Policy & Planning agenda February 2021
Policy & Planning Committee agenda February 2021
Policy & Planning Committee agenda February 2021
Taranaki Regional Council meeting agenda April 2020
page 07/23- #650412 Page 5 of 8 4.4 State the relevant regional plan[s] and rule[s] numbers this application falls under. Regional Fresh Water Plan Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ Regional Air Quality Plan Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ Regional Coastal Plan Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ Regional Soil Plan Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ No Specific Rule [eg,
page 07/23- #650412 Page 5 of 8 4.4 State the relevant regional plan[s] and rule[s] numbers this application falls under. Regional Fresh Water Plan Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ Regional Air Quality Plan Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ Regional Coastal Plan Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ Regional Soil Plan Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ No Specific Rule [eg,
environment be prohibited unless there is an unforeseen emergency such as a tree falling on a pipe but that said, all risks should be assessed and prevented. It is unacceptable in this day and age to be discharging contaminants to fresh or seawater. There are always alternatives such as grey and black water systems or controlled evaporation. As a society we use far too much clean water to ‘wash away’ contaminants. This attitude has to stop. In most places around the world they wouldn’t think of
Appendix I Resource consents held by South Taranaki District Council (For a copy of the signed resource consent please contact the TRC Consents department) page Water abstraction permits Section 14 of the RMA stipulates that no person may take, use, dam or divert any water, unless the activity is expressly allowed for by a resource consent or a rule in a regional plan, or it falls within some particular categories set out in Section 14. Permits authorising the
Resource consents held by WestSide New Zealand (For a copy of the signed resource consent please contact the TRC Consents department) page Water abstraction permits Section 14 of the RMA stipulates that no person may take, use, dam or divert any water, unless the activity is expressly allowed for by a resource consent or a rule in a regional plan, or it falls within some particular categories set out in Section 14. Permits authorising the abstraction of water are
spotted by a TRC environment officer enjoying the rain at the top of Denbigh Road this week. It's so cool to see them venturing out of the national park more and more. Well done to farmers and landowners around the boundary - your trapping efforts are making it safer for them to do so. (Towards Predator Free) 1.3K 47 Executive, Audit & Risk Committee - Financial and Operational Report 13 page Common Seal 16. The following transactions were executed under Common
hydrometric equipment $680.90 per year Tawhiti hydrometric equipment (lower) $1,730.30 per year Tawhiti hydrometric equipment (upper) $1,070.30 per year Waingongoro hydrometric equipment $830.50 per year Waitaha hydrometric equipment $8,091.60 per year Rain Gauge Calibration $336.60 per deployment Chlorine Meter $20.80 per use Drone $132.00 per day Multi-parameter Field Meter $112.20 per day Haehanga hydrometric equipment $2,383.20 per year EXPLANATION This scale of charges is used to
systems away from direct surface water disposal to land irrigation. Analysis comparing data to NPS-FM NOF attributes showed that 52 of the 67 sites (78%) reported five-year median MCI scores above the national bottom line (≥90), with 15 sites (22%) falling below this threshold, indicating severe organic pollution or nutrient enrichment. Most sites (29, or 43%) were in band C, suggesting moderate pollution, while 12 sites (18%) were in band A, indicating pristine conditions. For SQMCI, 41