UFNZ position on the RMA Bill
UFNZ position on the Resource Management Amendment
Bill
By United Future leader, Peter Dunne, and Environment spokesman, Larry Baldock, MP
United Future played a key role in bringing the Resource Management Amendment Bill (No2) into Parliament in its present form for its first reading last week.
By getting this important piece of legislation moving again at last, and by ensuring it is in a form that represents a gain for some of those who deal with the Resource Management Act, we have made a significant achievement. We freely acknowledge that we didn't get all (or even most) of what we wanted in the Bill, and that there is plenty in it that we disagree with, but on balance it is a definite improvement on the status quo.
Even the most critical business commentators over the past few days have grudgingly admitted that the Resource Management Amendment Bill represents at least some improvement over the status quo. While they rightly point out that the Bill does not go nearly far enough, they also acknowledge (to illustrate their point) that the improvements the Bill does make will mainly benefit small businesses.
The reason gains that only benefit small
businesses (as well as private individuals and families)
actually represent a significant achievement - and as
business commentators are usually, and correctly, at great
pains to point out - is that small businesses are the engine
room of New Zealand's economy. They make up over 99% of the
total number of enterprises in New Zealand, and employ over
60% of the workforce There are two key
aspects of this Bill that were pivotal to our decision to
support it in its current form. The first is the
reintroduction of clauses that allow limited notification of
resource consent application for activities with no more
than minor effects. The second is the removal of clauses
that would have meant that the Environment Court would have
to hear appeals on council decisions not to notify a
resource consent application. The limited notification
category for activities with minor effects will give
(mostly) individuals, families and small businesses the
freedom to make small improvements to their properties
without being subjected to crippling amounts of red tape.
The purpose of the RMA is to protect the quality of New
Zealand's environment, so there is no gain to be made by
subjecting people who want to do things that will have very
little impact of the environment to frustrating extra
administrative costs and delays. It's just not common
sense! Also important to United Future was removal of
clauses from the Bill that would have meant the Environment
Court would have to hear appeals on council decisions not to
notify a resource consent application. We have reached an
understanding with the Minister for the Environment that the
first step to improving RMA outcomes is to reduce the
backlog in the Environment Court (through this Bill and
through later legislative and non-legislative reforms). The
clauses in question, if allowed to remain in the Bill, would
have run contrary to this goal by seriously adding to the
workload of the Environment Court and increasing the backlog
of cases rather than reducing it. There are several
other clauses in the Bill that also made us more inclined to
support it in its current form. Positive contributions to
reducing the backlog in the Environment Court include
clauses that allow for the expansion and simplification of
procedures for preparing national environmental standards
and national policy statements. If such amendments result
in the greater use of national environmental standards and
policy statements they could, by clarifying and reducing
potential arenas for dispute, reduce the number of cases
that end up in the Environment Court in the first place.
There are several other minor clauses in the Bill that
will also make a further, positive contribution to reducing
the Environment Court backlog by streamlining and clarifying
RMA processes - thereby reducing administrative timelines
and various sources of duplication and confusion. The
elements of the Bill discussed above are the positive
contributions United Future believes the Resource Management
Amendment Bill (No2) will make to the important (and urgent)
process of reforming the RMA. However, we are also aware
these measures are just a first step. There are plenty of
amendments that we were unable to persuade the Government to
include in this Bill, and there are plenty of amendments the
Government did include in this Bill but which we strongly
disagree with. One part of the Resource Management
Amendment Bill (No2) that United Future is particularly
unhappy with is the removal of the power of the Environment
Court to require security for costs from individuals or
groups it considers vexatious. This is not a power the
Environment Court has used often - in fact in its entire
history it has only required security for costs from
objectors approximately seven times. The point that
concerns us is the symbolism. Where is the protection for
property owners and business people? It is them who bear
the cost of ongoing delays and litigation when an individual
or group lodges appeal after appeal against their
development for what the Environment Court acknowledges are
spurious reasons at best. Supporters of the removal of
the Environment Court's power to require security for costs
often point out that the Environment Court will still have
the power to award costs at the conclusion of a hearing as
it sees fit. However, in such cases redress may still not
be possible because the individuals or groups concerned
often do not have the money to pay such costs. Therefore,
we believe this power should be retained in the Environment
Court as both a backstop and as a sign that the rights of
property owners are being considered. United Future is
also highly critical of the expansion and strengthening of
the scope of RMA heritage provisions that is provided for in
the Bill. We would prefer to see the definitions in the
Bill narrowed to focus more closely on tangible biological
and physical factors rather than being broadened to
encompass even more intangible factors. It represents a
potentially serious inroad on private property rights and is
an example of fuzzy, Green style thinking. It remains to be
seen what the actual effects of this will be, but we will be
monitoring the situation closely and will be calling for a
repeal of those provisions if property rights do suffer as a
result. United Future has several other proposals,
many inspired by the original Simon Upton Bill and the
"McShane Report", that the Government has promised to
consider but which they were unwilling to incorporate into
the current Bill. We are hopeful of making some progress on
these in the next phase of RMA reform, which will begin
immediately upon the current Bill being passed into law.
