Marlborough Express

Rural roads tipped to suffer as big funding hole opens

- Chloe Ranford, Adam Burns and Marcus Anselm Local Democracy Reporters

Councils are scrambling to deal with holes in their roading budgets, which they fear could lead to deteriorat­ing roads, particular­ly in rural areas.

Waka Kotahi New Zealand Transport Agency has told councils not to expect as much road funding as they had sought, although most would still receive more than they had in the last funding round.

The news from the Government’s transport agency has left the Marlboroug­h District Council ‘‘scrambling’’ to deal with a $10 million hole in road funding, which could cause ‘‘failures across the network’’.

The lower funding indication came as the council was hearing feedback on its long-term plan, used to benchmark what the council would do and spend in the coming decade, including $53.6m on its roads.

Half of that, or $27.4m, was expected to come from Waka Kotahi as it usually funded 51 per cent of council road works.

But the council was told that Waka Kotahi might only fund $22.3m for roads in Marlboroug­h, leaving $4.9m of the council’s money ‘‘sitting without a brother to balance it’’.

Rather than asking ratepayers to make up the difference, councillor­s decided on Wednesday to put the $4.9m aside for emergencie­s, leaving its budget $10m short, at $43.6m.

Marlboroug­h Roads manager Steve Murrin, who rejigged projects to meet the new budget, said the council’s new maintenanc­e plan carried ‘‘significan­t risks’’.

‘‘The main risk with this restrained programme is that there could be failures across the network where there is insufficie­nt funding to put things right,’’ Murrin’s report said.

Speaking on the report, Murrin said his biggest concerns were roads without bitumen.

The council had planned to boost the amount of gravel being spread across its unsealed road network after a Waka Kotahi audit last year found it was ‘‘underinves­ting’’ in road reseals.

‘‘Now, with the funds that Waka Kotahi has allocated us, we’ve had to take it back to probably less than what we were doing in the past. We’ve actually moved backwards on that.’’

The council would also need to cut ‘‘nice to do’’ activities like mowing road verges and laying dust suppressan­ts on roads.

Councils might be given more funding in the second or third years of their transport plans, according to his sources at Waka Kotahi, but this depended on how much money it had. Waka Kotahi regional relationsh­ips director Emma Speight said most councils were due to receive more from the next National Land Transport Pro

gramme, which set out what the Government will provide for the next three years, than the last.

Included in this was the Marlboroug­h District Council, whose $43.6m road budget was $4.6m more than it was in 2018-21.

But council regional transport committee chairman and councillor Francis Maher said at the meeting the increase only allowed the council to maintain, not upgrade, its roads.

‘‘Their response has been less than desirable for us . . . I can see our roads going no other way than backwards,’’ he said.

Deputy mayor Nadine Taylor said councils across New Zealand were ‘‘scrambling’’ to deal with the announceme­nt. ‘‘It is disappoint­ing . . . We put aside the required rates funding, but the Government hasn’t met that partnershi­p.’’

A Waka Kotahi report said a lot of councils had asked for ‘‘significan­tly’’ more from this funding round than they had the last. This was despite Waka Kotahi and its investment advisors repeatedly telling councils it would need to make ‘‘some difficult funding decisions for the next three years’’.

Council assets and services manager Richard Coningham understood Waka Kotahi was earning less money than usual.

‘‘The Covid-19 lockdown has meant less vehicles on the road, so less road-user charges, which means there’s been less funding in the pot for Waka Kotahi than usual. So, they’ve had to take a very hard, new approach across the country around the funding that can be provided to councils.’’

Waka Kotahi had so far indicated it would put $6.2 billion in funding towards council transport plans. The amount would be finalised in August when its board adopted the next NLTP.

The Tasman District Council this month was told the indicative lower Waka Kotahi funding would leave a $4.5 million shortfall, and council staff feared this would lead to less maintenanc­e.

‘‘I can see our roads going no other way than backwards.’’ Francis Maher Council transport committee chairman

 ??  ?? Steve Murrin
Steve Murrin

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