cycle.
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Our health and safety | Tō tātou Hauora me te haumaru
The Taranaki Regional Council is committed to a process of continuous improvement in order to
achieve excellence in the management of health and safety at all of our workplaces. We recognise
the positive impact that the values and benefits of enhanced health and safety
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Taranaki Galvanizers Ltd
Monitoring Programme
Annual Report
2022-2023
Technical Report 2023-73
Taranaki Regional Council
Private Bag 713
Stratford
ISSN: 1178-1467 (Online)
Document: 3208143 (Word)
Document: 3222025 (Pdf)
March 2024
page
Executive summary
Taranaki Galvanizers Ltd (the Company) operates a zinc galvanising plant which is located on the
approach needs to be developed so that Council works to a timeframe that is best for Taranaki.
Set out in this paper are a number of considerations which are being investigated by staff in order to
bring a paper back to the Policy and Planning Committee in March setting out a proposed approach.
Discussion
11. There are a number of factors to consider when determining an appropriate approach for Taranaki in
relation to our policy development program. These are covered by the
samples that were split in order to perform inter-laboratory comparisons. For
these comparisons, a satisfactory agreement between two samples was reached if they were each within
10% of the resultant mean. Because both NPDC and the Council were sending samples to Hill Laboratories
for mercury analysis, an inter-lab comparison was deemed unnecessary for this analyte.
During the 2022-2023 monitoring year, sample results for heavy metals, cyanide and phenols remained
within consent limits, and
Pest plants are not just a rural problem – they are also a blight on our urban neighborhoods. In Taranaki kahili and yellow ginger have found their way onto many urban properties – often unknown to the residents. Old Man’s Beard and giant gunnera are also common, particularly near waterways. These are all sustained control plants in the Regional Pest Management Plan, which means the land occupier has a legal obligation to remove them from their property. This month our biosecurity team carried
Fonterra Kapuni
Monitoring Programme
Annual Report
2022-2023
Technical Report 2023-20
Taranaki Regional Council
Private Bag 713
Stratford
ISSN: 1178-1467 (Online)
Document: 3182768 (Word)
Document: 3213877 (Pdf)
April 2024
page
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Executive summary
Fonterra Limited (the Company) operates a lactose manufacturing factory plant located on
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Our health and safety | Tō tātou Hauora me te haumaru
The Taranaki Regional Council is committed to a process of continuous improvement in order to
achieve excellence in the management of health and safety at all of our workplaces. We recognise
the positive impact that the values and benefits of enhanced health and safety bring to the
organisation, our employees and our communities.
There are two key points to health and safety:
marine and coastal
area. However, an iwi, hapū or whānau group may have their customary rights in the marine
and coastal area recognised through a recognition agreement negotiated with the Crown or by
applying for a recognition order from the High Court. Groups can apply for protected
customary rights and/or customary marine title:
A protected customary right is a right exercised since 1840 and that continues to
be exercised. It could include things like collecting hāngi
change and dealing with high inflationary pressures. To meet these challenges, the Plan includes additional investment and spending will rise to $53.8m (compared to $45m for 2023/2024 in the LTP). General rates will increase by $1.77m (15%) for 2023/2024 – an extra $30 per year for most residential ratepayers. The LTP had forecast a $0.58m (5%) rise for 2023/2024. The Dividend Equalisation Reserve, grown through the Council’s long-standing ownership of Port Taranaki Ltd, contributed $1m to offset the
school students aged 16-19 may travel to and from school on a child's fare if they are in school uniform or have sufficient ID.
Concession fares are available for senior citizens, tertiary students, Community Service or ACCESS card holders and Total Mobilty members.
Prices include GST.
Fare zones Lepperton: Lepperton township including Richmond Rd. Motunui/Tikorangi: Main North RD (SH3) from (but excluding) Bayly Rd intersection, up to (but excluding) Waiau Rd intersection; Ngatimaru Rd, Inland North