Companies fined for pollution offences
A Waikato demolition company and a Matakana Island dairy farmer were fined a total of more than $70,000 in the Tauranga
District Court yesterday on pollution charges in two separate cases brought by Bay of Plenty Regional Council.
Waikato Demolition of Hamilton was fined $29,400 in total, $21,000 for disposing materials other than cleanfill in
contravention of the Rotorua District Plan and $8,400 for discharging contaminants to air by burning demolition waste in
the open.
Waikato Demolition disposed a number of loads of demolition waste at an unauthorised landfill on Te Manu Road, Rotorua.
The waste came from a demolition project at Rotorua Hospital and included treated timber, plastic, polystyrene, carpet
and electrical components.
The lessee of the property where the waste was disposed, Raymond Fleming, is to be sentenced in Tauranga District Court
in February 2013 for his role in the offending.
In the second case, JAG Farms Limited and its director, John Gardiner of Matakana Island, were fined $41,000 in total,
$36,000 for JAG Farms for discharging dairy effluent to land where it may enter water and a $5,000 fine for Mr Gardiner
for discharging dairy effluent to land where it may enter water. The charges arose when a Regional Council officer found
effluent overflowing from the farm’s effluent pond to a drain and then into Hunter’s Creek in Tauranga Harbour.
Judge Jeff Smith also imposed enforcement orders requiring the defendants to provide the Regional Council with an
effluent management plan for the farm by April 2013, and for Mr Gardiner to complete an effluent management course
within 12 months.
Bay of Plenty Regional Council Pollution Prevention Manager Nick Zaman said it was particularly disappointing when
demolition contractors whose business was to dispose of waste legally did not act responsibly and make sure landowners
had the proper consents.
“Yet again simple steps could have been taken to avoid pollution of a water body. In this case it was the Tauranga
Harbour which the Regional Council has and continues to investing significant effort and resource to improving its water
quality. Tauranga Harbour is one of the Regional Council’s main priority areas of work, and everyone must play their
part if we to see real improvements for the Harbour,” he said.
Ends