WARNING: This is long but informative and essential reading if you want to know what's going on.
1. Properties on the Bypass designation (ie Upper Cuba, Tonks Ave, Arthur, Kensington and Willis street areas):
As you may know, eviction notices were served on commercial and resident properties in upper Cuba St and Tonks ave early
this year. Some tenants chose to leave, but others stayed - the tenant of 289 Cuba St and the Freedom shop across the
road. The tenant of 289 Cuba St has managed to get a month-by-month lease on the property, while the tenant of 270 Cuba
St (the old salvage yard / original Tonks family home) has moved back in legitimately. The Freedom Shop is still
present. 291 Cuba St has been let out as well, but not to the tenants who occupied it before eviction. Transit has
refused to retenant Tonks Avenue because they would have to be residential leases (the above are all commercial) which
makes it harder to boot tenants out. The properties in Arthur, Kensington, Willis Sts and Oak Park ave are still
tenanted, and it is not known if/when they will be asked to leave. It has been suggested that Bar Bodega must be out by
the end of the year. Ask next time you're there.
2. Goings on in Tonks Avenue.
Over the past two weeks, both Knight Frank (property agents for Transit) and the Wellington City Council have been
carrying out maintenance and rubbish removal in Tonks Ave. Plumbers have been at work on some of the buildings, and
superficial maintenance of exterior features, such as roofs, is planned. Contractors employed by Knight Frank removed
'rubbish' which included a very old bike and an original window from the houses and dumped everything in a skip. No-one
from the Historic Places Trust was present, and it is possible that some important historic artifacts may have been
mistaken for rubbish. Locals salvaged the bike from the skip, but it was too full to enable a decent investigation of
the contents. The WCC employed a tow-truck company to tow away an old house-truck that had been parked up by 12 Tonks
Ave for some months. Unfortunately part of a cabbage tree was broken in the process. The WCC has also employed
contractors to remove the fence and concrete work from the front of 13 Tonks Ave (WCC owns this and #12) and interior
fixtures such as the fire places and toilet. All of these are recognised heritage items. The Historic Places Trust was
not present when any of this activity occurred. Apparantly they were not pleased about this, but have not taken any
action against the WCC. It is not expected that they will. Mayor Kerry Prendergast and council employees visited 13
Tonks just prior to this occurring.
3. Heritage walks
Despite this unfortunate activity, heritage walks are still going strong along the bypass designation. They occur every
sunday, 11am and 1pm. The meeting point is the cnr of Upper Cuba and Tonks Ave.
4. Construction funding.
Despite certain Wellington newspapers claiming that the bypass has overcome all hurdles, Transit are yet to apply for
construction funding. This involves applying to Transfund, the body who are responsible for funding transport in New
Zealand. Transit will have to demonstrate that the bypass satisfies the cost-benefit ratio, which means that for x
amount of cost, a certain amount of benefits from the project have to be derived. The government, with a lot of help
from the Greens, has developed a new transport strategy which may well make the bypass unfundable. Under this strategy
all existing projects must be re-evaluated under the new criteria. It is hoped that Transit's application will fall
under this. Stay tuned for more information on the new strategy.
5. CBC's appeal of the Historic Places Trust decision
Earlier this month, the Historic Places Trust gave Transit approval to destroy, damage and modify a recognised
archeological site. The bypass designation is recognised as having this status. In essence, the Trust said that the
bypass was the only way the historic buildings could be saved. They attached certain conditions to the approval, eg that
they had to carry out archeological digs first, but the fact remains that they have given Transit approval to destroy
one of the most important and intact historic sites in NZ. CBC in consultation with its lawyer, believes the grounds are
good for an appeal, so it's back to the environment court. Note that Transit will not be able to apply for funding until
there is an outcome to the courtcase. The Environment Court has a back-log of cases, so this may not occur for some
time. The Te Aro Heritage Trust has also taken this action. This is a massive undertaking for CBC and we will need all
the help we can get: not just from law! yers (although legal research ! will be v. important) but from anyone who feels
they can be of use. This could stop the bypass, so it is important to do it well.
Thanks for reading this. If you have any questions, or want to help, please reply to this email.
Catch CBC online at http://www.cbc.org.nz