Northern News

Building resilience for remote communitie­s

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SUSAN BOTTING

Almost 100 free new water tanks have changed lives and built drought resilience for vulnerable isolated rural communitie­s in Northland.

The new tanks have been installed in response to the region’s 2019/2020 drought which exposed significan­t water poverty across Te Taitokerau in vulnerable rural communitie­s without access to public water supply.

This resulted in the New Zealand Army being brought in to deliver water to communitie­s without town water supply.

The 100 tanks that have lifted people out of water poverty have been installed since March 2023 to provide on-site healthy drinking and general household water for homes and marae including from Ahipara, Kaihu, Kaikohe, Takou Bay, Taupo Bay, Tangiteror­ia, Waima and Utakura.

Northland Civil Defence Te Kahu o Taonui (Northland Iwi Chairs Forum) representa­tive and project lead Hone Dalton said the water tanks were bringing positive changes for the community: their installati­on had changed lives. Dalton outlined the project almost 300 people at the 14th annual Northland Civil Defence Emergency Management Forum, held in Whangārei.

The 100 tanks were provided through the Northland Regional Council water resilience project and Te Puni Kōkiri kainga rua marae emergency water storage project. Several hundred other tanks have also been installed across the region by a variety of other additional providers since 2021.

Dalton said each recipient in his project was provided with a tank of between 8000 and 17,000 litres and an external lockable waterproof pumping cabinet with water pump and ultraviole­t filter. On-site training is provided and a one month call-back service is offered.

He said many people in remote rural valleys around areas such as Kaikohe were travelling into the town to do their washing, evidenced by the number of laundromat­s in the town.

The council’s website said the project prioritise­d the most vulnerable Northland communitie­s without access to the water basic living needs − a necessity that many took for granted. It said the climate crisis was this generation’s biggest challenge and already an issue in Te Taitokerau.

There were prediction­s of on average a hotter, drier Northland with more extreme events to come. It said the project had worked towards ensuring communitie­s had enough water to get through challengin­g times of this type.

Water challenges for affected residents had previously meant facing daily considerat­ions about how best to use limited water over the summer months.

“For some it’s the constant checking of an unfit tank or water source and the ongoing worry and stress of how to provide freshwater for whanau but sadly for many it has become a way of life,” the council website said.

The website said the project used a model that relied on “trusted community champions” to help identify those most in need of water tanks – a system that worked well for the community. The project had enabled hapū to devise their own community-led solutions to get water infrastruc­ture to where it was most needed.

It had provided water tanks of sufficient size, water pumps and filtration systems to comply with drinking water standards, and in some cases the infrastruc­ture such as guttering so that rainwater could be collected on site, the website said.

 ?? NORTHLAND REGIONAL COUNCIL ?? Water resilience project leader Hone Dalton, left with Kaikohe’s Tina Broomfield and her new tank, and project operations manager Phil Young.
NORTHLAND REGIONAL COUNCIL Water resilience project leader Hone Dalton, left with Kaikohe’s Tina Broomfield and her new tank, and project operations manager Phil Young.
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