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Reaction to plan change halt mixed
Reaction to plan change halt mixed

Otago Daily Times

time7 days ago

  • Politics
  • Otago Daily Times

Reaction to plan change halt mixed

Dunedin residents' concerns about multi-unit development have been caught up in sweeping halts to plan changes, leaving one city councillor "extremely unhappy". Across the South, councils are at odds in their reaction to a government announcement halting some plan changes, ahead of further resource management reform. One council said the decision was "unexpected"; others said it was anticipated or already incorporated into decision-making — one staff member called it "another piece of track on the reform rollercoaster". Dunedin City Council city development manager Anna Johnson said the change's most immediate impact would likely be on Plan Change 2 — a review of the city's heritage provisions and design of multi-unit development. A report recommending work on the plan change ceased would be considered at the council's August 12 meeting. Cr Sophie Barker said "huge amounts" of work and community consultation had been done. "I'm extremely unhappy that Plan Change 2 is caught in the halt," she said. She remained concerned about central government interference in local decision-making. "Seventy-three percent of people surveyed thought more should be done to improve the design of multi-unit developments in relation to effects on streetscape amenity or neighbourhood character," she said. "This is a growing issue of concern." Dr Johnson said the council had anticipated the halt to future plan changes — the wider impacts on council were still being considered, but there would be "substantial work" in preparing for Resource Management Act (RMA) reform. On Wednesday, Minister Responsible for RMA Reform Chris Bishop announced the government would stop "unnecessary" plan changes, legislation expected to be in place by August — suspending requirements for councils to review plans or notify new plan changes, unless they met exemption criteria. Too much time was spent on plan processes which would likely be incomplete or "largely wasted" under the government's RMA replacement. Queenstown Lakes District Council planning and development general manager David Wallace said the changes were "another piece of track on the reform rollercoaster". At a planning and strategy committee meeting yesterday, he said staff would continue their work, while assessing what exemptions would be allowed. Waitaki District Council heritage and planning manager David Campbell said the announcement was "unexpected". "[It] would have benefited all councils if it had been made clear earlier in the resource management reform programme," he said. The council would seek clarification from the Ministry for the Environment to determine how the change would affect its notified proposed district plan. Environment Southland strategy and regulation general manager Hayley Fitchett said the council had already paused work on two key pieces of local regulation while final changes were made to the new system — the council was focused on "a smooth transition". Gore District Council operations general manager Dave Bainbridge-Zafar said the council was in a "good position" — the change did not affect its work programme. "We still intend to notify decisions on the proposed district plan by January, on the presumption that [Minister for the Environment Penny Simmonds] grants our recent extension request." A Central Otago District Council spokesperson also said the changes would not affect its work programme. "In anticipation of reforms, we were not proposing to draft or notify any plan changes until after national direction is in place and the new legislation is introduced." — Additional reporting Guy Williams.

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