The New Zealand Herald

Coast tackles next step in landfill fix

January start on moving 12,000cu m of Westland trash

- Logan Church

Work to move about 12,000 cubic meters of rubbish from the Fox landfill is expected to begin early 2021 next year. Last year, rain washed out an old landfill near Fox Glacier township, sweeping tonnes of rubbish down the river and across more than 2100ha of coastline on the West Coast.

A huge clean-up effort by the Department of Conservati­on, the Defence Force, and the Westland District Council followed, with volunteers joining a work force of hundreds to pick up the rubbish, much of which had not seen sunlight for decades.

More than 13,000 bags of rubbish were removed, but there was still a question over what to do with the landfill in the long term to prevent a similar disaster in the future.

Westland mayor Bruce Smith said a funding deal worth $3.3 million was signed between the Government and the council to dig out the old landfill and move it to Butlers Landfill near Hokitika, where a new cell was being dug — a huge oblong hole where rubbish could be dumped.

Smith said tenders to do that were now out and he expected work to begin about January 11.

That involved digging up the old landfill and sending it about 2.5 hours down the road by truck to Butlers.

“It will be taken in trucks with bins and covers on,” Smith said. “It’s a significan­t distance.”

“The dump site would then be backfilled using gravel and compacting and ensuring the rock protection there is right up to scratch.”

The January date was to ensure the worst of Christmas traffic had passed, the Westland mayor said.

As part of that funding, $350,000 had been allocated for another cleanup, which was under way.

Smith said while the average person would not see rubbish now at a glance, there was still work to do clearing it from harder-to-reach areas.

“Some of it is caught in trees, some of it is caught in stumps . . . it’s fair to say it is a difficult process.”

He said it was essential this work was done to prevent a future environmen­tal disaster.

“Two kilometres further up the road that used to be the glacier access is Mills Creek — it is the largest moving slip in New Zealand — it is huge,” said Smith.

“What’s happening is it is moving down on a constant basis into the river, and the gravel it is pushing into the river then gets flooded down the river and is continuing lifting the base of the riverbed,” the mayor said.

“This would at some stage rise to a point where it wants to cut through that channel which was the old Fox river channel, which is where the old dump site was.”

He said the river could potentiall­y cut through that area again.

“Potentiall­y when and if that happens, we certainly don’t want the community to be facing that [ same] terrible cleanup job.”

 ??  ?? Hundreds worked on the huge cleanup after a landfill near Fox Glacier was washed away last year.
Hundreds worked on the huge cleanup after a landfill near Fox Glacier was washed away last year.

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