Rates in Mid-Ulster to be one of the lowest in the North.
Good news for us in the mid-ulster area, the council have agreed to generate almost One Million in saving and additional income which in turn gives them the ability to keep the rise at 3.9% making us one of the lowest of the 11 councils.
A welcome chink of light with the cost of living rising at a devastating rate. The council deserves a pat on the back for the projects completed, the projects in progress and the ones soon to begin. We can also be grateful for their control of debt and borrowing, once again a leader in the field.
Details Below:
The Council has confirmed its commitment to the continued delivery of an ambitious capital investment programme, valued at more than £80M in the next 3 years, building on the multi-million pound investment across Mid Ulster in the previous 18 months.
While 2021 saw the completion of extensive work at Maghera Leisure Centre to create a new 3G pitch and floodlighting, an upgraded play park and a trim trail at a cost of more than £1M, in 2022 the focus for leisure will turn to Mid Ulster Sports Arena in Cookstown with plans for a new £2.6M athletics track and pitch expected to go live and further developments expected in the realisation of the £6.5M Gortgonis leisure and community health hub.
Also in the year ahead, a £1.9M refurbishment of recycling facilities in Magherafelt will be completed, together with a £2.6M ‘small settlement’ scheme which will see a dozen villages benefit from new facilities.
Currently there also 10 projects, representing a spend of £1.8M which are due to be completed by late spring this year.
They include a £340K revitalisation scheme in Coalisland which will bring environmental improvements to the Lineside area of the town, creating a new pedestrian walkway, with the towpath also receiving a complete landscaping make-over.
Coalisland will also join Cookstown, Dungannon and Magherafelt as one of the towns where ‘shared community spaces’ are to be created, with retractable awnings, barriers and planters, heaters, and benches and seating areas to be installed at the start of the canal.
£197K improvement works to the courtyard area and car park at Pomeroy Forest are currently also underway and a £210K scheme at Iniscarn Forest has also started to create an all-ability play area, covered outdoor seating area and parking.
The final phase of the redevelopment of Ballyronan Marina is also underway, as Ballyronan Wood becomes the latest part of the marina site to be rejuvenated in a £175K project.
Play parks in Moygashel, Cookstown and Magherafelt are the latest to be earmarked for redevelopment in 2022 as part of the Council’s £2.6M Public Parks and Play Five Year Strategic Plan (2020-2025) and the work follows the upgrade of more than 20 play parks since 2020.
The overall rates which residents pay is based on the district rate set by local councils and the regional rate which is set by the NI Assembly. In Mid Ulster, only 42% of the domestic rates paid go towards funding council services and facilities. 58% funds the services provided centrally. This means the overall aggregate rate increase for Mid Ulster ratepayers (that is, the total of the district rate and regional rate) is estimated to be 1.69% (domestic) and 1.82% (non-domestic).
To note:
1. A domestic ratepayer in a property with an average capital value of £125,000, would see their annual rates bill increase by £16.75 per year or £1.68 per week.
2. The regional rate which is set by the NI Assembly accounts for 58% and 54% of the rates which residents and businesses pay (respectively) and is not increasing in 2022-2023. This means the overall aggregate rate increase for Mid Ulster ratepayers (that is, the total of the district rate and regional rate) is estimated to be 1.69% (domestic) and 1.82% (non-domestic).
3. The Council’s net expenditure for 2022-23 is £49,319,866.
4. In 2021-22, Mid Ulster District Council had the 2nd lowest domestic rate of all 11 district councils here. The Council anticipates this will continue to be the case (to be confirmed when all other councils have struck their rates).
5. The Council has the lowest level of debt and the lowest level of borrowing as a percentage of revenue income.