Saturday, April 4, 2026

Canterbury Mayoral Forum concerned by rates cap proposal

The Canterbury Mayoral Forum has expressed its concern about the Central Government’s proposal to cap rates at a local government level.

Late last year, the Government announced a suite of proposed reforms, including to cap rates set by Councils at between 2 to 4% per year.

In a formal submission, Canterbury Mayoral Forum Chair and Timaru District Council Mayor, Nigel Bowen said the Forum acknowledged the Government’s intention to reduce rates and improve efficiency and accountability – all of which are central to councils’ work in Long-term Plan and Annual Plan processes.

“We held two workshops in January discussing all the government proposals and were able to have some good in-depth and robust discussions. These have been reflected in the first of our submissions, for the rates cap proposal,” Chair Bowen said.

“We appreciate the Government’s intention is to implement a rates cap, but we have significant concerns with the proposed model and the limited analysis that accompanies it.”

As part of its submission, the Forum recommended the establishment of a funding model for activities provided by local government that can be sustained for generations.

“We acknowledge that the current local government system requires reform to address long-standing economic, environmental, and funding challenges. However, the scale and pace of the change across the proposed reforms will require careful management and significant investment from communities and councils to transition to new statutory responsibilities,” said Chair Bowen.

“Each Mayor and the Canterbury Regional Council Chair will continue to engage with Central Government, their councils, and communities to understand the implications of these proposals and their potential impacts.”

The Mayoral Forum will also submit on the Planning; Natural Environment; Simplifying Local Government, and the Emergency Management Bills later this month.

“Our submissions will focus on the importance of aligning reforms, funding, timing, and change for the benefit of communities and ratepayers. Our focus is to work in partnership to get the best outcomes for Canterbury,” Chair Bowen said.

The 7-page Canterbury Mayoral Forum submission for the rate cap proposal can be viewed here.

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