Government Would Be ‘Short Sighted” To Rule Out Visitor Levy
3 April 2017
Government Would Be ‘Short Sighted” To Rule Out Visitor Levy - Dunne
UnitedFuture leader
Hon Peter Dunne says that a failure to introduce an overseas
visitor levy to help fund conservation infrastructure would
be “short-sighted and
disappointing.”
“UnitedFuture proposed a levy of
about $25 per visitor could raise around $75 million a year
which could be directed towards upgrading infrastructure
like huts, tracks and other amenities on the conservation
estate, freeing up other DOC resources to focus on the
protection of threatened indigenous flora, fauna and marine
life,” he says.
Mr Dunne says a $25 per head levy
per overseas visitor was a very a small per capita cost –
“barely the cost of a meal at a restaurant” – but the
overall sum raised would provide a significant boost to the
already stretched DOC budget.
“Many overseas
visitors are stunned that they are not charged already for
access to National Parks, so the imposition of a modest levy
is hardly likely to deter them from visiting here away, nor
scare them away, but will be positive for the conservation
of our environment.
"It is disappointing to see a
recent change in messaging to say that New Zealand already
costs too much when the former Prime Minister, John Key,
was making much more positive public comments about such a
policy in November.
"This is about looking to the
future and ensuring we have a conservation estate that is
funded to a level that means it can continue to attract the
overseas attention it does, bring tourists into our country
and maintain its outstanding reputation without shifting
that costs exclusively to the New Zealand taxpayer,” he
says.
Ends