Whanganui Chronicle

Horizons plans new work, 8pc rates hike

Water-quality projects backed by Govt

- Laurel Stowell

Horizons Regional Council proposes big changes in the coming year, increasing its workload and lifting rates by 8 per cent. The council met last week to approve its Long Term Plan consultati­on document. The plan proposes spending more for extra work on water quality, climate change, biodiversi­ty and consulting iwi.

The cost will increase rates by up to 8 per cent a year over the next three years. The council’s debt is also projected to rise.

The document was approved for release, but councillor­s were uneasy about the increased rates take.

Nicola Patrick said those new work streams were important, and the water-quality work would be backed by Government funding.

“It’s not easy to be a councillor in terms of rate increases that are higher than inflation, but actually I do stand behind them.”

The council had no choice about whether to do the water-quality work, councillor Sam Ferguson said, because Government has said it must.

Fiona Gordon was especially happy with the increase in both the quantity and quality of biodiversi­ty work, which she said had been a “poor cousin”.

It was also “well past time” for Horizons to spend more on engaging with iwi and she was pleased with “a brand new contestabl­e fund” for community action on climate change.

Councillor­s Bruce Gordon, Weston Kirton, David Cotton and John Turkington were less happy with the proposed document. They encouraged residents to make submission­s.

Gordon said the region’s rates wouldn’t go up as much as the general rate increase of about 73 per cent proposed by the Otago Regional Council, but the increase would be close to 30 per cent over three years.

Ruapehu residents would be “grumpy”, Kirton said. Farmers would have to work on water quality, and urban people would get less benefit than farmers. Added to that, property revaluatio­ns may increase Ruapehu rates by an extra 10 per cent.

“We have got a lot of hard selling . . . to convince Ruapehu people what we are doing is in their best interests.”

Turkington said the council would need to prove it could work effectivel­y and efficientl­y, and should look for investment­s that would reduce the rates burden.

No one was happy about the proposed rates increase, deputy chairman Jono Naylor said, but the alternativ­e was to do less work. He urged people to make submission­s, and to do more than “complain”.

“If people do want their rates to be lower, they need to give us a good steer on what they want us to do differentl­y,” he said.

There was no alternativ­e to the change, councillor Wiremu Te Awe Awe said.

“We want all of these things, and there is only one way to do it — deepen our pockets.”

The proposed plan is out for consultati­on until April 23.

 ??  ?? Horizons councillor Fiona
Gordon says changes to the council’s workload are “well past time”.
Horizons councillor Fiona Gordon says changes to the council’s workload are “well past time”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand