Forestry company, director fined $112k for continued pollution of stream
Photo:
Supplied / Waikato Regional Council
Slash and sediment polluted an important stream in Waihī for over a year and despite six inspections, and two abatement notices, a logging company refused to change its behaviour and continued to cause environmental damage.
Forestry company Seaview Logging Limited and company director, Graeme Howard Savill, who carried out the harvest, were convicted and sentenced by Environment and District Court Judge Lauren Semple in the Huntly District Court in April on five charges of breaching National Environmental Standards for Commercial Forestry and fined $112,500.
After the conviction the defendants appealed the sentence to the High Court however, this week that appeal has been abandoned and RNZ can now report the original sentence.
The summary of facts showed that on 6 October 2022, Waikato Regional Council enforcement officers visited the 18-hectare plantation forestry block on Thorn Road, Waihī to inspect the harvest operation.
The council found several breaches of the National Environmental Standard for Plantation Forestry, including a lack of stormwater and water run off control, exposed areas of soil which had not been stabilised, and unmaintained and ineffective erosion and sediment control measures.
This was the first of six inspections over 2022 and 2023 which all found sediment and erosion control measures were deficient in protecting the environment from discharges.
In her sentencing indication, Judge Semple said during each visit to the site the council told the defendants that the sediment and erosion control measures were unsatisfactory to prevent the discharge of sediment to waterways.
"Rather than work with the council to ensure that appropriate sediment and erosion control measures were put in place and appropriately maintained, Mr Savill determined that such measures were unnecessary or could be undertaken in a perfunctory manner or at a later date."
Judge Semple also wrote that Savill was an experienced operator who knew, or should have known, that effective sediment and erosion control mechanisms are a fundamental component of a forestry harvesting operations.
"I accept the prosecutor's submission that the offending was deliberate and sustained. I find the defendants' actions to be highly careless bordering on reckless and the culpability in this matter to be high."
Waikato Regional Council's acting regional compliance manager Evan Billington said the Waitaheke Stream, which was affected by the failure to control sediment and erosion, should be protected.
He said the effects of sediment and forestry slash on waterways was widely known.
"The harvest and earthworks management was done very poorly, with Mr Savill failing to take his responsibilities seriously, despite the intervention of council officers," Billington said.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
3 hours ago
- RNZ News
One person dies following Horowhenua quad bike crash
Photo: A person on a quad-bike has died following a crash at a Horowhenua beach on Saturday. Emergency services were called to Foxton Beach near the surf club shortly after 1pm. Two people had been on the quad bike at the time of the crash. The other person is uninjured. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
14 hours ago
- RNZ News
Man dies after Ōtara street fight, homicide investigation launched
Photo: RNZ / Marika Khabazi A man has died after a street fight in the Auckland suburb of Ōtara on Friday night. A homicide investigation has been launched. "Police were called to Wymondley Road shortly before midnight after reports of a group of people fighting in the street," Detective Senior Sergeant Simon Taylor said. "Upon arrival, two men were located with critical injuries." The men were taken to hospital and one died a short time later. The other man remains in hospital in a serious condition. A scene examination continues today and cordons will be in place, with police urging witnesses to come forward.

RNZ News
17 hours ago
- RNZ News
Bangladesh-born Jahangir Alam's 25 years of passport fraud and sham marriage land him record jail term
Photo: RNZ A man who pretended to be his brother for 25 years and entered a sham marriage to get citizenship has been handed the longest jail term in New Zealand history for passport fraud. Bangladesh-born Jahangir Alam - whose true name is not known - was found guilty of 29 offences, which included applying for visas for his wife and mother with his false identity, earlier this year. He was jailed for four years at the Auckland District Court on Friday for producing forged documents, supplying false information and using a false passport, where the judge Peter Winter denounced the two-decade long passport and immigration fraud. "The initial identity fraud offending progressed and continued to mushroom from there," said Winter. "It was complex, premeditated and longstanding. The duration and scale of the offending is considerable." His 45-year-old wife, Taj Parvin Shilpi, who was sentenced to 12 months' home detention, was "fully aware" of the fraud, he said, as they were cousins who had lived in the same village growing up. The Te Atatu couple have a 21-year-old son, a university student who was 'entirely blameless' said Winter, having arrived with his mother as a four-year-old in 2008. He became a citizen as the child of a New Zealander. Alam went on to become president of the Bangladesh Association of New Zealand Inc (BANZI), in which he helped up to 80 people applying for passports. Bangladesh had no consulate in New Zealand and Alam, through BANZI, had helped with paperwork, passports and stamps. There was no suggestion any of those passports were false. The judge was asked to take his work in helping others into account as community service when looking at whether Alam's sentence could be discounted. Winter said it was a "form of arrogance" that someone who was illegally in the country, and who had standing in the Bengali community, was dealing with other people's passports. He refused to reduce his sentence for that, or for Alam being of good character. Alam's age and true identity remain unknown, but he is believed to be the 50-year-old older brother of John Alam, who lives in the US. How he adopted his brother's identity and came to possess the Bangladeshi passport that got him to New Zealand is not clear, but authorities found he lived in Japan in the 1990s, before returning home and setting off for Auckland. He became a taxi driver and entered a 'marriage of convenience' with a New Zealand woman - they separated shortly after he got his residence. He told a jury earlier this year that they split because of differences over her 'lifestyle' but claimed that it was a genuine partnership. Having become a citizen, married Shilpi and had a son, he could still not complete his fraud, as Immigration New Zealand initially rejected her visa application because of discepancies in the interviews staff had with the husband and wife. But she arrived in 2008 on the first of a number of visas - her application for residence was rejected as her health was deemed too poor. Alam had also tried to get his mother a visitor visa, but that too had been declined. Shilpi, who suffers from hypertension and diabetes, was "aware that he was not the person who he claimed to be, and was aware from the very beginning", said Winter. The jury had not believed her version that the couple did not meet until after his New Zealand marriage failed. Immigration New Zealand welcomed the record prison sentence, and said it was a complex investigation that took six years to complete. Shilpi has only been on temporary visas and her last visitor visa has expired. Alam's case will be referred to Internal Affairs, which is in charge of passports and citizenship. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.