Forget the reports, time for bulldozers say politicians

9:14 am on 15 August 2024
Shane Jones

Regional Development Minister Shane Jones says the Westland Mayor is right to demand action to extend the Waiho stop banks. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Westland mayor Helen Lash says her council is thrilled that funding has at last been released to protect valuable farms and homes on the south bank of the wild Waiho River at Franz Josef.

But she warns there won't be a cent to spare for red tape or paperwork.

Regional Development Minister Shane Jones announced a grant of $6 million this week for the West Coast Regional Council to strengthen and extend the Waiho stop banks, leaving local ratepayers to find the remaining $4m for the job.

Lash says the grant will be welcomed by landowners waiting to see if the government would come to their aid, while large chunks of the land disappeared with every flood.

"But it's $2 million shy of what the council thought it would get so they're going to have to make every cent work to get the right result, and not waste any on more reports and consultants' fees."

The last Labour government spent $12.5m shoring up stop banks on the north bank of the Waiho to protect the tourist township but withheld another $8m originally promised for the south bank with its farms and lifestyle blocks.

It wanted to see a long- term plan, including retreat, for the community labelled "Disaster Central" by geologists, before spending more money.

The stony bed of the short river has risen eight metres since the 1950s and now sits well above the level of the town.

That process is speeding up as the glacier retreats, releasing rocks and gravel to the flats below.

And to cap it off, Franz Josef is perched right on the Alpine Fault, which is due for its 300-yearly major rupture.

The 2019 destruction of State Highway 6 bridge over the Waiho (Waiau) River was partly due to gravel build-up on the bed of the glacial-fed river, impacted by increasing high intensity rainfall and thawing effects on the river's upper catchment.

The 2019 destruction of SH6 bridge over the Waiho (Waiau) River was partly due to gravel build-up on the bed of the glacial-fed river. Photo: LDR / Supplied

When the Waiho River Management Strategy came out last October, saying the south bank would eventually have to be abandoned to the river, property values there plummeted, destroying equity overnight.

Helen Lash says the landowners had been 'horribly mucked around' by the decision makers, and the uncertainty.

"You can't do that to people's lives. Every flood they go into stress mode. When you have no skin in the game you don't get the gravity of it."

River management is the Regional Council's job, the mayor says, but the Westland District Council wants to be heavily involved in the stop bank project this time, to make sure ratepayers got the fullest possible benefit from the $6m.

"We want to be sure the community gets the best protection and maximum gain out of it and I'm sure that's what the government wants to see as well."

Regional Development Minister Shane Jones - in Greymouth on Wednesday for a meeting with civic leaders - says the Westland mayor is right about that.

"I have insisted that MBIE maximise the amount of dough that's spent on practical delivery. We don't need reams of reports from consultants - we need picks and shovels swinging to and fro, and delivery."

The Franz Josef project, and others in Nelson approved for funding this week under the government's "Before the Deluge" banner, were all bulldozer-ready, the Minister said.

"There's a lot of uncertainty in the pipeline from (contracting) firms saying they can't keep their workforce on unless the money keeps flowing.

"The added virtue of these West Coast projects is that the damn things are consented so the mahi can take place as soon as possible."

Long term, the fate of Franz Josef, the Waiho Flats and those who live and farm there will require decisions well above his paygrade, Shane Jones says.

"You are wrestling with Mother Nature there, and all hell could break loose with that river."

But it's not a fight that should be conceded - at least, not yet, he says.

"The name of our Party is New Zealand First, not Climate First. For as long as I'm around, we are going to spend money and work with communities to adapt - so we can generate the necessary solutions over a longer period of time."

A cynic would say that's only putting off the inevitable, he says.

"But I feel grossly uncomfortable chasing anyone out of where they are. I've got a lot of sympathy for the people on farms, being told they should leave.

"Who's going to pay them to leave? Not Mother Nature. "

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

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