Contaminants - BayBuzz wins Ombudsman appeal!
Contaminants — BayBuzz wins Ombudsman appeal!
Sun, Aug 02 2009
Back on October 8, 2008, I made an Official Information Act request to the Regional Council regarding the existence of 3,000+ sites in Hawke’s Bay potentially with toxic waste contaminants on them.
Here’s my original BayBuzz article raising the public’s right to know about the potential health and safety risks posed by these sites.
And here’s the information I officially asked for:
1) Identification of those (possibly) contaminated sites that: a) are owned by local governments; b) are accessible to the public in the normal course of events, creating potential exposure hazards; or c) are possibly leaching contaminants into fresh or ground water.
2) Assuming that the Council is prudent enough to have “triaged” the list, at least in some preliminary fashion, and given some sort of “rating” to the sites they consider most problematic — and therefore rank first on the list to be examined — identification of the specific sites highest on the list, the number of sites in each category, and the “triage” approach used.
3) A copy of any workplan that indicates how and when HBRC will examine the sites on the list to establish their safety or danger.
The balance of sites can remain anonymous, for
now, although by omitting them from this request I do not
suggest that there is any legal basis for keeping them
confidential.
The Regional Council refused this request
and I appealed to the Office of the Ombudsmen.
Last week I received official notice that Ombudsman David McGee has advised the Regional Council that they should release the information referenced in Items 2 and 3 above. The Ombudsman has indicated that HBRC is not in a position to respond to Item 1, and has asked the Council to explain its difficulties with this part of the request.
Regional
Councillors are meeting Friday August 7 to discuss their
release of the information, and then with me on Monday the
10th to arrange the hand-over.
I plan to move this
information into the public domain via the BayBuzz website
(unless the Regional Council publishes the material online
itself) as soon as possible.
The real issues are: What is
the real extent of the risk to public health and safety, if
any? What clean-ups or other precautions might be required?
And who will pay for them?
Stay tuned.
Tom Belford
ENDS