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Govt joins forces with communities to clean up waterways

Published: Sun 11 Aug 2019 11:47 AM
Government joins forces with local communities to clean up waterways
The Government has today announced the next step in its plan to clean up our rivers and lakes by supporting community-led programmes, delivering on the Wellbeing Budget’s investment to clean up our waterways.
“Every New Zealander should be able to swim in their river without getting sick,” Jacinda Ardern said.
“Sadly, half of our monitored swimming sites are not safe for swimming.
“Today, we are focusing on cleaning up the Kaipara, the largest estuary in New Zealand, showing how it will be done – a unified effort led by the community, with Government support.
“Estuaries like the Kaipara are clogged with sediment and mangroves.
“Actions in Kaipara will include simple solutions such as:
- riparian planting, and wetland preservation and development
- fencing streams to prevent livestock trampling at waterway margins
- using the best science to locate sediment hotspots and measure sediment flows
“To support this the Government will be investing $12m to help improve catchments, with a share going to Kaipara.
“The direction of travel is clear: we need to reduce the pollution – nitrogen, sediment, E.coli and other contaminants – from flowing through our cities and farms and into our waterways,” Jacinda Ardern said.
Cleaning up our rivers and lakes is a priority environmental issue for New Zealanders, and the Budget provided $229m to help improve land use and waterways.
David Parker said the Government was working with the community to help understand what can make the greatest difference and then what interventions to take, such as where to build and restore wetlands, or where more hillside planting is required to stabilise steep land, as part of this new nationwide programme.
“Volunteers, iwi, local government, farmers and school students are all working together to improve the quality of the water flowing into the Kaipara harbour,” David Parker said.
“Those lessons from ‘exemplar’ catchments like Kaipara will be passed on to others. Further exemplar catchments will be identified in coming months.
“Other government initiatives and funds were also part of the mix including 1 Billion Trees, the Provincial Growth Fund and the Freshwater improvement fund.
“It’s our birth right to go down to our local river in summer for a swim and put our head under without fear of getting sick - and to be able to gather kai from our waterways.
“Working with the community we are fulfilling the Government’s promise to stop the degradation of our waterways, reverse the damage and make measureable improvements within five years,” David Parker said.
Further measures will be rolled out over coming months as the Government moves to implement its Essential Freshwater plan. This plan will:
- set clearer and stronger national direction for councils on freshwater standards
- put in place measures to improve land use such as controlling poor winter grazing practices
- provide guidance on the preservation of precious natural resources such as remaining wetlands and streams.
Editor’s note:
• Kaipara is a large and biologically significant harbour. It is New Zealand’s largest estuarine ecosystem and is the receiving environment of a 640,000ha catchment with many inflowing rivers encompassing a large proportion of the northern peninsula of the North Island. It extends across the Auckland and Northland regions.
• Estuaries provide a range of valuable high ecosystem services (e.g. fisheries, water quality, climate change mitigation) as well as biodiversity values. The Kaipara contains some of the rarest ecosystems in New Zealand namely sand dune, seagrass, freshwater and estuarine wetland ecosystems.
• The Kaipara Harbour provides important juvenile habitat for white sharks and snapper. It contains nationally significant seagrass meadows, is a regular orca foraging area as well as being a nationally and internationally significant wading bird habitat including for the critically endangered Fairy Tern.
Graphic attached
http://img.scoop.co.nz/media/pdfs/1908/Kaipara_Graphic.pdf

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