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Residents protest at rates on cyclone-affected lands

Author
Linda Hall,
Publish Date
Sun, 20 Apr 2025, 2:22pm
Wairoa resident Hinerangi (Marie) Tuahine's home was flooded in the June floods of 2024. The latest QV has halved the value of her property. Photo / Hawke's Bay Regional Council
Wairoa resident Hinerangi (Marie) Tuahine's home was flooded in the June floods of 2024. The latest QV has halved the value of her property. Photo / Hawke's Bay Regional Council

Residents protest at rates on cyclone-affected lands

Author
Linda Hall,
Publish Date
Sun, 20 Apr 2025, 2:22pm

Kerry Tong鈥檚 Category 3 land in Eskdale is a thorn in his side.

He claims agents handling the buyout of his cyclone-destroyed property told him his best bet would be to take the relocation offer and keep the land.

鈥淭hey said my rates would be minimal,鈥 Tong said.

They weren鈥檛.

Kerry Tong is being charged pre-cyclone rates for this Category 3 land in Eskdale.
Kerry Tong is being charged pre-cyclone rates for this Category 3 land in Eskdale.

However, a spokesperson for the Hastings District Council says the Property Group acted as agents for the council and was unaware of any advice given regarding ongoing rates obligations.

鈥淭he voluntary buyout policy developed and approved by council and jointly funded by both the Government and council, set out a process for how it would work,鈥 the spokesperson said.

 鈥淚ncorporated in that was a differentiation between properties under 2ha and those over 2ha. For those smaller properties owners had the option of selling their land to the council or taking a relocation grant and retaining ownership of the land.

鈥淐ouncil also provided financial support to property owners to get their own expert advice including legal support.

鈥淲here property owners decided to take the relocation grant, they retained ownership of the land and with that the opportunities that may arise in the future for that land to be sold or utilised for other purposes.

鈥淗owever, with continued ownership came responsibilities like looking after the land and paying rates like most other property owners.鈥

An increasing number of cyclone victims have spoken out about being charged the same rates for Category 3 land.

They include P膩k艒whai landowners who claim their properties, parts of which encroach on the edge of the red zone known as Category 3 brought in after the cyclone, are now worth hundreds of thousands of dollars less, yet they are still being charged the same rates as before the cyclone.

Tong said that as soon as he received the rates bill for $1400, he stopped his automatic payment.

鈥淚鈥檓 not paying it. I鈥檒l fight it. How can they charge full rates when they know the land is worth virtually nothing?

鈥淚t鈥檚 bloody rude.鈥

Wairoa resident Hinerangi (Marie) Tuahine's home was flooded in the June floods of 2024. The latest QV has halved the value of her property. Photo / Hawke's Bay Regional Council

Wairoa resident Hinerangi (Marie) Tuahine's home was flooded in the June floods of 2024. The latest QV has halved the value of her property. Photo / Hawke's Bay Regional Council

In Wairoa, residents are facing a similar dilemma with new rating valuations prepared by independent valuers Quotable Value (QV) on behalf of the Wairoa District Council wiping thousands of dollars from some property values.

Hinerangi Tuahine has lived in her Wairoa home for 鈥50-odd years鈥.

It was flooded in June last year.

鈥淭imes are tough and three months before the floods I was thinking of stopping my insurance. I鈥檇 been paying it for 50 years and had only claimed on a couple of small things.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 get around to it. I think someone was watching over me.鈥

The repairs to her home cost $234,000.

Her last valuation was $205,000. Her new one released in February, is $100,000, less than half of what it cost to repair her home.

鈥淓veryone was shocked at the valuations. We are facing another rate rise this year. I think it鈥檚 unfair we have lost so much value and yet we still have to pay higher rates.鈥

Wairoa Mayor Craig Little said drops in QV valuations have occurred in many places across New Zealand,

鈥淲airoa isn鈥檛 unique,鈥 he said.

鈥淰aluations do not affect the amount of money a council collects from rates - it is a tool that helps the council work out everyone鈥檚 share of rates.

鈥淎n increase or decrease in your property value may not mean you pay more or less in rates. Any rate change is determined by your new property value compared with the new average across the district.

鈥淓very year, the council looks at what it will cost to run the district and subtracts revenue from fees and other sources. This leaves the total amount of rates needed to run the district. That rate requirement is then shared across the district based on each property鈥檚 capital value.鈥

 A spokesperson for the Hawke鈥檚 Bay Regional Council says it continues to grant rating relief based on several factors including financial hardship.

鈥淭his is by way of annual application, which allows us on a case-by-case basis, to review the progress of restoration of dwellings and productive land, and assess the appropriate level of financial assistance.鈥

The Hastings council spokesperson said it could not 鈥漥ust reduce people鈥檚 rates.鈥

鈥淭here are clear and defined processes for how rates are calculated and struck, and once that has been done at the start of each financial year there is very little the council can do to reduce them.

鈥淭he council is, however, required to have a rates remission policy and a rates postponement policy.

鈥淭he rates remission policy sets out how rates can be remitted [reduced]. Any application a ratepayer makes to have their rates remitted, either partially or wholly, must be assessed against that policy and any changes to that policy can only be made following full public consultation and normally occurs when a long-term plan is being consulted on.

鈥淩ates remissions are funded by the broader ratepayers.鈥

Napier MP Katie Nimon said councils are accountable to their communities for their operational policies and decisions (including the settings of rates) rather than the Minister of Local Government.

鈥淟ocal authorities are responsible for deciding what mix and level of rates best suits their communities, following consultation with ratepayers and residents.

鈥淭hey can adjust liability for rates to recognise factors such as location, availability of services and community expectations. The provisions in the Local Government (Rating) Act 2002 recognise that each city and district is unique and are intended to give individual councils the flexibility to decide on the arrangements that best fit local circumstances.鈥

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

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