Interest High In Environmental Legal Assistance
Since the launch of the Environmental Legal Assistance scheme in early March, a large number of enquiries have been received and hundreds of funding application forms distributed, says the Ministry for the Environment.
¡§The number of enquiries we have received ¡V sometimes as many as 20 a day ¡V is a clear indication of the significant public interest in the scheme,¡¨ says Ministry for the Environment Secretary Denise Church.
Ms Church has also appointed a panel to review applications for environmental legal assistance and make recommendations on funding. The scheme is designed to provide funding to assist environmental, community, iwi and hapu groups involved in Resource Management Act cases before the Environment Court.
To date, the Ministry has received five completed applications, which are now being processed. Applicants will be notified on funding decisions by the end of April.
Former Environment Court judge Peter Skelton of Christchurch will chair the Environmental Legal Assistance scheme advisory panel. In addition to Professor Skelton, the panel will include six other members. These are Susan Forbes, Tom Bennion, Derek Shaw, Denis Nugent, Jo Rosier and Adrian More.
¡§Between them, the panel members have significant experience and understanding of the Resource Management Act, the Environment Court and the difficulties facing community and environment groups,¡¨ says Ms Church. ¡§We believe this experience will prove invaluable when it comes to advising the Ministry about which cases should receive funding.¡¨
Panel membership and numbers will be reviewed in June 2002, allowing the Ministry time to review and monitor the scheme¡¦s effectiveness.
Information about the scheme is available from councils, community law centres, Citizen¡¦s Advice Bureaus, and the Ministry for the Environment. Application forms can be downloaded directly from the Ministry¡¦s website at: www.mfe.govt.nz
For
more information, please contact:
Kathy Perreau, Policy
Advisor, Ministry for the Environment; Phone:
04-917-7546
Karl Ferguson, Media Advisor, Ministry for
the Environment; Phone: 04-917-7482
NB Pleased see
attached page for brief biographies on panel
members
Biographies of Environmental Legal Assistance
panel members
„h The chair of the panel is Associate
Professor Peter Skelton CNZM. Professor Skelton has had a
long career in the law. For almost 13 years he worked as a
litigator -based first in Hamilton - as a partner in a firm
and from 1975 to 1978 as a barrister sole. Much of this work
involved town and country planning and environmental
matters. Last year, he retired from the Court to take up
the position of Associate Professor of Resource Management
Law at Lincoln University.
„h Susan Forbes is an
archaeologist absorbed in the task of researching and
protecting the "once-wet coastal dune and wetland places" of
the lower North Island. Her other occupations include being
part of the Kapakapanui team (environment and heritage
management for Te Runanga o Te Ati Awa ki Whakarongotai
Runanga unit) and the Whitireia Polytechnic Research
Co-ordinator. A great deal of her work in archaeology and
land management involves knowledge of the Resource
Management Act and the Environment Court.
„h Tom Bennion
has been practicing as a barrister since 1995. He
specialises in indigenous land claims and environmental law
and brings his experience with the Wellington Legal Aid
subcommittee where he was involved in dealing with Treaty of
Waitangi claims. In his current work as a barrister a large
proportion of his time is spent representing community
interest cases before the Environment Court.
„h Derek
Shaw has been involved in representing the community for
much of the last twenty years. He has been a member of
conservation-focused bodies, including the Nelson
Conservation Board from 1990-1998 and has also been a
Councillor at both regional and district levels. He is
currently a Councillor on the Nelson City Council and
chairperson of the Environment and Planning Committee.
„h
Denis Nugent is a consultant planner, in private practice,
based in Auckland. He is a member of the New Zealand
Planning Institute and has acted as an expert witness. He
is a past director of the Environmental Defence Society, a
group which is active in providing legal assistance to
community groups involved in Environment Court cases.
„h
Dr Jo Rosier is a Senior Lecturer in the Resource and
Environmental Planning Programme at Massey University. She
is trained as a planner and has published extensively on
planning related matters. She is involved in two community
groups as secretary of the Waitohu Stream Care Group and
chair of Pit Park People in Palmerston North. Her research
and teaching focuses on planning for people's activities in
ecologically sensitive areas.
„h Adrian More practices as
a barrister in Dunedin, where his extensive practice deals
mainly with resource management law and civil litigation.
In his early law career he was a solicitor and then partner
in the Timaru firm of Petrie Mayman Timpany & More, later to
become Timpany Walton. In addition to his court experience
he has developed his interest in arbitration and mediation,
becoming a Fellow of the Arbitrators and Mediators Institute
of New
Zealand.
Ends