Huge drop in building consents

A 44 per cent drop in income from building consents issued in Waipā paints a stark picture of the state of the construction industry, figures released to the council’s Finance and Corporate committee this week show.

Photo: Rodolfo Quirós pexels.com

Eleven months into the financial year, 1251 building consents worth $275.17 million have been processed. For the previous financial year to June 30 last year, there were 1665 building consents worth $488.77 million.

The other barometer comes with development contributions – money paid to the council by developers to fund growth related infrastructure. The council forecasts it will finish the financial year at the end of this month with $15.572 million, nearly $11.65 million shy of its budget. By the end of last month, it had only received $7.354 million.

Ken Morris

In a financial report signed off by Business Support group manager Ken Morris, a drop of $14.9 million in fees and charges – most from a reduction in property sales and a fall in revenue from building fees – showed slower growth in the district.

And the fall in development contributions indicated growth projects were being deferred.

Overdue rates – from the $83.3 million levied – sat at $1.8 million on May 31 with $126,186 still outstanding from previous years. Water rates of $15.4 million were invoiced for the year with $1.5 million of that owing at the end of last month.

Photo: Life Of Pix pexels.com

More Recent News

Water strength in numbers

Seven Waikato district councils are discussing joining forces to form one council-controlled water organisation while two others want their own and another is sitting on the fence. Chris Gardner reports it’s far from a done…

Economic plans

Takitini is the new economic development brand for Waikato District Council. It was launched recently and symbolises the district’s connection to navigating waka (canoe) and the lifeforce of the Waikato and Waipā rivers. They are…

Claims denied

Claims the waste to energy plant proposed for Te Awamutu will release toxic emissions have been denied by a lawyer close to the project. Māori owned whanau business Global Metal Solutions’ in house counsel Amanda…

Many more take the plunge

The Waipā Community Facilities Trust has recognised a growth opportunity for Swim Waipā upon presenting its six-monthly report. Trust chief executive Matt Horne and chair Shane Walsh unveiled the July-December 2024 report at the Waipā…