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Council meeting minutes 21 May 2019

page Doc# 2259610-v1 Minutes of the Ordinary Meeting of the Taranaki Regional Council, held Taranaki Regional Council Chambers, 47 Cloten Road, Stratford, on Monday 21 May 2019 at 10.30am Present Councillors D N MacLeod (Chairperson) M J Cloke M P Joyce D L Lean (Deputy Chairperson) C L Littlewood (via Zoom) M J McDonald D H McIntyre B K Raine N W Walker (via Zoom) C S Williamson Attending

Policy & Planning minutes November 2018

page Doc# 2160071-v1 Minutes of the Policy and Planning Committee Meeting of the Taranaki Regional Council, held in the Taranaki Regional Council Chambers, 47 Cloten Road, Stratford, on Tuesday 20 November 2018 at 10.30am. Members Councillors N W Walker (Committee Chairperson) M P Joyce C L Littlewood D H McIntyre B K Raine D L Lean (ex officio) D N MacLeod (ex officio) Representative Ms E Bailey (Iwi Representative) Members

Minutes

page Doc# 1821243-v1 Minutes of Ordinary Meeting of the Taranaki Regional Council, held in the Taranaki Regional Council chambers, 47 Cloten Road, Stratford, on Monday 20 February 2017 at 10.30am. Present Councillors D N MacLeod (Chairperson) M J Cloke M G Davey M P Joyce D L Lean (Deputy Chairperson) C L Littlewood M J McDonald D H McIntyre B K Raine N W Walker C S Williamson Attending Messrs B G Chamberlain

Poplars and willows for fodder

utilised : � Leaf fall � Prunings � Thinnings Leaf fall Mature poplars and willows shed a large quantity of leaves in autumn and early winter i.e. April to June. Exact time and duration of leaf-fall depends on which variety is planted. Once trees are established, at about five years of age, leaf fall provides at least 60 kg of dry matter per tree. Table 1 compares the quality of poplar and willow foliage with some other feeds commonly used on farms. Fig 1 Autumn leaf fall from poplars DSIR

Report 2013-2014

unless the activity is expressly allowed for by resource consent or a rule in a regional plan, or it falls within some particular categories set out in Section 14. The Council determined that the application to take groundwater fell within Rule 49 of the Regional Freshwater Plan for Taranaki (RFWP) as the rate and daily volume of the groundwater abstraction might exceeded that of the permitted activity (Rule 48). Rule 49 provides for groundwater abstraction as a controlled activity, subject

SOE2022 Recreational use

forecast the contamination risk of bathing waters, based on preceding rainfall volumes and/or river flows. As the Council collects more data, we will be able to explore opportunities to develop a rainfall risk model to give real time predictions of water contamination risk. In the meantime, the public is advised to check the latest testing results on the LAWA or Council websites, consider whether there’s been heavy rain during the last three days, and avoid murky

Inhalable Particulate PM25 Programme Report 2020-2021

Comparison to WHO guidelines 5 3.3 Temporal Patterns 7 4 Trend Analysis 8 5 Discussion 10 6 Future Monitoring at Central School 11 7 Recommendations 12 Bibliography and references 13 List of tables Table 1 WHO guidelines for PM2.5 monitoring 1 Table 2 PM2.5 air quality summary statistics, based on daily means 5 Table 3 Number of days falling into environmental performance indicator category each year of monitoring 6 List of figures Figure 1 Overview of the