DoC Web page promotes mining
Coromandel Watchdog of Hauraki are disgusted to see that the Department has recently developed, a web page titled ‘No new mines on conservation land policy’, which has the Department of Conservation praising the mining industry and its contribution to the economy, and effectively inviting applications for exploration and mining permits.
The group has written to the Minister calling
for the page to be removed and replaced with a simple
statement that the government is working on the “no new
mines on conservation land” policy and that the status quo
prevails meanwhile.
The delays in this Consultation
are a concern as the Industry can continue to seek permits.
When the announcement was made in the ‘Speech from the
Throne’, Coromandel Watchdog expected that the
announcement was a definitive declaration. "The web page
should clarify the purpose and parameters of any public
consultation and when this will take place, although its is
hardly necessary. The public expect the Government to get on
with it and implement the no new mines policy as promised,"
Says Augusta Macassey-Pickard, spokesperson for the
group.
"While we wait for the public consultation we
should be able to rely on DOC to promote the values of
conservation not the opportunity to get in and mine before
it’s too late."
Coromandel Watchdog has also called
on the Minister to keep two promises already made: to stop
new mining on DOC land now; and to extend schedule 4 on the
southern Hauraki as promised by Labour and the Greens in
August 2017.
"We expect the next year to be a crucial
year in the fight to protect the Coromandel and Hauraki from
industrial mining. The industry are gathering to do whatever
they can to undermine our conservation land," says
Macassey-Pickard. "This is a hugely well resourced industry,
with money as their bottom line. Our communities have their
whole way of life at stake. Our bottom line is so much more
than money."
"It's simply not worth letting some
company come in here and mine the precious conservation land
of Aotearoa - well, undermine it, and us, until we are left
with nothing but unstable ground and a legacy of precarious
toxic dams that could go at any
time."