Council backtracks
Waipā District Council has taken the proposed blue blob “preferred” position off the table for a third bridge as part of its Cambridge Connections programme following a community storm. The announcement was made after The News went to press and following weeks of adverse publicity including an aborted public information session where mayor Susan O’Regan was allegedly threatened.
In a statement, O’Regan said while there was no doubt another bridge would be needed in Cambridge in the longer term, elected members agreed the time is not right to pin down a location. “We’ve heard their concerns and understood them,” O’Regan said.
The council still wanted feedback from the community on all aspects of the project and has extended the timeframe to 5pm on Friday, May 24. Anyone who had already submitted feedback could submit further thoughts, or any changes in their thinking before that date.
Dennis takes farmer crown
Piarere’s Dennis Main was crowned Waikato-Bay of Plenty FMG Young Farmerof the Year on Saturday, following two days of competition at the Kerepehi Domain. The 30-year-old will take on six other regional finalists in July’s final – when a successor to 2023 Young Farmer of the Year, Pirongia’s Emma Poole, will be crowned in Hamilton. Also on Saturday Summer Korkie and Luke Pease from Te Awamutu College won the Waikato Bay of Plenty FMG Junior Young Farmer of the Year title for 2024 – heading off James Hill and Ben Ede from Cambridge High School. Main has not competed in the event before though has been an active member of Piarere Young Farmers. “I didn’t know what to expect, so to come away with the win was a real surprise,” he said. Main grew up on the family dairy farm, and after leaving school studied engineering. He spent four years back on the family farm and has now turned his hand to building.
Kneebone sits
Waipā-King Country constituency councillor Stu Kneebone, co-chair of the Waikato River Authority, will sit on a hearings panel responsible for considering submissions on the proposed Waikato Regional Coastal plan. Hearings are expected to be held from late this year through to early 2025. The regional council has also backed an aquaculture strategy which aims to double the value of the region’s aquaculture exports over the next 20 years to $180 million.
Tagger hits
A vandal has sprayed black paint over at least two Waipā District Council information boards. Slogans were written opposing a pathway project in Cambridge.
Begging warning
Cambridge police say it doesn’t help to give money to people who are begging in Cambridge. Community senior constable Deb Hann says money given “does not truly help the person and encourages less scrupulous people to view Cambridge as being an attractive begging location”.
See: Your help makes a difference
Grants announced
Eighteen community transport providers get a share of $209,500 distributed in the latest round of the Waikato Regional Council Community Transport Grant fund. The fund supports community organisations that help Waikato residents with transport needs which aren’t met by the public transport network. Recipients include the Cambridge Community House Trust and Te Awamutu Community Health Transport Trust.
Electric rides arrive
Waikato’s first electric bus fleet will be carrying passengers in Waipā from next Monday. Six electric vehicles are replacing diesel buses on the Cambridge (20) and Te Awamutu (24) routes. The new buses will work to a timetable that doubles the number of weekly services connecting the district to Hamilton.
New manager
Waipā Networks has announced Tom Bromfield will join as its general manager of delivery from Monday. Bromfield has over 20 years’ experience in the industry in New Zealand.
Wānanga’s new scholarships
Two new Te Wānanga o Aotearoa scholarships honour men who were crucial to its establishment. The wānanga relaunched scholarships last year and is adding three news ones in 2024.
Te Tumuaki Rongo H Wetere Scholarship recognises a tauira Māori who is the first in their whānau to study at a tertiary level. Boy Mangu Mātauranga Māori Waharoa Scholarship recognises a tauira who demonstrates their commitment to the advancement of mātauranga Māori by studying a mātauranga programme.
The third new scholarship is the Te Pou Postgraduate Diploma Kaitiakitanga L8 Scholarship which is awarded to a registered health professional who is enrolled in the Postgraduate Diploma in Kaitiakitanga L8 programme. Applications for the scholarships run to June 30.
Better slow that Mustang down
Cambridge’s Rob and Josie Van Weerd are the proud owners of a new 1966 Ford Mustang which they won at the Beach Hop in Whangamata last month. The Beach Hop – one of New Zealand’s largest automotive events – has been running annually since 2000, and organisers have given away dozens of cars in that time. The event attracts more than 100,000 people to the Coromandel town for a five-day 1950s and 60s nostalgia-themed event. Rob and Josie picked up their car last week. A 25th anniversary celebration is being planned for next year.
