Marlborough Express - Weekend Express

Council loses appeal over wilding pines

- Local Democracy Reporting is Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.

The Marlboroug­h District Council has lost an appeal against an Environmen­t Court decision on its pest management plan and wilding pines on a former councillor’s property.

Former Marlboroug­h councillor Geoff Evans took the council to the Environmen­t Court to stop the council taking over control of wilding pines on his family property Stronvar Station.

Stronvar, at the headwaters of the Waihopai, had been in Evans’ family ownership since the 1940s. Immediatel­y north, in the Wye Catchment, the former Marlboroug­h Catchment Board planted mainly contorta pine – the most “aggressive” pest species. This was done for erosion control over a 370ha block, between 1959 and the mid-1980s. But over the years they spread to cover 7000ha, including the fragile “uppermost slopes” of Stronvar.

Evans wanted a containmen­t control zone for wilding pines on his property reinstated after the council removed it from its Regional Pest Management Plan (RPMP) in 2020.

Under that plan, the council proposed to play a leadership role in “facilitati­ng, establishi­ng, and supporting” collaborat­ive programmes that carried out the on-ground management of pest conifers in partnershi­p with landowners. The council would also employ someone to inspect land to ensure occupiers were meeting their obligation­s, monitor the effectiven­ess of control, use administra­tive powers under the Biosecurit­y Act (BSA) as a management agency.

Evans told the Environmen­t Court in 2022 he had concerns the council’s pest control methods could damage the indigenous vegetation establishe­d amongst the conifers.

The Environmen­t Court ruled in his favour in a decision released in March 2023, and directed the council to insert a site-led management plan for wilding pest conifers at Stronvar.

The council appealed this decision, following a debate between councillor­s about whether they should be spending more money on legal fees. The appeal was heard before Justice Helen McQueen in

August last year, and the High Court judgment was released on December 21.

The decision said the council had appealed on the basis that the Environmen­t Court made errors of law which “materially affected its findings”.

The council argued seven errors of law, such as that the Environmen­t Court “lacked jurisdicti­on” to direct the inclusion of a site-led programme in the RPMP, that it misapplied the BSA and the National Policy Direction for Pest Management 2015, and that the council did not consult on an amendment to the RPMP directed by the decision.

Evans opposed the council’s appeal and said the Environmen­t Court made no errors of law. Justice McQueen agreed – and found all seven “errors of law” alleged by the council did not stack up, therefore dismissing the appeal.

Justice McQueen directed the judgment be provided to the Environmen­t Court, so it could make directions for the “further progressio­n” of the matter. The council was also ordered to pay Evans’ costs.

 ?? SCOTT HAMMOND ?? Former Marlboroug­h District councillor Geoff Evans at his family farm, Stronvar Station, in 2018.
SCOTT HAMMOND Former Marlboroug­h District councillor Geoff Evans at his family farm, Stronvar Station, in 2018.

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