Two local district councils unite to fight mangrove spread
Mangroves in Whangamata, Nattelle Lidgard
Frustration with the cost, time and process to reduce mangrove growth in their areas has seen the Thames-Coromandel and
Hauraki District Councils band together to be more proactive on behalf of their communities.
This week both Councils passed a resolution to proceed with a joint Mangrove Management Bill, which proposes each
council may prepare a draft mangrove management plan in relation its coastal area and maintain acceptable levels of
mangrove vegetation in order to restore, protect or enhance the amenity values and/or ecosystems of the coastal area.
The draft local bill will now be publicly notified and presented to Parliament by Minister Scott Simpson, MP for the
Coromandel Electorate.
"We are acting on behalf of our communities who are disenchanted with the process when it comes to getting consent for
mangrove removal, which has been costly, time-consuming ," says Thames-Coromandel Mayor Sandra Goudie. "In Whangamata
since the early 2000s there's been massive community concern about the spread of mangroves and its impact on the
Whangamata Harbour and to date that process has consumed over a decade in time and in excess of $1.5M in costs."
The frustration is echoed in the Hauraki District, where the seaward advance of mangroves has considerably reduced the
feeding habitat of Arctic nesting shorebirds like the bar-tailed godwit and lesser or red knot which migrate every year
to the Firth of Thames, an internationally significant tidal wetland protected by the Ramsar Convention.
"We're pleased to be supporting this local bill, given the significant cost and administrative difficulties that our
Councils face in the control of mangroves in localised areas,” says Hauraki District Acting Mayor Toby Adams.
The Thames-Coromandel District and Hauraki District Council Mangrove Management Bill seeks to provide a collaborative
mangrove management plan for both districts, or individually if preferred.
"What this local bill is trying to achieve though is to provide the opportunity for communities to help devise solutions
themselves which provides for recreation amenity and preservation of other ecosystems threatened by the further spread
of mangroves," adds Mayor Sandra Goudie.
"It will also allow Councils like ours to use our limited resources more effectively and efficiently to provide for core
infrastructure and services, such as waste water treatment plants and catchment sediment management schemes to further
protect estuarine environments," she says.
ends