Carol Sakey
Uncategorized

NZ DEFENCE FORCE ‘AUTHORIZATION- SHOOT TO KILL CHRISTIANS WITH TRADITIONAL VALUES FOR VIDE0

NZ Defence Force’s Authorized Authority ‘Shoot on Sight’ – Shoot To Kill Christians with Traditional Values’. This is not Fake News – It’s a Truth Bomb that could explode in the governments face.  This very concerning information originated from a group of  Ex NZ Defence Force Personnel whom were mandated under duress during COVID19.

They established a group called ‘United We Stand NZ’. They  produced a short video into the public arena and documented evidence of a late 2025 NZDF Burham Simulated Training Program that’s entirely different from any previous NZDF Training Programs. The video revealed scenarios where the fictional opposing force  (The Adversary Enemy) are  described as a Christian Community with Traditional Values

The Christian Community were given a fictious name (DSM).  The  fictional Pacific country where they lived was called Belisia. Scenarios  document troops managed periods of Civil Unrest in Belisia.. The Christians with Traditional Values were given the fictitious name (VPF) Visayan Peoples Front. The country they lived in closely resembled the South Island of NZ.

Scenarios include NZDF authorized to use ‘Lethal Force’ – ‘Shoot to Kill On Sight’  *The Christian Community with Traditional Values- whom are described as Violent Extremists. The community of Christians with Traditional Values  opposed in Islamization (Defended their Faith).  . For the NZDF this being a ‘High-Readiness Inter-operability Training Exercise. These Training Exercises were used for Junior Non-Commissioned Officer Courses (JNCO) within the (3rd Combat Service Support Battalion – 3RCW.

Penny-Marie & Michelle Scott (Independent Investigate Media Reporters produced a video , that’s out in the public arena. Due to their concerns as to the Burham Military Camp Video . They describe the Simulated NZDF Scenarios “Like a Cut & Paste Culture War”. Their You Tube Video is titled ‘Why Are NZ Army Training To Kill Christians’? In their video is included the short United We Stand NZ Video con Christians with Traditional Values as ‘The Enemy On The  Map’.

Penny-Marie & Michelle Scott have now sent a letter of concern to the Leaders of the Three Party Coalition & their MPs. Which includes a number of questions that require a response. Also an OIA (Official Information Request) by S E Shaw has been sent to the NZDF. This also has a number of concerning questions waiting to be responded to. With similar serious concerns as to ‘Painting/Framing  Christians with Traditional Values as Extreme Violent Adversary Enemy’.

Questions includes:- When, How and Whom developed –(Approved) this Training Program where Christians with Traditional Values are the Enemy. And why is this Training Program entirely different from previous Training Programs? And how widely does the NZDF use this Training Program. In 2023 the US produced an Army Training Program called DATE ‘P’. Simulated scenarios are Countries/Regions with fictious names. NZDF started using this in 2023 shortly after it was produced by the US

RNZ Article in June 2025 confirmed that  NZDF at Burnham Military Camp were using the US DATE Army Standard Training Program. Therefore this entire difference in who the Adversary enemy being  a Christian Community described as Violent Extremists ‘Shoot to Kill On Sight’ is a relevantly new Training Program. In the Penny-Marie & Michelle Scott video they include some very interesting points.

Such as- what other groups would treat Christians with Traditional Beliefs as their Enemy in NZ. And what do they have in common with NZ Defence Force?…                              The NZDF are LGBTQ1 + Inclusive. Have Pride Accreditation.& The Rainbow Tick (This being an Ideological Conflict with Christians that hold Traditional Values) Seen as the Adversary Enemy. (A Threat Group)

What other entities would see Christians with Traditional Values as an Adversary Enemy (A Threat Group)? Central & Local Government * Govt Agencies *NGO’s * Academia (Uni Students-Lecturers etc.,) Also are included in having an Ideological Conflict with Christians that have Traditional Values.  For example -Mark Mitchell (Police Minister) strongly opposes Destiny Church Protests *Auckland Council & NZTA made Destiny Church an Adversary Enemy when members of Destiny Church  scrubbed out the Rainbow Crossing in K Road. Auckland. (This is being an  Ideological Conflicting scenario)

The  Te Atatu Library LGBTQ1+ Children’s Storytime again Destiny Church Rally /Protest. (Christians again being the Adversary Enemy)  (Ideological Conflict with Christian)  Destiny Church Protests against Pro Palestinians (Ideological Conflict -Christians the Enemy). Yet Black Lives Matter- The huge Hikoi march (Were not seen as the Adversary Enemy by Police-NZTA)

COVID 19 Mandate Protests by Destiny Church. Brian Tamaki arrested put in Mt Eden Jail for breaking Restrictions. (America’s Cup 2021 (Prada Cup) permitted to sail under Level 3 Lockdown in Auckland (16th February 2021 NZ Herald)  Huge crowds sat closely together as they watched this in Auckland (No Arrests).

 1,000s of Protesters marched in Auckland * Wellington * Christchurch * Dunedin in Solidarity for Black Lives Matter ‘The Killing of George Floyd’ during COVID19 Lockdown 2. Majority did not wear masks. Ignored Physical Distancing. ..Police stayed back away from the protests opting for a tolerant approach. Black Lives Matter intersectionality emphasize that Black Liberation must Include Black Queer * Trans * And Gender-Non-conforming people (Ideological Conflict with the Christians that hold Traditional Values)- (Spin Off & RNZ Reported Articles)Police took a tolerant approach and stood back) Police did not take a tolerant approach with Destiny-Brain Tamaki

The New Conservative Party majority Christians included Elliot Ikilei Deputy Leaders of New Conservative gave a Freedom Speech in Aotea Sq Auckland as did Jesse Anderson whom began his speech announcing he is a Christian – as is Elliot Ikilei. There was a big Police presence. I also gave a speech that day as I had  submitted a petition objecting to the UN Global Compact Of Migration to Parliament. (I too am a Christian). Jesse Anderson was a wonderful father of a little boy whom he had in his care.

The child was removed from his care. He was targeted by Police. He broke his heart when his little boy was taken out of his care, sadly this led him to take his own life. I am Christian I was also targeted by the Police. A visit from 2 police officers warning me not to speak out or organize any protests. At one stage a line of police officers in Aotea Square shouted at me to Go Home….as I had CCTV Camera’s in my face ( Yes- Christians were the Adversary Enemy)

The Burnham Military Camp Training Program.  The Christian Community with Traditional Values. ‘The authorized use of Lethal Weapons- The Shoot To Kill On Sight’ ‘. Is described as a 5th Generation Warfare Narrative. * Language in Training Materials being used to dehumanize (Destabilize) . Push Populations towards Crisis so that  a predetermined solution can be imposed.

