Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | Science | SOEs | Tax | Technology | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | Search

 


Nick Smith leaps on councils' development charges

Housing affordability: Nick Smith leaps on councils' development charges

By Pattrick Smellie

Feb 10 (BusinessDesk) -Newly appointed Housing Minister Nick Smith has wasted no time on returning to Cabinet with the announcement of a fundamental review of the way local governments charge developers for infrastructure like roading, drainage and water.

The growth in so-called "development charges" by councils was identified as one of several reasons for too many New Zealanders facing unaffordable housing costs in a report by the New Zealand Productivity Commission last year.

In a joint statement with Local Government Minister Chris Tremain, Smith released a discussion paper intended to respond to what Smith said was a major cause of section prices more than doubling over the last decade.

The government is already warning local councils, especially in Auckland and Christchurch, to take action to free up available housing land or face central government intervention to require it, as the issue of affordable housing gains political heat.

"A significant factor (in rising development contributions) has been the sharp rise in the development contributions charged by councils," said Smith. "The average charge nationally has increased from $3,000 per section to $14,000 per section over the past decade, an increase of 360%, and can be as high as $64,000 per section.

"These costs need to be contained if more kiwi families are going to be able to afford their own home,” said Smith, who authored major changes to the Local Government Act 2002 last year, just before resigning from Cabinet over the Bronwyn Pullar scandal.

The Act will require changes again to reflect whatever the government decides to implement.

The discussion paper includes options to cap the charges, tighten the criteria, reinstate appeals, provide discounts for types of housing, change the timing of charging, enable alternate provision of infrastructure, and abolish the charges.

“Development contributions are needed to enable councils to provide the necessary infrastructure to support new developments, but we also need to ensure the costs are fair and well justified," said Tremain. While there were "pockets of excellence" in local governments' infrastructure procurement, "we want to build on this to achieve greater consistency and certainty."

The paper builds on the recommendations of the Productivity Commission inquiry into Housing Affordability and of the Urban Design Technical Advisory Group that raised concerns about the way the system of development contributions has been working.

Submissions are due by March 15. The Department of Internal Affairs is managing the process.

(BusinessDesk)

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

 

Scoop Business: Bathurst Gets Nod For DoC Access To Denniston Mine

Conservation Minister Nick Smith has approved access over conservation estate land for Bathurst Resources to develop an open cast coal mine on the Denniston Plateau, above Westport, to the dismay of environmental opponents. More>>

ALSO:

Minding Of Meats: MPI Working To Clear Shipments To China

New export certificates are being issued to release containers of meat products held up at the Chinese border, the Ministry for Primary Industries said today. Shipments of meat into China were delayed after MPI issued export certification in a format which had not been approved by Chinese authorities at AQSIQ. More>>

ALSO:

Banking Ombudsman: Bank Customers Need To Remember Basics

Have you heard the story about the kids who used their mum’s credit card details to buy up large online? Or the one about the person who saved all their PINs disguised as phone numbers on their mobile which was then stolen by a thief who saw through the disguise and went on a spending spree?More>>

TPP: A Global Fair Deal On Copyright - OurFairDeal.org

Alastair Thompson: The orginal "A Fair Deal" campaign brought together Internet NZ with a bunch of other groups including the Royal New Zealand Foundation for the Blind, the Creative Freedom Foundation , NZ Rise , Trademe and Kiwiblog's David Farrar. OurFairDeal.org takes the NZ based campaigns a giant leap forward bringing together 84 lobby groups from across the Asia Pacific in 6 countries into a global alliance. More>>

ALSO:

Business.Scoop: NZOG's Griffiths Backs Director Liability On Health, Safety

New Zealand Oil & Gas chairman Peter Griffiths has thrown his support behind legislative moves to make directors liable if the companies they govern fail to meet health and safety obligations. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: NZ’s Services Sector Expands At Fastest Clip In 5 Mths

New Zealand’s services sector, which accounts for about 70 percent of economic activity, expanded at the fastest pace since October last month, led by activity/sales. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: MRP Senior Managers In Line For $1.2M In Bonus Shares

Senior executives of newly listed, state-controlled MightyRiverPower are in line for shares in lieu of cash bonuses worth $1.2 million for the year to June 30, one of the company’s first disclosures to the NZX and ASX as a listed company show. More>>

ALSO:

Get More From Scoop

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Business
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news