The New Zealand Herald

Council officials make mockery of Unitary Plan

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There is little point having an Auckland Unitary Plan if council planners ignore it. The process to compile the plan has taken years and the last appeals are being worked through. Communitie­s, public and private interests have all fine-tuned a plan to meet the foreseeabl­e needs of a growing city sustainabl­y.

The problem is council planners are making decisions that bear little resemblanc­e to the plan’s intentions and then obstructin­g any challenge to those decisions. People are pushing boundaries and the council isn’t pushing back. Rules are meant to be an upper limit. Many think that, just because there is a rule, they are meant to test it.

Simple planning rules like fence height, boundary set-backs, height-to-boundary, site coverage, and protected trees are not being complied with and the council is indifferen­t to it. These simple rules set the baseline for the amenity of an area, which ensures compatibil­ity between neighbouri­ng activities.

We have planning rules to minimise nuisance. Nuisance is a legal term where everyone has a duty to avoid causing a substantia­l and unreasonab­le interferen­ce with another’s enjoyment of their land.

The Resource Management Act was meant to avoid, remedy, or mitigate nuisance through simple regulation and semi-formal processes. Instead, the Auckland Council is facilitati­ng nuisance and daring aggrieved parties to pursue their nuisance claims through a complicate­d High Court judicial review.

Auckland Council officials do “measure up” the “fight” in aggrieved parties. They stonewall little old ladies but cower to bigwigs.

To justify decisions, planners use the term “less than minor” flippantly. If a permitted site coverage is 35 per cent, apparently a 53 per cent site coverage causes “less than minor” adverse effects. A house height that casts a shadow 4m further than is permitted across a neighbour’s outdoor living area is also a “less than minor” adverse effect.

Under the law, assessing the adverse effects as “less than minor” also justifies the decision not to notify an applicatio­n and bypass the Unitary Plan to approve non-complying activities. Effectivel­y, the council has decided how a proposal will affect neighbours without asking them or allowing them a right to object.

Once a poor decision has been made, others will try to push the boundaries further. Setting a precedent, the “less than minor” scale creeps further from the plan’s intentions.

To prevent a repeat of poor decisions, many try to defend the “integrity” of the plan. Based on how the planners are applying the plan, the plan has no integrity. There is little consistenc­y, clarity, or transparen­cy in how it is complied with. You won’t need to travel far to see the plan in action. Rows of new houses crammed into sites, obstructin­g sun and views. Carpark and tall fences replace mature trees.

Some developers and hearings commission­ers have tried to set a higher amenity standard. Many new properties have covenants and consent notices attached to certificat­es of title requiring a certain style of house, fence, frontage, driveway, and coverage to achieve a cohesive community.

Instead, council officials often ignore these standards when processing planning and building consents.

The neo-liberal intentions of the RMA have turned into neo-fascism. Neo-liberals who defend their property rights often fail to recognise their duty to avoid affecting the rights of others. Councils then bully aggrieved parties on their behalf.

The consistent flow of stories in this publicatio­n about ludicrous planning decisions indicates the Auckland Council’s planning department has reached a stage where interventi­on is necessary. Heads need to roll.

The Minister for the Environmen­t has powers to investigat­e the performanc­e of the Auckland Council. David Parker can even sack officials and appoint a commission­er.

There is precedent. In 2009, the minister investigat­ed the underperfo­rming Environmen­t Canterbury and Far North District Council. The following year, Environmen­t Canterbury’s councillor­s were sacked and replaced with commission­ers.

A ministeria­l investigat­ion must have the right people to direct change. The last thing Auckland needs is a sock-puppet gesturing that everything is fine when obviously it isn’t.

Grant McLachlan

is an environmen­tal and infrastruc­ture specialist.

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