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  1. 2023-09-04-O2NL-Conditions-Mediation-Version-tracked.pdf [pdf, 2.1 MB]

    ...putrescible, degradable or leachable components; b) hazardous substances; c) products or materials derived from hazardous waste treatment, hazardous waste stabilisation or hazardous waste disposal practices; d) materials that may present a risk to human health; e) liquid waste; and f) for the purpose of this Project, any archaeological material or from a wāhi tapu or site of cultural significance. Commercial activities For the purpose of Condition DNV1, commercial activities mean...

  2. E27 Contamination, Groundwater, Earthworks and Air Discharges JWS [pdf, 3 MB]

    ...holder shall implement the protected objects protocol in Document 8 to the application. 45A. The accidental discovery rules in the Auckland Unitary Plan: Operative in Part continue to apply for the discovery of other sensitive material, including human remains and kōiwi, archaeological sites, Māori cultural artefacts/taonga tuturu and lava caves greater than 1m in diameter. 45B. Any object that is encountered that sits outside Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga Act or Protected O...

  3. E31 Second Planning JWS [pdf, 3 MB]

    ...holder shall implement the protected objects protocol in Document 8 to the application. 45A. The accidental discovery rules in the Auckland Unitary Plan: Operative in Part continue to apply for the discovery of other sensitive material, including human remains and kōiwi, archaeological sites, Māori cultural artefacts/taonga tuturu and lava caves greater than 1m in diameter. 45B. Any object that is encountered that sits outside Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga Act or Protected O...

  4. 29b.-Appendix-B-to-the-Evidence-Ms-McLeod-O2NL-Conditions-Evidence-Version-Clean.pdf [pdf, 1.5 MB]

    ...putrescible, degradable or leachable components; b) hazardous substances; c) products or materials derived from hazardous waste treatment, hazardous waste stabilisation or hazardous waste disposal practices; d) materials that may present a risk to human health; e) liquid waste; and f) for the purpose of this Project, any archaeological material or from a wāhi tapu or site of cultural significance. Commercial activities For the purpose of Condition DNV1, commercial activities...

  5. Proactive-release-new-Whanganui-Courthouse-Cabinet-Paper_FINAL.pdf [pdf, 8.3 MB]

    ...month) and subsequent in-service life (100 years). Population Implications 36 There are no direct gender implications. The development will directly benefit Māori and disabled people due to better access and wraparound services on the site. Human Rights 37 The proposal has no direct human rights implications. Use of External Resources 38 The project delivery team will be supplemented by external expertise as agencies generally do not hold design, engineering, and other technica...

  6. Waitangi Tribunal - Part 5 Te Urewera [pdf, 2.1 MB]

    ...actions after entering into the lease, arguing that the lake was not cared for in the appropriate way as part of the national park . In par- ticular, they pointed to the ongoing harm of lowered lake levels, the alleged pollution of their taonga with human waste, and other ways in which they believed the Department of Conservation had failed as lessee . These particular claim issues were not supported by the Tuhoe-Waikaremoana and Wairoa-Waikaremoana Maori Trust Boards . This highlights a d...

  7. Waitangi Tribunal Part 1 Report on stage 1 of the Te Paparahi o Te Raki inquiry [pdf, 6.1 MB]

    H e W H a k a p u t a n g a m e t e t i r i t i t H e D e c l a r a t i o n a n D t H e t r e a t y He Whakaputanga me te Tiriti The Declaration and the Treaty Downloaded from www.waitangitribunal.govt.nz Downloaded from www.waitangitribunal.govt.nz Downloaded from www.waitangitribunal.govt.nz Downloaded from www.waitangitribunal.govt.nz W A I T A N G I T R I B U N A L R E P O R T 2 0 1 4 W A I 1 0 4 0 The Report on Stage 1 of the

  8. Strengthening the family justice system - PDF version [pdf, 2 MB]

    ...• communities and cultures that prioritise respect for authority figures and feel uncomfortable directly addressing or disagreeing with a judge are disadvantaged • denying access to legal representation limits access to justice and undermines human rights. Ministry-funded independent research in 2017 found that over 80 per cent of applicants interviewed listed the main reason for making a without notice application was they wanted a lawyer in court. Changes we’re considering...

  9. OWRUG - EiC - K L Scott - Planning (5 Feb 2021) [pdf, 1.9 MB]

    ...architecture, much of it dating back more than a century and in many cases either preserved or faithfully restored  predominantly dryland pastoral heritage which has been a strong definer of the appearance of the landscape over many decades of human habitation  historical status, notable for points of interest in national and regional history  cohesive social fabric born of multiple successive generations farming in the area  water, dams, streams, rivers and wetla...

  10. [2020] NZEmpC 62 Gibson-Smith v Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment [pdf, 388 KB]

    ...relevant training session the next morning. He did not do so. [57] Mr Gibson-Smith was asked again to attend bond line training on 2 May 2018; he was also told that if he did not attend that session, there would be a formal meeting involving Human Resources. He declined to attend. [58] On 2 May 2018, Ms Thompson wrote formally to Mr Gibson-Smith stating he had failed to follow instructions and attend bond line training. She said this may amount to a breach of MBIE’s...