logo
Is this the lowest rates rise in the country? Whanganui council holds firm on 2.2 percent

Is this the lowest rates rise in the country? Whanganui council holds firm on 2.2 percent

RNZ News29-05-2025
The plan for 2025/26 will go before the council in June to be adopted.
Photo:
Unsplash / Tom Rumble
Whanganui District Council is sticking to an average rates increase of 2.2 percent following deliberations on its draft Annual Plan.
Mayor Andrew Tripe believes it's the lowest rise in the country for the year ahead.
The plan for 2025/26 will go before the council in June to be adopted.
Tripe said the council has focused on doing the basics well, investing in core infrastructure, and involving the community in decision-making.
The big topics thrashed out by the council in this week's deliberations were creating a standalone housing entity to grow housing stock, adopting a new strategy for Whanganui, changes to fees and charges, and increasing loan repayments.
In each case, community feedback aligned with the council's preferred options.
Whanganui mayor Andrew Tripe.
Photo:
RNZ / Robin Martin
On Thursday, the council confirmed it would:
Operational budget changes have also been made since the council opened its draft Annual Plan 2025/26 for consultation.
This includes water levies set by water services authority Taumata Arowai to recover the cost of regulatory functions. These levies will take effect from 1 July, 2025 and are expected to cost around $16 per household.
Tripe said it was "incredibly frustrating" to receive news of the levies just as the council was about to adopt its budgets for the year ahead.
"It is yet another example of central government shifting costs to local councils and communities - when it should be administered and funded at a national level."
These levies, along with proposed Commerce Commission levies, would be incorporated into the Annual Plan budget for 2025/26 and would affect three waters rates for connected households.
To ensure full transparency, the levies would be identified on rates notices.
However, they would not increase overall rates due to additional income from other council revenue streams.
The Annual Plan will be adopted on 26 June, with the plan taking effect from 1 July.
LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

International tourist numbers: Call for government funds for new airline routes, major events
International tourist numbers: Call for government funds for new airline routes, major events

RNZ News

time16 minutes ago

  • RNZ News

International tourist numbers: Call for government funds for new airline routes, major events

Photo: RNZ A tourism leader is warning the sector is hurting because of the hike in the international visitor levy and a lack of investment in big events. Tourism Holdings chief executive Grant Webster says growth is sluggish, and trailing far behind Australia. In recent weeks Auckland Business Chamber chief executive Simon Bridges, Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown and Sudima Hotels chief operating officer Les Morgan have all called for some action to give Auckland, and the wider economy, a much-needed shot in the arm. Since October last year, foreign tourists having been paying a levy of $100 when they arrive - almost triple what they had been paying previously. Tourism organisations opposed the increase at the time , saying it would deter tens of thousands of visitors. Webster said the sector needed help, and the government needed to boost efforts to bring big events to Aotearoa. Grant Webster Photo: Linkedin He told Morning Report Increased air capacity, cruises and major events were all areas needing further investment. He cited Australia where state tourism organisations and the national body Tourism Australia were backed by the government. This meant they could target attracting new airlines or routes by paying for marketing and other incentives. "That has been proven time and time again as a key lever for growing overall toursim numbers." He said the government had changed its tourism approach - which was the most positive in around eight years - but there was still a lot of work to do. "Events are a key strategy that we need to really see the government get in behind - they're starting to, there's more money coming into the sector but there's more to do yet." He said there would need to be some kind of financial support to attract major events like the FIFA World Cup and the World Choir Games. "The reality is that's what happens around the world. We often think in New Zealand people just want to come here, but it's a competitive market." The increased levy which was typical of costs imposed at the border had affected demand and put the sector "behind the eight-ball". However, he did not favour axeing it, instead it should be spent in the most effective way possible. It should soon approach $200 million so "let's get that reinvested". The point of having some kind of levy, such as a bed tax, imposed on a national basis was supported by the travel industry. "We've got to reinvest to get this whole system working in the right way... let's get on with it and do it." Tourism Minister Louise Upston has been approached for comment.

