NZ's handbrake
OPINION: Your old mate gets the sinking feeling that no matter who we vote into power in the hope they will reverse the terminal slide the country is in, there will always be a cohort of naysayers determined to hold us back.
A controversial land swap deal which would have advanced the Ruataniwha dam scheme may now not go ahead.
This follows a successful appeal by Forest & Bird against a High Court decision which allowed the land swap so that the dam project could proceed. The dam is aimed at irrigating about 25,000ha of farm land in Central Hawke's Bay.
The Department of Conservation had proposed swapping 22ha of the Ruahine Forest Park for 170ha that the Hawke's Bay Regional Investment Co Ltd (HBRIC) proposed to buy from Smedley Station. This would have triggered a downgrade of the protected conservation status of the land to allow it to be flooded as part of the Ruataniwha scheme.
HBRIC, the investment arm of Hawke's Bay Regional Council, last year reached agreement with DOC to exchange the land.
The swap was agreed to last October, but Forest & Bird challenged the decision by the director-general of conservation, saying not only was it illegal, but it also had implications throughout New Zealand for specially protected land under the Conservation Act 1987.
"This land swap would have set a precedent for up to one million hectares of specially protected conservation land, which includes forest parks, conservation parks and ecological and wilderness areas," says Forest & Bird lawyer Sally Gepp.
"This case goes to the heart of the purpose of the Conservation Act 1987 and upholds Forest & Bird's position that specially protected conservation land should not be subject to commercial or political whim."
The National Wild Goat Hunting Competition has removed 33,418 wild goats over the past three years.
New Zealand needs a new healthcare model to address rising rates of obesity in rural communities, with the current system leaving many patients unable to access effective treatment or long-term support, warn GPs.
Southland farmers are being urged to put safety first, following a spike in tip offs about risky handling of wind-damaged trees
Third-generation Ashburton dairy farmers TJ and Mark Stewart are no strangers to adapting and evolving.
When American retail giant Cosco came to audit Open Country Dairy’s new butter plant at the Waharoa site and give the green light to supply their American stores, they allowed themselves a week for the exercise.
Fonterra chair Peter McBride says the divestment of Mainland Group is their last significant asset sale and signals the end of structural changes.