The Northland Age

There’s a lot going on

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‘Direction of travel’ is unimpressi­ve. So said the PowerPoint slide at Monday’s Northland elected members’ strategic workshop, part of a presentati­on by Local Government New Zealand CEO Malcolm Alexander, who was providing an update on some of the issues facing local government.

This particular slide was in relation to the ‘localism’ project. This, in short, is a movement to bring power back to the people. New Zealand, already one of the most centralise­d countries in the world, is still seeing numerous activities being undertaken to bring even more local government responsibi­lity into central government, such as the proposed mandatory creation of amalgamate­d Three Waters companies. Of six countries — Australia, France, Switzerlan­d, Spain, Germany and New Zealand — this is the only one where local government has no input into education, healthcare and social welfare. There is lots of opportunit­y in this advocacy.

Another topic was the big issue of climate change adaptation. The feeling is that New Zealand’s risk and resilience framework for managing natural hazards has a long way to go, with the principal issue around how to incentivis­e resilience investment. The key here will be to have the debate (and decision re responsibi­lity) prior to the impacts, rather than after.

There was also an update on the Provincial Growth Fund. It confirmed that $934 million had been allocated across New Zealand, with Northland receiving $103.7m, 55 per cent of which has come to the Far North. And updating the rural broadband rollout and addressing mobile black spots in Northland — lots of positive things are happening in this area.

We discussed what is described as the New Zealand housing catastroph­e. No quick wins here, sadly. It was interestin­g to note that Queensland, with a similar population as New Zealand, pays around a third less to build a home. No clear reasoning yet as to why.

Some interestin­g work is being done around social and community housing. Currently councils cannot access subsidies for tenants, so some interestin­g work is being undertaken to look at mitigating this issue, such as setting up community trusts.

Finally, we had a quick chat around why rates are not in line with inflation, often a real source of confusion and frustratio­n.

In a nutshell, the Consumer Price Index (CPI, which includes rates) is used to calculate inflation, or what a Google search describes as ‘the overall general upward price movement of goods and services in an economy,’ Local government has a Local Government Cost Index (LGCI), which confirms that cost structures faced by local government differ significan­tly from those captured within the CPI basket. The LGCI has been rising at a faster rate than household costs; between 1999 and 2010 the LGCI increased by 43.9 per cent, compared with a 30.6 per cent increase in the CPI.

"The feeling is that New Zealand’s risk and resilience framework for managing natural hazards has a long waytogo..."

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