Waikato Herald

Closed track a ‘real problem' says MP

Famous beach important to region’s tourist reputation

- Al Williams

Coromandel MP Scott Simpson has taken a swing at the Department of Conservati­on over the ongoing closure of Cathedral Cove. In Parliament this month, Simpson said DOC had been ”so slow to get that track open”.

Simpson told the house DOC had a “very slow timetable”.

DOC said it would not be responding to Simpson’s parliament­ary speech.

Hauraki-waikato-taranaki regional director Tinaka Mearns said DOC was continuing to work towards a June deadline set by Minister of Conservati­on Tama Potaka.

Last month, DOC announced the first steps to restore walking access to Coromandel’s Cathedral Cove Te Whanganui-a-hei, while Potaka said he hoped to have the walking tracks reinstated before next summer.

DOC was now looking at rerouting the walking tracks, as the existing tracks were still unsafe.

The track to the famous beach — renowned for its natural rock arch feature — was severely damaged by extreme weather events last year. Since then, walking tracks to the cove have been closed.

“I think it’s beholden upon the Department of Conservati­on to actually get their act together, to pull finger, and to actually get ahead of

the Minister’s timetable and see if we can get the track open sooner,” Simpson said on Tuesday.

“There was some cyclone damage to the pathway that takes people down to the beach from the lookout, down quite a long and windy walk,

and some damage has occurred, but, by engineerin­g standards and by any other measure, it’s not that big a job to get it fixed.”

Labour’s MP for Christchur­ch Central, Duncan Webb, told the house Simpson should talk to his minister

Tama Potaka.

Simpson Potaka visited January 2.

“We went and had a look and then about a week or so later . . . we had the Minister for Tourism, the Hon said on

Matt Doocey, come to visit and have a look for himself.

“Those ministers understand how important that track is, not only to locals in the Coromandel, in Hāhei, but how important it is to our internatio­nal tourist reputation and our total internatio­nal tourist package.

“There are literally tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of people who want to come and walk that track and experience the beautiful Cathedral Cove experience, who currently cannot do it.

“It wasn’t going to be until September of this year that they were even going to make a decision about what might eventually happen at the cove,” he said.

“Well, thanks to the good work of Tama Potaka, the new Minister of Conservati­on, I was delighted, on behalf of local businesses, tourist operators, and also the hundreds of thousands of visitors who want to come and see Cathedral Cove, that he has now committed to ensuring that his Department of Conservati­on officials have on his desk, in June, their plan for getting the track reopened for the coming summer season.”

He said it was important because many local businesses did most of their annual turnover during the summer months.

“When we don’t have a good summer period, there isn’t an opportunit­y for those businesses to make that revenue up any other way. So having the track closed is a real problem.”

 ?? ?? Coromandel’s Cathedral Cove repairs have been too slow, MP Scott Simpson says.
Coromandel’s Cathedral Cove repairs have been too slow, MP Scott Simpson says.
 ?? ?? Coromandel MP Scott Simpson.
Coromandel MP Scott Simpson.

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