changes to your site and your
daily practices you will be contributing to a pollution
free environment for us all to enjoy both now and in the
future.
For further advice or information contact:
Taranaki Regional Council, Private Bag 713
Stratford
Ph: 06 765 7127 Fax: 06 765 5097
Pollution Hotline: 0800 736 222
www.trc.govt.nz
Environmental Plan scope covers all the farm accept the vermiculture and composting pads,
the wetlands and the treatment ponds. The range of geology and topography in the catchment
requires specific management practices and these are shown in the operating plans listed below.
5.0 Climate
The climate in the Uruti Valley is generally mild and temperate. Rainfall is high, even in the driest
months of the year, compared to other parts of the region (See Table). Rainfall is measured and
recorded
page
Relationships between intensive
dairy stocking rates and soil
ecosystem health and biodiversity
in Taranaki pastures
Report 2009
ISSN: 0114-8184 (Print) Taranaki Regional Council
ISSN:1178-1467 (Online) Private Bag 713
Document:709200 STRATFORD
March 2010
page
2
page
Executive summary
Agricultural intensification is aimed at increasing farm profitability and productivity. It
typically involves increases in fertiliser use,
ADMINISTRATION OFFICER
DECEMBER 2017
page
NEW WAYS OF BEING
There have been big changes here at TEMO aside from the new team. The Taranaki CDEM Group will be moving from a central
operational model to a more localised operational model with each District Council in the region taking on responsibilities for
operations
page
Freshwater contact recreational
water quality at Taranaki sites
State of the Environment
Monitoring Report
2016-2017
Technical Report 2017-01
ISSN: 0114-8184 (Print) Taranaki Regional Council
ISSN: 1178-1467 (Online) Private Bag 713
Document: 1898428 (Word) STRATFORD
Document: 1899748 (Pdf)
July 2017
page
90
Waitara River at the town wharf, Waitara 4.2.14
drawn from surface water
downstream of a sheep dip or from a bore located within 300
metres of a sheep dip.
Sources of further information
Sheep Dip Factsheet 1:
Sheep dips in New Zealand
Sheep Dip Factsheet 3:
Arsenic
Sheep Dip Factsheet 4:
Checklist for landowners and occupiers
All Sheep Dip Factsheets are available on
www.envirolink.govt.nz. Project number 820-TSDC59
Your Regional Council’s contaminated sites officer, District
Council environmental health officer or
can not be disposed of according to
label instructions, contact your local Regional Council hazardous waste advisor for guidance.
13. DISPOSAL CONSIDERATIONS
Product which is surplus or spoiled should be disposed of by burying with other organic material on
the active tip face of an appropriately managed landfill or buried within the biologically active layer
of soil elsewhere within a secure area. Ensure that a good covering of earth is applied over the bait
immediately to
hazardous/dangerous and could pose Health and Safety
risks if inspections are undertaken without permission and supervision of
the submitter. They seek that clauses 10.1 and 10.2 be amended to
acknowledge that the Taranaki Regional Council has a duty as a Person
Conducting Business or Undertaking under the Health and Safety at Work
Act, in particular the duty to consult, coordinate and cooperate with other
Persons Conducting Business or Undertaking when undertaking its works.
Council officers point out
and restore production.
Some are simple, low-cost, and can be undertaken
by farmers themselves. Others entail engineering
design, outside contractors, and substantial expense.
Inspection is usually needed, to work out an
appropriate mix for each site.
For further advice and assistance, contact:
The Land Management Section,
Taranaki Regional Council,
Private Bag 713
Stratford
Ph: 06 765 7127 Fax: 06 765 5097
Appendix AA - irrigation block nitrogen analysis