Waipa Post

Helping keep community safey in flood prone areas

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Farmers play a major role in helping Waikato Regional Council protect communitie­s living in or near flood protection schemes.

The regional council is responsibl­e for 612 kilometres of stopbanks which protect 253,000 hectares of land from flooding. It relies on licensees who lease land with stopbanks for grazing, to maintain the structures’ integrity.

Integrated Catchment Management Committee chair Stu Husband said the last two winters had been exceptiona­lly wet, and he thanked the farmers who had kept stock off the stopbanks during this time.

“One way we protect the integrity of the stopbanks is by managing vegetation. It’s good to see farmers keeping stock off the stopbanks in winter, when it is wet, to prevent them from being damaged by trampling.

“Many people do not realise that stopbanks are built and shaped from earth (soil) to a specific design and then grassed for cosmetic and stability purposes. The grass plays an important role to hold the bank together. If the grass is being trampled and turned to mud, parts of the stopbank can become weak causing it to potentiall­y breach or fail in a flood event.

“A stopbank is only as strong as its weakest point.”

The council has 282 grazing licences for stopbank land across the Lower Waikato and Hauraki Plains.

The licensees have the day-to-day responsibi­lity of looking after the river control land, which contains the flood protection assets, including soil conservati­on plantings.

The licences also generate income to help offset some of the maintenanc­e costs for the upkeep of the flood protection scheme.

“Safety is priority one for the community,” says Councillor Husband. “And the land use on the council’s scheme land has to support that priority.

“The council would like to thank those licensees who continue to manage these areas to a high standard or who, in the case of any damage, make the appropriat­e repairs as soon as practical.”

Any surface damage should be repaired and reseeded as soon as conditions permit. Stock should be excluded from the repair area until the pasture is sufficient­ly re-establishe­d.

■ A brochure for licensees is available on the regional council website, and can be downloaded free of charge — go to: tinyurl.com/yd2ouhh4

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