“For five weeks it just went off like a bag of crackers; it was heaving,” he said.
“I’ve had a lot of seagulls, as in scavengers, wanting to get a hold of the place and lease it and I would do that, but I’ve said you’ve got to buy the business.”
Fregon described the council’s proposed rate hike as punitive given the current slump in retail and hospitality spending.
“What they are saying is, either rent your shop out at a peppercorn or we are going to penalise you,” he said. “They want the villages activated but in a state where you have an economy in recession or close to it, shops are going broke and they’re closing.”
Retail sales rose by just 0.1 per cent last month, after falling 0.4 per cent in March, according to data released on Tuesday by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, which said retail was experiencing “weak underlying spending”.
Port Phillip Mayor Heather Cunsolo said the proposed changes would not alter the total rate revenue that the council collects, which is determined in line with state rate-capping legislation.
“These changes only update the distribution of rates between different ratepayers. For example, a property that is classified as derelict will have to contribute more rates compared to a property that is not derelict,” Cunsolo said.
The mayor said fewer than 80 landowners in Port Phillip had properties classified as derelict, vacant or unactivated retail land. Properties must be in this vacant state for at least 24 months.
Property consultant Richard Jenkins is working with the City of Port Phillip to reactivate Acland Street, which 12 months ago had one of the worst vacancy rates in Melbourne at 27.5 per cent.
Jenkins said the council’s approach was novel in Australia but that such levies were increasingly being applied in cities overseas, including in the United Kingdom.
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“It is one lever the councils are looking to to improve the amenity of these precincts, and while there are challenges for some landlords of leasing these long-standing vacancies, it is in all our interests to have vibrant areas for the community,” he said.
Council Watch president Dean Hurlston said the City of Port Phillip was taking an “anti-business” approach to the problem of vacant properties and unused shopfronts.
“It’s using a blunt instrument, designed to penalise those already struggling with high costs of goods and high wages growth,” Hurlston said. “The council should be ashamed of itself for threatening small business owners.”
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