Panel: Marsden Pt. Rail Designation Should Be Ok'd
A panel of Independent Commissioners is recommending national rail operator KiwiRail be allowed to formally designate the corridor of land it would use for a proposed multimillion dollar rail link from Oakleigh to Marsden Pt.
Although KiwiRail has yet to make a decision on
when the proposed 20km long link might be built, the
State-Owned-Enterprise has been seeking a legal ‘notice of
requirement’ for the proposed corridor. (This effectively
protects the route from other future development or uses
that would be incompatible with a railway
line.)
KiwiRail’s application to the Northland
Regional and Whangarei District Councils for the consents
needed to construct, operate and maintain the proposed rail
link was heard in Whangarei early last month. (subs:
Sept)
The application was heard by a four-strong panel
comprising three Independent Commissioners - Rob van
Voorthuysen, Alan Watson and Greg Shaw - and, in a limited
role, Regional Councillor Lorraine Hill.
In making the
application, KiwiRail’s lawyer James Gardner-Hopkins
advised KiwiRail had several objectives.
These were to
protect the rail corridor, to link the deepwater port at
Marsden Pt to the national rail network, to provide an
alternative safe, sustainable option for moving freight to,
from and within Northland and to help the region’s future
economic growth.
A total of 83 submissions had been
received by the two Councils from 57 submitters. Of these
submitters, 18 were in full support of the proposal and 14
had indicated conditional support. Twenty-one submitters
were in full opposition, two others were partially opposed
and the remaining two submitters were neutral.
The
panel’s overall decision was that the project should be
allowed to proceed, subject to a raft of
conditions.
The panel recommended that KiwiRail, as
the Requiring Authority, officially confirm the requirement
to designate the land in the WDC’s Whangarei District Plan
subject to conditions. The panel noted that somewhat
unusually, being a Requiring Authority, KiwiRail can now
choose whether or not to accept the recommended designation
conditions.
More Information:
Meanwhile, on
behalf of the Northland Regional Council, the Commissioners
also granted KiwiRail’s application to “undertake
construction, operation and maintenance works for railway
purposes”. (These include earthworks, discharges and
other water permits.)
Additionally, the Commissioners
have recommended the Minister of Conservation grant several
restricted coastal activity consent applications. (Because
of the nature and scale of the proposed works - including
reclamation of more than 20 hectares of foreshore and seabed
alongside State Highway One between Oakleigh and Mata Hill
– the Minister’s approval is needed.)
On behalf of
the Whangarei District Council, the Commissioners also
granted KiwiRail’s land use consent application. This
enables KiwiRail to “undertake construction, operation and
maintenance works for railway purposes on land to be
reclaimed as part of the Marsden Pt Rail Link”.
The panel’s principal reasons for its decisions included that:
* Provision of the link would provide economic
benefits to Northland and was consistent with the relevant
transport planning provisions
* Confirming the designation would provide long-term certainty to landowners directly affected by the rail link, which had been suggested for several decades
* It was satisfied any more than minor actual and potential adverse effects associated with the project could be appropriately avoided, remedied or mitigated
* Directly affected property owners or lessees who felt designation conditions didn’t suitably deal with effects on their property could ask the Environment Court to order KiwiRail to buy or lease all or part of their land under the Public Works Act.
Both the applicant and
submitters now have the ability to appeal the Panel’s
decisions and recommendations to the Environment
Court.
ENDS