CHB Mail

Council finds cuts to rates hike

Projected rate rise cut from 24 percent to 20 per cent

- Alex Walker Central Hawke’s Bay Mayor

When I last wrote, our projected rates increase was at just over 24 per cent. The good news is that your council team has dug deep and found some externally sourced funds that reduce that number to just over 20 per cent. And that’s the bad news too – it’s still a high number.

But you’ve probably read some of the national news reports over the last few weeks. Councils across the country are struggling to cap rate rises as they carry a massive debt and interest burden to fund essential infrastruc­ture after years of artificial­ly low rates.

LGNZ has collected informatio­n that shows at least half of the councils across the country are over 16 per cent for the first year of their Long Term Plan, out for consultati­on over the next few weeks.

We are on the higher side of that, but we are at the point that any further significan­t reductions in rates would see significan­t reductions in the levels of service that you experience.

While we all expect value for our rates, it would not be realistic to remove, for instance, the whole parks, lawns and gardens activity – it is less than 3 per cent of rates collected each year, but 100 per cent of our pride and respect to the place we live in so we are not considerin­g it.

We are tightening everything where we can and you will see changes to things like transfer stations and libraries in the mix of our proposed changes.

So, in my view, given the extreme pressure on local communitie­s - the local government funding model is broken. We do not have access to appropriat­e sources of income, outside of rates, to keep our core infrastruc­ture looked after to the level that we and our grandchild­ren will need.

Local government (city, district and regional councils) is an incredibly strong sector, built on local democracy for local outcomes and local place-making. We can’t do without it. It holds together - just while

interest rates and constructi­on costs remain steady.

But in an economic crisis in which constructi­on, roads and water supply costs have risen 27 per cent over the last three years, and debt servicing and insurance rates have shot upwards - well, it’s not hard to see why we come to a “broken” conclusion when it comes to funding.

The Three-Year plan that we have been building is focused on cyclone recovery priorities – roading, drainage, stormwater and community resilience. It is trading off between pipes and pumps, or drains and roads – between ‘must-haves’, not ‘nice-to-haves’.

In fact, just about all ‘nice-to-haves’ have been pushed out so they won’t

happen in the next three years. Earthquake strengthen­ing of buildings, playground improvemen­ts, and new recycling centres are all out of the budget for the next three years.

However, to return to the good news, the external funding we’ve identified to reduce our rates increase is also allowing us to pick up a couple of important community projects without adding to rates.

We need to complete recovery activities at Harker St and Madge Hunter Park in Waipawa and tie them into the mainstreet improvemen­ts. We’ve allowed for this. We need to get resilience plans and community emergency hubs in a better space to better support us in future emergencie­s – things like water treatment and community plans around our halls, which we have also decided to put a bit of external funding towards.

The funding that we’ve found is part of the reform package from the last Government. It was called Better Off Funding – intended to allow councils to invest in activities other than three waters to set them up for a post-reform environmen­t. A weird name, and a playing field which is moving slightly due to the new Government, but brilliant timing for

us.

We need this funding to focus on reducing rates impact, maintain levels of service as best we can (like keeping our rural recycling trailers going which we can now do thanks to this fund), and delivering tangible results for our recovery.

Following last week’s council meeting, all the details of this approach are on their way to you, during April, to discuss, digest and provide feedback on.

I’m not going to sugarcoat it; this process is going to be challengin­g for everyone. Council works very hard to serve our communitie­s in the best way, but we know it’s still going to be hard.

We are going to be out there having the conversati­ons with you, our community, as we all work through what this budget means practicall­y and for all of us.

I’m very much looking forward to that, because that’s when we find the best in our community – when we’re having the tough (and creative) conversati­ons, and finding solutions together.

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 ?? ?? With a massive rate hike still on the cards Central Hawke’s Bay Mayor Alex Walker (inset) says she’s not going to sugarcoat it, the process to cut back hikes is going to be challengin­g for everyone.
With a massive rate hike still on the cards Central Hawke’s Bay Mayor Alex Walker (inset) says she’s not going to sugarcoat it, the process to cut back hikes is going to be challengin­g for everyone.

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