Councillors debated whether the reserve should be dual-named in English and Te Reo.
Pāpāmoa ward councillor Steve Morris said dual naming looked to him like a partnership approach.
Pāpāmoa ward councillor Steve Morris. Photo / David Hall
Welcome Bay ward councillor Hautapu Baker said restoring the original name would align with the council’s responsibilities to protect and preserve the site.
“Restoring that name is us acting in partnership.”
He referred to Australia’s Ayers Rock, which dropped the dual name to only be known as Uluru in 2002 at the request of the Regional Tourism Association.
“It’s a progression over time. It’s not something that would happen immediately.”
He said signs in the area would have the dual name during the transition and would stay until they needed to be replaced.
All councillors voted for using Te Rere o Ōmanawa, except Tauriko ward councillor Martin Rozeboom, who preferred the dual naming approach.
History of the reserve
Nicholas told the council the “beautiful” name was bestowed by their ancestors many generations ago.
He said the reserve was a place tangata whenua went to find peace, tranquillity and healing.
Nicholas said Ngāti Hangarau want to allow people to learn about and be one with the place.
“A name with mana, with prestige and a name with history.”
Ngāti Hangarau Hapū Trust chairman Koro Nicholas.
Nicholas wrote in the resource consent application about the history of the land.
He said the whenua at Ōmanawa Falls had been the exclusive domain of Ngāti Hangarau for most of known history.
“Following Ngāti Hangarau‘s defence of our land at the battles of Pukehinahina and Te Ranaga in April and June of 1864 and following the scorched earth campaign in the Kaimai hinterland in 1867 known unfondly as Te Weranga – the burning – the land was confiscated from us."
He said the Crown admitted to wrongful confiscation from tangata whenua in 2012.
The title to the land had been passed on to many different entities since then, but it now sits with Tauranga City Council and within the rohe of the Western Bay of Plenty District Council.
The Western Bay council wrote a letter to the city council in March 2024 in support of naming the reserve Te Rere o Ōmanawa.
The Ōmanawa Falls Governance Group and Tauranga City Council will support Ngāti Hangarau’s planned application to the New Zealand Geographic Board to officially rename the waterfall, Ōmanawa Falls, to Te Rere o Ōmanawa.
“Ōmanawa” translates to “of the heart”, and the full name means “the waterfall of the heart”.
– LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.
Ayla Yeoman is a Local Democracy Reporting journalist based in Tauranga. She holds a Bachelor of Arts majoring in communications, politics and international relations from the University of Auckland, and has been a journalist since 2022.