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Backyard trapping: Get involved

Subsidised rat and possum traps for urban residents, plus tips and trips for using them. Towards Predator-Free Taranaki can support you with a range of traps and devices that will help bring the birds back to your neighbourhood! We offer subsidised box-tunnel rat traps for $15 (Victor) and $20 (T-Rex). You can pick one up from: Envirohub, 28 Brooklands Park Drive (next to Brooklands Zoo), New Plymouth (Tuesdays and Thursdays 9.30am - 2.30pm and Fridays 12.30pm - 2.30pm only). Taranaki Regional

Annual report 2014-2015

discharge any contaminant onto land if it may then enter water, or from any industrial or trade premises onto land under any circumstances, unless the activity is expressly allowed for by a resource consent, a rule in a regional plan, or by national regulations. BTW holds discharge permit 7884-1.1 to cover the discharge of wastes from hydrocarbon exploration drilling operations with water based muds and synthetic based muds, and oily wastes from hydrocarbon exploration and production

Wellington landfarm consent monitoring 2019-2020

page BTW Wellington Landfarm Monitoring Programme Annual Report 2019-2020 Technical Report 2020-09 Taranaki Regional Council ISSN: 1178-1467 (Online) Private Bag 713 Document: 2471268 (Word) STRATFORD Document: 2589993 (Pdf) November 2020 page page Executive summary BTW Company Ltd (the Company) operated a landfarm …

Coastal Plan submissions M-R

page MANIAPOTO MĀORI TRUST BOARD 49 Taupiri Street 07 878 6234 PO Box 36 Fax 07 878 6409 TE KUITI 1 27 April 2018 Coastal Plan Review Project Team Taranaki Regional Council Private Bag 713 Stratford 4352 Tēnā koutou katoa, A muri kia

Watch the big decisions being made as meetings livestreamed

Taranaki Regional Council is now livestreaming all of its meetings, giving the public more opportunities to get involved in local democracy. The public can already attend meetings but will now be able to watch decisions being made by the elected members from their home or office. Chair Charlotte Littlewood urged members of the public to go online and find out more about the work being done around Taranaki by the Council. “Our region is a special place and your elected members are making some

Form No 130 Wellsite

of the applications, and the Assessment of Environmental Effects (AEE) required by Section 88(2) of the RMA. Please complete all questions on the form. Do not refer to attached documentation unless the form specifically requests it. If you have any questions relating to completion of this application form, please contact the Consents Department, Taranaki Regional Council on telephone (06)765-7127 or email consents@trc.govt.nz. Lodge the application by signing below and

Yarrow Stadium redevelopment moves into final phase

The redevelopment of Yarrow Stadium has hit another significant milestone with the appointment of local contractor Clelands Construction to complete the $42m East Stand build. Below ground civil works for the East Stand are now complete and with this milestone finished, the next stage of construction is commencing, says Taranaki Regional Council Chair, Charlotte Littlewood. “While pausing to celebrate these progress milestones, we also need to acknowledge the impact of inflation and rising

Beware of sea lice and other biting ocean critters

Beach-goers heading to cool off in the sea this summer are being warned to act quickly if they are nipped by sea lice and other miniscule ocean critters. Taranaki swimmers have reported being stung and bitten, leaving them with a painful skin rash or severe itching, with the culprits likely to be sea lice, jellyfish and other marine creatures too tiny to see. Abby Matthews, Taranaki Regional Council’s Director-Environment Quality, says the creatures are more prevalent and active in the summer

Art to inspire a predator free future

been made and grow awareness of the job left ahead and how everyone can contribute.” The exhibition includes a variety of mediums, with artists drawing on their personal connection to the environment and nature. Taranaki Kiwi Trust has commissioned a piece by Geoff Noble, with profits from the sale going towards protecting kiwi in Taranaki. Geoff has created a reproduction of a Western Brown Kiwi and the complex colours of their feathers and native Taranaki bush. Taranaki Regional Council Regional

High temperatures and low river flows likely caused fish deaths

Record high water temperatures and low river levels likely contributed to the deaths of more than 80 fish in two South Taranaki waterways earlier this year, says Taranaki Regional Council. A report to the Council’s Operations and Regulatory Committee revealed 27 fish died in the Waingongoro River and a further 55 fish were found dead in the Kaūpokonui River in January. An investigation was launched after members of the public alerted Taranaki Fish and Game to the deaths. The affected species