Otago Daily Times

Water quality leads 10year plan hearing

- GUY WILLIAMS and SEAN NUGENT

WATER quality in Lake Hayes dominated submission­s at an Otago Regional Council longterm plan hearing in Queenstown yesterday.

Of the 12 groups and individual­s who spoke at the hearing, half of them focused on either the lake’s water quality or the need to better monitor all the district’s lakes.

The hearing began with an impassione­d plea by Wakatipu resident Andrew Davis, who accused the council of ‘‘neglect’’ in its statutory duty to protect water quality in Central Otago.

He accused the council of taking a passive approach to the lake and its tributary, Mill Stream. That had allowed the lake’s water quality to gradually degrade to the point where residents and visitors could no longer be confident about swimming in it.

Mr Davis said the council had closed the lake for swimming several times in the past year because of high E. coli levels, but had not specified the bacteria.

That had left tourists to assume there was human waste in the lake, which was damaging the district’s reputation.

He called on the council to commit to a full restoratio­n programme.

Friends of Lake Hayes secretary Richard Bowman said practical options for improving the lake’s water quality had been identified, and it was now up to the council to ‘‘put it into action’’.

Failure to make progress would ultimately impact on the Wakatipu Basin’s tourism economy through reputation­al damage, Mr Bowman said.

Support for addressing the lake’s issues also came in a widerangin­g submission by the Shaping our Future forum.

Board member Maree Baker-Galloway said the council should continue working on remediatio­n plans for the lake. It should also install monitoring buoys on all of the district’s lakes by next year.

Queenstown Grey Power representa­tive Kirsty Sharpe said it was ‘‘past time’’ to start remedial action in Lake Hayes, and immediate action was required to prevent further contaminat­ion.

In a personal submission to the longterm plan, Mrs Sharpe said she supported an increase in rates if the extra funds were used to rectify the district’s water quality issues.

Queenstown Lakes district councillor Alexa Forbes said it was ‘‘tragic’’ the lake had reached its present state, and any commercial developmen­t in nearby Waterfall Park had to be ‘‘careful and sensitive’’.

Water quality, particular­ly in the Manuheriki­a River, was also a hot topic at the longterm plan hearing in Alexandra yesterday afternoon.

The river has suffered from bacteria contaminat­ion caused by rural runoff in recent years.

Clyde resident Lynne Stewart told councillor­s her children had been ‘‘violently sick’’ after kayaking in the upper section of the river, and called for the council to take action to preserve the waterway for future generation­s.

An emotional Raymond White, of Alexandra, read a poem entitled Manuheriki­a and Man to councillor­s. The poem mentioned that exploitati­on of the river was complete.

He told councillor­s they had a ‘‘hell of a task’’ ahead of them to save the river.

 ?? PHOTO: TRACEY ROXBURGH. ?? Ill water . . . Signs at Lake Hayes in February warning of cyanobacte­ria.
PHOTO: TRACEY ROXBURGH. Ill water . . . Signs at Lake Hayes in February warning of cyanobacte­ria.

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