14 May 2001
Petition to Save Heaphy and Hollyford launched on track
Green Party co-convenor Richard Davies begins a three-day walk tomorrow along the Heaphy Track gathering signatures for
a nationwide petition opposing the Collingwood-Karamea and Haast-Milford road proposals.
Mr Davies and Green Party MP Ian Ewen-Street will launch the petition on Tuesday morning at a gathering of supporters at
Brown Hut at the Collingwood end of the Heaphy Track.
The petition calls on Government to reject requests for funding for these projects, including assistance for further
feasibility studies. The roads will compromise the special conservation values of Kahurangi and Fiordland National
Parks, and threatens the benefits to tourism that have been generated by the Heaphy and Hollyford Tracks.
"Our message is that the conservation and tourism values of the Kahurangi and Fiordland National Parks are not only
worth preserving but that sustainable economic development will suffer if the roads are built," Mr Davies said.
"These high maintenance roads are environmentally destructive and economically unviable. Our petition aims to end this
debate once and for all."
Mr Davies, who runs a homestay in Golden Bay, walks the Heaphy at least once a year. He will be accompanied on the walk
by tourists from Japan and Germany: Hiro Kuwahara and Hans Arns.
"I enjoy walking the Heaphy very much, as do many of the people who stay at our homestay. Tourists and New Zealanders
I've spoken too are dismayed that a road may go through here. They come here to enjoy the wilderness, and a road will
undoubtedly spoil the experience for them."
Mr Davies intends to walk the Hollyford Track in spring.
Note to editors/reporters: The launch takes place at 11am, 15 May. To reach Brown Hut drive to Collingwood from Takaka,
and turn south (signposted) toward Bainham and the Heaphy Track. Allow 3 hours drive from Nelson. A factsheet outlining
issues about the roads accompanies this release. A feature article written by Richard is also available.
ENDS
Reasons not to build the Collingwood-Karamea & Haast-Milford roads
*Both roads will compromise the remarkably high natural and recreational values present in Fiordland and Kahurangi
National Parks. Fiordland National Park is a World Heritage Area. Kahurangi is the most ecologically and geologically
diverse region in the country and is itself an outstanding candidate for world heritage status.
*The coastal section of the Haast-Milford road would unavoidably disrupt presently undisturbed coastal habitat for
tawaki (Fiordland crested penguin) and fur seals which use the coast for shelter and breeding.
* Introduced pests and weeds pose a significant threat to fragile ecosystems. Roads through wilderness regions merely
act as highways for possums and other pests and weeds, putting a further burden on stretched resources to combat them.
*The Kahurangi road will divide the park in two, and will introduce new threats to endangered birds such as great
spotted kiwi and western weka. It will also disrupt the unbroken sequence of ecosystems from alpine zones to the coast
which are now rare anywhere in the world.
*The roads will destroy the integrity of theTasman and the Red Hills Wilderness Areas which are legally designated
places of low or no human impact which were fought for by citizens groups over many years. Such areas are rare in the
world.
*Adding approximately 170 km to the road network will not significantly enhance the range of forest and mountain driving
experiences in New Zealand. There are already many fine forest and mountain drives through wild country in New Zealand
that are accessible to most tourists.
*Anyone of moderate fitness can access these areas from a range of short walks or by walking the comparatively easy
Hollyford and Heaphy Tracks.
*Road-end tourism does work. People stay longer in Golden Bay than on the West Coast - a through route. Golden Bay and
Milford Sound have succeeded and are growing as tourist destinations - without the construction of through routes.
*Building the Karamea-Collingwood road would reduce Golden Bay to a toilet and lunch stop; would destroy the charm of
Golden Bay; and compromise the efforts of tourism authorities to promote high value sustainable destination tourism in
the area.
*A recent survey of Takaka businesses showed overwhelming opposition to the road.
*Businesses and communities in Murchison, Reefton and Makarora, which have developed their own tourism momentum, will
undoubtedly lose out if tourists are directed away from them.
*Both roads are economically unviable. Both cover difficult, high rainfall regions, subject to winter snow. Taxpayers
are not willing to pay for more high maintenance highways.