The environmental chapter also highlighted the confusion surrounding river ownership in Te Urewera.
For many decades the Crown has behaved as if it owned all or most of the Te Urewera
rivers, when in fact its own law officers could not establish who legally owned which waterways.
The second chapter in the report deals with 'specific claims' which could not be addressed elsewhere in the chapter. These involved public works, rating, taonga tuturu (artefacts), and school lands.
In relation to rating, the Tribunal found that Maori land in Te Urewera should only have been rated if it was profitable, or if the owners received services in return for their rate money.
The report concludes with a chapter on socio-economic issues. It shows the shocking poverty experienced in most Te Urewera communities throughout the 20th century.
Evidence is presented of children dependent of charity for food and clothing, families living in shacks and caves, and communities forced to eat rotten potatoes for want of other food.
The chapter explores the extent to which the Crown was responsible for these conditions.
The Tribunal found that causes of poverty included massive land loss and failure to provide adequate assistance.
More recently, the privatisation of the timber industry in the late 1980s led to massive
job losses and severe poverty in the west of the inquiry district, which had previously been relatively prosperous.
The Tribunal acknowledges that the Crown did provide some aid and services to Te Urewera communities. However, it found that these were never near enough to counter the massive disadvantages holding back those communities.
Many Maori from Te Urewera were compelled to leave the area in search of jobs, education, healthcare and better standards of living.
Today only a minority of Te Urewera tangata whenua live in the area.
Many witnesses in the inquiry spoke about the pain of being separated from their ancestral lands, and how they could not return because there were no jobs and no housing.
The Tribunal found that the poor socio-economic standing of the peoples of Te Urewera, in health, education, housing, and wealth, was in large part a prejudice arising from the Crown's many breaches of the Treaty.