A Spiritual * Psychological * Ideological Warfare against Christian People with Traditional Values. Its questionable as to the potential risks- impacts on these soldiers that partake in these Training Exercises and Society itself?.. Should we be concerned? Yes I personally believe we should be highly concerned. What are the potential Risks? Afterall, in NZ many Christians still gather in prayer at Easter (Jesus crucifixion). And at Christmas celebrating the Birth Of Jesus. Many Christians still attend Church on Sundays

The ANZAC Troops WW1 often carried the bible on the battleground and at the Enemy Front Lines. There are still Prayer gathering for the ANZACs – all those soldiers that courageously fought for us &  died for us – for our Freedom & Our Liberty. Described as Christian Heroism. ANAC Commemorations (Biblical verses). The Remebrance Day Words that echo throughout NZ & Australia

The writing imprinted into Remembrance Stones from the book of Sirach ( Chapter 44) “Let us now praise those famous men and our fathers in their generation” We Shall Never Forget Them”.- (May they liveth for ever-more ) Yet, the NZDF in their Burnham Military Training Exercise Program choose the ‘Adversary enemy to be Christians with Traditional Values). Why not Islamist Terrorists whom have murdered – tortured- kidnapped – unjustly imprisoned Christians ?

The Painting/Framing Christian with Traditional Values as Violent Extremists (Shoot To Kill- Use Lethal Force). NZ Designated Terrorist List -Zilch Christian affiliated Terrorists)  After researching have questions myself which include:-

After Researching the Psychology of Combat Training (Simulation Training Exercises & Religion)  Included the  potential risks of psychologically influencing  soldiers mindsets. The impact on Society. Trust issues as to whom and whom not to trust. Biases towards Christians (where Christian are the opposing enemy) And the potential risks/harms caused by ‘Moral Injury’ and ‘Cognitive Dissonance’

Particularly when Soldiers belong to a Christian Faith Group. This conflicting with their Moral/ethical/religious conviction. Being a form of Psychological Harm. With Simulation Training Exercises often using Dehumanizing Tactics. Making the Enemy nameless (Fictitious Names) or employing specific stereotypes to create a sense of ‘Otherness– You Vs Them scenario.

Psycholical harm may occur when an individual violates their own deeply held moral beliefs (Called -Definition Crisis). Where a Christian Soldier fights the Adversary enemy who is also a Christian (The Enemy)  Causing the soldier to question the justification of the conflict. Thus causing a potential for increased distress. Studies indicate whilst Religious (Christian Beliefs) can provide Resilience.

This can also cause a conflict thus contradicting those beliefs (Eg Such as fighting a fellow believer of the Christian Faith). Which may cause a negative ability to cope which can lead to PTSD Symptoms (Post Traumatic Disorder) Thus disrupting Cognitive-Moral -Spiritual mindset, potentially causing ‘emotional-Mental-Ethical Distress thus  ‘Ineffective Training’ Often manifesting in Cognitive Dissonance/ Moral Injury

May also conflict with Morals * Beliefs (Self Identity- The Lost and the Found)The Human Spirit is a motivating force directed towards realizing Higher Orders ‘Goals’- ‘Aspirations; that grow out of the ‘Essential Self’. Perceptions of Reality can be shattered and the Spirit broken when struggling with Moral Injury/ Cognitive Dissonance. This may also impact on Psychological Wellbeing/Health causing distress & increased Mental Health Symptoms & a Great Risk of Mortality

The Disconnection from others thus impacting on Society – Public Distrust. The use of Army Training Programs where Christians with Traditional Values described as Violent Extremists ‘Use authorized Lethal Force against them’ – Shoor to Kill On Sight’. Framing /Painting Christian Faith Identity as the Enemy influences cultural narratives & potentially causes Societal Conflict-Disunity – Fragmentation- -Disharmony -Distrust -therefore has a very real potential to negatively impact on Society

Burnham Miliary Camp NZ Defence Force Training Program -…Yes- ‘A Cut * Paste  Culture Ideological Psychological Warfare’ – Using authorized Lethal Force against Christians with Traditional Beliefs ‘Calling them Violent Extremists’ and ‘Shoot To Kill On Sight’. We must demand answers as to Who developed  and Approved this NZDF Training Program at Burnham Military Camp & The reasons behind it. (The Ideological Conflict with Christians & their Traditional Values)

Penny – Marie & Michelle Scotts video has 14,000 plus followers. The Silence is deafening. .WHY? It should be most concerning

WakeUpNZ  RESEARCHER.. Cassie

LINKS:

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/sailing/americas-cup/americas-cup-2021-prada-cup-final-schedule-uncertain-but-teams-permitted-to-sail-under-level-three-covid-19-lockdown-in-auckland/X5INY373CQEL4S722ZS6Y3BZ44/

(https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih,gov/articles/PMC6501118/

(https://www.opendoors.org/en-US/persecution/countries/#:~:text=More%20than%20388m%20Christians%20suffer,and%20discrimination%20for%20their%20faith.&text=1%20in%207,Christians%20are%20persecuted%20worldwide&text=1%20in%205,Christians%20are%20persecuted%20in%20Africa)       https://youtu.be/9Rfx-FuREE8?si=bgaWO9n5-Njx4kng

(S E Shaw- OIA REQUEST     https://fyi.org.nz/request/33328-framing-of-traditional-christians-as-enemy-in-nz-army-training?unfold=1#:~:text=From:%20S.E.%20Shaw,generally%20used%20by%20NZ%20Army?)

(https://youtu.be/9Rfx-FuREE8?si=vri-qxQ78S7n7KJc)                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   (https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/563405/new-zealand-defence-force-using-us-army-wargame-simulation-software-date)   (https://www.nzdf.mil.nz/assets/Uploads/DocumentLibrary/ArmyNews_Issue552.pdf)

(https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?tab=rm&ogbl#inbox/FFNDWNXgSWSxDXQcScLjzTSgCRhrrVbh?projector=1&messagePartId=0.1)

https://fyi.org.nz/request/33538-auckland-harbour-bridge-safety-risk-assessments-protest-approvals-and-event-permitting#incoming-137494

https://www.greaterauckland.org.nz/2022/12/20/waka-kotahis-harbour-bridge-walk-and-wheel-events/ Supported

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/auckland/a…

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/auckland/police-to-monitor-auckland-fishing-protest-convoy-over-harbour-bridge-along-waterfront/4DIC3MIID5AEBB2GQEXEDCFOMY/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zFlF0agWaeM

https://www.teaonews.co.nz/2022/02/26/anti-mandate-protestors-cross-auckland-harbour-bridge/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Other Blog Posts

