Leden/MacLeod
10. Public Excluded
In accordance with section 48(1) of the Local Government Official Information and
Meetings Act 1987, resolves that the public is excluded from the following part of the
proceedings of the Ordinary Meeting on Tuesday 22 September 2020 for the following
reason/s:
Item 11 - Public Excluded Ordinary Minutes – 11 August 2020
THAT the public conduct of the whole or the relevant part of the proceedings of the
meeting would be likely to result in the …
to dry conditions for
agriculture and hence less demand for the Company’s products.
The monitoring showed that the Company has had no significant impact on air quality in the
vicinity of the plant or on water quality in the Herekawe Stream. No complaint in relation to
the Company’s activities was registered by the Council.
During the year, the Company demonstrated a high level of environmental and
administrative performance.
For reference, in the 2013-2014 year, 60% of consent
simple and convenient form
for general public information and education
purposes. The information contained in this Appendix
also provides general guidance on the best practicable
option for preventing or minimising adverse effects on
the environment of agrichemical spraying. It also
provides a general indication of the nature of the
conditions that might be attached to a resource
consent for the spraying of agrichemicals.
Nothing in this Appendix shall amend
Oil Spill
Beach clean-up
Seashore study
Classifying
Adaptations
page
Curriculum Links
Links with New Zealand curriculum statements
Science Making Sense of the Living World
Achievement objectives and possible learning experiences
Level 1
• observing small plants or animals and reading books about their main functions
• exploring a beach and observing the different plants and animals that live there
Level 2
• establishing some of the
water and to a lesser extent
through feed and contaminated dust. Sheep eat an estimated
125 g of soil per day and cows about 1kg. Wet muddy conditions,
short pasture, feeding out of hay and silage, and consumption
of fodder crops such as turnips and chowmollier can increase
the amount of soil eaten by stock. Where residues are present,
animals that dig or disturb the soil, including pigs, chickens and
bulls, will have increased exposure to organochlorine pesticides.
There are regulatory
report.
1.1.3 The Resource Management Act 1991 and monitoring
The RMA primarily addresses environmental ‘effects’ which are defined as positive or
adverse, temporary or permanent, past, present or future, or cumulative. Effects may
arise in relation to:
(a) the neighbourhood or the wider community around an activity, and may include
cultural and social-economic effects;
(b) physical effects on the locality, including landscape, amenity and visual effects;
(c) ecosystems,
duties required to hear and decide the application to one or more hearing
commissioners who are not members of this Council.
[Please tick if you do wish to make a request otherwise leave blank]
Note: Such a request may be made [in writing] up to 5 working days after close of submissions. If you do make a request under section
100A of the Resource Management Act 1991, you will be liable to meet or contribute to the costs of the hearings commissioner
or commissioners.
or all, of the Yarrow Stadium grounds to developers for sub-division as it is in a great area, also the various other community sports grounds such as the Netball courts
beside the Waiwhakaiho River could be sold. You could charge a small fee for parking at the multi-sports hub when it is finished. Some of the larger businesses in Taranaki such as TSB, Todd
energy, Fonterra, etc. could be approached for sponsorship of the stadium and smaller businesses for the infrastructure of the surrounding
Provides additional habitat and greater connectivity with other Key Native
Ecosystems such as the Waiwiri Wetlands and other protected habitats in
this area.
Sustainability Positive Key ecological processes still influence the site and with appropriate
management, it can remain resilient to existing or potential threats. The
site will have the additional benefit of being formally protected.
Threats to ecological
values
Potential
threat
Comment
Pest animals High
firm, not loose
Blanking
Not all of the poles planted will strike. 100% survival of
a planting is rare; 90% after the first year is a good
survival rate. Sometimes due to adverse conditions such
as cattle damage, possum browse or summer drought,
survival drops to 50% or less.
Where mortality is heavy, it’s essential to blank (re-
plant) next winter. If this isn’t done, tree spacing won’t
be sufficiently dense for roots to anchor the soil, and
Fig. 2 A pruned stand of poplars
slips or