Lois Williams
Local democracy
reporter
Kaikoura ratepayers who want to join
Marlborough say the impact of Covid-19 will show the
Kaikoura District Council is running on empty.
The
East Coast Community Organisation (ECCO) has lobbied for the
KDC to be dissolved, on the basis that it is too small to be
sustainable, and ratepayers cannot afford to support it
long-term.
The economic downturn triggered by
Covid-19 'will stretch council resources to the max,
according to ECCO secretary Chris Wilson.
Mr
Wilson, who was a finance executive with Royal Dutch Shell
for 30 years, and now owns Sleepers Vineyard at Kekerengu,
is the council's independent member on its Finance, Audit
and Risk committee.
"This is the risk we (ECCO)
have been warning about for some time, that KDC does not
have the resilience to face another relatively high-impact
event.
"It has no reserves left, apart from some
forestry which doesn't generate income at present; it's used
what reserves it did have to keep rates down since the
earthquake; it's borrowing and now it's facing a serious
loss of revenue."
Marlborough in comparison, would
not have that problem, he said.
"They are much
bigger, they have lots of reserves and the downturn won't
have the same impact."
KDC rates were supported by
the district's two main industries - farming and tourism, Mr
Wilson said.
"Farming will still be there - but
tourism will not. Businesses that supply the rural sector
will carry on but the ones that service the visitor industry
will be in trouble.
"The government is saying we
will have quarantine at the borders until there's a vaccine
for the virus - and not many tourists want to spend two
weeks locked up before they start their holiday."
The
council had been planning to increase rates this year, but
that was now unrealistic, Mr Wilson said.
"I don't
know what they're going to do once Level 3 kicks in, I will
be raising this at the Finance, Audit and Risk meeting.
"
The council was currently being run by a small
emergency management group, Mr Wilson said, and there had
not been much feedback on what it was
planning.
Chief executive Angela Oosthuizen has
said the council was now reviewing its draft annual plan to
see where costs could be cut to reduce the impact on
ratepayers.