Carol Sakey
Uncategorized

NZ GOVERNMENT KNEW OF ‘RADICAL EXTREMIST TAKEOVER’ WAS GROWING WORLD-WIDE IN AUGUST 2023

THE GREAT REPLACE THEORY…CRASHING THE WELFARE SYSTEM – PEOPLE WILL ACCEPT ANYTHING WHEN THE WELFARE SYSTEM CRASHES

Radical Islamic affiliates exploiting conflicted and non conflicted frailties worldwide was reported by the UN Security Council in August 2023. The UN Security Council  notified ALL UN Member States Government (Across Govt Parties) that this radical Islamic terrorism is  happening  and will continue to do so both in the short and long term  (ALL UN MEMBER STATES were warned including NZ Government) 25 August 2023

Terrorist Groups Remain Significant Threat in Conflict Zones, Neighbouring States, Senior Official Tells Security Council, Noting Force Alone Can Exacerbate Matters, Despite the threat level remaining low in non-conflict areas, Da’esh and its affiliates continue to constitute a serious threat in conflict zones and neighbouring countries, a senior United Nations official told the Security Council today, underscoring that the use of force alone — with no backing of a clear strategy — can be counter-productive, creating conditions conducive for the proliferation of terrorist groups.(UN Meetings and UN Press Coverage UN .Org Security Council)

17 Community Questions to the Royal Commission Inquiry CH CH Attacks -Tarrant.. Ashed the Muslim Community did they have any fears of being attacked prior to 15th March 2009.. The response was ..”Yes up to 5 years prior to 15th March 2019 we were fearful of Daesh – ISIL attack on us”   Tarrant visited Turkey 3 times.. for 42 days, whilst tourists agencies worldwide were warning on Islamic attacks on westerners in Turkey, for westerners to stay away it was too dangerous..But Tarrant was safe enough he stayed there for 42 days without any fear for his safety.. RED FLAGS. Then the NZ Govt take away firearms from gun clubs and farmers. (UN disarmament of small arms in all Nation States worldwide).

LINK  (https://press.un.org/en/2023/sc15396.doc.htm 9405th Meeting) (AM)

SC/15396

 

RESEARCHER  Cassie (Carol Sakey)

WakeUpNZ  NOW

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Carol Sakey
Uncategorized

RNZ: THE COMPANIES DUMPING CONTAMINANTS DOWN THE DRAIN (9th February 2021) JUST BLAME THE FARMERS

Anusha Bradley, Investigative reporter..@AnushaBradley anusha.bradley@rnz.co.nz

Talleys, Ernest Adams and Yoplait are among hundreds of manufacturers and brands dumping contaminants into New Zealand’s drains and getting away with it. Frank van Betuw watches as blood red water and globs of yellow animal fat gush from Dunedin’s sewers into the Green Island wastewater treatment plant. The visceral, greasy liquid will clog the filters and coat the ultraviolet lights used to disinfect the effluent. They’ll have to be scrubbed clean, yet again.

Van Betuw knows where the wastewater comes from and he knows the company that dumped it down the drain isn’t allowed to do it, but the Dunedin City Council senior compliance officer also fears it will happen again and again. “It’s been happening for many, many years,” he says with a sigh. The waste comes from a Mosgiel rendering factory a few kilometres up the road. Wallace Group’s ‘Keep It Clean’ plant takes carcasses discarded from meatworks and boils and grinds them up to make tallow and animal meal for export. The resulting wastewater must be treated at the factory to remove most of the blood, fat and animal parts before being poured into the sewer. But this doesn’t always happen. That’s when Van Betuw watches the effluent wreak havoc on the wastewater plant before it’s sent out to sea off Dunedin’s coast.

***

The same sorts of bloody, greasy scenes are playing out across New Zealand. Even once treated, the waste being dumped can destroy biodiversity – choking rivers, and wreaking havoc on marine life. Hundreds of companies have dumped contaminants – like blood, fat, and toxic chemicals such as ammonia and sulphides – into sewers in breach of their trade waste consents over the past year, RNZ can reveal. Some are bakeries, supermarkets and takeaway shops dumping the contents of their dirty grease traps. But some of New Zealand’s biggest manufacturers and brands are also discharging contaminants – many of them dangerous – and most have breached the conditions of their consents multiple times.

The companies respond:- Data obtained from 68 city and district councils paints a grim picture of compliance, showing at least 267 companies have breached their conditions, while in several areas, compliance is rare or non-existent. In Timaru, every trade waste consent holder has breached their conditions, while in Central Hawke’s Bay, six of eight have done so. They include the seafood supplier, frozen vegetable and ice cream maker Talley’s, and its meatworks subsidiary AFFCO. There’s also the sustainable fishing company Sanford, DB Draught brewery, frozen foods manufacturer McCains, Heartland Potato Chips, Medallion Pet Foods, premium lamb producer Ovation and another of Wallace Group’s rendering plants, South Canterbury By-Products.

In Palmerston North, eight of the nine consent holders have broken their consents multiple times, including two sites belonging to the dairy giant Fonterra, Goodman Fielder’s Ernest Adams and Yoplait factories and the largest Māori-owned fishing company in the country, Moana New Zealand. Some of the breaches are so unbelievable they are almost comical. Horowhenua District Council failed to meet consent conditions it imposed upon itself, by allowing Levin Landfill to discharge more leachate – a chemical-filled liquid heavy in ammonia and nitrogen that drains from the dump – than the wastewater treatment plant could cope with. Even after forking out $28,606 in clean up costs to Tauranga City Council for trade waste breaches in 2019, upmarket pet food company ZiwiPeak racked up another 12 breaches last year, council records show.

Companies who have breached their consent –  But not every council keeps track of consent breaches in this way – or, if they do, is transparent about what they find. In several regions, it’s hard to get an accurate picture of how companies behave because councils don’t have rules about what can be dumped into the sewers, rarely monitor dumping, or will not answer RNZ’s questions.Auckland Council’s Watercare, which manages the largest wastewater network in the country, refuses to answer any questions about who has consents and who is breaching them because of “privacy reasons”.

Many other councils simply don’t know what’s occurring because they test a company’s wastewater as seldom as once a year, or leave it to the companies to monitor their own discharges. Despite hundreds of consent holders dumping contaminants into the sewers in the past year, not a single one has been prosecuted. Councils can’t stomach the cost of taking a prosecution under the Local Government Act or the Resource Management Act.

How many have been slapped with fines? None. A legal loophole means councils have no power to issue them, so are instead forced to take an “educative” approach with errant firms. The upshot is hundreds of companies getting away with breaking the rules, and potentially damaging public infrastructure and polluting the environment. And RNZ can reveal successive governments have known about the issue for nearly two decades, but have done nothing to stop it.

There’s a video on the Talley’s Group website with the tagline “Bringing you the best of New Zealand.” In it, fresh mussels are pulled out of pristine waters, fresh fish are stacked neatly in buckets of gleaming ice and smiling factory workers gently mix peas, corn and carrots on a production line into a quintessential family staple. But are four of Talley’s 17 factories doing their best when it comes to their waste?

