Mount Business Association chairwoman Kate Barry-Piceno and business improvement manager Harris Williams. Photo / Brydie Thompson
Mount Business Association chairwoman Kate Barry-Piceno and business improvement manager Harris Williams. Photo / Brydie Thompson
New alfresco dining fees in Mount Maunganui have been slated as “unfair” for businesses “struggling just to keep the doors open”.
Tauranga City Council is proposing to charge cafes, bars and restaurants a yearly fee of $50 per square metre of footpath they use for tablesand chairs.
“I’ve had a lot of conversations with our hospitality businesses and they say ‘the numbers are really grim, we’re really struggling just to keep the doors open’.”
There were owners doing 70-hour weeks to reduce staff costs and the time needed to apply for the street dining fee licence would “frazzle them even more”, Williams said.
The association’s chairwoman, Kate Barry-Piceno, said the council’s reason for expanding street dining fees beyond the CBD to create consistency across the city was “flawed”.
Mount Business Association chairwoman Kate Barry-Piceno. Photo / Brydie Thompson
The council had proposed a flat rate of $100 per square metre across central Tauranga and Mount Maunganui, discounted by 50% for the first year – a change from earlier proposed zone-based rates.
Businesses using footpaths in some CBD areas have been paying fees for years – since 2013 for The Strand and 2020 for Wharf St, after council upgrades in those areas.
Barry-Piceno said the council had not invested in Mount Maunganui’s streetscape for at least 25 years.
If the council was being consistent, in her view, it would invest in the streetscape, then charge the fees in consultation with businesses.
Cafes and restaurants on Wharf St have paid outdoor dining fees since 2020. Photo / SunLive
Outdoor dining increased foot traffic and created vibrancy, which benefited retailers and the community, she said.
Alpino restaurant manager Jamie Laurie said it seemed “really bizarre” the council was slapping charges on outdoor dining in a tourist town.
“A big draw for our customers is the fact they can sit outside and feel like they’re in Italy.”
Mount streets were dominated by cars and charging to use a tiny bit of pavement space didn’t make sense, he said.
If the council were to pedestrianise some of Maunganui Rd then it could justify charging the fees because outdoor dining space would increase, said Laurie.
Council city centre infrastructure lead Shawn Geard said the council’s last significant upgrade to the Mount Mainstreet streetscape was in the mid to late 1990s.
Footpaths were public spaces that needed to remain safe and accessible for everyone, he said.
This was why Mount Maunganui and Tauranga businesses that used footpaths needed a licence-to-occupy agreement outlining what area they could use, Geard said.
Tauranga City Council will charge businesses to use the footpath for tables and chairs. Photo / Brydie Thompson
“These public spaces are provided and maintained at the expense of ratepayers, so it’s fair and reasonable the businesses that benefit from exclusive use contribute to their upkeep.”
The fees were not directly used to pay for infrastructure or upgrades in the area but went into general council finances and were used for the benefit of all ratepayers, he said.
Licence-to-occupy fees were standard practice for councils and reflected a common approach to managing the private use of public land for commercial gain, Geard said.