Bay of Plenty Times

Fuel tax relief — for now

Roads of National Significan­ce are back on table

- Adam Pearse

At his post-cabinet press conference yesterday, Prime Minister Christophe­r Luxon said the draft Government Policy Statement on land transport would invested more than $20 billion over three years. The key part of the GPS was the 15 Roads of National Significan­ce programme, as well billions committed to addressing potholes.

Luxon said increasing road maintenanc­e was crucial for his Government, saying many Kiwis had experience­d the poor quality of some roads.

On safety, Luxon talked about the low number of people who thought they would get caught drink-driving. He said that attitude was “frankly unacceptab­le” and needed to change. Investment­s would be made in enhancing breath-testing stops.

Transport Minister Simeon Brown said it was not only national roads but some local routes which would receive upgrades through the Government’s focus on roads.

The upgrades of roads would be paid for through a number of measures including tolls, privatepub­lic partnershi­ps and value capture tools such as congestion charging.

Brown said the Government intended to hold police to account on improving safety outcomes on our roads.

He said he would not continue Labour’s “blanket approach” to reducing speed limits.

Brown said there would be targeted safety interventi­ons where needed.

One of the measures used to pay for the upgrades was upping the cost of registrati­on by $50. Road User Charges wouldn’t change this term.

Luxon said the reality was the Government needed revenue to have a strong roading network and therefore, the increases to vehicle registrati­on and fuel taxes were required.

“Our message to motorists is that they will benefit from this revenue,” Brown said, saying registrati­on was a “one-off fee”.

Asked how increases to registrati­on would ease the cost of living which was another Govt priority, Luxon said spoke of how the Auckland regional fuel tax was scrapped before talking about general moves to improve the economy.

Luxon said he had tried to find the balance by implementi­ng $50 increase over time in two $25 instalment­s.

He said road user charges would be something the Government wanted to get to in the future.

All vehicles would be moved to some kind of road user charge based on the type of vehicle they drove, Brown said.

Brown indicated further work will be done to fix the broken transport revenue system which has seen revenue raised from fuel taxes dwindle.

This work was begun under the last National Government and was significan­tly accelerate­d under the last Labour Government. The changes will probably mean an end to fuel taxes which would be replaced by a universal road user charge.

On the public-private partnershi­ps, Brown said the NZTA would be assessing the projects and go to the market to look for private sector investment.

However, Brown has kept National’s promise not to hike fuel taxes this term — just.

He will scrap Labour’s proposed gradual hike of 12 cents a litre increase to fuel taxes over the current term and delay that until the first year of the next term of Parliament, when fuel taxes will rise by 12 cents in one go.

The hikes don’t stop there, after the hike in January 2027, fuel taxes will increase by 6 cents a litre in 2028 and four cents a litre each year after that, meaning by the end of the next term, the Government will have raised fuel taxes by 22 cents a litre.

These increases will be accompanie­d by an equivalent hike in road user charges.

Brown announced the increases as he released a draft version Government Policy Statement on Land Transport, which is essentiall­y a transport budget, setting out how much the Government wants to raise from road users in fuel taxes and road user charges, and where it would like that money to be spent.

The draft will go out for consultati­on before taking effect on July 1 and take effect for the next six years, or until it is renewed, which will probably happen in three years time.

The two centrepiec­es of the plan are a greater focus on road maintenanc­e with a pothole repair fund and restarting the last National Government’s Roads of National Significan­ce (RONS) programme, with 15 new roads set to be delivered under the programme.

Brown said the Rons were “some of New Zealand’s most successful state highway corridors, reducing congestion and improving safety”.

The draft GPS did not put a dollar figure on the new roads. NZTA costings obtained by the Herald showed the roads could cost twice as much as National had budgeted them during the election, leaving the party $24 billion short.

The GPS tells NZTA how much money should be spent in different areas of the transport system, called “activity classes”.

Brown has created two new activity classes for pothole prevention. One class will spend up to $2.3b of pothole maintenanc­e for Government-owned state highways, the other class will spend up to $2.5b on fixing potholes on council-owned local roads.

Brown said he wanted the funding to lead to “2 per cent of the state highway network renewed each year”.

The plan has seen some big cuts from when Labour was in charge. Labour also published a draft GPS for the same period. National has killed funding for inter-regional rail, which could mean an end to the Te Huia train line.

It has also axed funding for coastal shipping, which had been given up to $20 million a year. This funding was to encourage people to ship freight by water, rather than putting it on trucks. Labour reasoned that this would take pressure off the roading network by having fewer trucks.

Funding for public transport has been cut dramatical­ly. Labour planned to spend up to $3.2b on public transport infrastruc­ture over the next three years. This has been slashed by nearly $1b.

The funding pot for council subsidies to public transport services has also been cut, which could mean councils being forced to hike fares. Labour had promised up to $2.8b in subsidies over the next three years. The new Government has cut this to $2.3b.

Brown said the last Government increased public transport funding by 71 per cent in five years, despite patronage declining by 23 per cent — although he conceded some of this was due to the pandemic.

He said the “private share” of funding for public transport had fallen from 32 per cent to 11 per cent in the same time.

Funding for walking and cycling improvemen­ts has nearly been halved from $1b under Labour to $510m under this plan.

 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Transport Minister Simeon Brown says vehicle registrati­on will increase to fund roading plans.
Photo / Mark Mitchell Transport Minister Simeon Brown says vehicle registrati­on will increase to fund roading plans.

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