Test results obtained by RNZ show in the past year, Talley’s Timaru fish processing plant has consistently discharged wastewater that’s too alkaline, while its two Whanganui AFFCO plants have together breached their oil and grease limits a combined 190 times and their sulphide limits 519 times. (Whanganui City Council says while AFFCO has breached daily limits, it hasn’t breached its consent as its discharge limits are averaged across a week and there are days AFFCO has been below as well as above its caps.) Meanwhile, AFFCO’s Napier meatworks has breached its consent 33 times in the two years to July 2020, though Napier City Council won’t say how. Due to a blocked pipe that Napier City Council is struggling to fix, waste from AFFCO’s Napier site, along with that of 21 other trade waste consent holders, has, for the past five years, been diverted to the city’s biological trickling plant, which is not designed to treat industrial waste. The partially-treated sewage is then being discharged into the sea off Napier’s coast.  Talley’s and its subsidiary AFFCO didn’t respond to RNZ’s repeated requests for comment.

Tasman Tanning is also causing issues at Whanganui’s wastewater plant. Its website declares “Leather, it’s in our nature” amid images of pristine landscapes and waterways, but it dumps too much chromium – a toxic heavy metal – into the sewer. In the past year, the company breached its chromium limits 205 times. It also clocked up 221 sulphide and 205 oil and grease breaches over that period. The company admits it’s at fault, though it says the high levels of grease and sulphides are “not much of an issue” for the Whanganui Wastewater Treatment Plant.

The high levels of chromium, however, are. Tasman Tanning installed a special filter at the factory last year but it didn’t work and the company is now spending $1 million on a new system to filter the chromium out of its wastewater. Still, Tasman has doubts about the quality of the council’s testing, saying it is carrying out its own tests because it doesn’t believe it’s breaching its consent as much as Whanganui District Council reports. Meanwhile, the company’s Timaru plant breached its consent 73 times between October 2019 and August 2020, including by dumping too much sulphide, zinc, chromium and ammonia down the drain.

Before Tara Okan was a waste expert, he was a professional magician, but even he can’t magic up an easy solution to the country’s sewage mess. It’s “no surprise at all” that so many companies are breaching their consents, he says..”It’s the reason we formed the New Zealand Trade and Industrial Waters Forum nine years ago. We recognised this as a huge problem.” With qualifications in freshwater ecology and marine zoology, Okan has been a trade waste advisor for more than two decades, working on some of the biggest wastewater projects in New Zealand and Australia. This country’s issue stems from ageing infrastructure and councils with little to no wastewater expertise, he says. Added to that are companies that don’t know they’re doing anything wrong and companies that do know, but don’t care, Okan says… “You have industries that deliberately push their consents so close to the mark to maximise profit, they’re essentially cowboys running roughshod over our environment. They don’t want to fix the problems, they want to maximise shareholder value.”

Trade waste is typically only a small part of the total wastewater most councils deal with, but Okan says it’s crucial it’s monitored and dealt with correctly. However, the cost of a trade waste officer is something some smaller councils can’t afford – or where they can, that person often has to multitask. “I know one where they’re monitoring the stormwater, the rainwater, the trade waste from abattoir, which damages their local wastewater plant, and is also responsible for the pigeons in the park,” Okan says, his tone exasperated. “Trade waste is usually a lot more toxic than the other things. And consequently even though it is a small complement, it can have a major impact. It can kill rivers.”

Chemicals poured down the drain can produce sulphuric acid which can dissolve concrete infrastructure, he says, “So the expensive infrastructure you put in the ground at a minimum of $5000 a metre is now being eaten away and lost. “Pipes burst… we’ve had situations where vehicles and people have been walking across the ground and actually fallen into pipes because they’ve collapsed underneath the ground.”..Contaminated wastewater can kill microorganisms inside a wastewater treatment plant and suffocate creatures in the waterways where it’s eventually discharged, as the contaminants suck up all the oxygen. It’s a huge problem – more than 100 wastewater treatment plants breached their consents in 2018-19, according to Water NZ.  “That is why the monitoring, treatment and the mitigation of trade waste is vitally important. It protects ratepayers’ assets and it maintains life in our environment”, Okan says.

***

Another burst of white noise comes from another sigh of frustration – this time down a phone line from Wellington. “To be honest… it annoys us greatly,” Local Government New Zealand (LGNZ) principal policy advisor Mike Reid says . He’s explaining the loophole in the law that allows companies to get away with dumping their waste, knowing the council can’t fine them and they’re highly unlikely to face prosecution. Reid is frustrated that successive governments have failed to fix the error in the Local Government Act 2002 that prevents councils from enforcing their own bylaws with fines. For the past 18 years, his organisation has written to every incoming local government minister urging an amendment to allow councils to issue fines to those that breach consents.

LGNZ President Stuart Crosby dispatched the latest letter just last month to Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta and Environment Minister David Parker and reminded them officials have been fobbing off concerns for 18 years.”It is an issue that LGNZ has raised with multiple governments since 2002, but with no success,” the letter reads. He signs off the missive: “We write to both of you because until councils are able to infringe breaches of, for example, trade waste bylaws, there will continue to be adverse effects on the quality of our freshwater.” The Act was always supposed to give councils the power to issue fines of up to $200,000 for trade waste consent breaches. “The ability to have an infringement fine was an essential way to being able to change behaviours without a lot of bureaucratic waste of time,” Reid says.

But after the Act passed and the regulations were being written up, Crown Law discovered a problem. “What we had intended was that there would be one regulation that would be applied to every bylaw made under the Act… The way the legislation was written, it actually required regulation to be written for every bylaw a council wished to use. Given there are 78 councils… if a regulation was needed for every bylaw adopted…it would be totally, utterly impractical,” he says. And repeated pleas to tidy up the Act so the rules could be carried out as intended have fallen on deaf ears. “We’ve not succeeded in getting this through. It was just not a priority for governments,” Reid says. New ministers prefer to tackle the “big sexy stuff” they can stamp their name on, according to Reid’s colleague at LGNZ, Clare Wooding. “But actually, what we really need is someone to fix up the day-to-day, practical stuff that councils need to be able to improve the wellbeing of their communities.” At one point, LGNZ got so “desperate” it drafted a private members’ bill for National’s Palmerston North MP Jono Naylor to drop in the ballot box. “But his caucus never agreed to it,” Reid says.

When LGNZ surveyed councils three years ago, one of the key issues raised was the need to fine for trade waste breaches, Wooding says. “We still get regular correspondence from council officials along the lines of ‘when is this going to be fixed?”

NEW ZEALAND IN DEPTH UP TO THEIR EYEBALLS IN SHITE... 9th Fenruary 2021 (RNZ News) Revealed: The companies dumping contaminants down the drain…Frank van Betuw watches as blood red water and globs of yellow animal fat gush from Dunedin’s sewers into the Green Island wastewater treatment plant. The visceral, greasy liquid will clog the filters and coat the ultraviolet lights used to disinfect the effluent. They’ll have to be scrubbed clean, yet again. Van Betuw knows where the wastewater comes from and he knows the company that dumped it down the drain isn’t allowed to do it, but the Dunedin City Council senior compliance officer also fears it will happen again and again. “It’s been happening for many, many years,” he says with a sigh.

