Report: 102 Ways To Save Money In Local Government
Report: 102 Ways To Save Money In Local Government
28 JULY 2018
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The New Zealand
Taxpayers’ Union has today released 102 Ways to Save Money in Local
Government – a report that lists big and
small opportunities for local councils to save money and
reduce the burden on ratepayers.
Taxpayers'
Union local government researcher Garrick Wright-McNaughton
says, "The 102 suggestions, many of which were provided to
the Union by mayors across the country, range from
the common-sense to the novel. Taken together, they serve as
a challenge to unimaginative and undisciplined councils who
allow wasteful spending to accumulate and then tell
ratepayers to expect rate hikes."
"The Taxpayers’
Union advocates instead for a culture where fiscal
prudence is not a cause for celebration, but an expectation,
just as it is within private organisations and households
across the country."
Some highlighted
suggestions:
• Pay down council debt (#1)
• Offer
prizes to staff who suggest efficiencies – but allow
anonymous entries (#2)
• Scrap political advisors
(#10)
• Stop sending staff to conferences
(#30)
• Rent out under-utilised office space
(#68)
Some more novel ideas:
• Graze cattle and
sheep on council land to save on grass cutting
(#6)
• Pay cafés to open bathroom facilities to the
public, instead of building new toilets
(#17)
• Transition to LED lighting (#33)
• Turn
down the heating at council buildings (#37)
• Ditch
colourful, photography-heavy annual reports (#81)
New
Plymouth Mayor Neil Holdom, in a foreword to the report,
says, “I support this Taxpayers’ Union initiative
to highlight opportunities for councils, large and small, to
identify savings or efficiencies in their operations to
minimise costs to ratepayers and deliver value. While I do
not advocate some of the more radical ideas which the
authors of this document have included, no doubt to grab a
few headlines, I celebrate those who are committed to
sharing ideas and encouraging open and honest
debate.”
Auckland Ratepayers' Alliance
spokesperson Jo Holmes says, “Some of the initiatives
included in this report run the risk of being dismissed as
mere common sense. We don’t mind a dose of common sense
where it saves money at the town hall - exactly what
ratepayers are calling for.”
The Taxpayers’
Union would like to thank the Mayors who responded to
the Union's invitation to submit ideas and examples
of how their councils have saved ratepayer
money.
ENDS