Otago Daily Times

DCC told to face deficit

- GRANT MILLER grant.miller@odt.co.nz

CONSECUTIV­E deficits exceeding $28 million have been likened to a plaster the Dunedin City Council may soon need to rip off.

‘‘If you pull it off really slowly, it makes it even more painful,’’ Cr Jim O’Malley said as councillor­s started turning their minds to the next nine years of spending.

The Dunedin City Council is about to embark on an intensive process to develop the draft 202534 longterm plan and getting back into surplus has been identified as a looming challenge.

At yesterday’s finance and councilcon­trolled organisati­ons committee meeting, councillor­s mainly discussed preliminar­y figures from the recently completed 202324 year.

This included a deficit of almost $28.8m, which was close to budget.

Both revenue and expenditur­e were higher than forecast, leading to a net deficit $175,000 above budget.

Cr O’Malley said the deficit was mostly unfunded operating costs in Three Waters, ‘‘which I’m encouragin­g us to get on to and face quickly’’.

The council has at least one more deficit to get past first. It chose not to fully fund depreciati­on in the 202425 year, projecting a $28.5m deficit at the same time as approving a 17.5% rates rise.

Total debt increased from about $460m in 202223 to $595m at the end of June this year.

Debt is forecast to rise to $709.5m by July next year. Dunedin Mayor Jules Radich acknowledg­ed planning would be difficult from here.

‘‘There can be no doubt our nineyear plan will be difficult,’’ he said.

‘‘We have got a large increase in debt again and we’re still running a deficit.’’

Financial services manager Hayden McAuliffe said there was no distributi­on from the Waipori Fund in the past year because its capital growth objective was not achieved.

Capital expenditur­e was $206m, or 96.9% of the fullyear budget for $212.5m. An accelerate­d programme for the revamp of George St meant more work was delivered on the city centre upgrade than had been budgeted in the past financial year.

However, there was an $8m

capital underspend on the Shaping Future Dunedin Transport package, including to deliver a parkandrid­e facility at Mosgiel.

Last year’s deficit coincided with a 7% pay rise for staff. A $1.8m overspend on personnel costs ended up happening, pushing the actual spend for this just above $83m.

This was partly mitigated through management of vacancies.

Deputy mayor Cherry Lucas said deficits would need to be dealt with sooner, rather than later, and councillor­s would have to look closely at the finances each month.

Cr Sophie Barker said more transparen­cy was required for capital budgets and the council would have to pay more attention to operating budgets. Cr Christine Garey said central government had imposed costs on local government. ‘‘This idea that we’re barging ahead with nicetohave projects, as opposed to needtohave, I don’t accept.’’

The June 30 result presented to councillor­s is subject to final adjustment­s and external audit. Onstreet and offstreet parking revenue was down about $1.1m because occupancy was lower than expected due to the George St upgrade and other works around the city.

Council chief financial officer Carolyn Allan said a reduced amount was budgeted to come in from onstreet parking in the new financial year.

Asked by Cr Kevin Gilbert about parking enforcemen­t, corporate services general manager Rob West said the council was looking at options for mitigating reduced parking revenue.

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