Minister says muddy label won’t stick
Environment Minister Nick Smith says his new swimmable water quality standards won’t see him labelled as the ‘‘Muddy Waters Minister’’ in New Zealand’s history books.
Last month the Government announced a target of making 90 per cent of the country’s lakes and rivers meet swimmable targets by 2040, with new policy, regulations and the strengthening of the National Water Policy Statement to help reach the goal. It came under fire with many saying it lowered current standards and Forest & Bird claiming the focus on waters deeper than 40 centimetres excluded 90 per cent of waterways.
‘‘The streams that are not covered by the Government’s standards are often the places that are popular with local families. Given the popularity of many of these rivers and streams, this places Kiwi families at an unacceptable risk of contracting illness,’’ Forest & Bird chief executive Kevin Hague says.
Rivers of concern cited by Forest & Bird not covered by the swimmable standard inlcue the Orewa River, feeding the popular Orewa Estuary north of Auckland and the Okura River which is part of the Long Bay-Okura Marine Reserve, and the Weiti River.
But Smith says Forest & Bird are factually incorrect and there is no concern waterways will become increasingly polluted and then flow to contaminate the coastline. As coastal environments the Orewa, Weiti and Okura rivers aren’t covered by the freshwater policy and council’s have the primary job under law for managing both the coastal environment and fresh water under law, the Nelson MP says.
The Ministry of Health, under the Labour Government, set the current swimmable standard for E.coli contamination of 540 parts per 100 millilitres in 2003, supported by the Green Party, and the new policy didn’t change this, he says. ‘‘For the very first time there is a legal obligation on councils to improve there waterways, even those that are not the 40 cm deep.’’
The swimmable standard will expected to be under the E.coli 540 target 95 per cent of the time with an annual mean of 130 parts per 100ml.
When the latest National Government came to power there were no national standards, Smith says. ‘‘There is a legitimate argument as to whether this policy goes fast enough or far enough, but there is no question that it is the most ambitious policy from government around fresh water.’’
Smith says muddy waters will not be his legacy. ‘‘Quite the opposite. I say quite emphatically that I have done more than any other Minister of the Environment to provide strong national direction around cleaning up our waterways.’’