of the $1b pie close at the end of the month.

A monthly newsletter on council goings-on, Town Hall, published by local government consultanc­y McGredy Winder, says the Housing Infrastruc­ture Fund poses a costly risk for ratepayers.

It quotes a Cabinet paper which says councils with high levels of debt could come close to or over their debt limits, resulting in credit rating downgrades and higher inter- est repayments.

Auckland Council’s debt to revenue currently sits at 256 per cent, near the debt ceiling of 265 per cent.

Goff has warned that a credit downgrade would reduce investor confidence in Auckland Council, drive up the cost of borrowing and reduce council’s ability to secure longer-duration debt.

“The issues that these councils face is that, pushing up against lending ceilings, they have little or no borrowing headroom through which to fund the billions of dollars of infrastruc­ture investment required to service growth,” said Town Hall.

— Bernard Orsman

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