Otago Daily Times

Accommodat­ion plan to be heard

- PAM JONES pam.jones@odt.co.nz

AN applicatio­n for a 70person camping area at a Central Otago orchard will be considered by the Central Otago District Council (CODC) hearings panel today.

Kevin Jackson Holdings Ltd has applied for land use consent for travellers’ and workers’ accommodat­ion on an orchard on the western side of State Highway 6, between Burn Cottage Rd and Shortcut Rd, near Cromwell.

There are already six ‘‘chalets’’ on the site which are used as staff accommodat­ion in the orchard season and can be used as travellers’ accommodat­ion in the offseason. The chalets provide accommodat­ion for 24 people.

The applicant now wishes to add a camping area for tents and camper vans, and a catering and ablutions block.

The site would have eight powered sites and 12 tent sites and would accommodat­e a maximum of 70 people.

A report from council planning staff says that, rather than apply to change the conditions of their existing consent and end up with two overlappin­g consents, the applicant has requested the use of the existing accommodat­ion chalets be included within the consent, so the entire accommodat­ion complex falls within one set of conditions.

The camping ground and chalets would be used 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, the report said.

The applicant anticipate­d almost all guests during harvest season would be seasonal workers, and in the offseason there would be a 50/50 mix of general public/tourists, and longterm workers. A checkin office and onsite manager would be at the complex.

Although an area of existing fruit trees would be removed for the camping area, the accommodat­ion facility would remain ‘‘extensivel­y surrounded by orchard’’ and ‘‘not be generally visible’’ from outside the site, the report said.

The hearings panel will consider seven other applicatio­ns at today’s meeting, including an applicatio­n from Simker Ltd for an eightlot subdivisio­n and eight dwellings that breach minimum area and height standards on Barry Ave, Cromwell; a retro spective land use consent applicatio­n for Lindis Honey to operate a honey processing plant on Bannockbur­n Rd; and an applicatio­n from C Watkins and H Ninkie for a private aircraft landing strip on Pukerangi Dr, Queensberr­y, within 500m of a dwelling on another property and/or within 500m of a property capable of accommodat­ing a dwelling.

Hearings panel Neil Gillespie said this month’s hearings panel agenda was bigger than most but ‘‘last month’s was a bit light’’, and it was more ‘‘about timing’’ of the applicatio­ns rather than the number of them.

Council planning and environmen­t executive manager Louise van der Voort said the number of resource consents council was receiving had ‘‘increased significan­tly and does not appear to be letting up’’.

‘‘Staff are working really hard processing consents and responding to customer inquiries, but under current resourcing levels are struggling to meet statutory timeframes. We will be advertisin­g for an extra planner to assist with the extra workload, in the near future.’’

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