JUNE 9, 2015 \ MELTON.STARWEEKLY.COM.AU
NEWS + SPORT + PROPERTY GUIDE
Feet up in the bossâs shoes
(Joe Mastroianii)
Year 9 student Karlee had the top job last Wednesday ⌠and, despite the photo, it wasnât all tea and biscuits. As part of national Student Principal for a Day, the Kurunjang Secondary College student took over the reins from school principal Sandra Eglezos, stepping into her shoes for a day. âI got to listen in on some of the meetings that happen in the principalâs office, got to go to the morning briefing and the morning tea,â Karlee says. âIt was fun to see how teachers are when they are not ⌠you know, going on in the classroom.â Karlee says the experience made her appreciate the workload of principals and teachers, and to finally find out what teachers giggle about in that mysterious staffroom. âStudent connectednessâ leading teacher Tegan Aquilina says the day gives students an opportunity to find out whatâs happening on the âother sideâ. âItâs about bringing connectedness to the school; to let students know they and their opinions are valued. âWe always talk about how much teachers do, but students also put in a lot of time and effort.â Sumeyya Ilanbey
Farms hit hard by rates A fifth-generation farmer fears Moorabool councilâs five per cent rate rise could force him to âshut shopâ. Chris Sharkeyâs family has worked the Balliang farm for a century. But speaking out about the councilâs draft budget last week, Mr Sharkey said the proposed rate increase would be detrimental to his business. âFifteen to 20 per cent of our expenses are rates,â Mr Sharkey told the councillors. âThatâs too much and itâs affecting our business decisions.â Councillors adopted its 2015-16 budget with
a five per cent rate increase, which it says will be offset in part by a 2.25 per cent cut to waste service charges. As a result, overall rates will increase by 4.1 per cent. âRates make up a considerable amount of our expenses and itâs the only thing we donât have any control over,â Mr Sharkey told Star Weekly. âThe cost is that great that itâs influencing the business decisions weâre making; itâs making us really cautious.â Moorabool mayor Paul Tatchell said farmers were being âabsolutely screwedâ by the rating system. âHow do we balance the budget? Do we
increase the rates on punters living in houses? Is that fair?â Cr Tatchell asked. Mr Sharkey said he was disappointed councils evaluated his farm land as a commodity and not a resource. âI have to clear $1000 over and above what Iâm doing to pay this yearâs rates,â he said. âAnd this is on top of the rate increase from last year, and the year before and the year before that.â The Victorian Farmers Federation (VFF) released a report earlier this year comparing business rates in rural and regional Victoria. It found farmers, on average, would pay 2.5 times as much in rates as other commercial businesses this financial year.
The VFF found âfundamentalâ problems with the rating system for farmland. âFarming, generally, utilises a large amount of unimproved land and, as a result, municipal rates are a tax on a means of production,â the report states. âThe value of farmland does not necessarily reflect the income potential of the land. Agricultural land is not always valued on the basis of productivity.â Moorabool farmers contribute 13 per cent to the councilâs coffers. The VFF found âinequity between farming and other commercial businesses is predominant in councils reliant on farm rates for greater than 10 per cent of their rates revenueâ.
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By Sumeyya Ilanbey