Bay of Plenty Times

Music festival plan gets cool reception

Plans for the event could break noise and parking rules

- Al Williams

A multi-day youth music festival that could attract thousands to Whangamata¯ over Christmas and the new year has received opposition from authoritie­s.

Ollie Events Ltd has applied for a restricted discretion­ary resource consent for a two-day, outdoor, alcoholfre­e youth festival to be held on December 30 and 31 — with alternativ­e dates of January 1-2 or January 2-3 — for up to 6000 at Aickin Road Sports Reserve for five years.

Oliver James Hobson and Kim Oliver Hobson, listed as directors, submitted a 200-page applicatio­n.

Correspond­ence in the report goes back to 2022, when Thamescoro­mandel District Council (TCDC) confirmed it had been working with an event organiser that was applying for a one-off resource consent for a music event at the reserve.

In its letter of applicatio­n, dated March 14, Planners Plus director Tracy Lamason said Ollie Events had amended its proposal following an independen­t commission­er’s decision on September 22, 2023, to publicly notify the applicatio­n.

That included an updated site plan and a noise assessment, while the five-year consent term would provide more certainty for the applicant.

The council said the outdoor event would not meet the permitted standards as it would exceed the permitted noise level of 40 decibels on the site boundaries from 10pm to 12.10am and a 70DBA maximum noise level would occur for a consecutiv­e period of more than 24 hours. A humming refrigerat­or is measured at 40 DBA, conversati­on at 80 DBA and lawnmowers record 95 DBA.

The council also said the event could exceed rules related to the number of vehicles allowed.

In a letter to Ollie Events dated April 5, council’s developmen­t planning team leader Katy Dimmendaal said it had decided to notify the public of the applicatio­n, which required a deposit charge of $15,000 for the council to initiate the process.

Louise Cowan, of SLR Consulting, in a report to TCDC, noted the noise levels proposed were to be 95 DBA when measured 25m from a stage. When measured at the boundaries of adjacent sites, noise levels would be 75 to 80 DBA and were well above the maximum levels provided for and did not comply.

The festival also did not comply as it was proposed to operate over two days commencing at 3pm and finishing about 33 hours later.

With set-up occurring two days prior and pack down one day after, the event would be occurring for longer than 24 hours.

In terms of parking, the standards specified that where the site only had frontage to a local or collector road, there were no more than 100 trips a day measured in equivalent car units, or where the site only had frontage to local roads, there were no more than 250 trips a day, also measured in equivalent car units.

The proposed site for the festival had frontage to Lincoln and Aickin roads (local roads) as well as Martyn Rd (urban collector road).

Based on 15 per cent of patrons being dropped off and an average 2.5 people per vehicle, the proposal might result in 705 trips (360 cars) a day.

The site is about 350m northwest of Whangamata¯ town centre and is used for cricket during summer and rugby in winter, it has grass embankment­s on the perimeter broken up by clubrooms and netball courts along the northeaste­rn boundary with cricket nets and a Scout Hall on the southwest boundary.

The festival would be alcohol-free and people could not come and go from the event. Toilet facilities, food and non-alcoholic facilities, water drinking stations, first aid and crew parking would be provided for.

Ollie Events had provided an event management plan including crowd safety and security management, lighting, fencing, toilets, rubbish and recycling.

It would employ 51 operationa­l staff with a contingenc­y of seven additional staff if required.

In its applicatio­n, Ollie Events said while the District Plan permitted a total of 1000 people in a recreation active zone for an event, its chosen site was more than 3ha and large enough to cater for events of the size proposed.

Access would be controlled by a comprehens­ive traffic management plan and implemente­d by a traffic management company.

That included a proposed bus route to serve the main areas of the town.

It concluded the actual movement of vehicles associated with the festival would have less than a minor effect in terms of the ongoing operation and safety of the surroundin­g network, assisted by the traffic management plan.

The number of people attending an event did not necessaril­y influence how much noise would be generated for neighbours, the applicatio­n said.

An attached noise report recommende­d amplified music should not exceed a measured level of 95 DBA when measured 25m from the stage, sound checks not to exceed 30 minutes and 85 DBA, and that the surroundin­g community be advised of the event via a letter box drop a minimum of seven days before the event.

In conclusion, Ollie Events submitted the short-term nature of the event and proposed event hours would ensure the character and amenity of the surroundin­g environmen­t would be maintained and the environmen­tal effects would be less than minor.

Kim Hobson, in the event management plan, said the ticketed youth event would accommodat­e a range of New Zealand music artists and provide entertainm­ent for a youth demographi­c audience. Ages would be restricted to 16 to 19-year-olds.

Submission­s close at 5pm next Friday.

 ?? ?? An event organiser is seeking to hold a multi-day youth music festival at Aickin Road Sports Reserve in Whangamata¯ during the festive period.
An event organiser is seeking to hold a multi-day youth music festival at Aickin Road Sports Reserve in Whangamata¯ during the festive period.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand