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Home / Rotorua Daily Post

Letters to the editor: Tax changes penalise hard-working people

Rotorua Daily Post
6 Oct, 2021 07:56 PM4 mins to read

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Changes to tax rules impacting landlords will worsen the housing crisis, writes a reader. Photo / Getty Images

Changes to tax rules impacting landlords will worsen the housing crisis, writes a reader. Photo / Getty Images

Landlords sell up as the tax rules bite, was the headline on the front page of the Daily Post on October 1.

Landlords are selling up in droves as the government tax rules take hold. Rotorua Rentals' Pauline Evans said the new tax changes gave landlords two options: "to quit and sell, or increase rents to cover the cost".

October 1 was the date the first year of phasing out interest deductibility for residential rentals was applied.

Between the Healthy Homes Act and this new tax grab, the housing shortage will become even worse.

However, if you read the fine print, there are little-publicised exemptions;

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* Māori collectively owned land and housing
* Emergency, transition, social and council housing

In my view, the new policy is aimed at landlords to make the switch, to become emergency and transitional housing providers, so the not-so-desirable tenants will be accommodated first.

The hard-working population has just been penalised by the government, both tenants and landlords.

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There's little sympathy for some landlords who have worked hard for decades in hope of living out a retirement dream, which has now been shattered.

As the government's tax rules, MIQ, and emergency and transitional policies take hold, changing the demographic and landscape of Rotorua, you can't help but wonder if Gordon B Hinckley's saying will become true?

"Without hard work, nothing grows but weeds".

Tracey McLeod
Lake Tarawera

Lakeside playground

Lakeside playground looks amazing and will be great for "able and capable" children, but where is the wheelchair swing or any equipment, even ramps, for disabled children or children incapable of using the amazing structures now in place?

Sure there are basket swings, but you can't lift a wheelchair or even lift some disabled children into those.

How does it make this an "inclusive" playground when there is no equipment for disabled children?

Do they just have to sit and watch all the able-bodied children having a great time?

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That sounds like a very sad prospect.

Viv Radley
Rotorua

Taranaki change a model for Aotearoa

I enjoyed reading, as I always do, Rob Rattenbury's comment regarding opposition to the use of Aotearoa-New Zealand (Opinion, Oct 4).

It brought to mind the public outcry when in 1986 a name change was approved for changing Mt Egmont to Mt Taranaki/Egmont.

The large number of opposing letters to the paper, often racial, were mainly written under nom de plumes, whereas those more reasoned letters usually had a name attached.

It was about this time I recall the Daily News changed its policy and required names on letters.

Over the years it just became natural to call the mountain Taranaki and in 2020 it became officially Taranaki Maunga. I am sure the same will happen in this case.

I thoroughly agree real NZ history needs to be taught in our schools. "Ask that Mountain" by Dick Scott should be compulsory reading in all secondary schools.

Diana O'Brien
Tauranga

On Aotearoa

Yes Mr Rattenbury, just a WORD – Just like the countless other placenames that the Māori Party Petition also wants to change!

Ian Waugh
Rotorua

The Rotorua Daily Post welcomes letters from readers. Please note the following:

• Letters should not exceed 200 words.

• They should be opinion based on facts or current events.

• If possible, please email.

• No noms-de-plume.

• Letters will be published with names and suburb/city.

• Please include full name, address and contact details for our records only.

• Local letter writers given preference.

• Rejected letters are not normally acknowledged.

• Letters may be edited, abridged, or rejected at the Editor's discretion.

• The Editor's decision on publication is final. No correspondence will be entered into.

Email editor@dailypost.co.nz

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