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Contact UsWainui residents with concerns about trees that block their views have until Wednesday 10 March to tell council about them. A committee is to be established which will consider requests made about beachfront trees.
The Lysnar and Wainui Beach Reserves Management Plan, which council adopted in 2008, called for the establishment of a Tree Advisory Committee. The committee will consider requests made from Wainui residents to have trees which block their sea views pruned or removed. The committee is to be made up of council staff, a Department of Conservation representative and an arborist.
The community has until Wednesday 10 March 2010 to inform council of their concerns. A number of requests have already been made and these will all be assessed by the committee in March. Those not received by this date will be assessed when the group reconvenes in 2012.
“Obviously trees are an emotive topic,” says reserves planner, De-Arne Sutherland. “A number of submissions to the management plan from the Wainui community were about trees. Although the community at Wainui and Okitu are largely ‘beach’ people at heart, and recognise the importance of stabilising and regenerating the beach’s dunes. If their sea views are blocked by trees on council reserves, they generally want them gone, or at least pruned. Views are important too”.
Council understands this, and recommended a Tree Advisory Committee meet every 2 years to consider public requests. Where possible the group will look for reasonable ways to reinstate views. Decisions will be based on the impact the tree has on views, its health, its importance to dune stability and whether anything else impedes views. “We must balance the need to protect our dunes with the desire for views. The group may decide to remove exotic trees, lift or thin natives or leave the tree as it is,” Mrs Sutherland added.
Residents should advise us in writing or fill in an online form on our website. You should include your address, what tree(s) are blocking your view and what you want to happen.
Since 2008 reserves staff have been busy implementing the Lysnar and Wainui Beach Reserves Management Plan. New steps and picnic tables, signs and bins have been installed, landscaping has occurred at ‘schools’ and the ‘whales’ area has been tidied up.
Trees on private property are as much if not more a problem as those on council reserves. Wainui is a beach community not a forestery community.
Perhaps individuals should be more considerate of how their trees affect neighbours sea views.
Pohutakawa are extremely hardy and are the main culpret.They can take a heavy trim/prune program.
Posted by Greg Meade, 28/02/2010 7:09am (5 months ago)
Keep the bases of the large Norfolk pines clear of regenerating branches.
Posted by Mark Clapham, 24/02/2010 2:01pm (5 months ago)
I note with interest that the council are willing to work in with Wainui residents on the trees blocking our seaviews which is great. However recently our neighbours at 15 Douglas St have been granted consent to build a 2nd story on their home. I own a property at 14 Douglas St - and the 2nd story at number 15 will totally remove ALL seaviews from our property, greatly affecting the properties resale value? When I queried this at council they said there was only a "light" restriction not "view" restriction. I am very dissapointed that the council is not willing to protect seaviews.
Kind regards
Tess McCormick
Posted by Tess McCormick, 24/02/2010 12:03pm (5 months ago)
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