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Wellington Rail Network Budget Funding Welcome, But More Needed
Wellington Rail Network Budget Funding Welcome, But More Needed

Scoop

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • Scoop

Wellington Rail Network Budget Funding Welcome, But More Needed

Press Release – Greater Wellington Te Pane Matua Taiao Cr Ponter says the funding is essential for fixing broken down track assets and infrastructure that are plaguing the reliability of Metlink passenger services. Funding for Wellington rail network renewals in Budget 2025 is recognition of the precarious state of the metropolitan network, but ongoing investment is required, says Greater Wellington chair Daran Ponter. The government has allocated $143.6m for critical rail infrastructure renewals in Wellington and Auckland, from a total spend of $604.6m for the last two years of the Rail Network Investment Programme 2024-2027. Cr Ponter says the funding is essential for fixing broken down track assets and infrastructure that are plaguing the reliability of Metlink passenger services. 'It's music to my ears to hear the government has taken on board our calls for ongoing investment in rail infrastructure. Greater Wellington stands ready to work with KiwiRail to make the best use of this funding,' Cr Ponter says. 'We're relieved the Ministers for Transport and Rail understand the relationship between failing track assets, their impact on service reliability and falling passenger numbers. 'To restore commuter confidence in Metlink rail services, the investment announced today is a step towards faster and more punctual trains that reduce the road congestion stifling our region's economy.' Greater Wellington Transport Committee chair Thomas Nash says the funding is long overdue and will need to be sustained in future government budgets. 'We're grateful for this money and pleased the government has acknowledged more investment is required to properly renew its assets on the metropolitan rail network,' Cr Nash says. 'Currently our passenger services are beset by speed restrictions where track infrastructure is aging and cancellations when it fails. This has contributed to a steady decline in rail patronage, now down a third in Wellington from pre-Covid levels. 'Disgruntled rail passengers are continuing to switch to the roads, clogging State Highways and our cities with traffic, increasing carbon emissions and hampering economic activity.' To reverse this trend, Wairarapa regional councillor Adrienne Staples says between $700m and $900m is needed to renew Wellington rail network assets over the next 10-15 years. 'By confirming its 800-million-dollar investment in the LNIRIM project last year, the government signalled to rail commuters in places like the Wairarapa – it understood their pain,' Cr Staples says. 'I'm sure they join me in calling on the government to sustain its investment in renewing our aged rail network to restore the reliability of Wairarapa rail services and all Metlink passenger trains.'

Rare Endemic Plant, Te Pua O Te Rēinga, Rediscovered In Regional Park
Rare Endemic Plant, Te Pua O Te Rēinga, Rediscovered In Regional Park

Scoop

time18-05-2025

  • Science
  • Scoop

Rare Endemic Plant, Te Pua O Te Rēinga, Rediscovered In Regional Park

Press Release – Greater Wellington Te Pane Matua Taiao Greater Wellington ecosystems and community manager and Rp Tiaki co-chair, David Boone, says a bird specialist working on behalf of Greater Wellington was not looking for the plant, but stumbled across several clusters in an area closed off from the … Te pua o te Rēinga, the only parasitic plant endemic to Aotearoa, has been rediscovered in the Wainuiomata water collection area after wild populations of the species were thought to be extinct from the region for more than a century. Also known as wood rose or Dactylanthus taylorii, Te pua o te Rēinga is regarded as regionally Threatened – Critical. While Te pua o te Rēinga seeds from the King Country were translocated to the Wellington region in 2020, the last documented observation of a wild Te pua o te Rēinga population was in the Kaitoke area in 1914. Greater Wellington ecosystems and community manager and Rōpū Tiaki co-chair, David Boone, says a bird specialist working on behalf of Greater Wellington was not looking for the plant, but stumbled across several clusters in an area closed off from the public. 'In a remarkable and unexpected discovery, our contractor spotted the plants close to a bird count station we have been surveying annually for the last two decades,' Boone says. 'The plants were not found in a healthy condition – more like relics of a remnant population – further monitoring is needed to understand the size and health of the population, and what we can do to preserve it. 'The forest in the Wainuiomata water collection area is largely unchanged since Europeans arrived in New Zealand and includes the largest and most pristine lowland forest in the lower North Island. It is a habitat for native bird species like tītipounamu (rifleman) and kiwi, and now one of New Zealand's rarest plants.' Department of Conservation operations manager and an expert on Te pua o te Rēinga, Avi Holzapfel, says this is the southernmost known population of the plant in Aotearoa New Zealand. 'Individual plants can be long-lived, for decades or even more. Initial indications are this is a remnant population of mature plants which may have been at the site for a long time – right under our noses. Protecting the plants from predators like possums and rats will hopefully allow the plants to seed, which may be replanted to rejuvenate the population,' Holzapfel says. 'The parasitic nature of Te pua o te Rēinga means the plant is fully dependent on host trees; therefore, all conservation efforts need to take the wider forest into account as well; regular pest control carried out by Greater Wellington helped the population survive.' Short-tailed bats, pekapeka, are a known pollinator of Te pua o te Rēinga. Greater Wellington's acoustic monitoring along the nearby Pākuratahi River in early 2024 detected a new population of central lesser short-tailed bats. The only short-tailed bat populations known to the regional council prior to this were in the Tararua Range and northern Wairarapa, both of which had not been seen in recent years. 'As short-tailed bats can range over 40km during a single night's feeding, it is quite possible that bats have visited, fed on, and pollinated the newly discovered population in the past, and hopefully will do so again,' Holzapfel adds. The working group responsible for translocating Te pua o te Rēinga seeds to Zealandia and Ōtari-Wilton's bush in 2020 has reconvened to work with Greater Wellington, Wellington City Council, and the Department of Conservation to develop a co-management plan for the re-discovered wild population; made up of representatives from the region's six iwi: Rangitāne o Wairarapa, Ngāti Kahungunu, Taranaki Whānui, Ngāti Toa Rangatira, Te Āti Awa ki Whakarongotai and Raukawa. Rangitāne o Wairarapa Pou Rautaki Whenua Amber Craig, a member of the working group, emphasises the significance of Te pua o te Rēinga in te ao Māori and the discovery of the collection of rākau. 'This rediscovery is very exciting for us as a collective mana whenua rōpū,' Craig says. 'Leading this project with mātauranga Māori, in collaboration with Greater Wellington, Department of Conservation, and communities, will ensure that we can not only protect Te pua o te Rēinga but ensure they thrive. 'Preserving the whakapapa of these plants is important, and we can only do that by listening to our pūrākau, looking at the intrinsic relationships Te pua o te Rēinga has with other species, and working together holistically to support the entire ecosystem.' The 'Protection and Recovery Plan' is a living document outlining next steps, including protecting the site, conducting a broader survey of the surrounding area, and identifying any additional plant individuals. Educational resources for Greater Wellington field staff and knowledge exchange with iwi and national experts is also underway. 'Te pua o te Rēinga is a spiritual plant that has brought us all together and shown us what kotahitanga looks like,' Craig adds. The Wainuiomata water collection area is a Key Native Ecosystem site due to its high natural values and vulnerability to predators, and would become part of the proposed Puketahā eco-sanctuary. Pest control efforts in the area are managed under the Greater Wellington Key Native Ecosystems programme.

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