Walkways and Cycleways Strategy
SDC Stratford District Council
SH State Highway
SHIP State Highway Investment Proposal
SIG Special Interest Group
SNP Safe Network Programme
SPR Special Purpose Road
STDC South Taranaki District Council
STE Stock Truck Effluent
TAIP Transport Agency Investment Proposal
TEFAR Targeted Enhanced Financial Assistance Rate
TIO Transport Investment Online
TP Transport Programme
TRC Taranaki Regional Council
TSIG
the Act. Where a
word is followed by an asterisk ‘*’, the meaning which follows is the meaning provided in
section 2 [Interpretation section] of the Act. In the case of any inconsistency, the
statutory definition prevails. Where a word is followed by a double asterisk ‘**’, the
meaning which follows is the meaning already adopted in the Regional Policy Statement
for Taranaki and/or one or more of the regional plans for Taranaki.
Accelerated erosion** means intensification of the rate of
page
63
Appendices
Appendix 1: Charging Policies
Resource Management Act Charging Policy
Schedule of charges pursuant to section 36 of the Resource Management Act 1991
Schedule 1: Scale of charges for staff time
Rate for processing resource consents and
responding to pollution incidents.
Rate for all other Council work.
Professional staff $94/hr $89/hr
Professional/supervisory staff $118/hr $110/hr
Managers $171/hr $160/hr
Support staff $94/hr
page
168
Appendix 6: Charging Policies
Resource Management Act Charging Policy
Schedule of charges pursuant to section 36 of the Resource Management Act 1991
Schedule 1: Scale of charges for staff time
Rate for processing resource consents and
responding to pollution incidents.
Rate for all other Council work.
Professional staff $92/hr $87/hr
Professional/supervisory staff $116/hr $108/hr
Managers $168/hr $157/hr
Support staff $92/hr $87/hr
Directors
refinement of methods
and considered responsible resource utilisation, to move closer to achieving sustainable development of the
region’s resources.
1.1.4 Evaluation of environmental and administrative performance
Besides discussing the various details of the performance and extent of compliance by the consent holder
during the period under review, this report also assigns a rating as to the Company’s environmental and
administrative performance.
Environmental performance is concerned with
current year. They also generate 319 full-time equivalent jobs
(FTEs).
The Port’s important enabling role can be seen from the estimates that its users and
service providers are likely to generate $353 million in Value Added (GDP) the current year,
and 929 FTEs.
The Port also plays an important role in other ways. It facilitate the imports and exports
of the Region’s industries, the dividends it pays help to keep the Regional rates burden in
check, and it sponsors and supports
consent or a rule in a regional plan, or it falls within some particular categories set
out in Section 14.
As Greymouth Petroleum Limited was unable to estimate the rate or volume of the
take, and as such, may exceed the limits of the permitted activity Rule [Rule 48 of the
RFWP], the take of groundwater fell for consideration under Rule 49 of the RFWP as
a controlled activity.
The standards of Rule 49 require that:
• The abstraction shall cause not more than a 10% lowering of
Stadium can’t succeed
without rugby.
Rugby remains important to Taranaki people – the region has the nation’s highest
rugby engagement rate of any region in New Zealand.
Reference: BERL report (www.trc.govt.nz/yarrow1)
TV1 news clip May 2019 showing main pitch set up for soccer: (www.bit.ly/YarrowTV)
annotation http://www.trc.govt.nz/yarrow1 http://www.trc.govt.nz/yarrow1
annotation http://www.bit.ly/YarrowTV http://www.bit.ly/YarrowTV
page
5
C>f^t'
3.4 Map Co-ordinates at point of discharge (either Longitude/Latitude or NZTM):
Longitude _ Latitude OR
17-ll^Q^ _ E 5625 796-3- ^ (NZTM)
3.5 Legal description of property at site of activity (refer to land title or rates notice)
ft- $<_ ̂ B^/ ^/?5/- (^/^fe^(y- ^^ee-/ ~p^r\
07/17-#623867 Page 3 of 14
page
3.6 Assessment/Valuatiop number of property (refer to land title or rates notice)
risen from 50% to 85%,
and the percentage planted has risen from 42% to 70%. Notwithstanding that while NIWA
confirms a definite reduction in E coli levels, the rate of compliance with NPS-FM targets has
not changed over the same period (NIWA, in prep) due at least in part to the reality that peak
concentrations of E. coli at peak flows are not reduced by such riparian interventions. Taking
the above into account, regional gains in swimmability of some 25% in relative terms, from a
current 39%