O-Rākau remembered
A commemoration on Tuesday marked the 160th anniversary of the battle of O-Rākau where hugely outnumbered Māori defended the site from British soldiers. The commemoration are all the more significant this year following a deed of settlement for the site being signed recently. Raukawa, Ngāti Maniapoto and Waikato-Tainui have been working with the Crown to achieve the return of the battle site since the Crown bought the land in 2015.
Switch signals
The new roundabout at the intersection of state highways 1 29, Piarere is taking shape with much of the main foundation work now complete. The focus now shifts to construction on the southern side (Tīrau approach) and to safely accommodate this work, motorists can expect to see a change to the road layout soon. Traffic south of the roundabout will be moved onto a newly constructed section of road adjacent to SH1 from Monday April 15. The changeover will occur overnight between 8pm and 5am, Sunday April 14 (weather permitting) with temporary speed restrictions and shoulder closures in place.
Turnaround bays
There has been excellent progress on the turnaround bays being constructed as part of improvements to SH1 between Cambridge and Piarere. With the finishing touches now being applied to the turnarounds at Gorton and Tunakawa Roads, installation of flexible median barrier can begin. From Tuesday next week, median barrier will begin to be installed in sections from south of the Mobil Karāpiro through to Fergusson Gully Road.
Road reopened
State Highway Three near Ōtorohanga reopened on Tuesday morning after a truck rolled closing the highway for three hours between Blackett and Awatane roads. The driver was reported to have minor injuries.
Art awards
An exhibition of all Enrich Plus artists’ entries in the IHC Art Awards will be held in the organisation’s Te Awamutu gallery in Teasdale Street on April 12. Enrich artists have always done well in the awards which provide artists with an intellectual disability the opportunity to have their talent recognised, their voices hear and to sell their work. Entries for the awards opened on Monday and close at the end of the month.
Debt levels
A reduction in development contributions and significant increases in the size and cost of Waipā’s planned capital work programme has resulted in debt increasing from a projected $318.5 million on June 30 next year to $398.5 million. More than half the debt is growth related and takes the council perilously close to its borrowing limit. The council needs to retain its borrowing power should there be a natural disaster but the delays between when council builds the necessary infrastructure and when developers pay their contributions creates a lag which high growth councils like Waipā are struggling with, a consultation document released to the public this week says.
Minor changes
No consultation will be needed for changes made to development contributions in the 2024-2025 financial year starting July 1, council’s Strategic Planning and Policy committee decided this week. Rates will not increase in growth cells while a market slowdown is occurring as seen through the lower number of consent applications and developers taking fewer sections to the market. The impact of not increasing the rates is low, Growth principal engineer Tony Coutts told the committee.
National champs
The New Zealand Dragon Boat nationals will be staged at Lake Karāpiro tomorrow (Friday) and Saturday. It’s busy weekend for the domain, which also hosts water skiers for the third round of the Karāpiro masters on Saturday and Sunday.
Tractor crashes
Police are concerned three serious crashes involving tractors over the long weekend put road users at risk and are warning people to be patient. The first was near Te Kuiti where two people were seriously injured after a car and tractor collided.
Missing woman
The search for a 79-year-old woman missing in the Pureora Forest was continuing as this edition went to press. The woman became separated from a group which were laying bait on March 23..
Daffodil call
People can pay $5 to buy a daffodil bulb for Te Awamutu’s Sculpture Park on Albert Drive later this month to ultimately create a “Memory Meadow” to remember cancer victims. The event will help raise funds for the Cancer Society.
Farm finals
The Waikato Bay of Plenty regional final of the young farmer of the year series will be staged in the Hauraki district at Kerepehi Domain tomorrow and Saturday. The present Young Farmer of the Year is Pirongia’s Emma Poole.
Housing progress
The first stage of a Housing for Humanity development on the former Zion Church site – clearing the site – has been completed. Habitat chief Nic Green said there is no time frame to complete the next stage and funding is being sought now.
Call for amalgamation
Waikato Chamber of Commerce chief executive Don Good, who lives in Karapiro, says it is time for Waikato’s 13 local authorities to start talking about mergers.
Local government duplication of bureaucracy, the differences in rules, the lack of efficiency and speed in delivering services, the number of dumb initiatives that annoy voters (such as the raised roads at intersections) means voters are looking for change, he says in his latest newsletter to members.
