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2013 Future of Local Government – National Summit Melbourne, 22-23 May 2013 Amalgamation: The Queensland experience to date Learnings, Outcomes and Sustainability? Greg Hoffman PSM, General Manager – Advocacy & Simone Talbot, Manager – Infrastructure, Economics and Regional Development.
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2013 Future of Local Government – National Summit • Melbourne, 22-23 May 2013 • Amalgamation: The Queensland experience to date • Learnings, Outcomes and Sustainability? • Greg Hoffman PSM, General Manager – Advocacy & • Simone Talbot, Manager – Infrastructure, Economics and Regional Development
Paint the picture – from then to now Compare similarities and differences over 20 years Sustainability??? Objectives
History… • Comparison of Amalgamation Processes 1992 – 1996 • ALP State Government • Process: comprehensive, considered & consultative • Result: 166 to 157 • 1996: Coalition State Government • De-amalgamation polls: Result – 3/9 polls but no change
History… 2007 – 2008 • ALP State Government • Process: club fist, concocted & closed door • Result: 157 to 73 • 2013: LNP State Government • De-amalgamation polls: Result – 16/31 sought polls, 4 referred, 1 recommended, 4 granted, 4 successful
History… • Why different outcomes? • 1996 ˃ no change ˃ reasonable process (1 year each & extensive consultation) • 2013 ˃ 4 de-amalgamations ˃ repugnant process (whole State in 3 months & no consultation) • Learnings: • Respect the residents, let them genuinely participate • Bad process = rejected outcomes
Surveys in 2005 of 5 amalgamated cities Twice as many residents said outcomes successful than those who said it was not Service delivery – three times as many felt performance had improved than those who said it was worse Only 7% wanted the clock turned back to previous boundaries Success of Amalgamations (1992-96)
Survey 2009 of amalgamated mayors & CEOs Overall objective – stronger councils in 5 years 3.93/5 Overall performance of new council 3.73 Community satisfaction with service levels 3.54 Community acceptance & identification 3.34 Community satisfaction with rates & charges 2.91 Success of Amalgamations (2008)
Success of Amalgamations… • Mayoral Election Outcomes 2012 (31 councils) • Stood down 5 • Returned unopposed 4 • Re-elected 9Total 18 (58%) • Defeated 13 (42%) = 48% of all defeated mayors • Learning: • More mayors of non-amalgamated councils were defeated in 2012 than mayors of amalgamated councils
Objective of Amalgamations • Facilitate optimum service delivery • Effectively contribute and participate in Queensland’s regional economies • Better manage economic, environmental and social planning consistent with regional communities of interest • Effectively partner with other levels of government to ensure sustainable & viable communities • Basically… • Stronger resource base, economies of scale, capability & capacity, better services & infrastructure, economic & regional development, growth management, “bigger picture” approach… • A new local government model!!!
Starting Point 2008 • Financial Sustainability Reviews – 94 councils pre-amalgamation (excl Indigenous councils)
Current Point 2012 • Self-Assessed Financial Sustainability – 53 councils post amalgamation (incl Indigenous councils) Source: AECgroup Draft Report – Identification of Factors influencing financial sustainability by local government segment 20.8% 13.2% 50.9% 5.7% 9.4%
Operating surplus ratio (analysis of Financial Sustainability ex Financial Statements & Department reports) Current Point (2012)… Sources: QTC, AECgroup, DLG
Net financial liabilities ratio (analysis of Financial Sustainability ex Financial Statements & Department reports) Current Point (2012)… Sources: QTC, AECgroup, DLG
Total debt per segment (analysis of Financial Sustainability ex Financial Statements & Department reports) Current Point (2012)… Sources: QTC, AECgroup, DLG
Rating effort – general/separate/special rates & levies as % of household income (Analysis of Financial Sustainability ex Financial Statements & Department reports) Current Point (2012)… Sources: QTC, AECgroup, DLG
Auditor General’s Sustainability Risk Assessment 2011-12 Current Point (2012)… • Council Category Higher Moderate Lower • Very large 2 6 4 • Large 1 3 11 • Medium 0 2 9 • Small 2 0 14 • Indigenous 11 2 1 • TOTAL 16 13 39 • PERCENT 24 19 57 • Based on: • Three financial sustainability measures ex Local Government Regulation 2012 • Sustainability targets set by the DLGCRR • Three years average
Current Point (2012)… • Sustainability measures • Operating Suplus Ratio (˂10%) • Very large: Gold Coast, Redland • Large: Western Downs (A) • Small: Cook, Paroo • Indigenous: TSIRC (A), NPA (A), 9 others • Net Financial Liabilities Ratio (˂60%) • Very large: Brisbane, Ipswich, Rockhampton (A), Townsville (A) • $3.6B/$7.5B debt • Asset Sustainability Ratio (Capital Replacement Ratio ˃1.5) • Very large: 4/1A • Large: 3/3A • Medium: 3/3A • Small: 3/0A • Indigenous: 12/2A)
Learnings Factors influencing results: • Debt funded capital expenditure growing • Operating deficit problems ex depreciation • Inconsistency in valuation of assets • Natural disasters – major impact on capital works and asset issues • Infrastructure burden growing Other impacts: • Reduction and removal of capital grants and subsidies • Capping of infrastructure charges • SEQ water reforms (capping dividends) • Lost revenue – $800m per annum • Primary impacts – very large & large (SEQ & coastal councils)
Another insight • Queensland’s support for Constitutional Recognition Percent
Constitutional Recognition… According to Prof AJ Brown: “…cross-party political support, and popular support, for recognition have been consistently stronger in Queensland. Due to the greater strength, role and performance of local government in Queensland over many decades, there remains a much stronger consensus that local government is both worth investing in, and should be invested in, in political terms.” LGAQ’s $2m Public Image Campaign has seen support levels increase over 3 years.
Conclusions “Overall, there does not yet appear to be a material change in the vulnerability of Queensland Local Governments pre and post reforms…………” – AECgroup Current sustainability challenges are shared across both amalgamated and non-amalgamated councils driven by State government policy decisions Public acceptance of amalgamated councils confirmed by election results Amalgamations are an “opportunity” not an “outcome”
Conclusions Con’t Have amalgamations objectives been achieved? Work in progress, but it was always going to be a decade in the making SEQ, Coastal and Resource segments pre-amalgamation councils would have been significantly worse off under the financial and growth pressures of the past four years than their amalgamated successors Local government seen as “Partner in Government” Political clout is now evident Success will and has been achieved over time (5-10 years) depending on leadership, policy choices and response to external impacts