The Northern Advocate

GMO-free policy not put in plan

Council criticised for excluding statement

- Lindy Laird

There could be a small break in the ring fence meant to keep geneticall­y modified organisms out of Northland’s environmen­t and primary sector.

The decision has groups who fought for 10 years for that GMOproof fence criticisin­g the Northland Regional Council’s decision to exclude its strong Regional Policy Statement (RPS) on GMOs from its proposed Regional Plan.

A year after no-to-GMO policies became operationa­l in Whanga¯rei and Far North Districts’ and NRC legislatio­n, the NRC failed to copy over its stance to its new environmen­t plan.

The overarchin­g Regional Plan — the draft of which received 360 submission­s overall — will encompass, replace and update three outdated water and soil, air and coastal plans. More than 100 of those submission­s referred to the GMOs subject.

The many groups who fought for a regional precaution­ary policy about GMOs are also flummoxed by another NRC decision, to winkle out submission­s on the topic and treat them differentl­y to all others.

They will be heard by the council itself instead of by the independen­t panel of commission­ers which has been hearing all other Regional Plan submission­s. That resolution was made by the council in March.

NRC policy developmen­t manager Ben Lee said the council decided not to include the GMO policy at the time the proposed regional plan was released, as a Federated Farmers NZ case against Northland’s RPS hadn’t been resolved in the Environmen­t Court.

“The council thought that it would be inappropri­ate. Council realised it was legally obliged to consider the GMO but had to make a decision by default,” Lee said.

Principal Environmen­t Court Judge Newhook’s decision on that court case was released in April, with FFNZ soundly losing.

Lee said the decision to exclude the GMO policy from the draft plan was also made because the current council had not been through workshops to bring newer members fully up to speed with the complex issues.

Whanga¯rei and Far North District Councils, both with their own GMO-prohibitin­g policies, have made joint submission against the NRC’s proposed regional plan.

Whanga¯rei District Plan policy and monitoring team leader Melissa McGrath said the council wanted the NRC’s regional plan to be made consistent with WDC’s District Plan GMO provisions.

In response to some suggestion­s it was wrong to exclude the RPS policy on GMOs in the first place, and also sideline submission­s relating to it from the commission­ers’ role, Lee said: “In [the] council’s view, it is very legal.”

Asked if there could be a gap in the region’s GMO-proof fence should the NRC not add its policy to the new Regional Plan, Lee said the council felt there was already a level of security via the Government’s Environmen­tal Protection Authority ( EPA) which had to approve GMO field tests.

That faith in the EPA level of scrutiny has also been the basis of the costly Federated Farmers court cases objecting to territoria­l authoritie­s having their own precaution­ary GMO statements and policies.

GE-Free Te Taitokerau/Northland chairwoman Zelka Grammer said the NRC should be “obliged” to include its policy statement against GMO experiment­ation and use in reviews of any plans.

“Not only is the NRC’s March 2018 resolution to sideline the NRC hearings panel of independen­t commission­ers only on the GMO issue highly questionab­le, many Northland primary producers, whose valuable enterprise­s need protection from GE contaminat­ion, have little faith in the EPA,” Grammer said.

The Regional Plan would be the over-arching document of protection for the essential environmen­t — air, soil and water — and the GMO statement should be embedded in it, she said.

The GMO-related submission will be heard by the full NRC council on October 30. The commission­ers will continue hearing others on October 31.

 ?? PHOTO / FILE ?? Protesters against GMO outside the Northland Regional Council building in Whanga¯rei in 2013.
PHOTO / FILE Protesters against GMO outside the Northland Regional Council building in Whanga¯rei in 2013.

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