More than 890,000 property owners have registered or paid the €100 household charge, according to tallies from the Local Government Management Agency this morning.
The figure includes 153,000 postal applications yet to be processed, 74,000 made to local authority offices, and 14,445 applications for a waiver. Nearly 650,000 properties were registered online.
According to the agency 11,425 of those payments were made after the March 31st deadline and incurred penalties of €10 plus €1 in interest.
With the rate of payment of the charge at about 50 per cent local authorities are facing an unprecedented gap in funding.
The charge is intended to replace the exchequer element of the Local Government Fund, set up in 1999 as one of the funding sources from central government to local government. In 2011 exchequer funding was €164 million; in 2012 this was to be replaced by the household charge to the tune of €161 million.
However, while local authorities could rely on their allocation of the €164 million, the same will not be true of the household charge.
Last week Minister for the Environment Phil Hogan suggested he would “incentivise” local authorities that “pull out all the stops” to collect the charge by giving them a greater allocation of the money generated. However, no matter what success rate is ultimately achieved, unless 100 per cent of the charge is collected, local authorities will face a gap in their funding.