MANGAWHAI'S NO.1 NEWSPAPER
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Backyard burning by the rules pleaseNorthlanders are being asked to be courteous – and follow the rules – as people take advantage of warmer spring weather and start to consider burning unwanted vegetation and other waste material.
Joe Carr, chairman of the Northland Regional Council's Environmental Management Committee, says roughly a quarter of calls to the council's environmental hotline involve complaints about burning and associated smoke nuisance. "Backyard burning typically increases during spring months in Northland because as the weather improves people start to tidy up their properties ahead of the warmer summer months. The recent storm means there's also likely to be even more waste vegetation around this spring than last year." In the past the council preferred to educate rather than take enforcement action in most cases, however, as backyard burning continued to be a common cause for complaint, it was considering a more hard-line approach from now on. Essentially the rules on backyard burning cover two broad geographical areas; one for those living in the more densely populated Whangarei area and another for the rest of the region. Northlanders outside the Whangarei airshed can have outside fires as long as the fire does not cause offensive or objectionable smoke or odour to neighbouring residents or obscure vision along public roads. The ability to have fires obviously did not apply when restricted fire season or fire bans had been imposed by local authorities. The regional council encourages alternatives to backyard burning. Vegetation waste can be composted, mulched or larger branches can be used as firewood, while paper and other materials can usually be recycled." Both the council's Regional Air Quality Plan and national regulations specifically ban the burning of a number of materials for health and environmental reasons. These include rubber tyres, coated metal wires, treated timber, plastic containers, motor vehicle parts and waste oil. Those breaching the rules are liable for enforcement action which can range from $300 to $1000 instant fines, abatement notices and prosecution (with the risk of much stiffer penalties) through the courts. General information on the rules around backyard burningis available from the council's websitenrc.govt. nz/backyardburning. Report nuisance or otherburning on the NRC environmental hotline 0800 504 639. |
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