THE KEEP IT CLEAN CARCASSES: The waste comes from a Mosgiel rendering factory a few kilometres up the road. Wallace Group’s ‘Keep It Clean’ plant takes carcasses discarded from meatworks and boils and grinds them up to make tallow and animal meal for export. The resulting wastewater must be treated at the factory to remove most of the blood, fat and animal parts before being poured into the sewer. But this doesn’t always happen. That’s when Van Betuw watches the effluent wreak havoc on the wastewater plant before it’s sent out to sea off Dunedin’s coast.

The same sorts of bloody, greasy scenes are playing out across New Zealand. Even once treated, the waste being dumped can destroy biodiversity – choking rivers, and wreaking havoc on marine life. Hundreds of companies have dumped contaminants – like blood, fat, and toxic chemicals such as ammonia and sulphides – into sewers in breach of their trade waste consents over the past year, RNZ can reveal. Some are bakeries, supermarkets and takeaway shops dumping the contents of their dirty grease traps. But some of New Zealand’s biggest manufacturers and brands are also discharging contaminants – many of them dangerous – and most have breached the conditions of their consents multiple times.

THE COMPANIES RESPONDED: Data obtained from 68 city and district councils paints a grim picture of compliance, showing at least 267 companies have breached their conditions, while in several areas, compliance is rare or non-existent. In Timaru, every trade waste consent holder has breached their conditions, while in Central Hawke’s Bay, six of eight have done so. They include the seafood supplier, frozen vegetable and ice cream maker Talley’s, and its meatworks subsidiary AFFCO. There’s also the sustainable fishing company Sanford, DB Draught brewery, frozen foods manufacturer McCains, Heartland Potato Chips, Medallion Pet Foods, premium lamb producer Ovation and another of Wallace Group’s rendering plants, South Canterbury By-Products.

INCLUDES A MAORI OWNED FISHING COMPANY: In Palmerston North, eight of the nine consent holders have broken their consents multiple times, including two sites belonging to the dairy giant Fonterra, Goodman Fielder’s Ernest Adams and Yoplait factories and the largest Māori-owned fishing company in the country, Moana New Zealand. Some of the breaches are so unbelievable they are almost comical. Horowhenua District Council failed to meet consent conditions it imposed upon itself, by allowing Levin Landfill to discharge more leachate – a chemical-filled liquid heavy in ammonia and nitrogen that drains from the dump – than the wastewater treatment plant could cope with… Even after forking out $28,606 in clean up costs to Tauranga City Council for trade waste breaches in 2019, upmarket pet food company ZiwiPeak racked up another 12 breaches last year, council records show.

NOT EVERY COUNCIL KEEPS TRACK OF CONSENT BREACHES:  Or, if they do, is transparent about what they find…In several regions, it’s hard to get an accurate picture of how companies behave because councils don’t have rules about what can be dumped into the sewers, rarely monitor dumping, or will not answer RNZ’s questions. Auckland Council’s Watercare, which manages the largest wastewater network in the country, refuses to answer any questions about who has consents and who is breaching them because of “privacy reasons”. Many other councils simply don’t know what’s occurring because they test a company’s wastewater as seldom as once a year, or leave it to the companies to monitor their own discharges.

HUNDREDS OF COMPANIES GET AWAY WITH BREAKING THE RULES: Despite hundreds of consent holders dumping contaminants into the sewers in the past year, not a single one has been prosecuted. Councils can’t stomach the cost of taking a prosecution under the Local Government Act or the Resource Management Act. How many have been slapped with fines? None. A legal loophole means councils have no power to issue them, so are instead forced to take an “educative” approach with errant firms. The upshot is hundreds of companies getting away with breaking the rules, and potentially damaging public infrastructure and polluting the environment. And RNZ can reveal successive governments have known about the issue for nearly two decades, but have done nothing to stop it.

BRINGING YOU THE BEST IN NEW ZEALAND ‘ REALLY’? There’s a video on the Talley’s Group website with the tagline “Bringing you the best of New Zealand.” In it, fresh mussels are pulled out of pristine waters, fresh fish are stacked neatly in buckets of gleaming ice and smiling factory workers gently mix peas, corn and carrots on a production line into a quintessential family staple…But are four of Talley’s 17 factories doing their best when it comes to their waste? Test results obtained by RNZ show in the past year, Talley’s Timaru fish processing plant has consistently discharged wastewater that’s too alkaline, while its two Whanganui AFFCO plants have together breached their oil and grease limits a combined 190 times and their sulphide limits 519 times. (Whanganui City Council says while AFFCO has breached daily limits, it hasn’t breached its consent as its discharge limits are averaged across a week and there are days AFFCO has been below as well as above its caps.)

DISCHARGED SHITE INTO THE SEA ..Meanwhile, AFFCO’s Napier meatworks has breached its consent 33 times in the two years to July 2020, though Napier City Council won’t say how. Due to a blocked pipe that Napier City Council is struggling to fix, waste from AFFCO’s Napier site, along with that of 21 other trade waste consent holders, has, for the past five years, been diverted to the city’s biological trickling plant, which is not designed to treat industrial waste. The partially-treated sewage is then being discharged into the sea off Napier’s coast. Talley’s and its subsidiary AFFCO didn’t respond to RNZ’s repeated requests for comment.

CHROMIUM AND TOXIC  METALS: Tasman Tanning is also causing issues at Whanganui’s wastewater plant. Its website declares “Leather, it’s in our nature” amid images of pristine landscapes and waterways, but it dumps too much chromium – a toxic heavy metal – into the sewer. In the past year, the company breached its chromium limits 205 times. It also clocked up 221 sulphide and 205 oil and grease breaches over that period. The company admits it’s at fault, though it says the high levels of grease and sulphides are “not much of an issue” for the Whanganui Wastewater Treatment Plant. The high levels of chromium, however, are…Tasman Tanning installed a special filter at the factory last year but it didn’t work and the company is now spending $1 million on a new system to filter the chromium out of its wastewater…Still, Tasman has doubts about the quality of the council’s testing, saying it is carrying out its own tests because it doesn’t believe it’s breaching its consent as much as Whanganui District Council reports. Meanwhile, the company’s Timaru plant breached its consent 73 times between October 2019 and August 2020, including by dumping too much sulphide, zinc, chromium and ammonia down the drain.

