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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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Last
week, the Local Government Act 2002 Amendment Bill had its
first reading in Parliament. It has now been referred to the
Local Government Select Committee. Submissions close on July
26th and can be made on-line here
>>>.
There is no doubt that reform of local government is long
overdue. Ratepayers up and down the country have long
expressed their anger over the management of local government.
From excessive rate rises and excessive debt, to attacks on
private property rights, unwarranted costs and restrictions,
the imposition of race-based representation… the list of
concerns is endless.
Last February, our NZCPR Local Government Taskforce, which
included the late Owen McShane, one of New Zealand’s
foremost authorities on local government, and former local
body councillor Frank Newman, published a five-point plan to
reform local government.[1] In particular, our focus was on
the following five objectives:
1. Restraining
Local Government - by removing the power of general
competence and the requirement to focus on the social,
economic, environmental and cultural ‘well-being’ of their
community, both of which had been introduced by the Labour
Government through their 2002 reform of the Local Government
Act. We suggested that councils should be required to refocus
on their traditional role of providing utilities (including
roads, footpaths, street lighting, water, sewerage, rubbish
collection, libraries, public toilets, parks and reserves) as
well as issuing and monitoring consents.
2. Introducing
Prudential Controls - by imposing
regulatory debt restrictions on councils just as the
government have done on finance companies. One such mechanism
would be to cap rate increases to the rate of inflation
and a population growth adjustment, with any special spending
proposals in excess of these limits put forward for ratepayer
approval through binding referenda. In addition, it is long
past time that all
property owners in local authority areas should be required to
pay rates - including on Department of Conservation land,
other State-owned property, and Maori land.
3. Strengthening Private
Property Rights - by preventing councils from impinging on
the property rights of ratepayers in any way at all, unless by
mutual agreement including the payment of fair compensation.
Private property should not be subjected to any
council-imposed designations - landowners’ rights should be
sovereign.
4. Streamlining Planning
and Consultation - by reducing council planning
requirements to a single plan only, to cover the full
three-year term of a local authority council, with air, soil,
water, and coastal plans being standard national plans with
regional variations. In addition, there should be greater use
of referenda (sent out with rates bills) for ratepayer
consultation on the prioritisation of major council projects.
5. Removing Race-based
Representation - all residents and ratepayers should be
treated equally with no representation or special treatment
based on race.
Shortly after releasing our reform plan, the government
announced its intention to streamline local government as part
of its strategy to build a more competitive and productive
economy. This Local Government Amendment Bill is their
response to the challenges in the sector. The question is
whether the new bill addresses the public concerns ratepayers
have about local government?
New
Zealand’s 78 local authorities are a significant component
of our economy. Their asset base is worth $100 billion, they
spend $7.5 billion a year of public money, and they make up 4
percent of GDP.
In the decade prior to the introduction of Labour’s Local
Government Act in 2002, rates grew on average by 3.9 percent a
year. After the reforms, between 2002 and 2011, the growth in
rates escalated to almost 7 percent. In comparison, over the
same period, average transport costs increased by only 2.6
percent, food by 3.3 percent and housing by 5 percent. It has
been estimated that if rate increases had been held at the
same average level as they were over the period 1982 to 1992 -
at a time before the introduction of the Resource Management
Act when councils were very focussed on their core
responsibilities - the average household would be paying $500
a year less in rates, saving the economy $1 billion.
So what
has been driving the increase in rates? The prime reasons
arise from the enactment of the 2002 Act, which transformed
our local authorities from a provider of community facilities
and utilities, into a provider of community well-beings. Their
mandate is now limitless, as is their need for funding through
rate increases and debt.
Since
Labour’s 2002 changes to the Local Government Act, debt has
been growing rapidly, increasing four-fold from $2 billion in
2002 to $8 billion in 2011. If left unconstrained, debt is
expected to reach $11 billion by 2015. The cost of the
interest paid by ratepayers has also been escalating, rising
to $468 billion in the year to June 2011. This was a 23.8
percent increase over the previous year. The cost of interest
will soon eclipse half a billion dollars a year.
In spite
of New Zealand falling into recession in 2008, resulting in a
dramatic slowdown in the housing sector and building consent
activity, local government staff costs have continued to rise
- up 4.4 percent on the same time last year.
