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Home / The Country

Rubbish dumping frustrations at Coromandel beauty spots as visitors defy $2 fee

Martin Johnston
Reporter·NZ Herald·
5 Jan, 2019 11:51 PM2 mins to read
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People have piled up refuse at Colville on the Coromandel Peninsula rather than paying $2 to have it squashed into a council rubbish compactor. Photo / Supplied.

People have piled up refuse at Colville on the Coromandel Peninsula rather than paying $2 to have it squashed into a council rubbish compactor. Photo / Supplied.

Frustrations are growing as piles of rotting rubbish are being dumped by holidaymakers on the Coromandel

"It's totally lazy," said Thames Coromandel Mayor Sandra Goudie.

The district council has placed solar-powered rubbish compactors at four sites, in areas that attract large numbers of visitors. They require a $2 coin to squash up a deposit about the size of a typical council rubbish bag.

The council has cleaned up piles of rubbish twice in the last week after people failed to put their trash into a compactor.

Council infrastructure group manager Bruce Hinson said: "We need people to understand that they have to put the rubbish into the compactor themselves to dispose of their rubbish bags properly, and not just dump it next to the compactor."

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The mayor said there was no realistic way of tracking the offenders to impose fines for illegal dumping of rubbish.

The compactors were placed before summer and the piles of rubbish were a holiday-time problem which she said was linked in part to the difficulties with freedom camping.

"I would say that it's largely visitors," Goudie said.

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"Why is it that we have to keep funding the enforcement of people's behaviour?"

"It's incredibly frustrating. You would have thought when they were coming to an environment like Thames Coromandel District - it's such a beautiful environment - they would have more respect and look after it.

"It's a minority, but a sizable minority, that are disrespecting our environment. It's totally lazy."

"It's the same behaviour we get from some of the freedom campers"

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New Zealand

Broken compactor and campsites' ban on rubbish disposal exacerbate dumping

06 Jan 01:57 AM

She said the council had provided some freedom camping sites but they had become overloaded and were causing problems.

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"Where are they going to the toilet? What are they doing with their rubbish?"

She said the claim of vehicles being self-contained - with an onboard toilet and storage tank - was in many cases "bogus". For some it amounted to no more than carrying a bucket.

The council, outlining its freedom-camping policy, says on its website: "The big rule – you must be in a certified self-contained vehicle if you want to freedom camp. If you're a tourist and don't know if your vehicle complies, ask your rental company."

The council's four roadside rubbish compactors are at Colville, Kuaotunu, Opoutere and Coroglen.

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