Gore District ratepayers who are experiencing financial hardship due to COVID-19 will have  the opportunity to defer their rates payment for up to two instalments.

Gore District councillors today agreed to a short-term rates deferral policy designed to  provide immediate relief to those ratepayers who are in financial difficulty due to the  pandemic.

The policy allows all ratepayers to defer their next two rates payments – that is the fourth  instalment for this financial year, which is due on 27 May, and the first instalment for the  2022-23 financial year due in late August.

The Council offered the same deferral policy during the first wave of COVID-19 in 2020.  There were 15 applications received and approved.Of that number, nine applied to have  only one instalment deferred.

Chief executive Stephen Parry said the policy aimed to provide a six-month hiatus to tide  ratepayers over.

“Extraordinary economic retraction, the likes of which have probably not been seen since  the 1930s and 1940s, demands we respond with alacrity and empathy to ratepayers who  have been severely disadvantaged by COVID.”

He stressed the policy provides a rates deferral, not a remission in rates. People will have to  commit to a repayment plan.

Gore District Mayor Tracy Hicks said staff would work with applicants to ensure their repayment plan reflects their financial position and is achievable.

The community should not underestimate the impact of omicron, he said.  “I am regularly hearing of businesses experiencing significant financial hardship.

“Omicron has seen more people working from home and kept people away from our CBD  except for trips to the supermarket or pharmacist.”

Mr Hicks said ratepayers that can pay their next instalment should do so.

Rates remain a crucial source of income for all councils, helping ensure the essential services  they provide – from drinking water to rubbish collection and roading maintenance – continue during the pandemic, he said.

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