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pp1106

Councillor B K Raine Councillor C S Williamson (via Zoom) Councillor D L Lean (ex officio) Representative Ms E Bailey (Iwi Representative) Members Councillor G Boyde (Stratford District Council) Mr J Hooker (Iwi Representative) Councillor R Jordan (New Plymouth District Council) Mr P Muir (Taranaki Federated Farmers) Councillor C Coxhead (South Taranaki District Council) Mr M Ritai (Iwi Representative) Apologies Councillor D N MacLeod (ex officio) Councillor P Nixon (South

Annual report 2016-2017

(13) Other Uses 61% (120) Pasture Irrigation 28% (55) Horticultural 5% (9) Recreational 6% (11) page 5 Figure 4 Pasture irrigation zones and locations of consented irrigation in Taranaki 1.1.7 Irrigation systems In general there are two types of irrigation methods; surface and pressurised. The majority of irrigation systems currently in operation in the province fall in to the pressurised category. Pressurised systems can be further differentiated

Taranaki Regional Council Model Standing Orders

parts. page Taranaki Regional Council – Standing Orders 8 Subcommittee means a subordinate decision-making body established by a council, or a committee of a council. See definition of “Committee”. Working day means a day of the week other than: a) Saturday, Sunday, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Anzac Day, Labour Day, the Sovereign’s birthday, Matariki, and Waitangi Day. If Waitangi Day or Anzac Day falls on a Saturday or a Sunday, then the

Todd Energy Aquatic Centre monitoring 2018-2019

than the concentration of the backwash discharge A B C page 10 sample, the concentration of total chlorine in the shoreline sample was slightly above the consent limit of 0.1 g/m3 (Table 2). However, it is possible that the actual value for total chlorine did in fact fall below the consent limit as the repeatability of the chlorine meter used is ± 0.05 g/m3; this result therefore provided insufficient evidence for non-compliance with condition 4 of consent 2339-4.0.

Compliance, monitoring and enforcement metrics 2017-2018

way that reflects the level of risk the subject activity (risk-based approach) may pose to the environment and/or the wider community and given the relatively robust basis for cost recovery of consent monitoring, there is no good reason why councils should fall significantly short of fulfilling this expectation. For some, resourcing may simply be inadequate for the task, which places undue stress on staff and management and should be addressed at a council level.

Another way to measure river health (from NIWA magazine)

roles in stream ecosystems on top of their intrinsic biodiversity value. They convert primary energy inputs to streams, from leaves that fall in and algae and bacteria growing on the streambed in response to light and ‘catchment tea’ (dissolved carbon from soils), into food for fish such as whitebait, eels and trout, and birds. In the process they keep the streambed clean and recycle nutrients, keeping the stream healthy and productive. Q&A page www.niwa.co.nz Water & Atmosphere

Annual report 2015-2016

Freshwater physicochemical state of the environment monitoring report 2015-2016 - TRC.