A tino rangatiratanga flag flies at tapu Lake Rotokākahi near Rotorua. Photo / Laura Smith
The fence at the worksite of a controversial sewerage scheme was taken down on Friday while Rotorua‘s council awaits a court decision to continue.
It is the second time Rotorua Lakes Council has asked the court for help to progress its $29 million Tarawera Sewerage Scheme.
The first time was in May when it applied for an injunction to stop “interference” with the construction of the scheme. It proposed a1m buffer around the work zone on Tarawera Rd.
It followed protest action earlier in the year, with mana whenua holding concerns the pipeline was through a wāhi tapu area at Lake Rotokākahi, and saying those had been known since at least 2019.
The council claimed that between January 29 and February 1 “unknown respondents negligently, wilfully or maliciously stopped, obstructed or interfered with the works”, and expected this could continue when works resumed.
It could not go further, however, while mana whenua occupied its land opposite the fence, at the access point to the lake.
They feared the pipeline risked environmental damage to the water and an area where tūpuna (ancestors) were buried nearby during the 1886 Mount Tarawera eruption.
At a late September council meeting, elected members voted to continue with the works after an update from police, staff and contractors.
The decision was made in a public-excluded session.
The injunction proceedings were renewed.
With no decision to date, the council on Friday scaled back the work site temporarily.
In a community update it said this allowed the road to fully reopen ahead of Labour weekend until it knew when works could restart – within any conditions set by an injunction.
“Discussions with iwi and hapū are ongoing and the Tarawera Sewerage Scheme remains vital to protect the health of the lake, community and natural environment.
“While the urgency to complete the work remains and the court’s decision on the injunction application is expected soon, the decision has been made to scale back the work site in the meantime.”
The update said it would provide relief to local and visitor traffic and save additional costs from the site security and traffic management.
At the time of the hīkoi, Skipwith said people referred to it as “another Ihumātao”.
The board of control and “persons unknown” were named as respondents in the injunction proceedings.
Co-chairman Peter Moke organised the January protest. He previously told Local Democracy Reporting he believed no one in the group was to blame for what prompted the application.
The council was considering a Local Democracy Reporting request for a copy of the renewed application under the Local Government Meetings and Information Act.
Laura Smith is a Local Democracy Reporting journalist based at the Rotorua Daily Post. She previously reported general news for the Otago Daily Times and Southland Express, and has been a journalist since 2019.
– LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.