Otago Daily Times

Business, farming wary of Greens

- SALLY RAE

SUBMISSION­S are open on a proposal under which 9500ha of high country land, near Omarama, could become conservati­on land.

A preliminar­y proposal has been developed for Dunstan Downs, a 12,300ha Crown pastoral lease farmed by the Innes family, which is one of 28 properties in tenure review.

While the Government made the decision to end tenure review in 2018, it was ongoing until changes to the Crown Pastoral Land Act came into effect.

Tenure review is a voluntary process that gives lessees an opportunit­y to buy some of their leasehold land from the Crown while the remainder returns to the Crown for conservati­on.

If the proposal went ahead, 9500ha, including part of the St Bathans Range, would contribute to nearby conservati­on areas and reserves, Commission­er of Crown Lands Craig Harris said in a statement.

The remaining 2800ha of the pastoral lease would become freehold and some areas would be subject to conditions such as conservati­on covenants.

A summary of the preliminar­y proposal said the property adjoined the Oteake Conservati­on Park and conservati­on areas resulting from tenure reviews at Killermont and Twin Peaks to the east.

To the west, it adjoined conservati­on areas arising from the

Morven Hills tenure review and conservati­on convenants created from historic reviews in the Lindis Valley.

The St Bathans Range was an impressive mountain range providing a backdrop to views from the Upper Clutha basin and particular­ly from viewpoints along State Highways 6 and 8.

The Lindis Pass highway adjoined the lease and provided the opportunit­y to appreciate the impressive landscape of the northern and western flanks of the Dunstan Range, the report said.

The St Bathans Range provided a ‘‘dramatic and remote environmen­t’’ for recreation­al users including day walks, tramping, mountain bike and horse riding, crosscount­ry skiing and ski touring in winter and more passive pursuits such as fishing, photograph­y, botanising and bird watching.

Use had been limited in the past by remoteness and difficult access.

Much of the significan­ce of the area was from the scale of the landscape involved. That included the vegetation and geological features, the report said.

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