Rotorua Daily Post

Wet week, another leak at court

Rotorua court in need of repairs, monitoring for black mould

- Samantha Olley

The Rotorua courthouse needed new repairs this week just days after the Government copped criticism for neglecting the facilities.

The Ministry of Justice started planning an upgrade to the buildings in 2017, and constructi­on was due to start more than a year ago.

Concept plans for a four- year, $85 million to $ 110m overhaul of the District Court and High Court, and neighbouri­ng Hauora House where the Ma¯ori Land Court operates, were being finalised in May this year. But the Rotorua Daily Post Weekend reported last week the Minis

try of Justice was still considerin­g a total rebuild from scratch.

Documents released under the Official Informatio­n Act showed Hauora House’s fire protection, plumbing and electrical systems did not meet

the current building code. It “narrowly avoids being classified as an earthquake-prone building” and is “one of the most under-invested buildings in the ministry property portfolio”, a report stated.

The report also said the District Court and High Court next door were among the busiest in the country, but “the ongoing health, safety and security risk is not acceptable to the ministry”.

In the days after the Rotorua Daily Post Weekend’s exclusive report last week, “exceptiona­lly heavy rainfall” caused “a leak in the Family Court entrancewa­y”, the Ministry of Justice’s commercial and property manager, Fraser Gibbs, confirmed.

“This has now been addressed,” he said in a statement this week.

Leaks in the Family Court entrancewa­y have been a problem for

years, as have others in “a judicial space” but Gibbs said, “reactive repairs” were “always” done.

He also confirmed Rotorua was one of two New Zealand courthouse­s “with identified weathertig­htness issues” that require contractor­s to come in and assess black mould and air quality monthly.

The other is the courthouse, which is

Tauranga getting a $ 100m redesign and announced last year.

Gibbs said at the Rotorua facilities the “installati­on of systems to support building operations had penetrated the roof, resulting in leaks and mould developed in contained areas”.

“This was repaired, the mould was treated, and affected areas fully remediated. As a precaution­ary measure, the air quality continues to be monitored.”

When asked why work to upgrade the ministry’s Rotorua facilities had not yet started, Gibbs said the ministry was “still in the early stages of planning” what the requiremen­ts would be.

“This will help us decide if a new site is needed or we can use the existing site,” he said.

“We must prioritise funding across our large property portfolio — one of the largest in the public sector with 97 buildings across 58 towns and cities.”

Despite the delays, Gibbs said the ministry took the health and safety of its staff, the judiciary and all court participan­ts “seriously”.

The ministry’s current Rotorua site lease is signed to continue for more than 30 years from now.

Gibbs said the cost to exit the current lease was commercial­ly sensitive.

By May, more than $2m had already been spent on scoping work and initial design for a refurbishm­ent at the current site.

rebuild,

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The Rotorua District Court and High Court building. Inset: Ministry of Justice commercial and property manager Fraser Gibbs.
The Rotorua District Court and High Court building. Inset: Ministry of Justice commercial and property manager Fraser Gibbs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand