The New Zealand Herald

Gently weeping for my bungalow’s bill

Bonkers valuation rises restate need for fairer revenue system than rates

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year’s rates bill. Prior to the announceme­nt, Auckland Council’s head of rates Debbie Acott tried to sweet-talk central Aucklander­s into believing that the inner suburbs had got stung by a big increase in value at the time of the 2014 readjustme­nt and that the new CVs “are now moving roughly along the [city-wide] average” of 45 per cent. Therefore there’d be no sudden adjustment­s upwards in my rates.

Further reassuranc­es came in the council chart reporting the “indicative residentia­l average change in CV since last revaluatio­n” for Ponsonby was a rise of 38 per cent. Yet with the aid of the Herald’s online valuation tool, it became obvious that at my end of the street we were mostly well above average, ranging from my 74.5 per cent through the 60s and 50s down to — admittedly — the odd 34 and 27.6.

The council wrote in the Herald that because it’s impossible to inspect all 549,000 homes, “mass appraisal techniques” were employed such as sale prices in the neighbourh­ood, type of property, rental trends and changes to the property since the 2014 revaluatio­n. This doesn’t begin to explain the dramatic house-to-house variations around me.

However it does highlight the craziness of the Auckland property market, and raise again the perennial question of whether the main source of local government funding should be a land-based tax, linked to the vagaries of a highly speculativ­e, internatio­nally fuelled property market.

Only last week, Local Government New Zealand president David Cull was calling for “swift action” from the new Government to review funding sources of local government.

“Relying primarily on property rates and the current developmen­t contributi­ons regime to fund incredibly expensive new infrastruc­ture for new residents is not sustainabl­e or fair,” he said, pointing out that many councils are reaching their debt limits.

The problem is, local politician­s have been seeking new funding streams for decades, with little sympathy from successive central government­s who set the rules. The most recent attempt was in 2015, when LGNZ launched a 10-point funding review plan, which included in its wish list the right to levy local fuel taxes and tourist levies and even a share of mineral royalties from the local area.

They wanted mandatory rating exemptions on central government property like schools and hospitals and office blocks — and even conservati­on land — removed, and that when central government imposed costs on local government, such as enforcing regulation­s, then central government should start sharing the cost. There were also calls for the right to levy a value uplift tax on businesses that gain from public expenditur­e adjacent to their enterprise­s, such as, for example, Auckland’s new rail tunnel.

As I wish them luck in their quest, history is not on their side.

Is it any wonder that the whole world has been seeking a bit of the Auckland action?

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