National attacks the RMA
July 4, 2002
National is threatening to undermine the core principles of the Resource Management Act, says Forest and Bird.
Forest and Bird's environmental lawyer, Kate Mitcalfe, says "National's policy on the RMA is based on hype and misinformation. National claims that the RMA creates 'unnecessary costs, delays, and uncertainties'.1 However, an OECD Report published in 2001 directly challenges these claims.2"
The OECD Report shows that New Zealand has low environmental compliance costs. New Zealand businesses require fewer permits under our environmental legislation, than that required in most of the 11 countries surveyed. The Report confirms that the cost to comply with the RMA is considerably lower than the cost to comply with our tax or employment laws.
"National threatens to shut the community out of environmental decision-making. Opportunities for community participation in resource management decision-making are already very limited - a staggering 95% of resource consent applications are processed without any opportunity for public input" says Ms Mitcalfe. "National proposes to reduce opportunities for community involvement even further by whittling the notification of resource consents; squeezing the public out altogether."
National plans to block members of the community that are not "directly affected", increasing the barriers to public participation in environmental decision-making.3 Ms Mitcalfe says "public participation ensures that relevant information is available and properly balanced. Public participation creates fair and sustainable decisions. By undermining community involvement, National threatens sound and well-informed environmental decision making."
National's proposal to block public participation will undermine the quality of environmental decisions. "Restricting the public's involvement in planning decisions may smooth the way for developers and business interests but at what cost to the environment and the community?" Ends
1
What is the Resource
Management Act? The Resource Management Act 1991 (RMA) is
world-leading environmental legislation. The purpose of the
RMA is to promote the sustainable management of land, sea,
air and water. It does this by "remedying, avoiding or
mitigating" the negative effects of proposed activities on
the environment. The RMA integrated environmental
management. It replaced 50 different statutes that dealt
with air quality, noise control, water and soil
conservation, and town planning and coastal management, so
that all the environmental effects of a proposed activity
could be considered at once. The RMA is frequently used as a
guide for other countries considering environmental law
reform. The RMA seeks to protect those qualities of our
environment that we all cherish, such as breathing clean air
and being able to swim at an unpolluted beach. It also seeks
to encourage the protection of wetlands, the natural
character of the coast, and the diminishing areas of our
natural environment that provide habitat for indigenous
species such as kiwi and giant weta. Without rules
controlling new activities, large-scale, dirty and
unsustainable factories, mines or dams could be built
anywhere. The RMA allows the community and local councils
to comment on proposed activities that may have significant
environmental impacts. It sets up processes to ensure that
decisions are fair, balanced and sustainable. The RMA
requires local councils to prepare plans and policy
statements. These documents set out those activities that
require a resource consent and those that can take place
without any permit at all. These plans and policy statements
ensure that the quality of our environment can be protected
- for our enjoyment, for future generations, and to protect
our unique natural biodiversity. Dispelling the RMA Myths
Myth 1: The RMA creates uncertainties and slows
development. Not true The Facts: The majority of consents
are processed without delays. In the 1999/2000 and 2000/2001
financial years 82% of resource consents were processed
within the statutory time limits. Some resource consent
applications require particular scrutiny because of their
potentially serious environmental effects. The proportion
of applications that are declined or appealed is tiny - less
than 1%. The impacts of a new development are often
reduced or avoided through conditions being placed on
resource consents, rather than the whole proposal being
rejected. Sometimes a compromise can be reached that
satisfies the interests of all those involved. For
example: a) A subdivision proposal in a bird corridor near
Wellington was allowed to go ahead once it was agreed that
cats would not be introduced into the area. This has
occurred with a number of wildlife friendly sub-divisions in
ecologically sensitive areas around the country. a) A
major subdivision in the Canterbury high country, close to
conservation land, was allowed to go ahead once conditions
were agreed to that would reduce the impacts of new
buildings, garden weeds, grey water and sewerage
disposal. Claims that the RMA stifles development and
involves too much "red tape" are the same accusations as
those that were levelled against the Town and Country
Planning Act, which the RMA replaced. But it is essential
that developers' interests are balanced against those of the
public and the environment, so fair and sustainable planning
decisions can be made. Myth 2: The RMA is costly and
anti-business. Not true The Facts: An OECD report
published in 2001 shows that New Zealand has low
environmental compliance costs by international standards.
Businesses here require fewer permits or consents under
environmental legislation than those in most other countries
included in the survey. The cost to comply with our
environmental laws is much lower than that for our tax or
employment laws. The RMA process has, in fact, tended to
be weighted in favour of developers, and against
environmental and community groups. Developers have better
access to information, funding, scientific expertise, and
legal representation. Until recently members of the public
did not have access to legal aid to enable them to voice
their concerns. Community and environmental groups are
usually under-resourced and as a result are often unable to
participate in the RMA process to the extent they would
like. Opposing activities with negative effects on the
environment exposes community groups to the risk of having
costs awarded against them. After losing their court case
legal costs of nearly $27,000 were awarded against the Stop
the Wash group, which sought to slow down fast ferries to
reduce the environmental damage and safety problems caused
by the fast ferries' wake. These costs were awarded despite
the group having legitimate concerns - the Marlborough
District Council has since passed bylaws to reduce the ferry
speed. Myth 3: The RMA allows submitters to be obstructive.
Not true The Facts: People object to applications because
of their concern for the effects of a proposal, whether it
is close to their homes or in another part of the country.
Claims that "vexatious" objectors hold up development are
used as a justification for further reducing the public's
right to have a say on resource consent applications. In
reality few people have the time or energy to participate in
the planning process - if they manage to hear about and
understand a proposal, writing a submission can still be
daunting, let alone appearing before a council hearing
panel. Sometimes an individual is labelled as unreasonable
purely because they are the only person to object to a
proposal. But the fact that so few people make objections is
indicative of how difficult and daunting it can be to make
submissions, give evidence and lodge an appeal with the
Environment Court, rather than an objector's
unreasonableness. Most people who appeal a decision to allow
a development proposal do so at great personal cost and from
a genuine desire to protect an area of significant natural
or aesthetic value. Myth 4: The RMA requires too many
notifications Not true The Facts: Only 5% of resource
consent applications were notified, and therefore could be
commented on by the public, in the 1999/2000 financial year.
This is less than half the rate of notification that
occurred under the planning legislation that preceded the
RMA. For the vast majority of resource consent
applications there is no opportunity for the public to
comment. Forest and Bird believes that concerned citizens
should be able to submit on any application that may have a
significant impact on the environment. While this is
envisaged by the RMA, it often does not happen. The
failure of councils to notify consent applications has
resulted in important areas of native habitat being
destroyed without any opportunity for public comment.
Examples of resource consent applications that the local
council approved without public notification
include: * Farming of the alien invasive seaweed
pinnatifida, Wellington harbour. * A coal mine under Paparoa
National Park, West Coast. * Heavy logging of Orikaka
beech/podocarp forest by Timberlands West Coast, Buller.
* Clearance of an extensive area of matagouri (New Zealand's
only thorn woodland species) on the banks of the Maruia
River. * Construction of the 10 storey Park Terrace
apartment block next to Christchurch's Hagley Park. * The
construction of a new two storey house on an undeveloped and
wild cliff edge at Punakaiki, ruining a spectacular
landscape. Think twice the next time you hear that the RMA
creates "costs, delays and uncertainties". Do you want a
clean environment, natural beauty and an opportunity to have
a say - or rampant, unsustainable development approved
behind closed
doors?