Gisborne city ratepayers will be short a cup of coffee a week, a district councillor says, with residential rates set to go up by 6.4 percent, on average, from July.
The “cup of coffee” analogy was used by
Larry Foster yesterday as the council signed off a proposed
overall rates hike of 4.87 percent for the 2021 financial
year.
Rates bills will go up by more than 5
percent for 55 percent of ratepayers, with households in the
city expected to pay an extra $150 to $200 over the
year.
Cr Foster said councillors had just heard
about the district’s housing crisis and need for adequate
infrastructure, and that most people would be happy to
supplement the council’s work by $3 to $4 a
week.
“This is our future,” he
said.
But councillor Meredith Akuhata-Brown
thought “a cup of coffee” was not an insignificant
amount for many in the region, saying middle income earners
were “feeling it big time”.
Many had not had a
pay rise for some time and felt the stress of any additional
expense, Cr Akuhata-Brown said.
Nonetheless, she
could see the need for the rates increase, in terms of
building better infrastructure for
Gisborne.
Councillors were presented with the
2020/21 draft annual plan last week but deferred a decision
on its proposed rates hike so they could further discuss why
the increase was necessary.
The plan sets the
council’s rates take for the year to June 30, 2021, at
$62.8 million.
The increase has been deemed necessary
because of the council’s February 2019 decision to more
quickly implement wastewater disinfection, along with the
need to employ more staff to process resource consent
applications and depreciation on council
assets.
At yesterday’s full council meeting,
councillors pushed ahead with the rates hike, but the
community will now be consulted on the differences between
the proposed annual plan and the 2018-28 Long Term Plan,
which budgeted a 3.26 percent overall rates rise for
2020/21.
Councillors Shannon Dowsing and Amber
Dunn voted against the last-minute recommendation for a
consultation document to be prepared.
Cr Dowsing
said the council needed to accelerate the second stage of
its wastewater treatment plant upgrade to meet impending
resource consent conditions.
The upgrade was not
optional and suggesting through public consultation that it
was up for debate was disingenuous, he said.
But
chief executive Nedine Thatcher Swann said the council had
been advised to undertake consultation and community
feedback could have an impact on the final annual plan to be
adopted in June.
Councillor Kerry Worsnop said
public feedback on the plan should have been sought before
now and the process looked and felt
“messy”.