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Ratepayers Hit Again By Arc Transport Rates


Many Residential Ratepayers Hit Again By Arc Transport Rates.

Although the Auckland Regional Council has changed its rating policy following the outrage at last year's huge rate increases, it has also introduced a transport rate which discriminates against many ratepayers in those areas which the ARC claims have greater accessibility to public transport services.

The re-introduction of a business differential will provide some small relief to most ratepayers, but almost 18,000 North Shore residential ratepayers, in the Inner Passenger Transport Rating Area [PTRA], will face an 8% increase in their total ARC rates due to the changes in the transport rate.

RatesRebellion raised this issue in its submission to the ARC and asked that a more graded system of transport rate was needed to reflect actual public transport services provided.

We also asked for a special 'train rate' for those areas which are benefiting from the huge rates-funded expenditure on the rail system.

This bias against the North Shore and Rodney continues into the larger Metropolitan Passenger Transport Rating Area, where ratepayers, after allowing for the re-introduced business differential, will only get a rates decrease of less than 3%, while Auckland City, Waitakere, Manukau and Papakura District get decreases ranging from 13% up to 25%.

Despite those figures it is even stranger to note that businesses in the North Shore Inner PTRA will face a 62% increase while businesses in the other cities face lesser increases from 45% down to 25%.

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These transport rates figures suggest that the ARC may have made some significant mistakes in calculating the rates.

When challenged on this ARC chief executive Jo Brosnahan claims that the North Shore increases are due to the fact that previously North Shore was paying less than its fair share of transport rates.

No doubt North Shore ratepayers and public transport passengers will dispute this ARC claim.

© Scoop Media

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