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Home / Hawkes Bay Today

CHB water issues on backburner for regional council - CHB Mayor

By Victoria White
Reporter·Hawkes Bay Today·
7 Sep, 2017 08:00 PM3 mins to read

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CHB Mayor Alex Walker says the regional council now seems consumed in dealing with water issues on the Heretaunga Plains. Photo / File

CHB Mayor Alex Walker says the regional council now seems consumed in dealing with water issues on the Heretaunga Plains. Photo / File

Central Hawke's Bay Mayor Alex Walker has slammed the Hawke's Bay Regional Council for appearing to forget about the water issues facing her district.

Last week the regional council pulled its support for the Ruataniwha Water Storage Scheme, leaving the company driving it open to seeking other investors.

The $330 million irrigation project would have been the largest in the country and was intended to provide a secure water supply, particularly for those in drought-stricken Central Hawke's Bay.

However it faced years of opposition, with questions raised about its environmental impact and its financial viability, with $80m in ratepayer funding pledged to it.

Yesterday Ms Walker said the regional council's move meant meaning her community was now dealing with "a double-whammy" of disappointment, as the council appeared consumed in dealing with water issues on the Heretaunga Plains.

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For several years, CHB had been dealing with issues similar to those now before the Heretaunga Plains community - who are facing aquifer over-allocation and the possibility of a Water Conservation Order in one of its main catchments.

"What seems to have been forgotten is that the Tukituki catchment was identified as the priority area in the region for improving water quality and quantity - that's why the whole conversation about Plan Change 6 and the Ruataniwha Water Storage Scheme began several years ago," Ms Walker said.

She said CHB water consents had been over-allocated for several years, with no new consents considered by the regional council in the catchment - which produced about a quarter of Hawke's Bay's primary produce exports.

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"Quite rightly, water storage was identified as a key to securing the future for water in our community and Central Hawke's Bay District Council will continue to support initiatives that have water storage at their core. This may be Ruataniwha, or it may be some other solutions.

"Water-users in the catchment (and beyond) are now faced with the short-term issue of restricted water takes as Plan Change 6 comes into effect in mid-2018. Because RWSS was promoted as the solution to this part of the Plan for so long, water-users are now having to think about water quantity solutions in another way - and quickly."

Yesterday regional council chairman Rex Graham said CHB had not been forgotten about.

"I am deeply concerned that we ran Plan Change six alongside the [RWSS].

"The people who were the proponents of the dam...it was a big risk they took with the lives and the aspirations of the people of Central Hawke's Bay and it hasn't worked out.

"So now we need to look at Plan Change six...because we don't want to affect people negatively and so we'll have to say, 'how do we make this work a different way'."

He said he wanted CHB residents to "get their heads together" and give feedback, and input to the council what they wanted in terms of solutions for water issues in the district.

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