Otago Daily Times

Beach bylaw compromise looks likely

- RICHARD DAVISON richard.davison@odt.co.nz

CLUTHA District Council may be leaning towards a middlegrou­nd compromise regarding a controvers­ial bylaw proposal.

The council has been working through consultati­on on the draft vehicles on beaches bylaw since May, in a process that has both galvanised and polarised residents.

On Thursday, councillor­s met in a public workshop in Balclutha to discuss finetuning of options for any new regulation­s, before they make a formal decision at a meeting on September 15.

The draft bylaw proposed a ban for vehicles on eight Clutha beaches, with exemptions for emergency services, boat access and access to properties otherwise inaccessib­le by road.

Vehicles elsewhere would be limited to 30kmh and be expected to be driven safely and away from wildlife.

During Thursday’s meeting, councillor­s appeared to be leaning towards more flexible options for vehicle control.

Discussion centred on options 2 and 3 of five presented, at the less stringent end of the spectrum.

Option 2 proposes institutin­g a ‘‘general set of rules relating to driver behaviour and speed’’.

Option 3 takes that a step further, and includes establishi­ng ‘‘selected safe zone beaches’’ and a formal process for adding others as required.

That could mean some beaches originally included in the draft bylaw would not immediatel­y be subject to vehicle bans.

Presenting the options, council senior policy adviser Mike Goldsmith said issues with vehicles on beaches had been identified both by the council’s freedom camping ranger, and by a large number of submitters.

Between December 3, 2021, and

March 27, 2022, the ranger identified 21 incidents involving vehicles being used unacceptab­ly on beaches.

A record 725 unique submission­s were made to the consultati­on process.

Of those, Mr Goldsmith said the two key values identified were ‘‘walking’’ and ‘‘wildlife’’, mentioned more than 900 times each; the top two ‘‘threats’’ were ‘‘vehicles can endanger wildlife’’, and ‘‘loss of habitat for wildlife’’, both mentioned more than 500 times.

A recurring point of discussion during the meeting was the effective policing of any bylaw.

Cr Lloyd McCall said he wondered whether efforts placed in forming the new bylaw might be wasted if unable to be policed.

‘‘Perhaps, instead of spending our money on monitoring and compliance, we spend it on education?’’ he said.

Cr Alison Ludemann agreed, requesting council staff prepare further informatio­n on how education and signage might be used.

Any resulting bylaw will come into force on January 1, 2023.

 ?? PHOTO: RICHARD DAVISON ?? Drive here? Clutha District Council senior policy adviser Mike Goldsmith illustrate­s a signage option used by Horowhenua District Council to control vehicle use on beaches, during a council bylaw workshop in Balclutha on Thursday.
PHOTO: RICHARD DAVISON Drive here? Clutha District Council senior policy adviser Mike Goldsmith illustrate­s a signage option used by Horowhenua District Council to control vehicle use on beaches, during a council bylaw workshop in Balclutha on Thursday.

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