Take me to the river

by frog

Jim Anderton has today resurrected the Land Access issue, saying that he has no preconceived idea as to how it should be achieved, but that some sort of deal must be done. However, his options may be limited because the Government’s deal with UF(O) reportedly says only non-statutory solutions can be considered to resolve the issue.

Which means that after all the fuss and bother the whole debate is circling back to the solutions the Greens have consistently advocated.

Like Labour and Anderton’s Progressives, the Greens support the principle that the public must have access to their waterways, but Jeanette has always maintained that a unilateral law change that effectively confiscates land off farmers is only going to create conflict. Announcing the Greens’ position last November, she said:

“The days when New Zealanders enjoyed a shared culture in favour of public access seem to have gone. Landowners are afraid of crime and interference with stock. People who want to enjoy traditional access to the great outdoors to tramp, fish and mountain bike are seeing more doors closed to them. We need to find a process for negotiation and conflict resolution to restore both access and trust.”

Shortly after she said that, the Government adopted the Greens’ new policy of appointing an Access Commissioner to, among other things, negotiate public access to waterways on a case-by-case basis.

And as Jeanette said in June this year, a lot of the specific disputes around the country between local communities being denied access to their rivers and beaches by (often new) land owners could be resolved by having the existing legal arrangements actually honoured, which in most cases means properly enforcing paper roads.

It is worth noting that, in even contemplating a legal universal ‘right to roam’, Labour started off some way to the left of the Greens on this issue…

frog says

Published in Environment & Resource Management | Parliament | Society & Culture by frog on Sat, October 29th, 2005   

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