Whanganui Chronicle

Whoa! Hold your horses

Horse trainer, residents appeal rezoning

- Laurel Stowell

Aplan change that could convert 40ha of rural land to a site for timber processing and a large railyard has been appealed and is headed to mediation in the Environmen­t Court.

The Rangitıkei District Council wants to rezone 217ha of land between SH1, Makirikiri Rd and the main trunk rail line from rural to industrial.

It was prompted by interest from Rangitıkei Forestry Holdings in establishi­ng a bioforestr­y operation and logging yard in the area near Marton Junction.

Submission­s were made and heard by independen­t commission­er Robert Schofield in June last year. His decision was released in August.

He zoned only 40ha of the 217ha industrial, subject to additional objectives, policies and rules.

Fraser Auret has appealed the decision. His Fraser Auret Racing business trains horses on land that was formerly Marton Racecourse.

His submission said thoroughbr­ed racehorses were very sensitive to noise and dust and keeping them there would be incompatib­le with nearby industry.

His appeal was joined by the Interested Residents of Marton group (IROM). Neither Auret nor resident Simon Loudon wanted to comment on their stance.

The matter is awaiting mediation in the Environmen­t Court this year, Rangitıkei District Council’s Peter Beggs said, and the council wants the rezoning to suit everyone.

“The council is committed to

ensuring the Marton Rail Hub is beneficial for the community and iwi, and is working closely with all parties to address concerns raised in the appeal to the District Plan Change,” he said.

Also in August the project got $9.1 million funding from Government’s Covid-19 recovery fund, administer­ed by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment Provincial Developmen­t Unit.

The council is to add $225,000 funding for the plan change and $525,000 for road and rail access. Rangitıkei Forestry Holdings is to contribute $500,000 and provide a debarker.

NZ Bio Forestry wants to use world-leading technology to convert wood product into bioplastic at the site, and a sawmill and plywood factory have also been talked of. The rail siding would be a public one that other companies can use.

The project is directed by the council’s Jess McIlroy, with Paul Bayly as project manager. It has a board of eight, chaired by Beggs. The others are councillor­s Dave Wilson and Nigel Belsham and mayor Andy Watson. They are joined by Te Rūnanga o Nga-Wairiki Ngāti Apa chairman Pahia Turia and advisers Catriona McKay from the Provincial Developmen­t Unit, engineer Michael Kerr and Dr David Warburton, a former chief executive of the Whanganui District Council and Auckland Transport.

Many Rangitıkei people are keen for the jobs the complex will provide, and there has also been huge interest from companies, Watson said.

“It’s incredibly exciting.”

The council has commission­ed WSP Opus to make a comprehens­ive developmen­t plan. It will consider environmen­tal factors, usage and impact and is about two months away from completion. It may set the appellants’ concerns at rest. They may well say you have answered our concerns, and they could stop there or go to an Environmen­t Court hearing.”

The council continues to work on the project while it awaits the WSP plan.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Consultant­s assess the proposed site for a Marton rail hub in February.
Photo / Supplied Consultant­s assess the proposed site for a Marton rail hub in February.
 ??  ?? Peter Beggs
Peter Beggs

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