Helicopter monitoring due to start for 2011-12
MEDIA RELEASE 4 August 2011
Helicopter monitoring due
to start for 2011-12
A new round of Waikato Regional
Council helicopter monitoring to check on compliance with
dairy effluent management rules is due to get underway
shortly. Helicopter monitoring is one of the council's
contributions to an ongoing agriculture industry effort
aimed at a continuing improvement with compliance in the
Waikato, said compliance and education manager Rob Dragten.
"We will be working with Federated Farmers, Fonterra,
DairyNZ and farmers generally to make further gains on
effluent management in the Waikato this season after last
year's much improved performance. Farmers wanting specific
advice on the council's rules can call 0800 800 401 or visit
www.waikatoregion.govt.nz/forfarmers
Federated Farmers Waikato dairy section
chairperson Chris Lewis encouraged farmers to ensure their
effluent systems were working well. "Waikato farmers are
making big improvements on farm spending, with tens of
thousands of dollars spent on effluent upgrades in the last
few seasons, and fencing off streams and rivers. Federated
Farmers Waikato was very happy with last season's big
improvement in compliance. We would like to remind farmers
that we need to make sure effluent systems are working
properly and managed by senior staff, or the owners
themselves, so we continue to see an even better result this
year."
Fonterra, meanwhile, is continuing its "every
farm, every year" inspection system to check effluent
systems on dairy farms supplying the co-operative. "We are
looking forward to working with the council on making
further environmental gains in the Waikato this season,"
said Fonterra's environmental programme manager Charlotte
Rutherford. Mr Dragten said doing more to ensure compliance
was important for environmental health as effluent
management practices that contravene the rules can lead to
excessive levels of nutrients and bacteria getting into
waterways, posing a threat to human and animal health, as
well as the general health of waterways. The council is
planning to check about 1000 of the region's 4000 dairy
farms using helicopters this season. Seven monitoring
flights are planned, each taking in about 135 farms in
randomly selected locations.
"It's important for the sake of the health of our waterways that we work together with the agriculture industry to weed out any remaining poor effluent management practices in our region. "We don't want the very good work being done by the majority of farmers to be undermined by those who aren't complying. "We won't shy away from taking enforcement action where appropriate against those found to be breaking the rules." Last season's results from helicopter monitoring of farm compliance with permitted activity rules, as well as on the ground checking of consented effluent systems, showed just 12 per cent of properties were significantly non-compliant, compared to 27 per cent the year before. Significant non-compliance is generally described as a discharge of effluent that has either entered water, or is at high risk of entering water, such as unauthorised direct discharges of effluent to drains and streams, and excessive application of effluent on to pasture. Sixty-six per cent of farms were fully compliant with the rules in 2010-11, up significantly from 51 per cent the year before. Others were mostly compliant or partially compliant. "Farmers deserve a great deal of credit for lifting their performance on compliance last season and we will be really pleased if further gains can be made in 2011-12," said Mr Dragten. "Farmers, the council, Fonterra, DairyNZ and the agriculture industry generally put in a lot of effort to improve compliance last year and the challenge now is to build on this progress."
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The Waikato Regional Council The
council's area extends from the Bombay Hills in the north to
Mt Ruapehu in the south, and from the mouth of the Waikato
River to Mokau on the west coast, across to the Coromandel
Peninsula on the east.
The region contains nationally
important electricity generation facilities, an
internationally significant dairy sector and iconic natural
features, such as Lake Taupo, which are key tourist
attractions.
The council has three key strategic
goals: * The values of land and water resources are
sustained across the region * The people of the region
collaborate to achieve a shared vision of the Waikato
competing globally, caring locally * The Waikato
Regional Council meets its legislative co-governance
requirements by working together in good faith and a spirit
of co-operation
Our wide-ranging responsibilities
include: * sustainable management of natural and
physical resources, including pest control. * planning
regional growth and transport, and providing bus services. *
civil defence, emergency response, navigation safety, dam
safety, flood management, erosion control and road
safety.
ends
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