Home » letters » Repeal Emergency Services and Volunteers Fund tax

Repeal Emergency Services and Volunteers Fund tax

LAST week, the State Government passed a Bill, the Emergency Services and Volunteers Fund, which will increase state taxes, particularly in rural areas, and charge it through Swan Hill Rural City Council.

There has been overwhelming rejection and anger from all our communities and neighbouring municipalities.

This is nothing but another excessive tax grab, targeting rural, honest working farming and business communities to fund major state budget shortfalls.

Our communities pay enough, and our hard-earned taxes go to the Federal Government to be distributed out to state governments.

If the Allan Labor Government wants more, they should seek it from their federal counterparts who have plenty of our taxes and not double tax us.

The Allan Government do not even have the guts to administer the charges and debt collection for their tax, and unfairly legislate council to do their dirty work, placing pressure on local people.

The State Revenue Office should be collecting the states taxes not councils who receive no benefit from this unfair task.

Our state roads have fallen into complete disrepair through lack of funding and neglect, putting our road safety at risk yet we see enormous spending splurges and wasteful funds spent in metropolitan Melbourne.

Our services have seen declining State Government contributions to local government over the years such as libraries and school crossing supervisors, and the state caps council revenues under inflation, to assist with the cost of living for Victorians. And then it does this.

We experience poor rail services and bad maintenance to the disgrace of seeing our train engine disconnecting itself from the carriages recently.

We even have to fund our own hospital MRI machine.

Our communities are fed up with being overlooked and neglected.

Our Australian culture, goodwill between neighbours and community members brought now into conflict by unwanted powerlines, wind towers, and now the gall to tax the volunteers and farmers who work so hard putting food on your table and then volunteering their time to protect and help people in desperate need, now to be slugged for it.

I strongly believe that urgent business is needed to inform the Allan Government that they must repeal this abhorrent tax on our good, minded volunteers and our hard-working community.

It will tax our communities an additional $2 million a year and we were already paying $3.6 million a year of state tax for the existing Fire Services Levy.

This tax is being charged through councils, which is not transparent tax and places the burden, distrust and anger at council. Our communities will not benefit from the additional tax which the state is using to fix its budget problems.

We need to reject this tax. e need to stand up and support our community.

At council’s meeting this week I received unanimous support to write a letter to the Allan Government and tell them this tax is abhorrent, inequitable and unfair with farmers and industrial ratepayers losing the most.

We call on the State Government to repeal this decision and if it proceeds to administer its own tax collection, administration and debt collection.

Cr Lindsay Rogers

Swan Hill Rural City Council

Digital Editions


  • Eagles return to winners list

    Eagles return to winners list

    The Mallee Eagles have responded in emphatic fashion to their disappointing 47-point defeat to NNW United by thrashing Tyntynder by 127 points at Lalbert on…

More News

  • Satisfaction survey launch

    Satisfaction survey launch

    RESIDENTS across the Murray River Council area are being urged to have their say as part of a new community satisfaction survey launching later this month. Chief executive Stacy Williams…

  • Cancer fundraiser

    Cancer fundraiser

    SWAN Hill is set to rally for a good cause, with the Swan Hill Racecourse Bowls Club hosting a heartfelt Cuppa for Cancer fundraiser next Tuesday. Sponsored by Any Occasion…

  • Headspace marks IDAHOBIT

    Headspace marks IDAHOBIT

    LAST Friday, Headspace Swan Hill partnered with the team at Swan Hill Regional Library and Youth Inc to bring Dragged To to town, a free Drag Bingo event for those…

  • News from Moulamein

    News from Moulamein

    Mighty Magoo’s celebrate IT’S been about two years since the Mighty Magoo’s have had the chance to sing the club song, so it was a pretty special moment. As we…

  • The 19th Hole

    The 19th Hole

    MURRAY DOWNS MEN’S Stableford – Thursday, May 14 SEVENTY nine players competed last Thursday in a Stableford event played across three grades. The C Grade winner was Robert James (30)…

  • Aged care neglect

    Aged care neglect

    UNDER the cover of last week’s Federal Budget, Labor at last released shocking data on how long regional Australians are waiting for home care support through our failing aged care…

  • Rock nostalgia

    Rock nostalgia

    A POWERFUL live tribute celebrating one of music’s most iconic eras is set to sweep into Swan Hill, as the nationally acclaimed Starshine hits the Town Hall stage next month.…

  • A sequel dressed to impress

    A sequel dressed to impress

    TWO decades after the events of The Devil Wears Prada, Meryl Streep returns to the silver screen as Miranda Priestly, the formidable sovereign of the fashion world in the highly…

  • Swan Hill urged to quit for good

    Swan Hill urged to quit for good

    SMOKING rates in the Swan Hill region remain well above the Victorian average as health officials urge locals to use World No Tobacco Day as a chance to quit. Ahead…

  • Swans face first big test

    Swans face first big test

    AFTER collecting last year’s wooden spoon, Swan Hill has emerged as one of the Central Murray’s early surprise packets, charging to four straight wins to open the season and spark…