ORC Takes Action On Stock Truck Effluent Spillage
MEDIA RELEASE
24 April 2013
ORC Takes Action On Stock Truck Effluent
Spillage
The Otago
Regional Council (ORC) joint working party on stock truck
effluent is urging dairy farmers, sharemilkers, and
transport operators to lift their game during the next few
weeks to help keep southern roads and waterways
effluent-free.
Many sharemilkers are shifting cows around Otago from late April until June.
ORC chief executive Peter Bodeker said the amount of effluent spilled on the roads while these stock were being transported posed unacceptable risks for cars and motorcyclists, as well as nearby waterways which would be the final repository for the effluent.
“ORC has run extensive campaigns over several years encouraging farmers to stand stock off green feed before transporting them, and to let truckies know about seven effluent disposal sites around the region,” Mr Bodeker said.
The council is also seeking support from the New Zealand Transport Agency and other councils in the region to help install additional disposal sites in some areas where the distance between existing sites was too great.
“We are concerned that despite this work the situation has not improved as much as it should have. We’ve responded by establishing a stakeholders group to provide a more effective collaborative solution,” Mr Bodeker said.
Project coordinator Selva Selvarajah said Federated Farmers, the New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA), NZ Police, the Road Transport Forum (RTF) and the Road Transport Association (RTA) were working together to find solutions to the problem.
Federated Farmers representative Stephen Korteweg said all farmers involved in transferring stock must ensure they were properly prepared by feeding dry feed (hay) for at least two days prior to shifting. If this is not possible then they need to be stood off green feed for at least eight hours before cartage, to minimise muck spilling onto the roads.
Road Transport Association representative Alan Cooper said the word had gone out to trucking companies that they had to maximise the effluent storage on stock trucks and use the disposal sites.
ORC receives many complaints from motorists whose vehicles are covered in effluent when following behind trucks where drivers have not emptied their effluent pans before starting their journey or at a disposal site.
Police acting southern district road policing manager Steve Larking said the mess these discharges created could impair motorists’ vision, make roads slippery, and make driving dangerous, particularly for motorcyclists.
Mr Bodeker said a map detailing the stretches of road where effluent spillage was a regular problem, had been given to the police, who would be patrolling the areas.
It would be a tragedy if a serious accident was caused by stock effluent degrading roads.
ORC had gone to considerable lengths by helping to
build six stock effluent disposal sites on State Highway One
between Pukeuri and Clinton, and another at Raes Junction,
at the intersection of Highway 8 and Highway 90.
Along
with this farmers and truckies had been given plenty of
advice about how to reduce pollution caused by stock
effluent, Mr Bodeker said.
“At the end of the day, if
dairy farmers and truckies do the right thing, the amount of
muck on our roads will be negligible,” he
said.
ENDS