The Northern Advocate

Kaipara council approves Plan change

$750m Mangawhai urban developmen­t pssses hurdle

- Susan Botting Local Democracy Reporter

AMangawhai residents group is looking to appeal Kaipara District Council’s green light towards intensifyi­ng a $750 million urban developmen­t in the middle of their coastal hamlet.

“We will be seriously considerin­g appealing the decision,” Doug Lloyd, chair of community group Mangawhai Matters said.

Kaipara District Council (KDC) yesterday in Dargaville decided in favour of a private plan change applicatio­n for one of New Zealand’s biggest coastal urban developmen­t projects — at Mangawhai.

Housing intensific­ation with a doubling of the number of dwellings in the developmen­t is at the crux of the private plan change. What had been 500 dwellings in initial 2007 plans for the area can now in principle become 1000 under the successful private plan change applicatio­n.

KDC’s 6-2 vote in favour of the applicatio­n sees the intensific­ation move a step closer.

Deputy mayor Anna Curnow was out of the room and did not participat­e in discussion­s or voting as she was a member of the three-person commission­er group which recommende­d the council accept the private plan change applicatio­n.

The decision next has to be publicly notified — scheduled for May 7 — with 30 working days from then for those who wish to appeal it in the Environmen­t Court.

Mangawhai Matters was among 208 submitters on the Mangawhai Central private plan change applicatio­n, those who had issues with the plan change predominat­ing.

Lloyd said his community group was not necessaril­y against the developmen­t.

But he wanted to see the necessary infrastruc­ture to support the developmen­t’s presence, and now potential intensific­ation, was in place.

A panel of commission­ers, made up of two independen­t specialist­s and Curnow, reviewed quantities of material which included taking infrastruc­ture provision into account and still made the decision to recommend KDC decided in favour of the applicatio­n.

But the hangover of Mangawhai’s longstandi­ng issues with huge cost blowouts over original estimates for an earlier sewerage scheme were still clearly in people’s minds at yesterday’s debate, Lloyd said.

The massive cost blowout resulted in KDC being taken over by commission­ers who then stayed at the coun

cil helm for New Zealand’s longest tenure of that type.

Lloyd said his group’s concerns over the provision of adequate wastewater and drinking water services for the developmen­t had not been allayed at the council meeting and hearing the public plan change applicatio­n debate.

The commission­ers, and KDC staff, first recommende­d the private plan change applicatio­n be accepted by the council in March.

But at its March 31 meeting in Mangawhai, councillor­s took the highly unusual step of not doing so — citing lack of time to consider the 277-page supporting documentat­ion — and the decision was put off until yesterday.

A heated and often tense 1.5 hour debate yesterday resulted in the majority vote to accept the plan change applicatio­n with Mayor Dr Jason Smith, and councillor­s Karen Joyce-Paki, Mark Vincent, Peter Wethey, David Wills, Eryn WilsonColl­ins voting in favour of doing so.

Councillor­s Victoria del la VarisWoodc­ock and Jonathan Larsen voted against.

The councillor­s were told by council lawyer Warren Bangma that there would be the prospect of a judicial review if they voted not to go ahead with the private plan change applicatio­n.

“Rejecting (the recommenda­tion) is what I would describe as legally fraught,” Bangma said.

“It creates the possibilit­y of ending up in the High Court and then Environmen­t Court.”

Smith said considerat­ion of the private plan change applicatio­n was the biggest and most detailed councillor­s had been involved with in his time as Mayor.

He said there had been due diligence, to an extremely high level, done on the matter.

Smith said council had followed due process. The purpose of yesterday’s vote had been simply to decide whether councillor­s felt commission­ers had done their job or not in recommendi­ng the private plan change be accepted.

He said KDC had to make a decision. The amount of effort involved in reaching this point was unpreceden­ted.

“It was a massive whale we had to swallow,” Smith said.

He said there were many steps in the process yet to come, among these the resource consent process.

The outcome of yesterday’s decision has been closely awaited around New Zealand, the possibilit­y of councillor­s voting against the decision real and nationally unpreceden­ted.

A decision against accepting the plan change would have meant significan­t costs for ratepayers, a rehearing and almost definitely an appeal from the developer.

About 4000 people live in Mangawhai, Northland’s fastest-growing area — and one of the quickest developing locations in New Zealand. The developer’s updated plans would add about 2500 people to that.

“This is obviously a significan­t decision for Mangawhai and Kaipara District, we have got to get it right,” Wethey said.

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 ?? Photos / Susan Botting, File ?? LEFT: Mangawhai central private plan change is debated at yesterday’s Kaipara District Council meeting in Dargaville. ABOVE: The Hub at the Mangawhai shopping centre could have many more customers with the town’s population is set to increase about 62 per cent if a new $750 million developmen­t goes ahead.
Photos / Susan Botting, File LEFT: Mangawhai central private plan change is debated at yesterday’s Kaipara District Council meeting in Dargaville. ABOVE: The Hub at the Mangawhai shopping centre could have many more customers with the town’s population is set to increase about 62 per cent if a new $750 million developmen­t goes ahead.

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