DATE: |
03 March 2008 |
TITLE: |
Innovative
Moves to Improve Services to Rural Communities
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An innovative move
which could see a return of banking services and substantially improve
services to some rural communities in the district is being proposed
by the Far North District Council.
Far North Mayor Wayne Brown said today the concept called for a "co-location
in the broadest possible way to achieve the broadest possible services"
for rural centres such as Kaeo, Rawene and Kawakawa.
"As a council we need to improve the way we provide customer services
to these communities because the existing service is inefficient and
ineffective. If we can achieve savings and create efficiencies by co-locating
with service providers such as banks and postal agencies it is going
to be to everybody's benefit.
"This is not about shifting services out of these communities –
it's about aggregating services so they are not lost. It's about reversing
the trend which has resulted in small communities progressively losing
out," he said.
Mayor Brown said he had held preliminary discussions with Kiwi Bank
and NZ Post representatives on the possibilities, and both agencies
would consider available options.
"There are no promises but the alternatives are promising,”
he said. “If it can work at Mangonui where the local 4-Square,
NZ Post and Kiwibank are co-located, there is no reason why it shouldn't
work at places like Kaeo and Rawene.
"I'm not opposed to using rates to subsidise costs if it means
these communities will gain rather than lose services," Mayor Brown
said. “I'm pretty sure we can come up with something a lot better
than these three communities are receiving now."
The innovation comes as a result of a council staff report proposing
to reduce staffing levels at the Kaeo, Rawene and Kawakawa Service Centres
by co-locating customer services on a part-time basis with council library
services.
The proposal involves supplementing staff services with the provision
of information kiosks, a council 0800 telephone link, a dedicated post
box, bringing in temporary staff to cover peak periods such as rate
payments and dog registration, and encouraging greater use of cashless
transactions and on-line services.
"If these moves are going to cut costs and improve efficiencies,
why stop there? It makes sense to me to take a wider view and look at
co-location with private sector organisations or even the local dairy
or grocery," Mayor Brown said.
The expanded co-location proposal has been adopted by the council as
its preferred option from four options presented at this week’s
council meeting. However, all options will be presented for comment
during a special consultative procedure to be carried out in conjunction
with public consultation on the council's draft Annual Plan during the
next four months.
Meanwhile, the council intends to stop accepting resource and building
consent applications at Kaeo, Rawene and Kawakawa because recent changes
to building legislation require applications to be pre-vetted; a service
that can only be offered at one of the main centres where there are
sufficient technically trained back-up staff.
The role of the three Service Centres’ customer services staff
has been reviewed following issues with finding casual staff to cover
holidays and sickness, risks associated with storing large sums of money
at satellite locations, the requirement for pre-vetting of resource
and building consent applications, resourcing difficulties and increasing
overhead costs.
For further information please contact:-
Alison Lees
Communications Manager
Far North District Council
0800 920 029
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Page created/updated: 3 March, 2008
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