TRC meetings bulletin
TRC meetings bulletin
17 October
2017
Items of interest from today’s
meetings of the Taranaki Regional Council’s two key
committees, Consents & Regulatory, and Policy &
Planning:
Knowledge waves
The Council’s recent
survey to gauge the regional community’s views on the
relative merits of 140 surf breaks was a first for New
Zealand and drew 338 responses, the Policy and Planning
Committee was told. After using a newly developed assessment
scale to analyse the responses, a status of ‘regionally
significant’ is proposed for 81 of the surf breaks, with
the rest to be classed as ‘locally significant’. The
regional ranking brings a very high level of protection, and
the local ranking brings a high but slightly lesser level.
These statuses will be incorporated in the review of the
Coastal Plan for Taranaki. People will get an opportunity to
have a say when the proposed new Coastal Plan goes out for
formal public consultation early next year.
See the full
list here: www.bitly.com/TRCsurf (PDF, 320
KB)
Getting the better of pests
Taranaki’s new pest
management blueprint is set for final approval next month
after the Policy and Planning Committee today heard verbal
submissions and made minor adjustments. Today’s hearing is
the final step in a consultation and pre-hearing process
that began in May and resulted in 10 largely positive
submissions. Two submitters presented in person today,
mainly seeking technical adjustments to the two documents
that make up the blueprint, the Pest Management Plan and the
Biosecurity Strategy. The Committee today agreed to some of
the suggested amendments, and the two documents will go to a
full Council meeting on 21 November for final approval. The
Plan sets out enforceable rules relating to pest management
and the Strategy, a first for the region, covers
complementary non-regulatory measures including
community-based programmes.
Freshwater monitoring device
never rests
An automated sensor platform that
continuously monitors multiple aspects of water quality,
sending data back to the Council every 30 minutes, has
performed well since being installed in the Mangati Stream
at Bell Block nearly a year ago, the Consents and Regulatory
Committee was told. The device has been trialled as a result
of increasing national and local expectations for detailed
information about water quality. It monitors acidity and
oxidation, conductivity and temperature and dissolved oxygen
levels, and the data it collects can also be used to derive
levels of suspended solids and dissolved solids. The machine
cleans its own sensors after taking each measurement, and
the device has proved to be reliable, robust and accurate.
The Council will consider investing in further technology to
enable the device to also monitor nutrient levels. Council
officers are also using a smaller, hand-held version of the
device for site-specific investigations elsewhere.
All’s well with most wells
Taranaki’s groundwater
is in overall healthy condition, with nitrate and bacteria
levels far below levels of concern apart from only a few
localised problem sites, the Policy and Planning Committee
was told. The Council’s latest monitoring report shows
that the vast majority of regularly surveyed wells are well
within national thresholds – for example, nitrates at 94%
of the 35 monitored wells met the drinking water standards.
Where levels are exceeded, they are generally not in wells
used for water supply, and in some cases reflect poor well
construction or protection methods. Exceedances are followed
up by Council officers to ensure that regulations are
complied with and that there is no threat to groundwater
aquifer quality, or to bore users.
See the report
here: www.bitly.com/TRCgroundwater2017 (PDF,
2.1 MB)
All have a role to play
The discovery of a
pest aquatic plant, hornwort, in Lake Rotorangi a couple of
years ago has highlighted the need for all lake users to
take on the responsibility for preventing it spreading to
other lakes in the region, the Policy and Planning Committee
was told. Thorough cleaning of boats, motors, fishing gear
and aquatic recreational gear is required. Hornwort’s
presence was noted in the latest environmental monitoring
report for the lake, which otherwise reports little change
in the water body’s health status. There is no sign of it
becoming more eutrophic.
See the report here: www.bitly.com/TRCRotorangi2016 (PDF, 2.9 MB)
ends