BLOOD RED WATER: Frank van Betuw watches as blood red water and globs of yellow animal fat gush from Dunedin’s sewers into the Green Island wastewater treatment plant. The visceral, greasy liquid will clog the filters and coat the ultraviolet lights used to disinfect the effluent. They’ll have to be scrubbed clean, yet again. Van Betuw knows where the wastewater comes from and he knows the company that dumped it down the drain isn’t allowed to do it, but the Dunedin City Council senior compliance officer also fears it will happen again and again. “It’s been happening for many, many years,” he says with a sigh.

The waste comes from a Mosgiel rendering factory a few kilometres up the road. Wallace Group’s ‘Keep It Clean’ plant takes carcasses discarded from meatworks and boils and grinds them up to make tallow and animal meal for export. The resulting wastewater must be treated at the factory to remove most of the blood, fat and animal parts before being poured into the sewer. But this doesn’t always happen. That’s when Van Betuw watches the effluent wreak havoc on the wastewater plant before it’s sent out to sea off Dunedin’s coast.

BLOODY GREASY SCENES PLAYING OUT ACROSS NEW ZEALAND:  Even once treated, the waste being dumped can destroy biodiversity – choking rivers, and wreaking havoc on marine life. Hundreds of companies have dumped contaminants – like blood, fat, and toxic chemicals such as ammonia and sulphides – into sewers in breach of their trade waste consents over the past year, RNZ can reveal. Some are bakeries, supermarkets and takeaway shops dumping the contents of their dirty grease traps. But some of New Zealand’s biggest manufacturers and brands are also discharging contaminants – many of them dangerous – and most have breached the conditions of their consents multiple times.

AND THE COMPANIES RESPOND:- Data obtained from 68 city and district councils paints a grim picture of compliance, showing at least 267 companies have breached their conditions, while in several areas, compliance is rare or non-existent. In Timaru, every trade waste consent holder has breached their conditions, while in Central Hawke’s Bay, six of eight have done so. They include the seafood supplier, frozen vegetable and ice cream maker Talley’s, and its meatworks subsidiary AFFCO. There’s also the sustainable fishing company Sanford, DB Draught brewery, frozen foods manufacturer McCains, Heartland Potato Chips, Medallion Pet Foods, premium lamb producer Ovation and another of Wallace Group’s rendering plants, South Canterbury By-Products.

TAURANGA CITY COUNCIL  CLEAN UP COSTS $28,606 AND IT DOESN’T  STOP THERE: In Palmerston North, eight of the nine consent holders have broken their consents multiple times, including two sites belonging to the dairy giant Fonterra, Goodman Fielder’s Ernest Adams and Yoplait factories and the largest Māori-owned fishing company in the country, Moana New Zealand. Some of the breaches are so unbelievable they are almost comical. Horowhenua District Council failed to meet consent conditions it imposed upon itself, by allowing Levin Landfill to discharge more leachate – a chemical-filled liquid heavy in ammonia and nitrogen that drains from the dump – than the wastewater treatment plant could cope with.

Even after forking out $28,606 in clean up costs to Tauranga City Council for trade waste breaches in 2019, upmarket pet food company ZiwiPeak racked up another 12 breaches last year, council records show.

THE RARELY MONITORING OF DUMPING:: But not every council keeps track of consent breaches in this way – or, if they do, is transparent about what they find. In several regions, it’s hard to get an accurate picture of how companies behave because councils don’t have rules about what can be dumped into the sewers, rarely monitor dumping, or will not answer RNZ’s questions. Auckland Council’s Watercare, which manages the largest wastewater network in the country, refuses to answer any questions about who has consents and who is breaching them because of “privacy reasons”. Many other councils simply don’t know what’s occurring because they test a company’s wastewater as seldom as once a year, or leave it to the companies to monitor their own discharges.

SUCCESSIVE GOVERNMENTS KNOWINGLY TURNED A BLIND EYE TO TWO DECADES OF TRADE WASTE WATER BREECHES: Despite hundreds of consent holders dumping contaminants into the sewers in the past year, not a single one has been prosecuted. Councils can’t stomach the cost of taking a prosecution under the Local Government Act or the Resource Management Act. How many have been slapped with fines? None. A legal loophole means councils have no power to issue them, so are instead forced to take an “educative” approach with errant firms. The upshot is hundreds of companies getting away with breaking the rules, and potentially damaging public infrastructure and polluting the environment. And RNZ can reveal successive governments have known about the issue for nearly two decades, but have done nothing to stop it.

THE COMPANY ADMITS ITS FAULTS: Tasman Tanning is also causing issues at Whanganui’s wastewater plant. Its website declares “Leather, it’s in our nature” amid images of pristine landscapes and waterways, but it dumps too much chromium – a toxic heavy metal – into the sewer. In the past year, the company breached its chromium limits 205 times. It also clocked up 221 sulphide and 205 oil and grease breaches over that period.The company admits it’s at fault, though it says the high levels of grease and sulphides are “not much of an issue” for the Whanganui Wastewater Treatment Plant.

The high levels of chromium, however, are. Tasman Tanning installed a special filter at the factory last year but it didn’t work and the company is now spending $1 million on a new system to filter the chromium out of its wastewater. Still, Tasman has doubts about the quality of the council’s testing, saying it is carrying out its own tests because it doesn’t believe it’s breaching its consent as much as Whanganui District Council reports. Meanwhile, the company’s Timaru plant breached its consent 73 times between October 2019 and August 2020, including by dumping too much sulphide, zinc, chromium and ammonia down the drain.

WASTE EXPERT ‘ TARA OKAN’ : Waste expert Tara Okan believes some industries deliberately push their consents close to the mark to maximise profits Photo: RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly Before Tara Okan was a waste expert, he was a professional magician, but even he can’t magic up an easy solution to the country’s sewage mess. It’s “no surprise at all” that so many companies are breaching their consents, he says “It’s the reason we formed the New Zealand Trade and Industrial Waters Forum nine years ago. We recognised this as a huge problem.”

With qualifications in freshwater ecology and marine zoology, Okan has been a trade waste advisor for more than two decades, working on some of the biggest wastewater projects in New Zealand and Australia. This country’s issue stems from ageing infrastructure and councils with little to no wastewater expertise, he says. Added to that are companies that don’t know they’re doing anything wrong and companies that do know, but don’t care, Okan says. “You have industries that deliberately push their consents so close to the mark to maximise profit, they’re essentially cowboys running roughshod over our environment. They don’t want to fix the problems, they want to maximise shareholder value.”

Trade waste is typically only a small part of the total wastewater most councils deal with, but Okan says it’s crucial it’s monitored and dealt with correctly. However, the cost of a trade waste officer is something some smaller councils can’t afford – or where they can, that person often has to multitask. “I know one where they’re monitoring the stormwater, the rainwater, the trade waste from abattoir, which damages their local wastewater plant, and is also responsible for the pigeons in the park,” Okan says, his tone exasperated.

