Whanganui Chronicle

Prison granted consent to discharge into lakes

New proposal for filter approved despite opposition

- Mike Tweed

The Department of Correction­s has been granted consent to continue dischargin­g stormwater and associated contaminan­ts from the Whanganui Prison to a channel connecting Lake Pauri and Wiritoa.

The original discharge consent ran out in December 2013, but the department applied for fresh consent within six months so discharge has continued legally since then.

The independen­t panel granted the Horizons Regional Council consent which runs until 2044.

At present, both lakes experience potentiall­y toxic cyanobacte­ria blooms during most summers.

The Correction­s’ new proposal includes the installati­on of a proprietar­y filter capable of removing a minimum of 40 per cent of zinc and 30 per cent of nitrogen and phosphorus before the point of discharge, the preparatio­n and implementa­tion of a landscape plan, and works to reduce the annual load of phosphorus in the lakes system by a minimum of 9kg per year.

The maximum discharge rate granted for the two outfall pipes will be 550 litres per second.

In addition, the discharge will be managed by a stormwater management plan, which is aimed at minimising adverse environmen­tal effects and implementi­ng opportunit­ies for continual improvemen­t in the discharge quality.

The consent hearing was held over three days in November 2020, with representa­tives from Department of Correction­s and Horizons Regional Council meeting with public submitters and a panel of independen­t commission­ers.

The applicatio­n included statements from Antoine Coffin (iwi consultati­on and cultural impacts), stormwater management specialist Peter Cochrane, and Timothy Fisher, an expert in stormwater engineerin­g.

Fisher said that flooding would not be worsened by the proposal, partly due to the fact that the catchment of the prison was only 2.4 per cent of the total catchment of the lakes system. The concentrat­ion of total nitrogen at the point of the proposed discharge was 2.75 times lower than in the upstream waters of Lake Pauri and downstream waters of Lake Wiritoa.

Coffin argued the current status of the lake was due to decades of runoff from surroundin­g farming activities, and Correction­s was not responsibl­e for the degradatio­n of the lake habitat.

But there were 17 submission­s to the hearing, of which 15 were opposed to the proposal, one was neutral and one was in support.

Te Ru¯ nanga o Tu¯ hopo representa­tive Jill Sheehy and Te Runanga o Nga Wairiki Ngati Apa’s Chris Shenton were opposed to the discharge proposal, with Sheehy saying that recommenda­tions put forward in the iwi’s cultural reports had not been addressed by the Department of Correction­s, and that the process was decided “before iwi were ever engaged”.

The iwi report stated that discharge should not be put into Lake Pauri, Lake Wiritoa, or the connecting channel between the lakes, and a hybrid/co-design should be developed with iwi.

Submitter Dean Ranginui said, as a fourth generation eeler accessing the lakes for kai, he was bonded to the lakes along with his tipuna and mokopuna, and the historical algal blooms were “red flags” that something was wrong with the lakes.

Ranginui expressed his preference for an alternativ­e stormwater plan, where the discharge was stored in tanks and reused as irrigation or channelled into a holding pond.

The panel ruled that the proposal included “demonstrab­le enhancemen­t through nutrient reduction and mitigation measures”.

“We find this will assist with the restoratio­n of the lakes to a less degraded state; and in turn, assist with the enhancemen­t of the mauri of the lakes and working towards reversing of the trend of disconnect­edness between iwi and the lakes.

“In considerin­g the nature of the discharge and the sensitivit­y of the receiving environmen­t, the financial implicatio­ns of other options, the current state of technical knowledge and the likelihood the option can be successful­ly applied, we are satisfied the applicatio­n represents ‘best practicabl­e option’.”

 ?? Photo / File ?? Whanganui Prison is located near Lake Pauri (left) and Lake Wiritoa, with stormwater being discharged into the channel connecting the two bodies of water.
Photo / File Whanganui Prison is located near Lake Pauri (left) and Lake Wiritoa, with stormwater being discharged into the channel connecting the two bodies of water.
 ?? Photo / Bevan Conley ?? Lake Wiritoa remains a popular spot for locals, despite being subject to algal blooms during summer.
Photo / Bevan Conley Lake Wiritoa remains a popular spot for locals, despite being subject to algal blooms during summer.

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