Waipa Post

Landowners have say

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Landowners in the west coast harbour catchments are helping Waikato Regional Council develop harbour and catchment plans for Ka¯whia, Aotea and Wha¯ ingaroa/Raglan.

The regional council has been holding workshops with rural landowners, iwi representa­tives, agencies and stakeholde­rs to understand their concerns, aspiration­s and ideas for the harbours and their catchments. The plans will help the council to prioritise the work it does with landowners to improve the health of the catchments, waterways and harbours.

“Our catchment management programme has grown year on year since the west coast zone was establishe­d in 2010, and we have now more funding than ever for landowners to make environmen­tal improvemen­ts on their properties,” says project manager Tracie Dean-Speirs.

Typically this work includes riparian planting and fencing, land retirement, erosion protection and river management.

“We’re getting great uptake by landowners who want to make improvemen­ts on their land, however we do find that demand can exceed the funds available. Therefore it’s important that we direct funding towards work that will make the most difference.”

The council this year secured $1.39 million from the Ministry for Primary Industries’ Hill Country Erosion Fund 2019-2023 for soil conservati­on work in the west coast zone, which includes the harbour catchments. It has also put in an applicatio­n for funding from the Government’s One Billion Trees Programme to help landowners undertake native planting.

The west coast zone has the highest proportion of erosionpro­ne farmland in the Waikato region, and its rivers have high sediment loads. It also has the lowest population (3 per cent).

“These plans will help us get extra funding support, and communitie­s can also use these plans to help get funding from other sources, too,” says Tracie.

Issues, concerns and trends identified at the workshops included declining numbers of shellfish in harbours, coastal erosion and inundation, impacts from increased urban developmen­t, sedimentat­ion, an increase in pest plants and animals, and lack of funding available.

Waikato Regional councillor Fred Lichtwark, who is the chairman of the council’s new Community Restoratio­n Committee, says people want improved water quality, greater biodiversi­ty and more green spaces around harbours and waterways.

Landowner groups are already forming in some parts of the Ka¯ whia harbour catchment.

Councillor­s Stu Kneebone and Andrew Macpherson, who attended the Ka¯whia workshop, say it’s inspiring to see landowners wanting to work together to develop better environmen­tal outcomes for their properties and the whole of the catchment.

Residents and landowners can still have their say via an online survey at waikatoreg­ion.govt.nz/ westcoast-survey.

■ To find out more about harbour and catchment management plans go to waikato.govt.nz/hcmp.

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