One of these proposals is a provision to make
consultation with landowners mandatory before any binding
changes affecting land use on their property can be
implemented (such as designating part of someone's farm a
Significant Natural Areas or wähi tapu). We would
also prefer to see all statutory powers taken from the
Historic Places Trust (leaving it in a purely advocacy role)
and incorporated into the RMA. This would streamline the
RMA's heritage processes and remove unnecessary
duplication. Another proposal we have on the table is
to add a provision allowing direct referrals to the
environment court for projects of national significance such
as roads or electricity generation facilities. The
importance of the direct referral provision, while it would
be a significant improvement on the status quo, should not
be overemphasised. The upcoming Land Transport Management
Bill, for example, is of far greater significance for the
future of road building than the RMA. That Bill ostensibly
(at this stage) addresses the true bottleneck slowing new
roading development, and that is the provision of adequate
funding. Horror stories such as it taking seven years
to get resource consents to extend Auckland's motorways
notwithstanding, there is evidence emerging that better
planning and consultation procedures by local authorities
could also play a role in reducing the incidence of long and
expensive delays to major roading projects. For example,
significant new roading projects in Tauranga recently
received resource consents without any objections or other
RMA related delays occurring at all. The same is true
of electricity generation. Obviously it is important to
remove any potential roadblocks to the future commissioning
of electricity generation projects, but we also note that
often blame is attributed to the RMA where none is deserved.
For example, claims that the looming shortfall in
electricity generation capacity this winter can be partially
attributed to RMA related delays in constructing new gas
fired generating capacity are nonsense. Electricity
generators Contact and Genesis both have the necessary
resource consents to build new gas fired generation plants
already, but they have to wait until gas contracts are
available from the new Pohokura field before they can go
ahead. The availability of gas contracts in turn has been
delayed by Commerce Commission concerns about competition in
the gas industry - a final decision on which is not due
until July - not t Although we did not get everything
we wanted in the Resource Management Amendment Bill, it
still represents a positive step forward. The passage of
the Bill through the House in its current form therefore
represents a major achievement on our part. Without our
advocacy and support, any progress on reforming the RMA
would at best have remained at a standstill (as it has been
for years) or, very possibly, have actually suffered a
significant reversal at the hands of the Greens. The
Greens do not support the Resource Management Amendment Bill
in its current form. They object to the limited
notification provisions and the removal of clauses allowing
council decisions not to notify resource consents to be
appealed to the Environment Court. They doubtless also had
plenty of proposals for making the RMA even more inflexible
and biased towards environmental and anti-developmental
groups at the expense of private property rights and
business development. At their hands, instead of
seeing the significant, if small, improvements to the RMA
this Bill makes, we would have seen a significant
reversal. Alternatively, if it did not wish to
capitulate to the Greens but did not have United Future's
support, the Government could have ignored the Greens and
simply retained the status quo. This is what occurred
during the last term of parliament. In words, there would
have been NO improvement, and no platform for making further
improvements. When it comes to a piece of legislation
as pervasive and contentious as the Resource Management Act,
progress is bound to be painstaking and has to be undertaken
one step at a time. In the eight months since our seven new
MPs were elected and decided that reform of the RMA was a
key priority, we have worked closely with the Government on
this issue and have achieved that much needed first step.
The RMA reform process does not end here. The passage of
the Resource Management Amendment Bill into law will
establish a sound platform from which further reforms can be
undertaken. We will work closely with the Government on the
proposals discussed above as well as other measures in the
coming months. Our focus will be on the impediments the RMA
poses for New Zealand's economic growth, but at the same
time we won't lose sight of the purpose of the RMA, which is
to protect the quality of New Zealand's unique environment.
Economic growth and environmental quality are not mutually
exclusive goals, and United Future will continue to work
towards sensible, common sense solutions to both.