Waimakariri council puts focus on climate change
From local democracy reporter David Hill:
The Waimakariri District Council has appointed a lead adviser as it looks to develop a plan to adapt to climate change.
Former Federated Farmers North Canterbury president Lynda Murchison, who has a PhD in environmental planning, has been appointed to work alongside Cr Niki Mealings, the council’s climate change portfolio holder.
‘‘The council is committed to being transformational leaders in this space and working with mana whenua and the wider community to mitigate and adapt to climate change challenges,’’ mayor Dan Gordon said.
Murchison farms in partnership with her husband, Jock Murchison, in the Weka Pass in North Canterbury and has worked in resource management for about 25 years.
She completed her PhD thesis - Conflict Between Intergenerational Family Farmers and Environmental Planning Processes: An ‘Economic versus Environment’ Proposition of Different Ways of Knowing? - at the University of Canterbury in 2020.
The Waimakariri District Council adopted a climate change policy in 2019 to get ‘‘its own house in order’’, Gordon said.
It has now set its sights on developing a climate change adaptation strategy for the wider district.
Councillors adopted a climate change scenario technical report, prepared by Niwa, at a council meeting on July 5.
The report identified that weather patterns are expected to become more volatile.
Annual average temperatures are expected to increase with more extreme warm temperatures, less frost days and less snow.
A warmer atmosphere is expected to hold more moisture and more average annual rainfall, but this is expected to lead to more frequent heavy rainfall events.
More flood events are expected to be punctuated by more frequent and prolonged droughts due to increased temperatures and wind speeds, the report says.
Sea level rise is also expected to lead to some changes in coastal areas.
Gordon said the council had begun ‘‘refreshing’’ its climate change forward work programme.
This included conducting risk assessments to identify land and infrastructure most at risk.
The council would also look to calculate an emissions profile for the district as it developed its own emissions reduction plan in response to Government regulations, he said.
Other initiatives include transitioning the council’s vehicle fleet to electric vehicles, planting 25,000 plants this year in council reserves and investing in other opportunities for carbon sequestration on council land.
‘‘We will be encouraging residents, businesses and communities within the district to come on this journey with us.’’
Waimakariri district plan faces more delays amid changing rules
By David Hill, Local Democracy Reporter
Changing Government legislation is causing headaches for council staff, as Waimakariri’s new District Plan is set to be delayed again.
Waimakariri District Council development planning manager Matt Bacon said he was relieved when the last of the public hearings ended last week.
But with final council reports due on December 13, staff will have just two working days to present the final District Plan on December 17. A district plan helps to control and manage the development of the district or city.
‘‘We are working through what it looks like and we will update the council at its meeting on December 3,’’ Bacon said.
‘‘But we will likely seek another extension from the environment minister and the Resource Management Act (RMA) minister.’’
The council first notified its draft District Plan in September 2021, but within months legislation was introduced with new medium density residential housing standards (MDRS).
‘‘We needed to call for further submissions and we had to create a separate hearing panel to consider the plan variations to allow for the MDRS,’’ Bacon said.
‘‘We have tried to merge the process as much as possible, as well as looking at re-zoning and incorporating other new legislation.’’
When the draft plan was first notified there was no National Policy Statement (NPS) for Indigenous Biodiversity, but an NPS was introduced - and then replaced.
The Natural and Built Environment Act came into being last year and then repealed, and then there is the NPS on Urban Development and the Greater Christchurch Spatial Plan.
The Government is now working on more RMA reforms and Environment Canterbury is working on the Canterbury Regional Policy Statement.
And then there is the Fast-Track Approvals Bill, which includes three proposed housing developments in Waimakariri - two of them outside of the future urban development areas identified in the Greater Christchurch Spatial Plan.
All three housing developments in the Bill have been included in submissions to the District Plan, including a proposed 850-home development at Ohoka, near Rangiora, which is also subject to an Environment Court appeal.
‘‘We haven’t seen the detail, so whether it is the same proposals, we don’t know, but they are different processes so we have to just keep doing what we are doing, until we are told otherwise,’’ Bacon said.
‘‘It might just be a timing thing, but we just don’t know.’’
Bacon said delaying the District Plan until new legislation is in place is not an option.
‘‘We are looking at what we can control and having a watching brief, and we will look at transitional timings because we don’t always have to immediately change planning documents when new legislation comes in.’’
Planning manager Wendy Harris said navigating changing Government legislation is a normal part of council planning work.
‘‘If we waited we wouldn’t do anything and we would go nowhere.’’
■ LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.
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