Research and examine some of the solutions to pollution on land and sea
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Taranaki Regional Council – Weather Unit 4
Social Studies Social Organisations and Processes Level 4
� Achievement objective
Understand and demonstrate ways people reshape their social organisations in response to challenge or crisis.
� Learning Activity
Level 4
Students interview a member of a civil defence organisation to find out how people in New Zealand prepare for
and
Section 5 presents recommendations to be implemented in the 2015-2016 monitoring
year.
A glossary of common abbreviations and scientific terms, and a bibliography, are
presented at the end of the report.
1.1.3 The Resource Management Act (1991) and monitoring
The RMA primarily addresses environment ‘effects’ which are defined as positive or
adverse, temporary or permanent, past, present or future, or cumulative. Effects may
arise in relation to:
• the neighbourhood or the wider
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If your day-to-day activities involve the use of water
blasting equipment, you should consider the potential
your activity has to pollute the environment.
What causes pollution?
Poor work practices while water blasting may be
causing some of these common problems:
• Discharges of contaminants including sediment,
paint, oil, heavy metals, chemical cleaners and
organic waste to the ground or stormwater system
• Foaming water in the stormwater system
• Blockage
appropriate to the task which they are
undertaking. The charges are calculated as per the IPENZ method with a multiplier of 2.1. All collection costs incurred in the
recovery of a debt will be added to the amount due. Overdue invoices will incur an interest charge at 12% per annum. All
charges exclude GST. Effective from 1 July 2019.
Schedule 2: Fixed minimum charges for the preparation or change of policy
statement or plans and the processing of resource consents
Request for
period to dispose of several different types of hydrocarbon
exploration and production waste, in accordance with the latest consent. The initial
consent for the Wellington area was subsequently surrendered during the 2011-2012
monitoring year as surrender criteria were deemed to have been satisfied, and all
further activities were covered under the new consent.1
Monitoring of the site will continue until the consents are either successfully
surrendered or expire, at which time contaminant
Act (1991) and monitoring
The Resource Management Act 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 a discharger, and may
include cultural and socio-economic effects;
(b) physical effects on the locality, including landscape, amenity and visual effects
(c) ecosystems, including effects on
performances, garden
festival activities, and once or twice a
helicopter landing.
The lawn has been and continues to be a
huge success. John Goodwin’s foresight
has been well rewarded. Spaciousness.
Thank you John.
Rene Duncan
with quotations and photos from Pat Greenfield’s
book ‘Pukeiti’
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page 3
Christmas Barbeque: 45 members were welcomed by Heather Robson. The chatter and laughter
reflected the longstanding enthusiasm for Pukeiti and the enduring friendships it brings.
capital injection of $700,000 from accumulated funds (not rates)?
No
Comment
I am opposed to spending of $1.2 million on a new lodge. In fact I would go further and ask that the
council consider not replacing the lodge at all, or perhaps replacing it with an open shelter where
people can sit in poor weather. The gardens already has an education centre so there is no public
need for a replacement lodge.
In 10 years of visiting the gardens I have never been able to access the old lodge so I
2015/16-2020/21 (the RLTP or the Plan);
to present a draft revised version of the Plan for the Committee’s consideration and
feedback on any changes the Committee wishes to make, noting that there are a
number of aspects of the Plan which are still evolving;
to seek support of the updated Programme tables within Section 5 of the Plan –
o proposed ‘business as usual’ activities in Section 5.1 (Table 3)
o proposed ‘regionally significant’ activities in Section 5.3 (Table 4) including the
Patea,
Rahotu, Waimate West, Oaonui and Waverley plants in regards to daily volumes or
abstraction rates. However all of these plants were compliant for over 98% of the monitoring
period.
In the 2012-2013 year there were two incidents recorded against STDC in regards to not
having telemetry installed at the Otakeho Stream and Mangawhero Stream intakes. An
abatement notice was issued and STDC are currently addressing the matter at the time of the
preparation of this report with a deadline for