Waikato Herald

Water CCO back on agenda

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How big that investment will be, and over what timeframe, has yet to be determined and discussed with the community.

Gavin Ion, Waikato District Council chief executive

Waikato District Council was to consider spending a further $1.757 million to address urgent concerns around wastewater spills at its Council meeting yesterday.

But staff and independen­t experts say that may be just the start of a long-term multi-million dollar programme needed to address issues with the district’s network.

In July, the Council received a formal warning from the Waikato Regional Council following three waste water spills in four months into Raglan harbour. The following month district councillor­s approved an immediate $300,000 programme including the installati­on of backups at all 18 Raglan pump stations, outage alarms, a back-up generator and funding for a community education programme. This work is either underway or already complete.

At the same time, Council ordered an independen­t report of the district’s entire wastewater network to pinpoint the causes of the overflows and identify costs to fix them.

At yesterday’s meeting, consultant­s from Jacobs New Zealand were expected to table their report and recommend a series of steps to fast-track improvemen­ts. Recommenda­tions included employingm­ore specialist water and wastewater staff, the purchase of standby generators and a further $1.6 million for specialist equipment ring-fenced for Raglan.

They will also recommend Council spends $3.6 million for specialist high-pressure jets and closed circuit television (CCTV) investigat­ions across the total district. Staff say $1.757 million should be spent immediatel­y and Council should consult with the community on any further spending next year.

The Jacobs report outlines a range of options all pointing to a bigger spending programme. It says over the next decade, Waikato District should be looking to invest $74-$134 million to bring its wastewater network up to scratch. More analysis is needed before costs can be pinned down.

Waikato District Council chief executive Gavin Ion said neither the community nor the council would tolerate ongoing spills and that a significan­t investment into the district’s wastewater network was “simply non-negotiable”.

“How big that investment will be, and over what timeframe, has yet to be determined and discussed with the community. We can take some immediate steps and I suspect Council may want to move on some of the recommenda­tions quite quickly. But we need more informatio­n before we can understand the scope of the challenges ahead and the funding implicatio­ns.”

If Council accepts the report’s recommenda­tions, immediate work to improve the network would drive a further increase in the targeted rate of $68 for each property in the district connected to the wastewater network, effective from the 2017-2018 year. Mr Ion acknowledg­ed it was a significan­t jump over and above an increase already signalled in the Council’s 10-Year Plan.

“But the clear message from our community is that waste water spills are simply unacceptab­le and they expect us to do something about it. We can’t keep doing a patch-up job. To meet the community’s expectatio­ns, we need to seriously invest.”

He expected more comprehens­ive analysis, including greater certainty around costs, would not be available until the second half of 2017. Council must consult with the community before undertakin­g any further spending, he said.

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 ??  ?? Awater CCO is back on the agenda for Waikato, Waipa and Hamilton City councils.
Awater CCO is back on the agenda for Waikato, Waipa and Hamilton City councils.

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