Foreshore, ECan, CRI policies all come pre-Easter
Govt clears decks pre-Easter on foreshore and seabed, ECan, and CRIs
by Pattrick Smellie
March 29 (BusinessWire) - The government's preferred solution for resolving the foreshore and seabed issue will be issued as a discussion document before Easter, along with decisions on whether to sack the regional councillors on the board of Environment Canterbury, Prime Minister John Key said today.
Speaking after Cabinet, Key said the government would allow four weeks for consultation on the foreshore and seabed document, which follows a ministerial review last year. Legislation to fix the vexed issue remains targeted for introduction to Parliament in August.
Repeal of
the previous government's 2004 Foreshore and Seabed Act is
part of the coalition agreement between the National and
Maori parties, but exactly what form the government is
proposing for resolving the issue remains unclear.
Indications from Treaty Negotiations Minister Chris
Finlayson suggest a pan-Maori approach to resolving the
issue is not favoured, and that capacity for local iwi
solutions to local issues will be possible.
The
Maori Party "seems happy with progress", said Key, who
promised a "thoughtful" document which would offer a
"credible way forward". The issue has polarised because of
its perceived threat to rights of access to the foreshore
for non-Maori, and Maori anger over the theft of
entitlements relating to foreshore and seabed created by the
previous government's legislation.
Meanwhile, Key
said Cabinet had made decisions relating to the future of
Environment Canterbury at Cabinet today, and these would be
announced by the environment and local government ministers
Nick Smith and Rodney Hide "in the next few days".
A
review led by former National Cabinet Minister Wyatt Creech
recommended sacking theECan councillors, replacing them with
a commissioner, and the creation of a new special water
authority to deal with water allocation and storage issues
in the stressed catchment.
Key also announced today
that the government would implement all of the key
recommendations of the Crown Research Institute taskforce,
including a greater proportion of non-contestable funding,
and a move to more meaningful measures of Crown science
contributions to national outcomes. This includes a
"financial viability" test rather than a commercial return
test for the CRIs' financial performance.
(BusinessWire) 18:06:30