Bay of Plenty Times

Slip-damaged road to stay closed

Local kaumatua’s submission sways district council

- Alisha Evans

Aslip-damaged road previously used by “rat runners” will remain closed to traffic in the Western Bay of Plenty. Te Puna Station Rd in the rural settlement of Te Puna was damaged by slips in October 2022 and then further eroded by severe weather in January 2023, forcing a 600m section of the road to be closed.

Western Bay of Plenty District Council decided to continue the temporary closure at a projects and monitoring committee meeting on Tuesday.

Councillor Margaret Murraybeng­e said keeping the road closed was a “very bad decision” and it should be reopened.

However, Pirirakau kauma¯tua Neville Bidios wanted the road to remain closed for cultural, ecological and safety reasons.

“We don’t want to see Pukewhanak­e [Pa¯] suffering any more damage, she’s suffered enough.”

The road runs through the Te Hakao Valley, between Te Puna Rd and State Highway 2 alongside the Wairoa River.

At the headland of the valley is the Pukewhanak­e Pa¯, which has been eroded from slips. The wetland below was once an important food source for mana whenua Pirirakau hapu¯.

The pa¯ was also a place where t¯ıpuna (ancestors) were buried and is considered wa¯ hi tapu (sacred), Bidios said.

In submission­s, the public raised concerns Te Puna Station Rd was used by “rat runners” (drivers using it as an alternativ­e route) to avoid congestion on State Highway 2 before the closure and they were worried this would happen again if reopened.

The traffic has now shifted to nearby Clarke Rd, which is causing damage to the road surface.

Traffic on Clarke Rd has jumped from 315 to 956 vehicle movements per day, from December 2021 to May 2023. Of those 956 vehicle movements, 150 were heavy vehicles.

Councillor Don Thwaites asked if the Te Puna Station Rd end of Clarke Rd could be closed for a few hours each day to prevent rat runners. Senior transporta­tion engineer Calum Mclean said it could be done using temporary traffic management but it would likely be expensive.

He suggested a heavy vehicle ban might be a better option.

Murray-benge said Te Puna Station was meant to take heavy traffic but Clarke Rd wasn’t.

“I think we are making a very bad decision. If you close this off you’ll be doing everyone a huge disservice.”

Councillor Rodney Joyce said the slips were not a one-off issue and asked how durable a fix could be. Mclean replied there we two issues: overslips from the pa¯ and washout from the river. The washouts were a symptom of climate change so were expected to increase, he said.

Joyce said opening Te Puna Station Rd would just move the problem of rat runners.

“There is no good answer here, but unfortunat­ely opening an unstable road and sinking more money into it … is not the best option at this stage.”

In August 2023, the council consulted on opening the road. People were asked if they preferred it remain closed or opened for one lane for eastbound vehicles in the short term. Of the 572 responses, 271 wanted it closed and 301 wanted it opened. Long-term, 41 per cent of respondent­s wanted it closed to vehicles and 59 per cent preferred it reopen.

Speaking after the meeting, Pirirakau kauma¯ tua Rawiri Kuka said the hapu¯‘s kaumatua were happy with the decision and supported keeping the road closed.

The council will consider a permanent solution for the road as part of the 2024-34 long-term plan, which will be adopted in September.

Staff would also investigat­e options for Clarke Rd.

— LDR is local body journalism cofunded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

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 ?? Photos / John Borren ?? Te Puna Station Rd will remain closed until the council decides on a permanent solution.
Photos / John Borren Te Puna Station Rd will remain closed until the council decides on a permanent solution.

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