Your search for '67 poplar grove' returned 906 results.

Executive, Audit & Risk agenda December 2021

page Monday 6 December 2021, 10am Executive, Audit & Risk Committee - Cover 1 page Executive, Audit & Risk Committee 06 December 2021 10:00 AM Agenda Topic Page Agenda 2 Purpose of Committee, membership and Health and Safety 3 Apologies Notification of Late Items 1. Confirmation of Minutes 4 2. Financial and Operational Report 9 3. Health and Safety Report 67 4. Quarterly

TRC 2024-34 Long-Term Plan

Long-Term Plan purpose Consultation issues Our mission Governance report Working together with Maori 1 2 3 10 12 14 Groups of activities Resource management Catchment management Transport Flood protection and hazard management Regional facilities Regional leadership and governance 29 41 52 57 63 67 Audit eportr Our region Community wellbeings Operating environment Strategic priorities 18 20 22 24 26 27

Annual report 2013-2014

Annual Report 65 13.4.4 Alterations to the monitoring programme for 2014-2015 65 13.4.5 page v 13.5 Recommendation 65 14. Summary of recommendations 66 Glossary of common terms and abbreviations 67 Bibliography and references 68 Appendix I Resource consents held by cleanfill owners and operators (alphabetical order) 70 List of tables Table 1 Cleanfill consent details for the period under review 6 Table 2 Number of samples taken and inspections

Land management study unit

causes the gullies to cut further uphill and deeper down. The first step is to keep the surface water out of the top of the gully. Trees are then planted in pairs along the sides of the gully. Trees with fibrous roots, such as poplar and willow are best for this purpose because they bind the soil and also remove excess water by transpiration. Tunnel Gully Erosion Tunnel gully erosion is best controlled by planting trees in the holes to prevent the water entering the