Morning Headlines | Wellington mayor issues warning over beaches and Christopher Luxon positive ahead of pōwhiri | Thursday, February 5, 2026
Part of the temporary road cordon around the Mauao landslide site is due to be lifted today.
Tauranga City Council said this morning it aimed to have Adams Ave between Maunganui Rd and Marine Parade open to both vehicles and pedestrians around lunchtime.
Adams Ave between The Mall (PilotBay) and Maunganui Rd would still be closed to the public.
“We are working to reopen this as soon as possible,” a council statement said.
“Permanent fencing has been installed around the affected area to keep people out, as the site remains hazardous.
A rāhui remains in place for affected areas around Mauao, and people are asked to respect the rāhui by avoiding entry, swimming, gathering kaimoana, or undertaking recreational activities in these areas.
A 30m maritime exclusion zone also remains in place around Mauao and applies to all vessels and people, including swimmers.
The council asked people to respect the fencing, signage and on-site instructions as operational and recovery work was ongoing, and vehicles may still be operating in the area.
State of emergency ends, support continues
The state of emergency for the Bay of Plenty after last month’s storm has now been lifted.
This was extended on Wednesday, January 28, for a further seven days.
“Although the immediate response phase has ended, recovery efforts will carry on across the region,” the Bay of Plenty Civil Defence said in a statement on Wednesday.
Following the lifting of the state of emergency, the Tauranga City Council said, the region was now shifting to a local transition.
The Notice of Local Transition period, under Section 94B of the Civil Defence Emergency Management Act 2002, took effect at 12.42pm today and ends on March 4, unless it is extended or ends before then, the council said in a statement.