The Timaru Herald

Riverbed fly-tippers warned

- Yashas Srinivasa

Fly-tipping has been described as a significan­t issue by Environmen­t Canterbury – and it is warning those caught dumping rubbish across the region will be fined.

ECan southern zone lead Gina Slee said since the start of the year it had received 17 reports of fly-tipping in the Orari-TemukaŌ pihi-Pareora zone alone.

‘‘Fly-tipping is unfortunat­ely a significan­t issue in Canterbury rivers. Despite the use of enforcemen­t as well as education, the problem persists.

‘‘In many instances, material that has been fly-tipped at local rivers could be disposed of at Timaru District Council refuse stations for free,’’ Slee said.

She said the council regularly patrols problem areas and its wider team reports any issues they may come across.

‘‘Dumping rubbish is an offence under the Resource Management Act, with a potential fine of $750.

‘‘Once we receive a complaint, an officer attends the scene to locate the rubbish and check for any identifyin­g markers, like items with addresses on them.

‘‘If we can locate the dumper we issue an on-the-spot $750 infringeme­nt and also recover costs for our ratepayer-funded time.’’

Slee said they give the alleged offenders the option of removing the rubbish themselves. If ECan have to remove it, or have contractor­s remove it, they also charge this cost back to the dumper.

If the alleged offender cannot be located, ECan is unable to recover the costs, she said.

A long-time Kerrytown resident who did not wish to be named due to safety concerns, said yesterday he was pleased to watch as contractor­s cleared away rubbish which had been dumped at the Ō pihi River, near Pleasant Point.

The man, who said he had reported the rubbish to the council last month, said dumping had been an issue at the Ō pihi River for years.

He provided photograph­s of a lot of rubbish, including the remnants of a structure, left by two people he believed had been living in the riverbed earlier this year.

‘‘People come from all over, dump their rubbish and just leave..

‘‘It’s all kinds of rubbish, household rubbish and especially a lot of rubbish from when people

are moving houses.

‘‘A few years ago a couple of guys came and dumped a trailer load of rubbish straight into the river,’’ he said.

Slee said ECan have placed signage at problem spots, alerting people to the $750 fee for those caught dumping.

‘‘Our rivers have high ecological value and dumping rubbish in them can harm water quality, native habitat and also hinder flood protection measures.

‘‘We know most people do the right thing and take all rubbish to the local council transfer station – or give unwanted furniture and household items to friends or family.’’

Slee said if someone sees rubbish dumped in or near rivers, to call ECan’s Incident Response Line, 0800 765 588 or use the Snap Send Solve phone app.

 ?? ?? A Kerrytown resident says rubbish dumping such as this has been an ongoing issue in the Ō pihi riverbed.
A Kerrytown resident says rubbish dumping such as this has been an ongoing issue in the Ō pihi riverbed.

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