get the balance right between safety and road user convenience, and I encourage everyone in Taranaki to take part in the discussion.” Following the community conversation, the feedback will be used to finalise the Better Travel Choices for Taranaki strategy and the three Speed Management Plans. TRC will then use these as building blocks when the next Regional Land Transport Plan (RLTP) for Taranaki is developed and there will be a chance for the public to have their say on that plan in early 2024.
Here is where you can find out more about how we are developing a new Road Land Transport Plan for Taranaki. The Better Travel Choices strategy for Taranaki includes a new shared and active travel strategy and an updated Regional Public Transport Plan. To have your say on the strategy click the link below: Give us your feedback
The options in the survey and the strategy have been informed by feedback gathered from a community conversation we held earlier this year where we asked people about
A step-wise change in public bus services is the number one funding priority in the draft Regional Land Transport Plan for Taranaki (RLTP). Bus services are the top priority, followed by safety improvements on SH3 and SH3A, further work on the New Plymouth integrated transport framework, upgrades of SH3 intersections and two new commercial vehicle regional safety centres. The draft RLTP opens for public feedback tomorrow and Taranaki Regional Council invite the community to have its say on
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40TARANAKI AS ONE—Tāngata Tū Tahi
Sustainable land use
Taranaki’s sustainable land management programmes and planting schemes mean that
sustainable land use in both the hill country and the coastal sand country has increased
considerably in the past two decades.
Key factors that influence vulnerability to erosion are the underlying geology, the type of vegetation cover,
and levels of rainfall. Although erosion is a natural process, human activity can accelerate its
A step-wise change in public bus services is the number one funding priority in the draft Regional Land Transport Plan for Taranaki (RLTP). Bus services are the top priority, followed by safety improvements on SH3 and SH3A, further work on the New Plymouth integrated transport framework, upgrades of SH3 intersections and two new commercial vehicle regional safety centres. The draft RLTP opens for public feedback tomorrow and Taranaki Regional Council invite the community to have its say on
goats eat native vegetation and
damage habitats that are important to native species. Invasive plants can overtake native species in forest
remnants, wetlands, cliffs and riparian zones.
DOC is responsible for managing threatened species. Regional councils and territorial authorities contribute
by protecting significant habitats of some of these species on private land.
What’s the story?
While Taranaki makes up only 2.7% of New Zealand's land area, 17% of the 270 threatened or
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Managing diffuse source discharges to
land and water in the Taranaki region
Review of the regional fresh water and soil plans for Taranaki
Taranaki Regional Council
Private Bag 713
Stratford 4352
November 2012
Document: 1030233
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Executive summary
This working paper entitled Managing Diffuse Source Discharges to Land and Water in
The Council undertakes or commissions studies to assist with its pest management activities under the Biosecurity Act 1993 and other legislation, as well as non-regulatory programmes. Pest Pathways into Taranaki This June 2020 report, prepared by Place Group Ltd for the Taranaki Regional Council, documents the key findings of a pest-threat risk assessment and sets out recommended options for the future management of pest pathways into the region. Pest Pathways into Taranaki (1.1 MB pdf) (single
The Taranaki Regional Council has decided that mustelids (ferrets, stoats and weasels) should be included in its pest management ‘rule book’, the Regional Pest Management Plan. Public notice: Adoption of new mustelids rule This means land occupiers in specified Predator Control Areas will be required to control mustelid numbers, similar to existing requirements for possum control. Weasels, as well as ferrets and stoats, are effective and opportunistic predators that have been implicated in the
The Taranaki Regional Council has decided that mustelids (ferrets, stoats and weasels) should be included in its pest management ‘rule book’, the Regional Pest Management Plan. Public notice: Adoption of new mustelids rule This means land occupiers in specified Predator Control Areas will be required to control mustelid numbers, similar to existing requirements for possum control. Weasels, as well as ferrets and stoats, are effective and opportunistic predators that have been implicated in the