2513 days ago

Impacts of storm water on Lake Horowhenua

Veronica from Manakau

Lake Horowhenua is in the spotlight again now Horowhenua District Council has finally submitted its resource consent application to discharge storm water in Levin.

Regional Council Horizons is expected to allow a request by Horowhenua District Council’s (HDC’s) chief executive David Clapperton for more time to undertake, "consultation with iwi, directly affected parties and other stakeholders" because a cultural impacts assessment is one of 19 requests for further information.

Many of the 19 requests for further information to accompany HDC's December 2018 Levin Global Storm water Discharge Consent relate to the effect of storm water on Lake Horowhenua and affected waterways including an, "assessment of impacts of the proposed activity on aquatic life in the Lake and in the Arawhata and Patiki Streams."

A November 2018 Horizons report, "confirmed the Arawhata is currently the major contributor of sediment..contributing between 48 and 75 percent of the sediment to the lake. ..In addition the sediment accumulation rates have increased in recent times."

HDC also has to address how storm water is, "contributing to nutrient and contaminant loads in the lake" and "how the proposed activity does not contribute to further decline of water quality in Lake Horowhenua and will improve water quality."

Horizons said the sediment quality study included in HDC's application, "was not designed to assess storm water impact on lake sediment" and asked HDC to provide data, “showing the effect of the storm water discharge on lake and stream sediments."

Horizons said as HDC "attributes some contaminant levels to industrial sites" in its application this means “contaminants are entering the discharge via the stormwater network” which means, “ these should be included in the consent."

There is public uncertainty about how the application will be processed in light of Horizons own short comings as a statutory authority.

Horizons One Plan has been operative since December 2014 but in 2016 Wellington Fish and Game Council and the Environmental Defence Society (EDS) won an Environment Court case that Horizons was not giving legal effect to its own One Plan rules on intensive farming activities, the National Policy Statement for Freshwater Management and the Resource Management Act (RMA).

Furthermore the Environment Court described a Horizons Council 25 June 2013 resolution not to apply its own One Plan rules for intensive farming land uses as, "unlawful, invalid and in contravention of the RMA."

The resolution has been revoked but Environment Minister David Parker became involved after no progress was made by Horizons since the Environment Court decision in 2016 meaning many agricultural and dairying farms are still operating without resource consents.

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1 day ago

Poll: Do you set New Year’s resolutions?

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

🎉 2026 is almost here!

We’re curious ... how do you welcome it?
Do you set resolutions, follow special traditions, or just go with the flow?

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Do you set New Year’s resolutions?
  • 10.6% Yes! New Year, New Me
    10.6% Complete
  • 22.1% Yes - but I rarely stick to them
    22.1% Complete
  • 67.3% Nah - not for me
    67.3% Complete
444 votes
15 hours ago

Quote for the Day

Mike from Paraparaumu

Interviewer:
"Do you think that the British class system has finally ended?"
Upper-middle class Romance author, Dame Barbara Cartland:
"Well, of course it has; otherwise I would't be sitting here, talking to someone like you!"

Happy New Year [hopefully!]
Mike

6 days ago

Driven On The Akatarawa Rd Lately?

Marie from Waikanae

If so, its good to know you are still alive and reading this.

We have a function to go to over Christmas up that way and having heard a few hairy stories about the road, I went up there on Thursday to check it out. The road's ok, narrow and winding, but not much worse than a Wellington hill suburb. What was pretty scary was the behavior of other drivers. Three vehicles heading the other way at speed would have crashed into me if I hadn't been pulled off the road. I had pulled in to check the address when a truck came flying past, taking up all of the narrow road at speed. There is no way the driver would have been able to stop had they come around the corner immediately in front of me. The other two drivers came hurtling past as I had turned in to turn around and come back down the hill. They were also driving at speed and taking up most of the road. Coming back down I passed another car coming up and estimate that the safe speed to pass another car was about 30-35 kms.p.h. So, now we're thinking, do we go to the function or not.? Feels a bit like we're taking our life in our hands going up there. Drivers appear to be overconfident, and they are courting serious injury.