Over the period from 2002 to 2010, salary costs have
increased by 82 percent from $884 million to $1.6 billion,
compared with an 8.7 percent increase over the eight years
prior to Labour’s reforms. This escalation in costs is a
matter of considerable concern - while all sectors of the
economy have reduced labour costs since 2008, the rate of
increase of the cost of labour over the last three years at
local government level is 7.6 percent - nearly double the rate
of the core state sector.
And when
it comes down to what it is that the estimated 23,000 local
government employees actually do, a Statistics New Zealand
survey of the change in rates funding for local government
activities between 2003 and 2008 showed that the biggest
increase of around 120 percent was in the area of planning and
regulation! Emergency management showed a 94 percent increase,
followed by environmental protection, water supply, and
culture at just over 60 percent, recreation and sport at just
under 60 percent, solid waste and refuse at 50 percent,
roading at 46 percent, waste-water 37 percent, governance 12
percent, transportation 10 percent, with spending on property
declining by around 2 percent.
With
councils expanding their planning departments so rapidly, it
is little wonder that the public are increasingly concerned
that New Zealand is over-planned! Owen
McShane used to quote Political Science Professor Aaron
Wildavsky’s “Original Rule of Thumb” – that a plan
that was thicker than his thumb had no relationship to the
real world. Owen believed the greatest boost to regulatory
sprawl was Labour’s 2002 Local Government Act. “This
radical piece of legislation granted the Territorial Local
Authorities the general and wide ranging powers of General
Incompetence, so unleashing them from the constraints of the
existing Local Government Act, which had limited them to
specific activities which were well within their capabilities.
Now these Territorial Local Authorities have the power to plan
every aspect of their economy, including matters previously in
the hands of Central Government such as Education, Health and
Housing. It was every Central Planner’s dream. And as the
new generation of Super Plans, based on the extensive powers
of General Incompetence, spread through New Zealand, do not be
surprised if activity grinds to a halt everywhere.”[2]
National claims that their new Bill will improve the
operation of local government to reduce red tape and
compliance, minimise rates for households and businesses,
lower debt, and provide high-quality infrastructure at the
least possible cost.
According
to the explanatory note the Bill introduces a new purpose
statement for local government, replacing the power of general
competence and the four catch-all well-beings with a
requirement to meet the current and future needs of
communities for good quality local infrastructure, local
public services, and performance of regulatory functions in a
way that is most cost-effective for households and businesses.
It
provides for regulations to establish financial prudence
requirements for councils, setting benchmarks for council
performance in respect of income, expenditure, and debt
levels. It establishes more transparency over staffing costs,
by enabling the elected council to determine policies on
remuneration and staff numbers, and requiring that this
information is published in council annual reports.
Of
concern is the fact that the Bill appears to be pursuing an
Auckland-style “bigger is better” approach, giving Mayors
additional powers and enabling any group within a community to
propose amalgamations. While provisions are retained to enable
restructuring proposals to be challenged by locals through a
binding public referendum, more and more people are now
questioning whether amalgamations deliver better local
governance at all.
This Bill is clearly just the first phase of a comprehensive
overhaul of local government. As it stands, it does appear to
deal with the first two of the NZCPR reform proposals - to
refocus councils on their traditional role, and to introduce
prudential controls. The Bill however, does not appear to
streamline planning, it does not strengthen private property
rights, and nor does it remove race-based representation.
This
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, former National MP and local
body councillor Sandra Goudie, is spearheading a campaign
against some of the excesses of local authorities, especially
their attacks on private property rights, and their propensity
to introduce race-based representation without consultation
with their local community. Sandra explains:
“Communities throughout New Zealand are feeling under siege
from regional councils, district councils, and external lobby
groups who are not part of their living, working communities.
Spatial planning has spawned an avalanche of costly, staff
driven micro management initiatives, for significant natural
areas, landscape, amenity, and biodiversity, affecting rural
private property. Planning maps now identify everything from a
blade of grass to a dog kennel.”
To
read Sandra’s article Communities
Under Siege click here
>>>. And to download the petition to eliminate
the Waikato Regional Council’s new Maori wards - which they
unilaterally imposed without consulting with their community -
click here
>>>.
Local government is an area of New Zealand life that can be a
help or a hindrance. In too many regions around the country it
has become a hindrance. If you feel strongly about the need
for more widespread reform, we would urge you to put in a
submission and have your say.
This week’s poll asks:
Do
you support the current trend towards amalgamations and bigger
local body councils? Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Muriel Newman, The
need for Local Government Reform
2.Owen McShane, Let’s
“Dis” the DURT
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