Online radicalisation and foreign interference among rising threats to NZ
Online radicalisation and foreign interference among rising threats to NZ

Newsroom

time3 hours ago

  • Newsroom

Online radicalisation and foreign interference among rising threats to NZ

Young New Zealanders are at growing risk of being radicalised online, according to a new report from one of the country's spy agencies that also highlights a rise in foreign interference activities against a background of global instability. In its latest security threat environment report, the NZ Security Intelligence Service (NZSIS) warns the country faces 'the most challenging national security environment of recent times', with increasingly unstable relationships between states as well as rising levels of polarisation and grievance. The report says there has been 'a noticeable increase' in foreign interference actors visiting the country in the last 18 months, highly likely to have asked to build relationships with specific parts of New Zealand society and conceal their links to foreign states. China is singled out as the most active nation undertaking foreign interference in New Zealand (although not the only one), with a section on the country's United Front Work Department and its efforts to build influence with individuals and organisations in countries like New Zealand. 'It is important to acknowledge that not all [United Front] activity is foreign interference and some engagements can have benefits for New Zealand organisations. However, its activities are regularly deceptive, coercive and corruptive and come with risks for New Zealand organisations.' The security report emphasises concerns about transnational repression, saying some New Zealanders are being targeted by foreign states in a bid to keep diaspora communities politically loyal even though they live in another country. The agency says it is aware of 'co-optees' monitoring social media, photographing individuals at events, or instructing other community members to collect information on behalf of foreign states, with the risk that such information could be used to coerce the person being monitored or their family back home. In one case, a foreign state asked a co-optee to collect information on a New Zealand-based person who had applied for refugee status – 'almost certainly' because they were a member of the rainbow community. The report also says it is aware of foreign intelligence officers who have travelled to New Zealand to likely support 'coercive repatriation' of people back to their country of origin. Though it does not name any states, Newsroom has previously reported on China's efforts to force alleged criminals to return from countries including New Zealand. Foreign agents have been taking control of community organisations by co-opting or replacing leaders, with the replacements sidelining those deemed to be a challenge to the foreign state's agenda and sometimes restricting government officials from speaking to the wider community. In one case, a New Zealand official who wanted to share 'important security advice' with a community was discouraged from doing so by a community leader (also a government employee) who had undertaken activity in support of a foreign state's objectives: 'Even though the intent of the security advice was to raise awareness of risks, the gatekeeper likely thought it was against the interests of a particular foreign state.' The report also raises concerns about increasingly polarised and violent rhetoric both in the real world and online, including 'a notable degree of misplaced agitation and blame for perceived societal ills' at the fringes. 'Much of this rhetoric exists solely online, and its spread is aided by algorithms that push controversial content because it generates the most engagement.' The NZ Security Intelligence Service says it has not seen any sophisticated state-backed information operations directly targeting New Zealand, but believes New Zealanders 'have almost certainly consumed foreign state-manipulated information when active online, even if they are not the target audience of that information'. Young and vulnerable Kiwis were particularly at risk of being radicalised online, with teenagers increasingly coming to the attention of security services as unfettered internet access shortened pathways to violence. 'What might have previously been considered societal risks associated with internet safety, now have the potential to pose an ongoing risk to New Zealand's national security.' In an interview with Newsroom, NZSIS director-general Andrew Hampton said the report was not intended to alarm people, but to raise public awareness about the growing threats. 'We certainly don't want to cause despair or anxiety. I actually believe that in a democracy like ours, the public are often those who are best placed to actually see concerning behaviours, report them and take steps to mitigate them.' Although much of the activity outlined in the report was not currently illegal, Hampton said the Government's foreign interference legislation – which is yet to pass its second reading in Parliament – would allow police to take action and give communities a clearer demonstration of what activities were unacceptable in New Zealand, acting as a deterrent to foreign states and the 'sympathetic individuals' they co-opted. Asked how the public should reconcile China's status as both New Zealand's largest trading partner and the most active state carrying out foreign interference here, he said the spy agency was well aware that our country's prosperity relied on its international and trade connections. 'We are not saying don't engage, and we're certainly not saying don't engage with China: what we are saying, though, is be cognisant of the risks that are associated with some of that engagement.' On the issue of young New Zealanders being radicalised, Hampton said questions around greater regulation of internet access – such as a social media ban for under-16s as suggested by Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and others – was for politicians and Parliament, but the agency wanted to draw attention to increased online engagement with grievance-based narratives. 'If you look at our current subjects of investigations – we're not talking about large numbers of people here – they're almost all young, in their teens or early 20s, they aren't part of global terrorist networks, they are people who have been largely radicalised online.' The spy agency had been speaking to school principals and other educators about what online radicalisation looked like, and had received leads as a result of that work.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store