Both Whakatāne’s mayor and a ratepayers group intent on lowering rates believe rates capping will create hardship for ratepayers, but for very different reasons.
On Monday, the Government announced plans to introduce a 2-to-4% annual rates target band, to be phased in between 2027 and 2029, with a new regulatoroverseeing compliance.
Councils would be able to apply for a rates cap exemption in circumstances such as natural disasters.
Whakatāne Action Group chairman John Howard said although a rates cap would be great news, it was not happening soon enough.
“The rate capping needed to be effective from 2026. That’s what ratepayers have been asking for.
Whakatāne Action Group chairman John Howard. Photo / LDR
“We can expect this council to embark on a massive rate hike spending spree for the next LTP. So for many ratepayers seeking some relief, the timeline is just too far away. It will cause much more hardship.
“We’ve had about a 42% rate increase in this Long-term Plan and the council’s agenda on Thursday is indicating that they may increase this year’s rate increase of 9.4% back to 10.4%.”
He said the council was spending about $9 million a year servicing debt.
“This new council needs to seriously get expenditure that increases debt under control fast for the benefit of the whole district.”
Former Whakatāne mayor Victor Luca, who tried to exert downward pressure on rates during his time on council, said the Government had “achieved in one fell swoop what I couldn’t achieve in six years”.
Previous Whakatāne mayor Victor Luca. Photo / LDR
However, he also noted the 2029 timeline.
“For a struggling ratepayer, that is not soon enough.”
Mayor Nandor Tanczos said rates capping was “well-intentioned but poorly thought out”, and would likely make things worse for ratepayers.
“We all want rates to go down, but what is being proposed is largely the same system that has failed across the Tasman, with pretty dire consequences for local communities in New South Wales and Victoria,” he said.
“It just leads to underinvestment in critical infrastructure, reduced public services, and then every few years a major correction that leads to a rates spike. All the evidence is that it does not work for communities and adds massive costs to councils.
“It’s catch-up time right now. Kicking the can further down the road will lead to an even harder adjustment when reality catches up with us.”
Tanczos said the proposed regulator function just added another bureaucratic layer to what was already a heavily regulated area.
“This kind of increased compliance creates more churn on staff time, so what’s meant to be saving us dollars can end up costing us more.”
Accountability should be to the community that elects the councillors and mayor, not to a minister in Wellington, he said.
“Double-digit rates increases are unsustainable, that’s a given. Everyone wants lower rates rises, including all of our councillors, but a centrally imposed limit restricts councils’ ability to respond to local needs. It takes away communities’ right to determine their own priorities.”
While three waters is not included in the rates cap, the proposal now captures core infrastructure like roads, bridges and public transport, which the Government had previously indicated would be excluded, Tanczos said.
“Local government needs a common-sense, fast-track process for exemptions - particularly for fast-growing areas or in response to natural disasters. That process must be flexible and fast-moving, not bogged down in bureaucracy.”
– LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.