$2.45M of emergency services funding allocated
11 November, 2015
$2.45M of emergency services funding allocated
The Northland Regional Council is
to allocate $2.45 million of funding to four separate
emergency services providers over the next three years.
The council introduced a new $900,000 annual ‘Contestable Emergency Services Fund’ as part of its Long Term Plan 2015-25 earlier this year, with councillors yesterday (subs: Tues 10 Nov) formally allocating the first suite of funding.
The fund – which costs
ratepayers roughly $12 per household annually – replaces
the regional council’s former emergency services
helicopter rate, as well as all other similar funding from
all four Northland councils.
Regional council chairman
Bill Shepherd says successful applicants and their yearly
GST-exclusive allocations are:
Northland Emergency
Services Trust; $525,000 annually for operational costs for
its air rescue and ambulance service
Surf Life Saving
Northern Region; $120,000 annually for professional guards
at popular beaches outside volunteer patrol hours
St John
Northern Region; $90,000 annually to partially-fund
replacement of Northland ambulances
Coastguard Northern
Region; $84,000 annually for operating, support and training
costs.
He says successful applicants will be funded for a three-year period (subject to suitable performance measures) to provide them with budgetary certainty.
Yesterday’s funding decisions mark the conclusion of a two-stage process that had effectively begun in August with a call for initial registrations of interests from qualifying organisations.
Six of an 10 original
applicants had qualified to advance to a
second stage,
which had seen examination of their specific financial
requests, proposed measures and targets and business
cases.
“Those six applicants had collectively sought $4,811,420 over the three years, roughly twice the available funding.”
Councillor Shepherd says by the time a provision of nine percent was deducted for any partial non-collection of the rate, the council was yesterday left with a total of $2.457M to allocate over the three years.
He says council was sympathetic to the plight of the two organisations which had yesterday missed out (both search and rescue groups) and ideally would have liked to have been in a position to fully fund all six eligible applicants.
“We listened to our community during the LTP consultation process and increased the annual funding pool to $900,000 ($100,000 more than initially proposed) but despite this we were ultimately unable to meet all of the applicants’ expectations.”
Even the four successful applicants had still received lesser sums than they had hoped for, Cr Shepherd says.
ENDS