Last spring, the Otago Regional Council (ORC) boss, Peter Bodeker, went to media, stating recent dairy inspections in Otago were not good enough and an unacceptable number of breaches had been found.
Let's compare these on-farm breaches of the RMA to those in the urban sector.
Last November, media reported that in Cromwell, 3500 litres of untreated waste had entered Lake Dunstan. In response, the ORC determined no action was required.
Over recent months and years, Queenstown Lakes District Council has had numerous untreated spills into the lake, and not a single prosecution has eventuated to date.
Apart from the fact that a major tourist destination's image is being tarnished by the site of untreated sewage flowing on streets and into the lake, that waste is entering water and is simply bad for the environment.
If Queenstown was a farm, there would be a huge public outcry for it to be shut down until major improvements could bring it up to appropriate standards.
Other towns around the country actually have consent to pollute on a daily basis. Milton is just one example. It has been issued consent by the ORC to intermittently discharge 9150 cubic meters per day of untreated wastewater mixed with stormwater to the Tokomairiro River.
This discharge permit expires on December 31, 2017. But don't worry; part of the consent approval includes a diagram for a sign to be erected, saying "Danger. Keep Out. No Swimming".
Other New Zealand towns also have consent to discharge untreated or partially treated waste to land "in a manner that may enter water". Interesting that those towns have these discharge consents approved by councils, when this is the same standard for which farmers are being prosecuted.
For many coastal towns, the solution is simple, just put waste out to sea in a longer and ever extending pipeline. Well at least it doesn't get to freshwater that way, although as we've seen recently, the impact on many of our beaches is not something to be proud of.
It is one rule for council discharges, and a completely different rule for farmers, and I'm convinced the environment doesn't notice the difference.
To people living in urban New Zealand, you have been "sold" a story comprising limited science based on a successful and catchy slogan, "dirty dairy". And from that was born the misconception that most pollution is from farms.
Regional councils around the country continue to turn a blind eye to blatant urban pollution, both within discharge consent parameters and through unconsented spills into our lakes and rivers.
Farmers don't expect any special treatment. We have a huge responsibility in looking after our environment. But nor do we expect to be targeted and singled out by regional councils. All we ask is that in the interests of our environment, we have a more level playing field. Currently what we have is anything but.