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
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
Businesses and homes in The Valley in New Plymouth will get improved protection from flooding with an upgrade to the lower Waiwhakaiho River Flood Control Scheme. The upgrades by Taranaki Regional Council will raise two sections of the existing defences including along the stopbank and a flood wall which protect shops and houses near Constance Street and Rifle Range Road. Council Rivers Manager Chris Vicars says revised flood modelling after a large flood event in 2017 identified two sections
Around 550 people have attended Taranaki Regional Council’s freshwater drop-in sessions at the 16 events held around the region over the past two weeks. The drop-in sessions, which ran from 17 June to 1 July and covered the main urban centres as well as smaller rural locations, were a chance for communities to chat with Council staff about the future of freshwater. The focus now shifts to online community conversations with a Zoom meeting on 3 July and surveys around key freshwater issues
Lakes and beaches generally have the best water quality for swimming in Taranaki, a new report has confirmed. Taranaki Regional Council this week released its report for the “Can I Swim Here?” monitoring programme for the 2023/24 season. From November to March each year the Council tests water quality at least weekly at 41 popular swimming spots, with the results available online. The annual report highlights that beaches were usually safe to swim while the region’s lakes and rivers were more
Taranaki Regional Council wants the public’s help to ‘back the bittern’ and has launched a new interactive map to make it easier to report sightings of the elusive wetland bird. Following on from the Council’s support of the matuku-hūrepo/Australasian bittern for the Forest & Bird Bird of the Year, conservation efforts are continuing with the call for people around the region to record whenever they see the nationally threatened bird. The webpage – haveyoursay.trc.govt.nz/bittern-sightings –
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S c h o o l s i n t h e e n v i r o n m e n t n e w s l e t t e r
For assistance or information on
environmental education contact:
Kevin Archer,
Taranaki Regional Council
Private Bag 713, Stratford
Ph: 06 765 7127 Fax: 06 765 5097
E-mail: education@trc.govt.nz
www.trc.govt.nz
Education Officer
OUT F
Stratford High School
students get involved
Welcome back
Welcome back to another busy and productive
year. We regularly review our programmes to
committee attends to all matters of resource management, biosecurity and related
environment policy.
Responsibilities
Prepare and review regional policy statements, plans and strategies and convene as a
Hearing Committee as and when required for the hearing of submissions.
Monitor plan and policy implementation.
Develop biosecurity policy.
Advocate, as appropriate, for the Taranaki region.
Other policy initiatives.
Endorse submissions prepared in response to the policy
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BTW Company Ltd
Wellington Landfarm
Monitoring Programme
Annual Report
2018-2019
Technical Report 2019-26
Taranaki Regional Council
ISSN: 1178-1467 (Online) Private Bag 713
Document: 2295176 (Word) STRATFORD
Document: 2323497 (Pdf) November 2019
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Executive summary
BTW Company Ltd (the Company) operates a
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R2/10420-1.0 Maddich Forest Vegetation Disturbance Forestry New
R2/10427-1.0 Brian Hiestand Structure - Bridge Dairy Farm New
R2/10431-1.0 Todd Energy Limited Structure - Other Hydrocarbon Exploration New
R2/9830-1.1 Cheal Petroleum Limited Structure - Culvert Hydrocarbon Exploration Change
R2/10435-1.0 Lloyd & Joanne Morgan Structure - Bridge Dairy New
R2/10441-1.0 Russell Gordon Vegetation Disturbance Forestry New
R2/10422-1.0 Ross Bolton Pipe Waterway Building