Manawatu Guardian

Repair work depletes fund reserves

Impact of Gabrielle has brought it into sharp focus

- Rachel Keedwell From Rachel’s desk Dr Rachel Keedwell is chairwoman of Horizons Regional Council.

. . . many weather events have been chipping away at the reserves, and Gabrielle has cleaned out many schemes for the remaining reserves.

The increasing­ly dry weather is good news for the Horizons river management team — summer means much more progress can be made in repairing flood damage and strengthen­ing our flood protection systems.

Cyclone Gabrielle caused a large amount of flood damage to rivers and the surroundin­g land across the region, but most significan­tly in Tararua and to the Pohangina and Oroua Rivers.

The scale of the damage and the wet winter has meant not all the work has been completed and the team still has a lot of work to do to fix the damage, as well as continuing with business as usual.

Originally, about $9 million worth of flood repair work was identified after Cyclone Gabrielle. Additional weather events added more jobs to the list, increasing the cost of repairs even further.

Some of these were minor fixes, but others were major repairs that required significan­t engineerin­g and design work to establish the best way to fix the issues.

Part of the design and planning work for the repairs included ensuring repairs were done in a way that added resilience to future flooding, rather than just replacing like-for-like and risking the work being washed away. To date, the team is about halfway through the work programme.

To enable all these storm repairs to go ahead, other projects around the region have had timeframes extended to free up staff to work on the more urgent repairs.

These projects include some major works such as the river training structures at the mouth of the Whanganui River, known as Te Pū waha, and climate resilience work programmes in Palmerston North and on the Rangitıkei and Lower Manawatu Rivers.

All these projects were partially funded by the central government agency Ka noa — Regional Economic Developmen­t and Investment Unit.

As I have discussed in previous columns, carrying out all the flood repair work after Gabrielle will exhaust many of the council’s reserve funds for river management.

Areas of rivers that are in Horizons’ river management schemes are rated through targeted rates on the surroundin­g ratepayers, plus a contributi­on from across the region.

These rates would usually enable a build-up of reserves over time to allow repairs after floods, but many weather events have been chipping away at the reserves, and Gabrielle has cleaned out many schemes for the remaining reserves.

This isn’t a total surprise, because we have been watching slowly declining reserve balances across several schemes, but the added impact of Gabrielle has brought it into sharp focus for councillor­s.

Our upcoming Long Term Plan, which will be out for consultati­on in March, has a focus on how we will meet this challenge, and I welcome the discussion­s with the community about all the difficulti­es that are facing us.

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 ?? ?? A digger strengthen­s the bank of the Manawatu¯ River on Te Matai Rd after flood damage.
A digger strengthen­s the bank of the Manawatu¯ River on Te Matai Rd after flood damage.

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