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Taranaki Stadium Trust
Statement of Financial Performance
For the Three Years Ended 30 June 2024, 30 June 2025 and 30 June 2026
Budget Budget Budget
2024 2025 2026
$ $ $
Income
Taranaki Regional Council Grant 2,178,669 2,178,669 2,178,669
Crown Infrastructure Partners Funding 12,000,000 2,800,000 0
Rent 70,000 70,000 70,000
Interest received 0 0 0
Total income 14,248,669 5,048,669 2,248,669
Expenditure
Depreciation and amortisation expense 900,000 1,200,000 1,400,000
Major
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Taranaki Stadium Trust
Statement of Financial Performance
For the Three Years Ended 30 June 2023, 30 June 2024 and 30 June 2025
Budget Budget Budget
2023 2024 2025
$ $ $
Income
Taranaki Regional Council Grant 2,178,669 2,178,669 2,178,669
Crown Infrastructure Partners Funding 10,000,000 3,594,347 0
Interest received 0 0 0
Total income 12,178,669 5,773,016 2,178,669
Expenditure
Depreciation and amortisation expense 500,000 1,000,000 1,400,000
Major maintenance 20,000 20,000
Summer arrives fast in Taranaki. Spring’s mix of rain and sunshine keeps the garden fresh and lush until Christmas, but then suddenly the gods flick the switch and a big halogen bulb shines down bringing warm seas and blue skies. Green lawns turn into light browns and trees show signs of water stress, meaning it’s time to haul out the irrigation hoses and check for those inevitable leaks. Luckily, Tūpare’s trees provide plenty of shade, protecting much of the garden from the harshest sun. But
has little prickles that aren’t nice for bare feet,” says Greg Rine, Taranaki Regional Gardens Manager. “Using sawdust is a great way to eliminate chemical use in public spaces and gave us the opportunity to create more play spaces too by changing the contours and placing new rocks.” With increased education around the effects of pesticides and herbicides there has been growing concern around their use in public spaces, which has seen other councils in Auckland and Christchurch adopt similar
Community category winners in the 2020 Taranaki Regional Council Environmental Awards. Category sponsor: Methanex Waitara Taiao - for outstanding advocacy and voluntary effort to protect and restore native biodiversity and te taiao o Waitara. Waitara Taiao shows how much can be achieved when a community develops and owns a conservation project. From small beginnings under local couple Tama and Gina Blackburn and their son Epiha, it’s grown into an effective and valuable predator control
Items of interest from today's meeting of the Council's Consents and Regulatory Committee: Resource consents
Resource consents allow industries to operate, and enable economic activity and employment. Three hundred and eighty-two consents were issued by Taranaki Regional Council over the 2015/2016 financial year, slightly down on 400 the previous year. This was probably due to an economic downturn in the oil, gas and dairy sectors, the Consents and Regulatory Committee was told on Tuesday.
They used to be extinct from Taranaki Maunga, but a family of six whio surfing down rapids in the upper Whaiwhakaiho River are a good reminder as to why rural predator control is so vital. The native blue ducks were classed as “functionally extinct” from the Maunga in 1945, due to introduced predators - stoats are whio’s number one predator. However, a video captured by Taranaki Regional Council this month shows the whio population is gradually increasing due to intensive predator control.
This information is particularly relevant for those outside the reach of municipal wastewater systems operated by District Councils. If you want to dispose of trade or commercial waste into water (a stream or river), you’ll need a resource consent from the Regional Council. If you’re discharging trade waste into a community wastewater system, you’ll need to comply with any trade waste bylaws or rules imposed by your District Council. Domestic wastewater
Domestic wastewater requires proper
This information is particularly relevant for those outside the reach of municipal wastewater systems operated by District Councils. If you want to dispose of trade or commercial waste into water (a stream or river), you’ll need a resource consent from the Regional Council. If you’re discharging trade waste into a community wastewater system, you’ll need to comply with any trade waste bylaws or rules imposed by your District Council. Domestic wastewater
Domestic wastewater requires proper
https://www.trc.govt.nz/environment/resource-consents/notified-consents the next
working day.
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(2)
Copies of the Taranaki Regional Council officer report will be available in the same location
on the Council’s website by 24 January 2022.
Hearing Procedure
While the procedure for the hearing is ultimately determined by the chairperson, the
Resource Management Act provides that:
a) unnecessary formality is to be avoided;
b) only members of the hearing panel may question any party or witness
c) cross-examination