Te Awamutu Courier

Council urges water engagement

-

Many small water suppliers in the region will be caught up in the proposed changes to standards of drinking water, Waikato Regional Council says.

In its submission on the proposed amendments to the National Environmen­tal Standards for Sources of Human Drinking Water (NES-DW) and the improving the protection of drinking-water sources discussion document, the council has asked the Government to engage with communitie­s and suppliers, so they are aware of compliance requiremen­ts.

At Tuesday’s Strategy and Policy meeting, there was discussion of what the proposed amendments would mean for small water suppliers, including farmers, bach owners and those on small community supplies.

The amendments seek to correct gaps in the activities that pose risk to source water and provide adequate protection to water supplies serving less than 500 people, therefore there will be more registered “water suppliers” under the NES-DW.

The proposals will also require regional councils to map the default source water risk management areas (SWRMA) for all registered drinking water supplies in their region.

Strategy and Policy chairwoman Pamela Storey says the committee approved of the proposed amendments in principle, however more informatio­n was needed, and that informatio­n also had to be shared with those impacted.

“We feel very strongly about the need to provide for the health and wellbeing of our communitie­s.

“But we’re concerned about how this will work in practice. There are many suppliers who will be caught up in this.

“Many farms in this region supply water to farmhouses, and that means they will need to treat those supplies and follow the standards.

“We don’t want this to be overcompli­cated for our rural communitie­s or costs to be too prohibitiv­e, otherwise we will see wholesale noncomplia­nce of a system that is set up to fail.”

As with all the council’s recent submission­s to the Government, it was noted that sufficient resourcing needed to be provided by central government to ensure successful implementa­tion and uptake.

“There will be a cost to the council, to map the water areas and amend plans to align with the proposed amendments. And this cost is inevitably handed down to our ratepayers,” Storey says.

“We want more tools in the toolkit to identify what constitute­s a water supplier, and central government needs to connect closely with communitie­s on this.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand