Horowhenua Chronicle

Landfill closure paused

Protest of six-month delay on tip closing

- Paul Williams

There’s a stink brewing over a Horowhenua District Council (HDC) majority decision this week to pause the official closure of a rubbish dump near Hokio Beach.

The decision to delay closing the Hokio Beach landfill for a further six months flies in the face of expensive consultant reports and the wishes of the community, and has raised the ire of a working party that recommende­d the landfill close this year.

HDC entered into the Levin Landfill Agreement in 2019 in response to the landfill not meeting Resource Management Act consents, and a working group of affected parties and council staff was formed to resolve those issues, in lieu of potential litigation.

Working party project manager Greg Carlyon, who also assisted a parliament­ary commission of inquiry into the landfill 10 years ago, said the decision to delay closure was disappoint­ing.

Carlyon said the working group had worked towards bringing affected parties and the community together to achieve solutions and it was “hugely disappoint­ing” to see their recommenda­tions abandoned.

He said he attended the meeting and was saddened the issue turned political.

David Moore, the Pareraukaw­a iwi delegate to that same working party, said 95 per cent of the 150 respondent­s during a public consultati­on round in January wanted the Levin landfill closed.

“They have been ignored,” he said. Moore said HDC had spent more than $1 million with consultant­s Morrisons Solutions and he couldn’t believe their recommenda­tion to close the landfill in 2022 was also ignored.

After four hours of debate, HDC voted to delay the decision until incoming chief executive Monique Davidson had the opportunit­y to provide her own evaluation on the complex matter.

Davidson starts the job in two weeks and would be expected to have a recommenda­tion back to council within six months.

Moore said it was a “hospital pass” for the incoming CEO, and was also concerned it was due to be revisited around the same time as the local body elections in October.

“It’s just kicking the can down the road for another six months,” he said.

Horowhenua mayor Bernie Wanden and councillor­s Sam Jennings, Wayne Bishop, PiriHira Tukapua, David Allan, Todd Isaac and Ross Brannigan were the seven-tofour majority in favour of the motion, which Bishop moved and Jennings seconded.

Councillor­s Robert Ketu, Christine Mitchell, Victoria

Kaye-Simmons and deputy mayor Jo Mason voted against the motion.

Wanden, who supported the initial recommenda­tion to close the landfill this year, said the council was just too fractured on the issue and he hoped more time would achieve a consensus.

“The process has been exhaustive. The future of the Levin landfill is a complex and difficult matter and something that has been the topic of contention for years . . . the best outcome from tonight was to delay the decision until we’re able to reach a consensus around the table,” he said.

“While we weren’t able to reach a consensus, it was heartening to hear councillor­s discuss the need for a unified focus on waste minimisati­on and how together as a community reducing our solid waste needs to be our priority.”

Horowhenua’s solid waste will continue to go to the Bonny Glen landfill in Marton until a decision is made.

 ?? ?? Pareraukaw­a Moore, 12, from Otaki, ¯ protesting outside Horowhenua District Council.
Pareraukaw­a Moore, 12, from Otaki, ¯ protesting outside Horowhenua District Council.
 ?? ?? David Moore protesting for the immediate closure of the Levin landfill in October.
David Moore protesting for the immediate closure of the Levin landfill in October.
 ?? ?? The landfill on Hokio Beach Rd.
The landfill on Hokio Beach Rd.

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