Horizons Regional Council

Manawatū-Rangitikei General Constituency
The Horizons Regional Council is the regional council for the Manawatū-Whanganui region. It makes decisions about managing resources in the region, such as air, water, soil and the coastline. It also carries out plant and pest control, helps prepare for natural disasters, and is involved in regional transport. The council is made up of 14 councillors. Councillors are elected to represent constituencies (areas in the region). two councillors will be elected from the Manawatū-Rangitikei constituency. This is a first past the post (FPP) election, so you vote by ticking the name of your preferred candidate on your ballot paper. Compare the candidates and their policies to decide who to vote for in the Horizons Regional Council election.

Rates and revenue

The work of local government is funded mainly by property taxes in the local area, known as rates. This makes up around 60% of council expenditure, with the rest coming from user charges, investment income, regulatory fees and roading subsidies. Councils can also borrow money to spread the cost of large investments such as infrastructure over a longer period of time.

Rates and revenue

The work of local government is funded mainly by property taxes in the local area, known as rates. This makes up around 60% of council expenditure, with the rest coming from user charges, investment income, regulatory fees and roading subsidies. Councils can also borrow money to spread the cost of large investments such as infrastructure over a longer period of time.

  • Simplify one plan as rates are unsustainable at flagged increase levels with previous years compounding to an unsustainable level.

    Prioritise hard as rate increases are bound to spiral social bankruptcy.

    Cut the cloth to fit as constituents do daily by foregoing less priority wants to later dates.

  • Focus on high-impact, shovel-ready projects that align with government funding priorities, including flood protection and climate resilience.

    Explore public-private partnerships for infrastructure and environmental restoration.

    Conduct a zero-based budgeting review to reassess all expenditures from the ground up.

  • Simplify one plan as rates are unsustainable at flagged increase levels with previous years compounding to an unsustainable level.

    Prioritise hard as rate increases are bound to spiral social bankruptcy.

    Cut the cloth to fit as constituents do daily by foregoing less priority wants to later dates.

  • Focus on high-impact, shovel-ready projects that align with government funding priorities, including flood protection and climate resilience.

    Explore public-private partnerships for infrastructure and environmental restoration.

    Conduct a zero-based budgeting review to reassess all expenditures from the ground up.