A change in the Far North District Council's approach to rating land in multiple Maori ownership is encouraging owners to resolve rates debts and bring neglected land into production.
Mayor John Carter spoke about the potential for the owners, the district, the region and the country to profit as he made a weekend inspection tour of the 159ha Ngakahu block, near Kaitaia, where the council's new approach to rates has helped transform unfenced, gorse-covered land into an attractive grazing block that grew 120 tonnes of maize this year, and is giving owners a return for the first time in decades.
The owners of other Maori land have followed in Ngakahu's footsteps with equal success, and Mr Carter urged all Maori with land in multiple ownership to contact council rates officials and learn how the council could help them.
He said the way council rates for land in multiple Maori ownership had previously been structured had made the land a burden for owners, who did not know how to deal with the mounting debts on their properties.
Since his election in 2013, he and the council rates team had worked at changing the land from a liability for owners to an asset from their cultural, spiritual and economic perspectives.