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Kātene urges greater attention to be paid to water quality |
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Rāhui Kātene
MP for Te Tai Tonga
28 September 2011
Kātene urges greater attention to be paid to water quality
MP for Te Tai Tonga, Rahui Katene is concerned at the latest findings from a report from the office of the Auditor-General which claims that regional councils are not doing enough to prevent the degrading of fresh water by dairy farms.
“The report tells us that some councils and landowners continue to pollute our precious waterways, all for the purpose of profit” said Mrs Katene.
“As local member for Te Tai Tonga, it is of particular concern that Environment Southland has been heavily criticised for not doing enough to reduce known risks to the region's water quality”.
"This is simply not good enough", says Mrs Katene. "I cannot emphasise enough the importance of looking after our clean fresh water resources. Our fresh water is essential for our health as well as our cultural and environmental and also our economic well-being”.
"Of course we do not want to limit economic growth", says Mrs Katene "What we want is a balance between economic growth and protecting the clean, green, pristine environment. These councils need to get their act together, and take responsibility for addressing the deterioration of our water quality. I would hope that they could work closely with mana whenua to have regard for the value we place on kaitiakitanga, the guardianship and protection of our natural resources”.
Mrs Katene is heartened by the self-assessment methodology mentioned in the report, which asks councils to consider, have iwi been consulted on the monitoring network, and has inclusion of Mātauranga Māori and cultural monitoring principles been considered?
“And we encourage Councils to look carefully at the responsibilities under the Resource Management Act, to actively consider the relationship of Māori and their culture and traditions with their ancestral lands, water, sites, wāhi tapu, and other taonga”.
Further information : Managing freshwater quality: Challenges for regional councils
ENDS


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