CRANBOURNE STAR NEWS
Home » Growth surge reveals budget pressure points

Growth surge reveals budget pressure points

Casey City has long been recognised as one of the fastest growing council areas in the country, and the second-fastest growing in Victoria.

Over the next 20 years, the already large population – estimated at near 430,000 in 2025 – is expected to swell to around 615,000, with a good slice of that expected to settle around Clyde and Clyde North.

Its phenomenal growth is reflected in its recently released budget reports, with revenue also heading north, from around $720 million to an expected $930 million over the next decade.

On the spending side, roads and rubbish, facilities in new estates and upgrades in existing areas, council services and operations consume almost all; some $540 million this year rising to over $700 million over the next decade.

On paper, this means surpluses hovering around $180 million for the next few years, jumping to around $230 million in a decade.

But the city’s forward budget reports show how delicately balanced the budget position is.

While those earlier revenue and expenditure figures are eye watering, the financial statements show city’s finances actually ran an underlying deficit of over $10 million this year.

Projections show modest surpluses in the near future, but the margins remain thin.

Rate capping at 3 per cent by the State Government limits revenue from householders, but inflation – currently at 3.8 per cent – means costs are outstripping income, with many local government cost categories increasing higher than CPI.

This puts the council in the position of having to make tough decisions about what to include in its works budget each year, and what to defer.

In the coming year’s capital works budget of $124 million, just over half will be spent on new facilities – the rest on revamps and upgrades to existing facilities.

State and Federal grants bolster Casey’s bottom line, but are unknown from year to year, dependent on shifting priorities of the government of the day and are usually tied to specific projects.

The financial forecasts hope for increasing grant receipts, rising from $106 million to $126 Million in the decade ahead.

Fees, fines and charges, and other income forms maintain the tight balance.

Staff numbers are expected to fall from 1421 (full time equivalent) to 1298 in the next two years and remain at that level for the rest of the decade, but the wages bill will still rise from the current level of $150 million to $186 million over that time; and external contracts from $125 million to $186 million.

Casey is investing in technologies and a new customer service model to help ensure that Casey communities will not feel that pinch.

Casey’s councillors and officers have committed to an ambitious program of works and priority areas over the next five years, based around transport, community safety, health and wellbeing initiatives, arts and events, sports, sustainability and a thriving business community.

The council will also advocate to all levels of government for the services and facilities – and grants – the city deserves to become and remain a diverse, healthy, welcoming, innovative and resilient destination for families, professionals and enterprises into the future.

Casey’s nowhere near done with its growth spurt, but the shape and extent of that growth will depend on a careful balance of community vision and bean counting well into the future.

Digital Editions


  • Roadworks cause havoc for Casey commuters

    Roadworks cause havoc for Casey commuters

    Roadworks on a major Clyde North intersection has caused gridlock during peak hours for many Casey commuters, some saying that their typical 10-minute commute has…

More News

  • Letter-to-the-editor: Who will grow the trees?

    Letter-to-the-editor: Who will grow the trees?

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 492338 This summer’s repeated 40-degree days have made one thing unavoidable: Melbourne’s suburbs are heating up, and trees are no longer decorative extras. Councils…

  • Bail plan flagged for accused teacher

    Bail plan flagged for accused teacher

    A former teacher accused of stabbing a principal at Keysborough Secondary College may require involuntary mental health treatment, a defence lawyer has told court. Kim Ramchen, 37, of Mulgrave, appeared…

  • Councillor withdraws legal case against CEO

    Councillor withdraws legal case against CEO

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 442319 A legal case by a City of Greater Dandenong councillor against the council’s CEO has been dropped just two days before the hearing,…

  • Springvale rides high for Year of Horse celebration

    Springvale rides high for Year of Horse celebration

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 454323 A crowd of more than 80,000 is expected to fill Springvale’s CBD for the traditional Lunar New Year Festival on Sunday 15 February.…

  • Jail for armed carjacker targeting elderly driver

    Jail for armed carjacker targeting elderly driver

    A would-be carjacker who held a screwdriver to his elderly victim’s neck and threatened to kill him in a home driveway in Keysborough has been jailed. Petap Kong, 31, of…

  • Lofty hopes for Ramadan Night Market

    Lofty hopes for Ramadan Night Market

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 467847 As the holy month of Ramadan is fast approaching, so is the buzz and excitement for Dandenong’s already-famous Ramadan Night Market – which…

  • Young players stars chase American dream

    Young players stars chase American dream

    A group of local young basketball players is set to take their skills international, with a life-changing educational trip to the United States planned for April 2026. The Pakenham Basketball…

  • Lyndhurst man set for life after winning $4.8 million

    Lyndhurst man set for life after winning $4.8 million

    A Lyndhurst man’s morning routine was blissfully interrupted with a call letting him know, he’s bagged a whopping $4.8 million in last night’s lotto draw. The man held the division…

  • Two men arrested after Wallace Road assault

    Two men arrested after Wallace Road assault

    Two men have been arrested following an assault in Cranbourne on the morning of Friday 6 February. Officers responded to reports of three men involved in a physical altercation on…

  • Opposition inquiry call rejected after peak-hour train disruption

    Opposition inquiry call rejected after peak-hour train disruption

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 183562 The State Opposition has called for a formal inquiry into Tuesday 3 February rail network disruption, where peak-hour disruption left thousands of Cranbourne…