Otago Daily Times

Calls for Meridian to foot erosion repair bill

WAITAKI

- SALLY BROOKER

LANDOWNERS alongside the lower Waitaki River believe Meridian Energy, not them, should fund erosion repairs in 13 places down the river.

A public meeting hosted by Environmen­t Canterbury (ECan) at the Waitaki Bridge hall yesterday attracted about 50 people. Many aired longstandi­ng complaints about Meridian’s inadequate contributi­on to river works.

ECan has proposed $1 million of work to fix erosion damage, caused by high flows last summer, at 13 sites.

ECan coordinate­s engineerin­g works in the river from the Waitaki Dam to the sea. Works are usually paid for by residents in the Lower Waitaki River Rating District, using a funding model based on which landowners benefited most from them.

Meridian pays for 40% of the works in an arrangemen­t decided in the 1990s.

ECan river engineerin­g regional lead Shaun McCracken said the 13 sites were on 11 landowners’ river frontages ‘‘spread all down the river’’.

There had been a lot of discussion about the effect of Meridian’s hydroelect­ricity generation on the lower river, he said.

He urged the meeting to consider both the positive and negative results.

However, several people referred to the lower river as the ‘‘tailgate’’ of Meridian’s hydro system and said the firm was wholly responsibl­e for the river eating up their productive farmland while it made money from the electricit­y it generated.

‘‘We’ve got absolutely no control over our investment in the river,’’ north bank farmer Walter Cameron said.

He wanted ECan to police Meridian’s compliance and believed it was not doing so.

Riverside ratepayer and ECan Lower Waitaki South Coastal Canterbury water zone committee community member Kate White said ECan had been asked to get an independen­t legal opinion on Meridian’s consent.

‘‘If Meridian has to make a bigger contributi­on, it’s good for ECan — it’s more money in their coffers, and they’re being good corporate citizens.’’

One attendee said Meridian should pay the full costs and recoup them across all electricit­y users in New Zealand.

That would be only a tiny amount each, the person said.

Glenavy fishing camp resident

Trevor Hill said excess water came from the entire catchment because runoff was not controlled.

‘‘To suggest just a few people on the edge of the river pay for it is just ridiculous.

‘‘Of course Meridian should pay more. Every time this is brought up, they just bury their heads in the gorse bushes.’’

North bank farmer Gert van’t Klooster wanted the remedial work to start now.

‘‘Where the money comes from, I don’t give a s...,’’ he said.

Mr McCracken said he would report to ECan councillor­s and keep ratepayers informed.

 ?? PHOTO: SALLY BROOKER ?? Contentiou­s issue . . . Environmen­t Canterbury river engineerin­g regional lead Shaun McCracken discusses erosion repairs at a Waitaki Bridge meeting yesterday.
PHOTO: SALLY BROOKER Contentiou­s issue . . . Environmen­t Canterbury river engineerin­g regional lead Shaun McCracken discusses erosion repairs at a Waitaki Bridge meeting yesterday.

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