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2024/25 Annual Report Highlights Major Progress For Tairāwhiti Communities

The end of the first year of Council’s three-year recovery plan was marked by progress, resilience and a strong financial footing, as detailed in its 2024/25 Annual Report adopted at yesterday’s meeting.

Mayor Rehette Stoltz said the Annual Report demonstrates both what has been achieved and the challenges that remain.

“This has been a year of rolling up our sleeves – from getting our roads reconnected, to strengthening stopbanks and advancing projects like Waingake Transformation and Kiwa Pools. The Annual Report shows that we’re delivering where it counts while keeping the day-to-day running of Council on track.”

Major progress for communities:

“These achievements show a region pulling together,” says Mayor Stoltz.

“From the large-scale infrastructure builds to small but meaningful projects like township upgrades and planting days, this report reflects the resilience, creativity and determination of our people.”

Finances stable and sustainable

Financially, Council’s long-term debt is $197.8m, in line with planned borrowing within the Three Year Recovery Plan and well within debt limits.

Council reported an operating surplus of $30.5m as a result of external grants to be applied towards recovery projects and reducing the need to borrow more.

The organisation is in a stable financial position, carefully balancing recovery costs with affordability for ratepayers.

Chief Executive Nedine Thatcher Swann said borrowing is a deliberate, strategic tool.

“It allows us to invest in the big projects now – safer bridges, stronger stopbanks, resilient water supply – while spreading costs fairly.”

“Just like a mortgage for a family home, we borrow to spread the cost of major projects fairly across generations. This ensures today’s community benefits from safer roads, stronger flood protection and resilient water supply, while costs are shared sensibly over time.”

Before Cyclone Gabrielle, rates provided around 60% of Council’s income. In 2024/25, rates contributed just 37%, with the majority of funding coming from Crown support and insurance.

This year, Council has received $123m external grants. This supported works roading network recovery, flood resilience, Category 2P and 3 buyouts and woody debris removal.

Mayor Stoltz said the numbers in this report give confidence. Our debt is under control, our investments are building resilience.

“This means every local dollar is going further, because we’ve leveraged external funding to make it work for our community.”

The Annual Report makes clear that while the scale of recovery is immense, Council is on track to deliver – with a clear plan, sustainable finances and partnerships in place.

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