“The why is clear: 13 councils have proven to be too costly. It is time look at how amalgamation can be implemented. It is time for our leaders’ parochial patch protection to be put aside in the interests of all of the Waikato.
“We are calling for some genuine co-operation, reasoned debate, then real action and our current leaders to lead the Waikato, not their personal patch,” he says.
Cycle numbers down
On Park Road in Te Awamutu, there were 2717 users in March, down from 3128 in February. The busiest day was 16 March 16 with 148 users.
On Hamilton Road in Cambridge, there were the highest number of pedestrians and cyclists so far this year with 8452 users. This compares to 8230 in February. The busiest day was Sunday March 17 with 485 users.
Te Awamutu College wins
Te Awamutu College’s Asarina Johnson (stroke) and Casey-Lee Baker have won the girls U18 2x event in the D final at the New Zealand Secondary Schools Rowing Championship at Lake Ruantaniwha near Twizel.
It was a powerful effort from the girls who had been third in their heat in a time of 8:21.98, then seventh in the quarter final in 8:19.80. In the D final they rowed their best time of 8:15.69 to blitz the field by nearly four seconds.
See: Hoping for Maadi stroke of genius
Transformer gone
Waipā Networks has replaced its network’s final two-pole transformer structure. The Te Awamutu transformer on Mandeno Street was the last two-pole transformer structure on Waipā Networks’ network to be replaced, marking the end of an 18-year project to replace the poles.
Local success
Waipa rider Bennett Greenough held off younger brother Jack to win the under 23 national BMX title at the UCI BMX Racing World Cup in Rotorua. Fellow Cambridge BMX club member Leila Walker won the female elite while club mate Rico D’Anvers was third in the male elite. Te Awamutu’s Amber Robson was third in the women’s under 23.
Hunting open
Fish & Game has announced that game bird hunting licences for the 2024 season started on May 4 are now on sale. Hunters can secure their licence – which they must have to participate in game bird hunting – online via the Fish & Game website or at selected retailers nationwide. Around 40,000 licences are sold each year, however, those who hunt on their own land do not need to purchase a licence but must abide by the regulations such as bag limits and hunting hours.
Skiing nationals
Hundreds of fans will descend on Piarere next week to watch a field of 109 water skiers from around the country compete in the 2024 Rothbury New Zealand Water Ski Nationals. The event is held about every six years because the 66-year-old Piarere Water Ski Club at the Horahora end of Lake Karāpiro is considered one of New Zealand’s best competition sites.
Comfortable Classical
As part of the Autumn Festival in Cambridge, Orchestras Central (Ngā Tira Pūoru o te Pokapū) will present three events on Saturday and Sunday. It starts with ‘Comfortable Classical’, a specially designed relaxed concert, creating a comfortable and welcoming environment for families, first time concert goers and regular listeners.In the evening it will be ‘Vivaldi by Candlelight’ and on Sunday, the Waikato Youth Orchestra, which appeared in the festival last year in the hall, will perform ‘Fire and Romance’ in the afternoon.
Council says sorry
Waipā council has apologised to residents in the area where maps show a third Cambridge bridge could go over the Waikato River. In a letter drop to the hundreds of householders in an area including Bryce, Grey, upper Duke, Queen and Alpha streets, MacKenzie Place, Dallinger and Wallace courts and Haworth Ave up to Hamilton Road in the north, Transport manager Bryan Hudson said the council had intended to notify residents before details appeared in The News. “We apologise unreservedly that this did not happen.” A public information session will be held on March 21 to discuss the proposal further.
Equestrian conference
Cambridge hosted some of the world’s most renown equestrian scientists at the International Society for Equitation Science’s conference at the Don Rowlands Centre at Karāpiro. The 160 delegates were also treated to a day of site visits to Cambridge Stud, Riding for the Disabled, Pike Racing Stables, Takapoto showjumping stables and Eventstars. The theme of the conference was ‘A Good Life for Horses” and the programme included topics such as the equipment being used, detecting positive equine emotions, racehorses in their second careers, and safe, effective and ethical horse-human interactions.
Artefacts found
Work has stopped on the stormwater outfall in the C3 growth cell south of Cambridge Road between Te Awa Retirement Village and St Peter’s School after workers found historic artefacts. Waipā group manager Dawn Inglis said posts, organic matter and fire pits were found last week. Other items had been found on site some time before those.