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Council buy Titirangi land, home of precious Kauri trees

Council buy Titirangi land, home of precious Kauri trees

The architects who own the two Titirangi sections with the precious Kauri and Rimu trees on them should have their land bought by the Local Board and the rent should be reduced because of the restrictions they suffer in building, according to the New Economics Party.

Spokesperson Deirdre Kent said the tree issue in Titirangi is a graphic example of why land ownership should progressively move into public ownership. Local Boards should have power to create a second national currency to buy up community land. And if the use of the land is restricted because of historic building, conservation of trees or building height limits, the rent should be reduced as the part of the land already serves a public purpose.

The land rent should be in lieu of rates and the revenue shared by other levels of government.

She said if the council or the local board buys this land destined for low cost housing there will be four beneficial outcomes:

1. The trees can be saved

2. the housing produced will be genuinely low cost because the cost of the land will not be included into the cost of the housing

3. the citizens Auckland will enjoy a dividend from the land rental in perpetuity

4. The citizens of New Zealand will enjoy a more buoyant economy as lower cost of housing results in lower mortgage payments therefore less interest payments and less bank profits streaming across the Tasman to Australia.

“The financing of land purchase on a large scale is eminently possible. It is only political will that is needed to create a second national currency that can be spent into existence through land purchase by councils,” said Ms Kent

ENDS

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