A public rally will be held to urge Tauranga City Council to “stop the spend” and remove rates increases.
Jan Gyenge has organised the event at 1pm at Memorial Park on Sunday.
The Tauranga resident said the proposed overall rates increase of 12% was unsustainable.
It was 4.8 times inflation of 2.5%, which was “unconscionable,” Gyenge said.
“People are doing it really tough, it’s just not sustainable.”
The rally wasn’t about asking the councillors to listen, but expecting them to act differently when they voted on expenditure, Gyenge said.
She said she wanted them to reduce their appetite for spending.
“It’s about the whole organisation becoming lean and mean and fully efficient with absolutely no wasted cents at all.”
Gyenge looked at the council’s financials and said finding an extra $40m in savings would avoid the need to increase residential rates.
Mayor Mahé Drysdale told her during an Annual Plan submission hearing it would take $80m in savings to avoid a rates rise.
Gyenge said the rally was needed to draw the community together and provide an outlet for people unable to take part in the hearings.
“It’s not an isolated event. It’s the beginning of the community saying ‘this is what we think’. It’ll be a platform for the community.”
Consultation on the council’s draft Annual Plan ran from March 28 to April 28. Hearings for submitters were on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Mount Maunganui Ratepayers, Residents and Retailers Association chairman Tim Maltby at the Annual Plan hearings on Tuesday. Photo / Alisha Evans
Tim Maltby, chairman of Mount Maunganui Ratepayers, Residents and Retailers Association, said there was a lot of worry and anger in the community about council spending and rates increases.
Most people’s wages increased in line with inflation at about 3% but a rates increase of 12% was unaffordable, he said.
“We believe that the council vastly overspends.
“If council was reorganised and restructured so that it was running properly and doing its job properly, there would be no need for a rates increase.”
It was “totally unrealistic” to expect a zero rates increase this year, Maltby said.
“If the elected members wanted to, they could force a restructure that would drastically reduce costs and it would be quite feasible to have a 0% rates increase [in future].”
Tauranga Mayor Mahé Drysdale. Photo / Alex Cairns
Drysdale said the Annual Plan tried to strike a balance between investing in the city and affordability for ratepayers.
“The real challenge is we have a huge infrastructure deficit. We’ve got to be mindful of that when we’re prioritising our money.”
The council found $29m in savings to lower the rates rise from 20% to 12%, he said.
The councillors had given the organisation direction to reduce costs across its operations to keep rates down, Drysdale said.
Disestablishing 100 roles was part of this, he said.
“I can assure the people of Tauranga that elected members are working hard to find savings, which would reduce the average rates increase for 2025/26 to 10%, or lower.”
To achieve a 0% residential rates rise, $80m in savings would need to be found, he said.
“Taking $80m out of a business our size in one year is actually nigh impossible.”
Feedback the council received during the Annual Plan consultation ranged from people saying facilities were not meeting the needs of the community to concern about rates, Drysdale said.
There were 968 written submissions and 96 people asked to speak at the hearings.
Final decisions would be made after Annual Plan deliberations on May 26, he said.
LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.




11 comments
Rates Increases
Posted on 16-05-2025 12:45 | By Noel Silver
The Council has just built a building for its staff. At that time they made the building to accommodate the required staff.
The simple solution next is to fill the building with those people most needed. Then close the doors and make those outside building Redundant. Then reevaluate the performance of remaining staff in six months and adjust accordingly. Job sorted
Rates grab cannot continue
Posted on 16-05-2025 13:38 | By jed
Council treats ratepayers as their personal piggybanks that can be raided at will.
My evidence of this is the last 8 years rate increases vs the inflation rate. 7 of my last 8 rates increases have been double digit percentage increases. That is, more than 10%.
Inflation rate over the last 8 years have been 1.9%, 1.6%, 1.6%, 1.7%, 3.9%, 7.2%, 5.7%, 2.9%, 2.5% (as of March 2025).
Tauranga council are taking money from local residents faster than they can earn it. This is ultimately unsustainable, as long term it would mean the council takes more than the entire local economy can produce. Mahe knows this.
When will council learn they have to moderate rates increase?
Rates
Posted on 16-05-2025 14:27 | By Trixie39
Rates rip off pensioners cannot afford this .good on the lady organizing rally.
