National Pledges QEII Funding Boost to Support Farm Conservation
Money invested to protect native bush, wetlands and other special habitats on farms is paying huge dividends.
Federated Farmers says reforms of local government announced last week will be music to farmers' ears.
The Government has given councils a three-month window to put forward proposals to simplify and strengthen local governmnet in their regions.
Sandra Faulkner, Federated Farmers' local government spokesperson, says New Zealand's local government structure simply isn't working for farmers.
"It's contributing to rising costs, infrastructure pressure, and declining civic engagement.
"Ratepayers up and down the country have completely lost confidence in a system that doesn't recognise how our communities have evolved across the last 30 years," Faulkner says.
"We've long advocated for reform, so we're very pleased the Government has now asked councils to get on with it."
The announcement offers councils a chance to fast-track their own reform proposals and bypass the Combined Territory Board model.
Federated Farmers encourages elected councillors to put aside parochialism and engage in open discussions on reform that will work.
"The clear message to councils from government is to seize the initiative and find more efficient structures that work better for ratepayers and communities," says Faulkner.
"If councils don't front-foot this, government will make the decisions for them."
Faulkner says Federated Farmers will only support reforms that lock in strong representation for provincial comunities.
"Our consistent view has been that metropolitan and provincial areas have very different needs and priorities.
"We took the initiative early this year by publishing a proposal for reform, promoting the case for unitary councils, which would combine the responsibilities of current regional and district councils.
"We'd like to see metropolitan unitary councils centred on cities of around 50,000-plus, and provincial unitary councils that merge the district councils."
That model could see the current 78 councils reduce to less than half that number.
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