Site Meter

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Councillor holds own meeting

Councillor holds own meeting on miner's plant

An Environment Southland councillor says it would be futile to sit on the committee hearing the case for a briquetting plant at Eastern Southland, and will hold his own public meeting instead.
  Robert Guyton, a member of the council's resource consent hearing committee, said yesterday he would hold an informal meeting to gauge public opinion on Solid Energy's plans to build a $25 million briquetting plant near Mataura, as legislation meant he would be unable to "ask the questions I feel are most important" at tomorrow's hearing.
  A clause in the Resource Management (Energy and Climate Change) Amendment Bill meant councils could not consider climate change and the impact of greenhouse gases when granting consent applications, so the public was unable to question the potential environmental impact of lignite mining at tomorrow's hearing, he said.
  Rules that meant regional councils had to look at conset applications on a case-by-case basis was flawed - as shown recently at the waituna Lagoon, he said.
  "It's death by a thousand cuts" and I'm not happy to sit and allow that to occur." Mr Guyton said.
  That clause made him wonder how much sway industry had on the country's policy-making, and what direction the National-led Government was heading, he said.
  Last month the Gore District Council approved a resource consent application from the Government-owned energy company, and Prime Minister John Key has backed plans to mine Southland's lignite.
  Tomorrow's Environment Southland hearing is for water and discharge permits.
  Mr Guyton said he believed the committee would approve the application, but it was important councillors heard a range of viewpoints and were not close-minded.
"[At meetings organised by stakeholders] I've found they can't really have a say too easily. They're more there to be told, to have the case presented to them, rather than back-and-forth sharing of information," Mr Guyton said.
  He wanted to hear from those in support of mining plans just as much as he wanted to speak with others in opposition, and planned to present the findings of tomorrow's discussion when Environment Southland attended a presentation by Solid Energy later this month, he said.
  Environment Southland chief executive Ciaran Keogh yesterday declined to comment on whether he believed Mr Guyton should be attending the consents hearing, rather than holding his own meeting.
  "It's actually a substantial political argument, and it's not up to me to be involved in that realm," he said.
  However, Mr Guyton and other committee members were under no obligation to attend every single hearing, and what each councillor chose to do as a private individual was their business, he said.
  Mr Guyton will hold his meeting at the Invercargill Public Library from 1:30pm to 3:00pm tomorrow. The resource consent hearing will begin at 1:30pm at Environment Southland.

 alana.dixon@stl.co.nz

4 comments:

Cheyne said...

Hi Robert, how did the meeting go? Apologies I was unable to attend, how did this amendment come about re climate change and industry that may have adverse effect on environ?? using global warming (or lack of conclusive evidence?)as scapegoat for council/government to allow without due consideration to adverse consequences?

robertguyton said...

Cheyne - the meeting was a great success, in my view. There were around 30 people there, all strong willed and clued-up. The discussions were well informed and thought-provoking - I learned alot! The journalist stayed the whole time and wrote screeds, especially when the ex-chairman of Environment Southland challenged my right to hold such a meeting and said I'd now disqualified myself from every consent in the future - that is, he scoolded me until the crowd, including Leslie Soper, our Labour MP, gave him a mighty strop-up and forced him to pull his head in.
There were District Councillors there, from Invercargill and Gore, candidates for the coming general election, farmers (organic and conventional), artists, teachers, business people - you name it! There was even one man who wore a Solid Energy tie! My faithful scribe Bioneer, recorded everyone's contribution and the Times photographer took lots of shots , one of which will I hope be in tomorrows paper. Some very interesting observations were made about the RMA/greenhouse gas exclusion situation and I will be following up on those. It was a very stimulating meeting and I was very proud of those who came along, and thankful too, as I am for those who emailed me earlier today with their support. It really surprised me how much interest and support there was. And now I'm tired :-)

Anonymous said...

Lesley Soper MP! Maybe a slip, maybe a premonition, maybe a traumatic hallucination. Who knows?

robertguyton said...

Indeed, she's not. It was an honorary status I conferred on her in recognition of her effective and decisive dispatching of Mr Collie yesterday.
I'll ammend the post, now that she's received the recognition :-)