“Trade waste is usually a lot more toxic than the other things. And consequently even though it is a small complement, it can have a major impact. It can kill rivers.”Chemicals poured down the drain can produce sulphuric acid which can dissolve concrete infrastructure, he says, “So the expensive infrastructure you put in the ground at a minimum of $5000 a metre is now being eaten away and lost.

“Pipes burst… we’ve had situations where vehicles and people have been walking across the ground and actually fallen into pipes because they’ve collapsed underneath the ground.” Contaminated wastewater can kill microorganisms inside a wastewater treatment plant and suffocate creatures in the waterways where it’s eventually discharged, as the contaminants suck up all the oxygen. It’s a huge problem – more than 100 wastewater treatment plants breached their consents in 2018-19, according to Water NZ.

“That is why the monitoring, treatment and the mitigation of trade waste is vitally important. It protects ratepayers’ assets and it maintains life in our environment”, Okan says For 18 years, Local Government New Zealand has been writing to ministers asking them to ammend the law Another burst of white noise comes from another sigh of frustration – this time down a phone line from Wellington. “To be honest… it annoys us greatly,” Local Government New Zealand (LGNZ) principal policy advisor Mike Reid says .

He’s explaining the loophole in the law that allows companies to get away with dumping their waste, knowing the council can’t fine them and they’re highly unlikely to face prosecution. Reid is frustrated that successive governments have failed to fix the error in the Local Government Act 2002 that prevents councils from enforcing their own bylaws with fines. For the past 18 years, his organization has written to every incoming local government minister urging an amendment to allow councils to issue fines to those that breach consents.

LGNZ President Stuart Crosby dispatched the latest letter just last month to Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta and Environment Minister David Parker and reminded them officials have been fobbing off concerns for 18 years. “It is an issue that LGNZ has raised with multiple governments since 2002, but with no success,” the letter reads. He signs off the missive: “We write to both of you because until councils are able to infringe breaches of, for example, trade waste bylaws, there will continue to be adverse effects on the quality of our freshwater.”

The Act was always supposed to give councils the power to issue fines of up to $200,000 for trade waste consent breaches. “The ability to have an infringement fine was an essential way to being able to change behaviours without a lot of bureaucratic waste of time,” Reid says. But after the Act passed and the regulations were being written up, Crown Law discovered a problem. “What we had intended was that there would be one regulation that would be applied to every bylaw made under the Act… The way the legislation was written, it actually required regulation to be written for every bylaw a council wished to use. Given there are 78 councils… if a regulation was needed for every bylaw adopted…it would be totally, utterly impractical,” he says. And repeated pleas to tidy up the Act so the rules could be carried out as intended have fallen on deaf ears. “We’ve not succeeded in getting this through. It was just not a priority for governments,” Reid says.

New ministers prefer to tackle the “big sexy stuff” they can stamp their name on, according to Reid’s colleague at LGNZ, Clare Wooding. “But actually, what we really need is someone to fix up the day-to-day, practical stuff that councils need to be able to improve the wellbeing of their communities.” At one point, LGNZ got so “desperate” it drafted a private members’ bill for National’s Palmerston North MP Jono Naylor to drop in the ballot box. “But his caucus never agreed to it,” Reid says.

When LGNZ surveyed councils three years ago, one of the key issues raised was the need to fine for trade waste breaches, Wooding says. “We still get regular correspondence from council officials along the lines of ‘when is this going to be fixed?” Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta says she is not clear fines are always effective in changing behaviour Photo: RNZ / Dom Thomas. If they’re waiting for Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta to ride to the rescue, they may be waiting a while. Though she has held the portfolio since 2017, when asked about the issue, she seemed perplexed, telling RNZ she’d “have to seek some advice”. When asked why, the Minister said it was a concern that had only “just been raised with me”.

Her reply to LGNZ’s latest plea, sent just 10 days ago, is more telling.”While I recognise that the law is not working as well as it could, it is not clear to me that infringement offences are always effective in changing behaviour.” Bylaws, Mahuta says, give councils flexibility to establish rules suited to their circumstances in order to control behaviour in public spaces from shopping malls, sports fields to cemeteries. “This flexibility does not sit well with the power to decide guilt and impose potentially significant penalties without a Court process. It is my view that careful consideration should be given before extending these powers,” she writes.

The Minister’s key adviser on the matter, Department of Internal Affairs Deputy Chief Executive of Local Government Michael Lovett, also seems unconvinced a law change is needed. Why change the legislation when you could change the infrastructure?, he argues. Although it’s never been done, councils can prosecute those who break bylaws, he says, though he accepts that to do so can be complex and expensive.

“But it’s important to balance from a compliance approach your promotional or education work with the use of a strong signal to commercial operators about acceptable standards of behaviour.”Building bigger and better wastewater treatment plants so they can cope with large amounts of contaminated wastewater is a much better solution, he says. “I totally accept that the issues with trade waste are playing into an already stressed system of infrastructure. But one of the fundamental issues that requires attention is reforming the way that we organise and pay for that infrastructure.”

The government’s ‘Three Waters’ reforms, currently underway, will help councils pay for these upgrades, he says. But the country’s new water regulator, Taumata Arowai, created to oversee these reforms, will not monitor wastewater networks for at least two more years. Lovett is at a loss to explain why nothing was done prior. “Yeah…that’s a really good question,” he says before pausing to think. “Local authorities are always balancing a bunch of difficult problems. On one hand they want to attract business… they want to create jobs. But it creates cost for the underlying infrastructure. “What they have to wrestle with is the necessary investments in the infrastructure upgrades and the rates that get charged to these new businesses, with a desire to get them in and have them as part of their economy.”

Bay of Plenty Regional Council’s compliance manager Alex Miller sees the impact of those decisions all too often. The pressure to attract industry and jobs into a region can result in trade waste consents being approved even though the council knows its wastewater plant can’t handle them, he says. “In our region we see it from time to time. We’ve got two cases at the moment which are linked to that.” He convenes a group of regional council compliance managers and they factor this in when deciding whether to prosecute local councils that have discharged contaminated effluent from a wastewater plant, after consent breaches from industry further up the line. Councils could choose to stop taking wastewater from factories that consistently break the rules, he says, though he admits that’s easier said than done.

Trade waste officers, who RNZ agreed not to name, say big industry will quickly get on the phone to elected councillors if their business operations are threatened. That concerns Tara Okan…”We have situations where the local fish and chip shop gets fined for not cleaning its grease trap in time, but the big industry in town gets left alone because they’re a major employer.” Trade waste officers are being prevented from doing their jobs, he says. “We have got cases where trade waste officers have been asked to stand down and when they wouldn’t, they’ve been moved out of their jobs”.

