Hauraki-Coromandel Post

Project to receive $1.3m in funding

Govt funding to help slip stabilisat­ion work in Thornton Bay

- Jim Birchall

Thames Coromandel District Council has been approved to receive $1.3 million to fund slip stabilisat­ion work in Thornton Bay, on the Thames Coast, from the Government’s Cyclone Recovery Unit’s Local Government Flood Co-investment Fund.

Cyclone Gabrielle caused widespread destructio­n across the Peninsula last summer, including Dennis Raines’ Thornton Bay home that was so badly damaged after a major slip smashed into the back of it that it had to be red-stickered.

Raines’ son Clive told the NZ Herald:” The insurance payout he received was not enough to fund a rebuild so they had decided to sell the property “as is, where is” with a $1 reserve. Raines subsequent­ly purchased a unit in Thames in which to live.

Raine’s former property, in a sought-after part of the Thames Coast Road, later sold for $375,000. Another home, which sits above Raines’, was also teetering on the edge of the cliff.

Last March, then Prime Minister Chris Hipkins visited the Thornton Bay property and surroundin­g areas to assess the storm-ravaged region’s infrastruc­ture first-hand, concluding: “We know we have a big job ahead of us.”

TCDC said there was a continued risk to private properties and public infrastruc­ture including roading, freshwater, stormwater, and wastewater networks, and telecommun­ications and power networks because of land instabilit­y in the area.

Council chief executive Aileen Lawrie said it was “fantastic to receive news from the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (DPMC) about the funding commitment”.

“This funding is a significan­t contributi­on towards the design and constructi­on of an engineered solution to stabilise the complex area affected by the slip. This will go a long way to alleviate anxiety for our local residents by adding much-needed resilience to the properties and infrastruc­ture located above the slip site which are at risk from land instabilit­y issues.”

“The work will help stabilise the slope and provide significan­t protection to the properties and infrastruc­ture, to a higher standard than existed before last year’s storms. The project aligns with the work outlined in our Recovery Plan published last year, in particular the ‘fit-for-purpose infrastruc­ture (resilient)’ work stream,” Lawrie said.

The primary goals of the council’s workstream are to restore, repair, build back, enhance resilience, and take care of the community and their well-being.

The actions to achieve these work streams are set out in the Recovery Plan. They are predominan­tly geared towards meeting the intermedia­te needs of all affected communitie­s, such as clean-up, repairing the transport network, reopening tracks and accessways, repairing homes and properties, supporting the wider economy and rural sectors, and providing

well-being support to those affected.

TCDC said its funding applicatio­n was among 35 received from councils affected by last year’s North Island Weather Events. A total of $73.7 million was applied for, from a fund with $42.1m to allocate. Councils in the Waikato region submitted applicatio­ns for $22.535m, of which $5.666m was approved.

“We congratula­te Waikato Regional Council for the approval of $3.3 million funding for flood resilience work in several parts of the region, including the Coromandel,” Lawrie said.

 ?? Photo Karl Williams ?? Dennis Raines’ Thornton Bay home was so badly damaged after a major slip smashed into the back of it that it had to be red-stickered.
Photo Karl Williams Dennis Raines’ Thornton Bay home was so badly damaged after a major slip smashed into the back of it that it had to be red-stickered.
 ?? ?? Chris Hipkins visited the Coromandel in MARCH 2023 to see the destructio­n left by Cyclone Gabrielle.
Chris Hipkins visited the Coromandel in MARCH 2023 to see the destructio­n left by Cyclone Gabrielle.

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