Charitable trust Clear the Air organised the meeting, held at Mount Maunganui Intermediate, to update the community about their recent work and studies on the impact of air pollution on people’s health.
Some of the ward candidates at the meeting included, Barbara Turley, Marten Rozeboom, Teresa Killian, Michael O’Neill, Larry Baldock, Kevin Schuler and Heidi Hughes.
Hughes is a Clear the Air member and MC’d the night.
Whareroa Marae’s environmental spokesman Ngatuere, implored those running for council to get an understanding of the issues, so if elected, they could work with the community and find ways to effect change faster than the current rules allowed.
Dr Jim Miller, a medical officer of health at Toi Te Ora - Public Health Service, said poor air quality was a much bigger health issue than people realised.
”It’s actually one of the biggest global causes of preventable ill-health.”
Air pollution in New Zealand was responsible for around 3000 premature deaths per year, he said.
The long-term effects of poor air quality included increased risk of strokes, lung cancer, and cardiovascular issues, said Miller.
Tauranga City Council regulatory and compliance general manager Sarah Omundsen said under the Resource Management Act (RMA) land-use rights were forever, unless the activity on the land changed.
A lot of the land use was granted before the RMA was introduced in 1991. This meant heavy industry was “tightly squeezed” next to homes, schools, playing fields, childcare centres and Whareroa Marae on a narrow peninsula, she said.
”If we started from scratch and this was a greenfield area, it wouldn’t look like this today.”
The council was working on the Mount Arataki Spatial Plan and the Mount Industrial Planning Study.
These looked at future planning outcomes and introducing stricter controls on future industrial land activity around sensitives areas likes schools and homes, said Omundsen.
”We can’t fix that planning of the past, but we have to get the planning of the future right.”
Bay of Plenty Regional Council regulatory services general manager Reuben Fraser said part of the regional council’s role was managing environmental effects of discharge into the environment.
If a business breached its permitted levels of discharge the council could issue an abatement notice or in “serious circumstances” pursue prosecution through the courts, he said.
The regional council had been monitoring the air around Mount Maunganui since the 1990s.
Clear the Air spokeswoman Emma Jones said the trust was formed in 2020 by a group of parents who decided “enough was enough” after watching their children run cross country while the “air was thick with the stench of the industrial odours”.
Clear the Air has been involved in planning and consenting processes, worked with the councils and industrial businesses, and participated at hearings and court cases, said Jones.