Manawatu Standard

Basket business ‘hampers the road’

Darroch Balls learns from a politics master

- SAM KILMISTER

A Feilding couple are at the centre of a neighbourh­ood in uproar only months after moving their homebased business to a new subdivisio­n.

More than 40 residents have signed a petition opposing Sarah and Richard Walton’s venture, Barclae Ridge Gift Solutions, which manufactur­es gift hampers out of their garage.

Residents on the newly formed Mahi Gr say the enterprise violates a covenant prohibitin­g any of their homes being used for trade or commercial purposes.

It’s a rule neighbour Roger Locke said was there to protect their ‘‘family-friendly’’ neighbourh­ood from increased traffic, noise and disruption.

But Sarah Walton said her business would attract one courier van per week, on average. The business is run primarily via phone, email and online orders, and does not have a store or showroom.

Walton said her venture was secondary to the residentia­l use of the property and did not employ any fulltime staff.

But Locke said Walton couldn’t predict future growth of the business.

‘‘There is potential the company could become more popular in the future and, therefore, an increase of traffic would be inevitable,’’ Locke said.

‘‘What’s stopping Toyota New Zealand from picking up the phone and saying we want 50 hampers a week?’’

Locke said there were 15 children who often played on the street and the design of the street didn’t allow for parking or footpaths.

‘‘Our grove is not designed for increases of traffic,’’ Locke said.

‘‘There would be an increase of traffic in a very small street, regardless of the quantity. There will be goods being delivered and then goods being sold.’’

The Waltons moved into the house three months ago after getting the all-clear from Karaka Court Trust property developer Wayne Christense­n. In an email to Sarah Walton in September last year, Christense­n gave his approval and said she was not in breach of the covenant.

The gift hamper business is in

‘‘What’s stopping Toyota New Zealand from picking up the phone and saying we want 50 hampers a week?’’ Roger Locke

its 12th year and Walton designed the new build to include an extended garage from which she could pack and store her product.

It didn’t require any exterior storage or visits for the collection of goods outside 7am to 8pm, she said.

Walton said residents on Mahi Gr were unaware she was running her business from home for three months. It wasn’t until a public notice in the Feilding-rangitikei Herald, advertisin­g Walton’s applicatio­n for an off-licence for the sale and supply of alcohol, that they were alerted to the business.

Fitzherber­t Rowe Lawyers senior associate Liam Hehir said covenants could be enforced by homeowners or property developers.

Hehir said whether or not an activity breached a covenant was a matter of how its wording was interprete­d.

‘‘You would need to get a formal legal opinion before you could have any certainty,’’ Hehir said.

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 ?? PHOTO: WARWICK SMITH/STUFF ?? Mahi Gr resident Roger Locke is worried the Feilding street will get busier.
PHOTO: WARWICK SMITH/STUFF Mahi Gr resident Roger Locke is worried the Feilding street will get busier.

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