I’m down in Canberra at the 27th National General Assembly of Local Government, and it’s been a valuable experience.
My head is swimming with statistics – the presentations have been excellent, covering the effects of COVID (both economic and health), initiatives to make communities more resilient, new technologies that aid in planning, communication and environmental protection. Enough for several other posts, but here are some headlines:
In 1996, Financial Assistance Grants – the main way the Federal Government assisted Councils, was 1% of Federal taxation revenue. Now, it has declined to only 0.55%, half of what it used to be. Despite the annual feeding-the-chickens announcements we’re used to (like the very welcome boost to the Local Roads and Community Infrastructure program), support from the Federal government to Local governments has declined in real terms for decades.
Councils, through levying rates and charges, take in just 3.2% of ALL tax in Australia. Yet we’re responsible for 32% of all public infrastructure, including 75% of roads.
COAG – the Council of Australian Governments, was founded in 1992 and was traditionally the table where all the tiers of government sat down. When that was replaced by the ‘National Cabinet’ last year, Local Governments were no longer at the table, and right at the time when our voice needed to be heard the most as COVID hit.
That’s why I’m here. To learn, listen, and advocate for a better deal.