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APPLICATION FOR A 10% RATE RISE Featured
29 November 2020 Posted by 

APPLICATION FOR A 10% RATE RISE

We need to pay for mismanagement
DALLAAS SHERRINGHAM
TENS of thousands of struggling Central Coast businesses and ratepayers have had to manage their finances through the most difficult year in history – and now they are faced with an almost certain rate rise to top it all off.
While they were busy balancing the books and makes end meet, Central Coast Council went on an illegal spending spree, the like of which has never occured in Australian Local Government before.
 
At Thursday’s special meeting Act Administrator Dick Persson flagged the 10% rise in the next seven year to pay for Council’s mismanagement.
 
Council will notify the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (IPART) of its intention to prepare an application or a one-off Special Rate Variation (SRV) of 8%. 
 
Mr Persson said this did not necessarily mean the application would proceed but if one wasn’t lodged the opportunity would be lost.
 
The rate would apply from 2021-22 and remain permanently in the rate base for seven years which, plus the 2% annual rate peg increase, represents a total rate increase of 10%. 
 
The application for a rate rise is proposed as of part of a raft of measures being considered to address the cash-flow and financial challenges Council is experiencing. 
 
The need for the extraordinary meeting, at this time, came from IPART’s deadline which stipulates applications need to be notified by  November 27. 
 
“I want to assure the community that this is not a done deal. It remains one of the options on the table,” Mr Persson said. 
 
“We need to keep our options open here as a rate rise may be needed to ensure our community can continue to receive the services they want and need.
 
“IPART is a completely independent process and the community will be consulted on a rate rise if we go down that path. We can’t put rates up on our own.
 
“We are exploring all other options as well including the sale of assets, borrowings, a reduction in our management structures and restrictions on spending which will all help our bottom line.”
 
 
 


editor

Publisher
Michael Walls
michael@accessnews.com.au
0407 783 413

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