"It's important to get this region back up and running as soon as possible to help sustain local jobs and businesses and enable people to get out into nature and experience a spectacular part of Aotearoa," Sage said.
"Pipopiotahi/Milford Sound has more than one million visitors a year and the Milford Track is one of New Zealand's premier walking tracks, attracting more than 14,000 users a year.
"DOC staff also use the tracks to carry out vital conservation work and it will be important to restore predator trapping networks which were also destroyed by flooding and slips."
The funding over four years, is contingent on an action plan being approved by the Ministers of Finance and Conservation. It's not a specific part of the Covid Recovery and Response Fund.
Sage said the work would involve engineering and geotechnical assessments, along with design work and "assessing long-term options for climate change resilience and relocating assets where appropriate".
What's in it
-$9.52m capital expenditure (material and labour costs of replacing assets such as tracks, bridges, and huts)
-$4.21m of associated operating costs for the assets repaired and replaced