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Targeted rates floated for Aucklanders living near new rail lines and roads

Saturday, 4 November 2017

Transport Minister Phil Twyford told The Nation he was considering a targeted rate as a way to pay for transport projects.
Transport Minister Phil Twyford told The Nation he was considering a targeted rate as a way to pay for transport projects.

Aucklanders living near new rail lines or motorways could face rates hikes in a bid to plug the city's transport funding gap.

Speaking to Newshub's The Nation on Saturday, Transport Minister Phil Twyford said he would consider a targeted rate as a way to pay for major developments.

New transport developments generated
New transport developments generated 'massive increases in the value of the property around that infrastructure', Twyford said (file photo).

Auckland is about $6 billion short of the money needed to fund planned transport projects over the next 10 years. 

'That's not a fictional hole that's been made up for electioneering purposes, that's an actual $6 billion fiscal hole,' Twyford told The Nation.

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About $1.5 billion of that was expected to be met by a regional fuel tax.

As to the rest, Twyford said he wanted to be 'smart' about raising revenue.

'One of the ways that we can do it is, when you build new transport infrastructure, like light rail or even indeed a motorway, it generates massive increases in the value of the property around that infrastructure,' he said. 

'I want us to look at ways that we can capture some of that value and recycle it back into the public good.'

Twyford told The Nation that could involve setting up an Urban Development Authority alongside any light rail lines, as well as targeted rates.

He also revealed he was considering scrapping Auckland's Metropolitan Urban Limit in a bid to bring down costs on building new homes.

'This city is going to have to grow up and out.'

Twyford also told The Nation he had asked for the business case information on Penlink, a proposed toll road between the Whangaparaoa Peninsula and State Highway 1 in Auckland's north.

'We're not saying we're not going to do anything – that's a vital freight corridor – but we just don't believe the [previous] government's $2 billion project stacked up.'