It's Easy actually Mahe
Posted on 16-05-2025 15:17 | By Jules L
Mayor Drysdale says that it's nigh on impossible to cut $80 million from council expenditure in one year. I found it dead easy, it took me all of 5 minutes. First you can cancel all of the money that council gives away in grants and donations, then you can trim the massive number of staff, plus you can stop all of those cycleways that everybody hates. Already I am up to over $120 million in savings and I haven't even broken a sweat. It is actually dead easy to get a rates rise of zero, in fact it's also easy to get a decrease in rates instead, that's if they actually wanted to of course. And therein lies the question, do they really have any incentive to reduce expenditure, or do they love all of the extra expenditure, for the power it brings them?
Localized lotto . .
Posted on 16-05-2025 16:32 | By Makkas1313
Ha ha ha you folks voted him in good luck.
I still don't know why Tauranga doesn't run a monthly LOTTO to top up shortfall infrastructure and build new assets . . It's easy looking what Sydney did and got an opera house . . Museum free as well . . Very well worth considering . Or is that too much work ?
Hmmm
Posted on 16-05-2025 17:06 | By Let's get real
One obvious part of the mayor narrative.... a balance between investing in the city and affordability for ratepayers.
We should, as the fifth largest city in the country, be encouraging outside investment in the city rather than burdening ratepayers at every opportunity.
We should also look at the gross overpopulation of council offices.. Who is doing what and why..? And possibly more importantly, who is actually qualified for the position that they are holding down.
Here We Go Mahé
Posted on 17-05-2025 09:04 | By Yadick
This is just the beginning of the community having to step in. You could have easily avoided this by listening and taking action yourself. Instead you've ploughed ahead all gunho and glorified the Commissioners costing us, the ratepayers, our life's.
It's not too late to start listening. It's not too late to pull the plug on nonsense, unwanted projects. A museum and meeting rooms is not going to revive anything. If an art gallery was going to draw people in, that would've already happened. You might be Mayor of Tauranga but you're not part of Tauranga (and I'm not referring to your living here). It's time for you to connect, step up and take action. Until then, here comes the ratepayers . . .
@Makkas1313
Posted on 18-05-2025 12:49 | By morepork
It took Sydney (whose population in 1960 was around 2.3 million) just under 30 years to finance the Opera House, using the lotteries AND Government grants. The budget for it was 7 million and it came in a little under 120 million.
(It IS a beatiful enhancement to their city and the acoustics are amazing. I guess you have to give them credit for sticking with it...
Maybe local government politicians all go to the same special school on how to exceed budgets and waste other people's money...
Mr ATTITTUDE
Posted on 18-05-2025 18:40 | By mr attittude
I Hope all of the above people put their names down for Council positions next elections.
It's great to be able to put all of their well thought ideas into practice and have the backing of all of the Tauranga population to agree 100% with these ideas too.
Surely every one would vote for them - it looks like a very simple easy job???
@ mr attitude
Posted on 20-05-2025 11:16 | By morepork
A couple of years ago it was suggested here that we should have "Morepork for Mayor". I laughed at it then thought about it. When I investigated, I figured it would cost around $30,000 to run a decent campaign (which I don't have, and would need sponsorship.) If you get sponsored then you have lost the independence you need to do the job properly. Even if I could get the support and help with funding, I really just want to enjoy my retirement, after dealing with stress in my career for most of my life. I was optimistic at the end of the Commissioners, so I dropped the idea. Now, I find myself disillusioned and disappointed at the Drysdale "replacement" for Tolley. There is no real commitment to Democracy, the people are not consulted or listened to, and it is just tryanny, back room deals, and covert co-governance.
@mr attitude (2)
Posted on 20-05-2025 11:33 | By morepork
I love Tauranga and I don't want to be anywhere else. But I am really heartsick to see the continuation of the Commissioner's policy under an elected local government, that promised so much.
I don't want to become an embittered cynic of our City administration and I will, if I remain engaged with it.
I see small businesses collapsing, Ratepayers treated with contempt, no effort to really cut spending or balance the books, a Council that prioritizes its own comfort and accommodation over what the community prioritizes, and race-based appointments to committees, which violate the fundamental principles of a Democracy.
There is an old saying that, in a Demcracy you don't always get the government you want, but you invariably get the government you deserve...
I no longer want to be a part of it.
I probably won't vote next time, never mind run.
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