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Resource Management Act goes under the guillotine

Jane Patterson

Jane Patterson

Political Editor, RNZ
Wellington, February 10, 2021

Environment Minister David Parker (RNZ Photo by Dom Thomas)

 The government will scrap the Resource Management Act (RMA) and replace it with three new pieces of legislation.

During the last term, Environment Minister David Parker ordered a review saying that the 30-year-old law was “too costly, takes too long, and has not adequately protected the environment.”

The plan announced today is broadly in line with the findings of the Independent Review Panel, led by retired Court of Appeal Judge Tony Randerson QC, which recommended a “completely different approach, while also incorporating some of the key principles of the previous legislation.”

Three New Acts

The three new Acts will be (1) Natural and Built Environments Act (NBA) to provide for land use and environmental regulation (2) Strategic Planning Act (SPA) to integrate with other legislation relevant to development and require long-term regional spatial strategies (3) Climate Change Adaptation Act (CAA) to address complex issues associated with managed retreat and funding and financing adaptation.

The Randerson Review highlighted “the significant pressure the country’s natural environment is under” and “the way we use land and water has proved to be unsustainable for the natural environment”.

“Freshwater, coastal and marine environments are in “serious decline” and “biodiversity is under significant threat”, it said.

Poorly managed urban growth was said to have “led to increasing difficulty in providing affordable housing, worsening traffic congestion, greater pollution and reduced productivity.”

Improving Natural Environment

Labour campaigned on repealing and replacing the RMA, and Mr Parker said that the new law would “improve the natural environment, enable more development within environmental limits, provide an effective role for Maori, and improve housing supply and affordability.”  

“Planning processes will be simplified and costs and times reduced,” he said.

Other “key changes” include “stronger national direction and one single combined plan per region,” the minister said.

“And there will be more focus on natural environmental outcomes and less on subjective amenity matters that favour the status quo. Better urban design will be pursued.”

The RMA has long been blamed for putting a brake on housing development.

Better Coordination for progress

Mr Parker said that the new laws would address that “by improving how central and local government plan for housing and urban development.”

“This includes better coordination of future infrastructure with land use, development and urban growth,” he said.

The NBA would be the main law to replace the RMA; it will include a “mandatory set of national policies and standards to support the natural environmental limits, outcomes and targets specified in the new law,” Mr Parker said.

He said this will be incorporated into combined regional plans prepared by local and central government and mana whenua.

“The existing 100-plus RMA Council planning documents will be reduced to about 14.”

The Strategic Planning Act will “integrate functions under the RMA, Local Government Act 2002, Land Transport Management Act 2003 and the Climate Change Response Act 2002 to enable clearer and more efficient decision-making and investment,” he said.

“New spatial strategies will enable regions to plan for the wellbeing of future generations, ensuring development and infrastructure occurs in the right places at the right times.”

Climate Change Minister James Shaw will be responsible for the Climate Change Adaptation Act. The Natural and Built Environments Act will be progressed first and a special select committee inquiry will consider a draft version from mid-year.

This will include the “most important elements of the legislation,” including the replacement of Part 2 of the RMA, Mr Parker said.

“I expect that the complete NBA and the SPA will be formally introduced into Parliament by the end of 2021, with the NBA passed by the end of 2022,” he said.

Working with Maori

And he said the government was working with a collective of pan Maori entities on key elements of the NBA including the strengthened recognition of tikanga Maori and Te Tiriti o Waitangi, and local government.

Opposition Leader Judith Collins offered the government an olive branch of working constructively to overhaul the system, but as of February 9, 2021, had not heard from the Minister.

Mr Parker said that he had not yet talked to National because “they are not the government.”

But he said he did intend to “reach out” and had had some initial discussions with National’s Environment Spokesperson Scott Simpson at Waitangi.

Working with the Opposition

Mr Shaw said that addressing the climate emergency required an across-the-board approach that included both emissions reductions and building community resilience – both of which were priorities for the government.

“It was clear from New Zealand’s first ever National Climate Change Risk Assessment published last year that the work to adapt and build resilience needs to start now. Failing to do so will only put communities and livelihoods at risk and store up problems for the future. We are already working on New Zealand’s first National Adaptation Plan, which will be informed by last year’s risk assessment and set out our long-term approach to adapting to the effects of climate change. Today we have announced that we will also progress legislation to provide a framework that can support local councils and communities in how they adapt to climate change,” he said.

The government needs to show more urgency and commitment if it ever wants to make meaningful strides towards solving the housing shortage and getting wins for the environment.

National Party not happy 

National’s spokesperson for Housing and RMA Reform Nicola Willis said that first-home buyers will be disappointed the government is not moving fast to make house building easier.

“House prices have risen more than 40% since Labour came to office, yet it has shown no urgency when it comes to making it easier to build houses in this country. National has offered to work with Labour on emergency legislation, much like the special powers used in the Christchurch rebuild, which would accelerate house building nationwide,” she said.

Jane Patterson is the Political Editor at Radio New Zealand. The above story has been published under a Special Agreement with www.rnz.co.nz

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