Taupo & Turangi Herald

Tongariro redress on table

Crown, iwi in Treaty negotiatio­ns over national park

- Wena Harawira

Treaty negotiatio­ns for Tongariro National Park have resumed between the Crown and the central North Island iwi of Ngāti Tūwharetoa. Treaty Negotiatio­ns Minister Andrew Little and Conservati­on Minister Willow-Jean Prime met iwi representa­tives to discuss cultural redress in Taupō last week.

An agreement is crucial to the completion of the comprehens­ive settlement between Tū wharetoa and the Crown.

Other iwi and hapū with interests in the park are also expected to join the negotiatio­ns.

Tongariro National Park is the country’s oldest and has seen more than a million visitors a year.

It was establishe­d in 1907 after years of controvers­y.

Ngāti Tūwharetoa leaders opposed the peaks of Tongariro, Ngāuruhoe and Ruapehu being the subject of a deed of settlement with the Crown in 1887.

However, the then paramount chief of Tūwharetoa, Horonuku Te Heuheu Tū kino, saw it as a partnershi­p with Queen Victoria to preserve the sacred nature of the mountains and his people’s associatio­n with them.

But in its 2013 report on the National Park District Inquiry, the Waitangi Tribunal found the Crown had not always honoured its obligation­s to protect and preserve

the mountains. The role of Tūwharetoa in the governance and management of the park was “diluted” and eventually abolished.

Commercial developmen­t caused physical and cultural degradatio­n of the environmen­t.

More than 4047ha (10,000 acres) of iwi land was taken for defence purposes between 1914 and 1973, then transferre­d to the Tongariro National Park when it was no longer required and without compensati­on.

Today, a significan­t portion of the tribe’s ancestral lands remains in the conservati­on estate.

Little told Te Ao News negotiatio­ns would focus on cultural redress and

might include discussion­s on the future governance and management of the park.

He had no comment on Ngāti Tū wharetoa opposing the liquidatio­n and sale of assets of Ruapehu Alpine Lifts (now in liquidatio­n) and said the negotiatio­ns weren’t intended to “directly address any existing commercial activity on the maunga” but might look at a framework of regulation­s on the matter.

Kānoa, the regional economic developmen­t and investment unit for MBIE, would continue to work with iwi and hapū throughout the liquidatio­n of RAL assets.

A spokespers­on for Regional Developmen­t

Minister Kieran McNulty said Kānoa would also manage bids for the ski field and this would inform advice to the Cabinet on the next steps.

Meanwhile, in addition to concerns over Ruapehu Lifts, regional officials are worrying over whether seriously seismic unsound The Chateau and its attached businesses in local towns can be revived.

Some estimate the cost of ending the lease is uncertain but may be up to $100 million.

In the meantime, maintenanc­e and repair of the empty buildings is costing the Department of Conservati­on $150,000 to $200,000 a month.

 ?? ?? Tongariro became the first national park in New Zealand in 1907.
Tongariro became the first national park in New Zealand in 1907.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand