Proposed RMA Reforms Seem The Real Deal
MEDIA RELEASE
FREEPHONE 0800 327 646
I WEBSITE WWW.FEDFARM.ORG.NZ
___________________________________________________________________
6 March 2013
Proposed RMA Reforms Seem The Real
Deal
After analysing the discussion document released late last week on the Resource Management Act (RMA), Federated Farmers congratulates the Government for undertaking a comprehensive examination of how the RMA is working.
“To be honest it has taken us a few days to get our heads around this 83-page discussion document,” says Ian Mackenzie, Federated Farmers Environment spokesperson.
“Federated Farmers actually supports the purpose of the RMA and requirements to protect our most important natural assets.
”Yet if we want real jobs delivering living wages then policy reforms like this are needed. Reform also needs broad political support and that is probably the most important thing we need to communicate; the need for RMA reform to survive changes of government.
“Aside from missing provisions for compensation we will raise in our submission, it is closely aligned to Federated Farmers 2008 reform package; Let’s Make it work – Why the Resource Management Act must change.
“Federated Farmers has for a long time tried to get the balance right between what the public wants to protect and what that means to someone who wants to use their land.
“The RMA in our view currently leans too far towards protection. Our members will welcome the proposed inclusion of “the benefits of the efficient use and development of natural and physical resources,” in a revised section 6.
“A newly drafted section 7, focussing on the efficiency of council process, could require councils to consider “an appropriate balance between public and private interests in the use of land”. Every council should ask itself that same question every time a decision is made.
“We also welcome the proposed dropping
of “the maintenance and enhancement of amenity
values”.
“Given one person’s
romantic landscape is another’s working landscape, amenity
has been used as an excuse to slap controls on rural
development. This also impacts urban growth, land prices
and eventually first home buyers; a big issue we need to
talk about as a country.
“I must also put
on record my concern at how quickly naysayers came out to
decry what is a discussion document.
“Federated Farmers looks forward to making the farmer’s voice heard. We will be especially keen to learn just how many submitters downloaded the discussion document too.
”From
our reading of the document, it is not about gutting the RMA
in favour of development; but rightfully redressing the
balance between protection and resource use,” Mr Mackenzie
concluded.
Federated Farmers
Position on Improving our Resource Management
system
The proposed
reform is closely aligned to Federated Farmers 2008 reform
package; Let’s Make it work – Why the Resource
Management Act must change.
Given this is a discussion document to engage public debate, Federated Farmers strongly supports a national conversation on modernising the RMA to fulfil its purpose of sustainable resource management. From the outset we do support an organic process of combining resource management plans between districts and within regional councils.
We strongly support proposed changes to sections
6 and 7 in the RMA:
The final shape of
these sections will be determined by how this discussion
document process sets what our national priorities are and
if the Government has the balance right in its
proposals
The inclusion in section 6 of “the
benefits of the efficient use and development of natural and
physical resources” should enable a more considered
balance of protection versus resource and land use when
making resource management decisions
This also
applies to the decision to remove amenity values and to
include a new section 7 requiring councils to achieve
“an appropriate balance between public and private
interests in the use of land”. In our view, this will
help to address the proliferation of landscape protection
many councils increasingly place on working rural
landscapes.
Consistent planning, decision
making, common definitions and technical
guidance:
While Federated Farmers strongly
supports this, it needs to be tempered by striking the right
balance between consistency and maintaining local, catchment
or regional decision making on resource management
priorities
The discussion document sets out
suggestions on how this balance will be struck
While stronger powers for the Minister to direct the content
of plans or plan changes is signalled, this is a major
conversation we must have to ensure that if a matter is
critically important, then in what circumstances is strong
national guidance appropriate
Federated Farmers
wants to see safeguards to ensure that during this process,
local views are strongly heard and that the new section 7
helps to strike the right balance between private and public
interest as key factors in decision making.
Non-statutory set of priorities to guide the
development of National Policy Statements and National
Environmental Standards:
This should allow
for a less ad hoc approach to the development of national
guidance on priority issues for the country through much
stronger intent and implementation accompanying promulgation
of national policy instruments under the RMA.
Addressing the number of resource consents for
minor issues:
The proposed 10-day time
frame for processing, limiting the conditions that can be
put on consents, excluding the notification of some consents
and providing an exemption for some minor activities should
help to speed up process. To date, simplifying and
streamlining has been focussed on major consent proposals
when some of the more widespread frustrations are pitched at
the level of “a deck extension”.
The public
needs assurance that people are doing things in a way that
meets acceptable standards or that the effects of an
activity are indeed minor. Federated Farmers wants to
ensure that this public confidence is retained while
reducing unnecessary administration, processing and
compliance costs for both resource users and councils
(ratepayers and taxpayers)
Resource users want
certainty that they can do those things in an efficient,
cost effective way and the proposals in the discussion
document go some way to achieving that balance.
Front end community planning also gets a tick
from Federated Farmers:
If multiple
stakeholders are going to put a large effort into
collaborative plan making and everyone can agree on those
plans, then our members want some confidence that agreement
will not be undermined by aggrieved parties using
Environment Court hearings down the track to get their way
Equally, if there is disagreement or a flaw in that
process by a council, then the Court should retain a role to
hear the views of parties involved and make a decision or
provide for a mediated outcome where they cannot reach
agreement
The discussion document focusses on how
this will be achieved by councils working together but we
need to ensure that this partnership based approach to plan
formation is extended to councils working with their
communities before a plan is put through a formal
consultation phase
There is a lot to work through
on exactly how this process would work but if we are to
commit to a collaborative approach to planning, then we need
to work out how we can do that most efficiently while
removing the overly adversarial approach we currently have
towards resource management.
ENDS