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  1. Protection order applications June 2017 [xlsx, 196 KB]

    ...issued by Police to protect people at risk from violence, harassment or intimidation. When a PSO is made the person bound by it must leave the address while the PSO is in force and abide by certain conditions. If the bound person does anything that is not permitted by the PSO, Police can take the person to court. A breach of a PSO is not a criminal offence. However, where a PSO has been breached, Police can request a temporary Protection Order be issued by the District Court. This occurs as lon...

  2. [2023] NZEnvC 141 Nature Preservation Trustee Limited v Queenstown Lakes District Council [pdf, 30 MB]

    ...a minimum of 10 working days prior to the removal of the Douglas Fir trees within the Council reserve commencing. This is to ensure the Parks Department are aware of these works occurring. Advice Note: The consent holder is advised a reserve permit may be required for these works. 16. All costs associated with the removal of the Douglas Fir trees shall be borne by the consent holder. Works on the reserve 17. The consent holder must not undertake any occupation of the QLDC D...

  3. [2018] NZEmpC 60 FGH v RST [pdf, 720 KB]

    ...response, speaking loudly and aggressively. She emphasised that she thought the process was at an end so that she could now recommence approval work. She became very distressed. She stated she had improved her performance; she should now be permitted to transfer to another team. Ms Julian again stated that they were trying to “break habits” which needed the intensive feedback which had been provided. Ms H then calmed down and apologised for overreacting. Amongst other thin...

  4. Waitangi Tribunal - Part 1 Rangahaua Whānui District Auckland [pdf, 6.3 MB]

    . I I r- • I ; 1 i i I , : I : i i I i , I , i : I i . : I ! j I I i i : J RANGAHAUA WHANUI DISTRICT 1 AUCKLAND ROSE DAAMEN, PAUL HAMER, AND BARRY RIGBY JUL Y 1996 WORKING PAPER: FIRST RELEASE WAITANGI TRIBUNAL RANGAHAUA WHANUI SERIES ~-, i ' i r 1 i 1 I i i , i I I FOREWORD The research report that follows is one of a series of historical surveys commissioned by the Waitangi Tribunal as part of its Rangahaua Whanui p

  5. 8.-Dr-Jack-McConchie-Hydrology.pdf [pdf, 30 MB]

    ...occurred in the past; and (c) Any actual and potential effects of the Project will be strictly avoided, managed and mitigated through the proposed stormwater management and erosion and sediment control measures. This is different to many of the permitted land use activities which occur currently throughout the area. Design rainfalls 15. All data from rain-gauges in the wider vicinity of the Project was analysed as part of a hydrometric review. The review included: comparison o...

  6. Child witnesses in the New Zealand criminal courts [pdf, 795 KB]

    ...provisions also allowed for expert evidence to be called, for example, on the complainant’s intellectual competencies and maturity. Judicial powers to close the courts in sexual assault cases were expanded and complainants in such cases were permitted to testify with a support person on hand. By the mid-1990s, the use of screens, CCTV and/or EVIs was commonplace (Pipe & Henaghan, 1996). However, other legislative provisions under the Evidence Amendment Act 1989 languished large...

  7. National Standards Committee 1 v Haines [2022] NZLCDT 10 (8 April 2022) [pdf, 551 KB]

    ...not been undertaken, and instead of being held in a trust account38 were placed into the personal bank account of the practitioner, where he had use of the funds immediately on their receipt, but without having rendered an invoice such as would permit deduction.39 [170] Mr Haines argues that, because the work for the company had been completed before the August invoice, these fees cannot be seen as having been taken in advance. However, in the absence of contemporaneous time record...

  8. [2021] NZEnvC 060 Upper Clutha Environmental Society Incorporated v Queenstown Lakes District Council [pdf, 4.7 MB]

    ...Identification Frameworks and Schedules, and the Landscape Assessment Methodology and the objectives and policies of Chs 3 and 6? (b) with the possible exception of 21.21.1.2 on existing vegetation (with its limitation on the application of the permitted baseline), do any of the assessment matters continue to fulfil any resource management purpose (i.e. one that does not simply duplicate what is already provided for)? [64] \Ve acknowledge that supplementary submissions may throw light...

  9. [2019] NZEnvC 059 Bunnings Limited v Queenstown Lakes District Council [pdf, 2.6 MB]

    ...industrial area. There are already a range of non-industrial activities within the zone, including the Mitre 10 MEGA, Pak'nSave and a number of more recent resource consent applications, many authorised as "service activities" which are permitted in Activity Area E1, with some including a retail component. The Council submits this exacerbates the 'precedent effect'102 and we consider that next. 5.2 Would granting consent undermine the integrity of the ODP?...

  10. Ngā Mātāpono – The Principles: The Interim Report of the Tomokia Ngā Tatau o Matangireia – The Constitutional Kaupapa Inquiry Panel on the Crown’s Treaty Principles Bill and Treaty Clause Review Policies [pdf, 6.4 MB]

    W A I T A N G I T R I B U N A L R E P O R T 2 0 2 4 N G Ā M Ā TĀ P O N O The Principles NGĀ MĀTĀPONO The Principles W A I 3 3 0 0 W A I T A N G I T R I B U N A L R E P O R T 2 0 2 4 N G Ā M Ā T Ā P O N O T H E P R I N C I P L E S The Interim Report of the Tomokia Ngā Tatau o Matangireia – the Constitutional Kaupapa Inquiry Panel on the Crown’s Treaty Principles Bill and