Rotorua Daily Post

Our lake will not be put at risk

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Rotorua Lakes Council agrees Te Rotorua nui-a-Kahumatamo­moe (Lake Rotorua) is a taonga that must be protected.

There’s been considerab­le talk about the council’s wastewater treatment plant upgrade and particular­ly the recovered water discharge proposal that had design input from a Ma¯tauranga Ma¯ori panel following considerab­le consultati­on and engagement.

It’s important to acknowledg­e people’s views and also important to deal in facts.

We would not propose a system that put the lake or public at risk. Protecting water quality, cultural values, the environmen­t and public health has underpinne­d several years of consultati­on and engagement that influenced the current proposal. Iwi and hapu¯, regional council, the Environmen­t ministry, scientists and other experts have worked with the council since 2013. It’s been a thorough process looking at all options, working through cultural aspects to arrive at a most preferred option.

There is a mispercept­ion that the council plans to pump sewage into the lake. That is untrue.

The proposed upgrade would treat wastewater to an extremely high standard, removing pollutants like nitrogen and phosphorus and disinfecti­ng bacteria like E.coli. The recovered water will be clean and would not pollute the lake.

There’s a mispercept­ion we can keep dischargin­g in the forest. This isn’t a sustainabl­e option for several reasons, including cultural concerns. It is also resulting in ground over-saturation that’s detrimenta­l to trees, making it an unreliable filtering system, adding to pollutants entering the Puarenga. We have ongoing easement in the forest but not ongoing resource consent and have been unable to find a suitable land-based discharge alternativ­e.

Dave Donaldson Deputy mayor Rotorua

Wasteful ways

Recently we have had the ravings of the likes of Sir David Attenborou­gh about the end of the world as we know it because of the use of fossil fuels and plastic dumping.

Well, I’m of a generation that can remember when we walked or cycled to school, milk came in glass bottles that were returned for refilling, we drank water from the tap not sucked on plastic bottles, we used the phone in the call box down the road to phone our girlfriend­s — not some device that needs to be replaced every two years, no TV and if it was, it was made here in NZ and came in a wooden cabinet.

Tools were bought and made here or in USA or UK that lasted a lifetime — not cheap tools that end up in the tip after a couple of uses.

Same with toys or any other commodity you can think of. I still have Meccano, Hornby Dublo and Dinky Toys more than 50 years old that still entertain my grandchild­ren.

What is my point? Well, for a start, perhaps the parents who own SUVs who transport their kids to and from school desist and make them walk or cycle, then I will give up driving my old-school, gasguzzlin­g V8. Andy Watson Rotorua

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