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‘Kremlin' councils need to go

‘Kremlin' councils need to go

Shaun Jones. PHOTO: ODT FILES
Resource Minister Shane Jones has called the Otago Regional Council "the Kremlin of the South Island" after an application to expand the Macraes gold mine ran into trouble.
Mr Jones, who is also the regional development minister, said the council was full of "KGB green zealots" and the episode showed why regional councils needed to be scrapped.
The Otago council's assessment of environmental effects — which recommended Oceana-Gold's application to expand its mine be declined in full — was "ideological scribbling".
Any other investor or miner in New Zealand would now quickly conclude they had to join the fast-track application process, "which will enable these economic saboteurs to be marginalised", he said.
Council chairwoman Cr Gretchen Robertson said "name-calling" was unhelpful and the council's views were evidence-based, not ideological.
OceanaGold has been granted more time to prepare for a hearing for its proposed expansion at Macraes after the regional council said its application should be declined and the Waitaki district and Dunedin city councils also raised concerns.
The regional council's view of the company's Macraes Phase 4 (MP4) Project was troubling, Mr Jones said.
"It confirms the worst of my prejudices, that the regional council in the South Island, that the Otago Regional Council is the Kremlin of the South Island," he said.
"These are the reasons why people should be backing me to disestablish regional councils in New Zealand.
"Their role is as catchment boards and looking at the discharge and the allocation of water, water take.
"I am astounded at a time where the economy is still recovering from the Covid experience, a record number of New Zealanders are moving to Australia, and we have these Politburo apparatchiks destroying hundreds of jobs, undermining scores of millions of dollars in the local economy.
"For a dead moth.
"It's an ideological attempt to defeat mining.
"It truly is unbelievable.
"This is a part of New Zealand where no-one goes.
"There are some easy mitigative steps that can be taken, but the Kremlin and its KGB green zealots completely and utterly show me why regional councils need to be disestablished."
The "nationally vulnerable" moth Orocrambus sophistes, which lives in short tussock grasslands, was found at Golden Bar, one of three open pits about 55km north of Dunedin that OceanaGold has applied to expand.
The regional council's recommending report highlighted the moth alongside the proposed expansion's actual and potential effects on surface water quality, aquatic ecology, natural inland and ephemeral wetlands, and lizard habitat.
The effects would be "significantly adverse" and could not be avoided, minimised, remedied, offset or compensated for.
It would also have significant adverse cumulative effects on cultural values, "and it is not yet known if these can be managed by conditions", the report said.
Cr Robertson said the report was prepared by qualified professionals under the Resource Management Act.
"It is a technical, evidence-based assessment — not a political statement.
"Our staff are simply doing their jobs within the law as it stands.
"Name-calling only undermines confidence in both central and local government."
Regional councils across New Zealand welcomed "meaningful dialogue" on how to best deliver the services they were intended to — flood protection, biosecurity, civil defence, environmental management and public transport, she said.
"Here in Otago, we remain focused on our responsibility to protect the environment while supporting sustainable economic development.
"That balance is not ideological — it reflects the law, and we believe it reflects the values of our region: caring for both our environment and our livelihoods."
A minute issued by independent commissioner Rob van Voorthuysen this week said the hearing for OceanaGold's proposed expansion had been postponed from next month to December at the mining company's request.
The company's lawyers advised more time was required to consider the recommendations from the councils, he said.
OceanaGold senior vice-president Alison Paul said adjourning the MP4 hearing, originally scheduled for next month, would give the company more time to prepare its evidence, including addressing all three councils' reports and recommendations.
hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

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