In a most unusual step, the same week that Parliament passed the Water Services Entities 2022 Act before rising for Christmas, the Government introduced another Bill to amend it.
The Bill goes by the name of the Water Services
Legislation Bill and it is as long as the Act it seeks to amend.
This is another sign of Three Waters reform package being
poorly planned and developed piecemeal.
The Government’s Three Waters reform agenda has been deficient from the time it tabled the business case in mid-2021. The assumptions behind the case are highly subjective and rightly have been challenged by most leaders from the local government sector.
This latest Water Services Legislation Bill addresses three
key questions that have been unanswered since 2021.
Firstly, given the massive amount of debt that each of the
four water services entities will take on, there has been a question as to what
security would be offered to lenders.
The Bill proposes that lenders will secure their debt through
a property rating mechanism. Should a water entity get into financial
difficulty and a receiver be appointed, the receiver would be able to bill
local authority ratepayers a uniform charge to recover the entity’s debt.
By shifting the risk to property owners in this way, the
Crown avoids the need to offer a guarantee to lenders.
Secondly, the way water services will be priced also is
addressed in this Bill.
Charging principles are spelt out. Pricing decisions are
left to the water services entities to make. The Bill directs them to promote
“the efficient use of resources” and to charge groups of consumers differently
only if “the costs of providing services to those groups is different”.
These provisions should leave the entities in no doubt that
their pricing of water services to consumers should be on a beneficiary pays
basis. This direction is then followed by an average price enabling provision,
a clause stating that the entities “may” charge geographically averaged prices
for water services.
The Minister has always promised that Three Waters reform
would deliver improved “equity” for consumers.
Rural New Zealand has taken this to mean that publicly
provided drinking and wastewater services would be extended out to towns and
villages that do not have them, and that to deal with issues of cost and
affordability, cross-subsidisation would occur. Effectively this means that
those in the larger towns and cities where economies of scale for water
services can be secured will pay more to cover the higher costs of service
provision in smaller communities.
Under this Bill, cross-subsidisation is not a given.
Small towns and villages may not secure the assistance that
they thought they were being promised.
Cross-subsidisation will be up to the whim of a Minister
providing directions through a Government Policy Statement, or up to the discretion
of the entity’s decision-makers.
Finally, this Bill clarifies how the new entities will
collect revenue from consumers.
The Bill enables water service entities to have local
authorities to collect their charges – at least until 2029.
This transition process will not surprise local authorities
but they and their constituents will be interested in what is considered in the
Bill “reasonable compensation” for providing this service.
If an agreement is not reached on compensation between local
authorities and the water service entities, the Bill provides for the Minister
to step in and determine the matter. This is a less-than-satisfactory process.
Local authority ratepayers should not be left on the hook
subsidising the administration costs of these water service entities.
But of much more concern is the first point I have raised.
The Bill proposes passing the security for water entity debt
on to ratepayers. Surely ratepayers who have no ownership interest in these
very large water services entities, do not elect their governing body, and have
no sway over the business decisions that they make, should not be exposed to
debt recovery by receivers.
The Water Services Legislation Bill is out for submissions
until February 12.
John Robertson, QSO, is the Mayor of Waitomo and a former Chair of Commissioners with Kaipara District Council. This article is posted with the kind permission of the author and was first published HERE. Submissions on the Bill can be made HERE.
4 comments:
Surely this is not surprising, standard practice for years now. The government of the day brings in new rules and forces councils to both enforce and pay.
This way we get to have 'rock star' economies while the ratepayers get to foot the bill.
Nothing really unexpected here. Just wait until the te mana o te wai statements and the levies for Maori start kicking in. Those poor, deluded, misinformed fools that thought things would get better and cheaper, with efficiencies of
scale are just that, misguided fools who'll soon be poorer.
Thankfully a change to an ACT driven government might yet save the day, but don't think for a moment that this hasn't still cost us all plenty - and now we all know (as if there was ever any doubt) who'll be picking up the tab for this unmandated rort.
Repeal.... and blanket repeal of all laws with CG embedded.
Reasons: no prior announcement of intent by Labour , no consultation with ratepayers - blatant overreach of power.
".....ratepayers who have no ownership interest in these very large water services entities, do not elect their governing body, and have no sway over the business decisions that they make, should not be exposed to debt recovery by receivers."
Sums it up in a nutshell.
Then again this was always the case that is why they ignored the 88,000 written submission for the forst one.
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