Call for emergency services fund applications
05 August, 2015
Call for emergency services fund applications
The Northland Regional Council has begun
the first step to identify potential recipients of its new
$900,000 a year ‘Contestable Emergency Services
Fund’.
The fund – which costs ratepayers roughly $12 per household a year – was adopted recently as part of the regional council’s new Long Term Plan 2015-25 and replaces its former emergency services helicopter rate and all other similar funding from Northland's four councils.
Council chairman Bill Shepherd says emergency services funding had attracted comment from almost 800 submitters, with a roughly even split between those wanting to adopt the new contestable fund and others keen to retain the status quo,
With the LTP (and new fund) officially adopted by councillors recently, the council has now begun the first step to formally allocate the funding; an initial ‘registration of interest’ (ROI) process for eligible potential recipients.
Councillor Shepherd says a two-stage process will be followed, with ROI required by 4pm Friday 21 August.
“The ROI process will be used by staff and councillors next month (SUBS: September) to determine the eligibility of applicants to then proceed to a second ‘request for proposal’ (RFP) stage.
He
says the RFP stage will consider specific financial
requests, proposed measures and targets and business cases
from eligible applicants.
“Our hope is that the second
RFP stage will be complete, and successful applicants will
have been chosen, by late October/early November to give all
applicants certainty as to their funding status for the next
several years as soon as possible.”
He says the
initial high-level criteria agreed to by councillors for the
fund ahead of the 21 August deadline is:
·
It’s available to emergency service organisations that
have a significant part of their activities undertaken by
volunteers;
· The purpose of the organisation
must primarily be the saving of human life that is in
immediate or critical danger or responding to serious
injury;
· The funds must be applied to the
provision of region-wide services within Northland;
·
Fund recipients must undertake not to approach the
region’s district councils for funding during the term of
the agreement;
· The total funded is for a
three-year period with the annual amount funded being
flexible, to suit the recipient’s requirements;
·
The fund can be for capital or operational expenditure.
Councillor Shepherd says groups interested in taking part in the initial registration of interest process can do so by visiting: www.gets.govt.nz (reference 14641490)
ends