Some businesses compare councils’ trade waste rules then play them off against each other, Okay says. “I know that industries have said ‘if you don’t let us do this we’ll move to another town and you’ll lose all this work”. “If we had national standards of discharge this would relieve the pressure. Basically they can no longer bully councils.” He’d like to see the Environmental Protection Agency set and monitor such standards, with exceptions granted for certain industries and audited by the government agency, he says. It’s an old idea. The Trade and Industrial Waters Forum, a voluntary organisation, has been advocating for this for nearly a decade. Though they’re yet to succeed, it’s an idea Okan says can’t be abandoned. “The environment is all we’ve got. Everyone has to be able to use the water we have here… Not just one or two big players on a river who pollute it. It’s for everybody.”

Back in Dunedin, Wallace Group admits its Mosgiel and Timaru factories have been non-compliant for years. Attempts to fix its wastewater treatment have frequently failed, says operations manager Manfredo Hintze. “This has been a weak spot in our systems.” The company has installed and is fine-tuning new equipment at the Timaru plant, South Canterbury By-Products, to ensure it meets its consent limits. Similar work will be completed at the Mosgiel Keep It Clean plant by the end of next month . While that will be welcome news to Dunedin City Council’s Frank van Betuw, he’d like to know he could fine Wallace Group – or any other company – that dumps again. “The threat of a fine would make the job a lot easier,” he says.

THE COMPANIES WITH RECORDED BREACHES AS REPORTED BY RNZ (THE NAME- NUMBER OF BREACHES & DETAILS- COUNCIL)

Companies with recorded breaches..Company..Number of breaches..Breach details..Council

Tasman Tanning = 570 – Including 27 pH breaches; 58 oil and grease breaches; 59 ammonia breaches; 221 sulphides breaches; 205 chromium III breaches. Whanganui District Council

AFFCO Imlay= 406..Including 103 oil and grease breaches and 303 sulphides breaches. Whanganui District Council

AFFCO Castlecliff (Land Meats) = 303 = Including 87 oil and grease breaches and 216 sulphides breaches. Whanganui District Council

South Canterbury Byproducts = 86 – Occurred between 10/12/19 and 3/9/20 Timaru District Council

NZ Light Leathers (Tasman Tanning) = 73 – Occurred between 15/10/19 and 20/8/20 including discharging too much sulphide, zinc, chromium and ammonia. Timaru District Council

Sanford = 50 – Occurred between 12/11/19 and 10/9/20. Timaru District Council

Pure Bottling = 48 – Occurred between 23/9/20 and 6/11/20. Tauranga City Council

Heartland Potato Chips = 42 – Occurred between 19/11/12 and17/09/20. Timaru District Council

HB Protein = 40 – occurred between July 2019 and July 2020. Napier City Council

Juice Products NZ – 38 – Occurred between 8/10/19 and 20/9/20. Timaru District Council

Fonterra Morrinsville = 36 – Occurred between 12/11/2019 and Sept 2020 including 26 pH breaches; 2 solids breaches and 8 oil and grease breaches. Matamata-Piako District Council

Blue Sky Meats = 35 -Occurred between 11/02/19 and 7/10/20. Gore District Council

bStudio = 34 – Occurred between July 2019 and July 2020. Napier City Council

Alliance Smithfield = 30  –  Occurred between 17/12/19 and 9/7/20. Timaru District Council

Mataura Valley Milk = 29 –  Occurred between 8/3/2019 and 13/10/20. Gore District Council

Liqueo – 27 – Occurred between July 2019 and July 2020. Napier City Council

DB Breweries = 24 – Occurred between 26/11/19 and 24/09/20. Timaru District Council

McCain Foods = 24 – Occurred between 19/11/19 and 17/09/20. Timaru District Council

Affco = 22 – Occurred between July 2019 and July 2020. Napier City Council

Washdyke Energy = 19 – Occurred between 15/10/19 and 20/8/20. Timaru District Council

Talley’s = 18 – Occurred between 3/12/19 and 8/10/20. Timaru District Council

Freshpork – 18 – Occurred between 5/11/19 and 3/9/20. Timaru District Council

Church Road Winery  =17 – Occurred between July 2019 and July 2020. Napier City Council

NZ Woolscouring = 16 – Occurred between 22/10/19 and 9/7/20. Timaru District Council

Mt Cook Alpine Salmon = 15 – Occurred between 3/12/19 and 8/10/20. Timaru District Council

Cedenco Foods = 14 -Gisborne District Council

Ziwi Peak = 12 – Occurred between 10/8/20 and 7/10/20. Tauranga District Council

Levin Landfill = 10 – Occurred between 01/10/29 and 30/09/20. Horowhenua District Council

Turk’s Poultry = 10 – Occurred between 01/10/19 and 30/09/20. Horowhenua District Council

Goodman Fielder Ernest Adams = 10- breach number unclear but charged penalty fees 10 times.

Goodman Fielder Yoplait = 10 – breach number unclear but charged penalty fees 10 times. Palmerston North City Council

HB Woolscourers = 9 – Napier City Council

Fonterra Brands = 9 – breach number unclear but charged penalty fees nine times. Palmerston North City Council

RJ’s Licorice = 8 – Occurred between 01/10/19 and 30/09/20. Horowhenua District Council

HB Galvanising = 8 – Occurred between July 2019 and July 2020. Napier City Council

Hexion WW = 7 – Related to phenol compound limits – including dumping twice the agreed limit. Phenols are a toxic organic compound used in industrial processing. Tauranga City Council

NZ Pharmaceuticals = 7 – breach number unclear but charged penalty fees seven times. Palmerston North City Council

Oji Fibre Solutions = 6 – Occurred between 01/10/19 and 20/09/20. Horowhenua District Council

Levin Eel Trading = 5 – Occurred between 01/10/19 and 20/09/20. Horowhenua District Council

Simply Squeezed = 5 – Occurred between July 2019 and July 2020. Napier City Council

Fonterra Research and Development = 5 – breach number unclear but charged penalty fees five times. Palmerston North City Council

Freshpork = 4 – Occurred between 01/04/20 to 20/06/20. Horowhenua District Council

Solvay NZ = 4 – Occurred between 01/10/29 and 31/12/19. Horowhenua District Council

Silver Fern Farms = 3 – Occurred between 24/02/2020 and 15/09/20. Gore District Council

BR & SL Porter = 3 – Occurred on 15/10/20

Greenlea Premier Meats = 2 – Occurred between 14/01/2020 and 18/02/2020 including discharge of blood and exceeded nitrate limits. Matamata-Piako District Council

Mission Estate = 2 – Occurred between July 2019 and July 2020. Napier City Council

Greenmount =  -Occurred on 21/8/20. Tauranga City Council

Massey University #1 dairy farm = 2 – breach number unclear but charged penalty fees twice. Palmerston North City Council

Stephens Transport = 1  -Central Hawke’s Bay District Council

Lowlen Plant Hire = 1 – Central Hawke’s Bay District Council

Farmers Transport = 1 . Central Hawke’s Bay District Council

Medallion pet foods = 1 – Central Hawke’s Bay District Council

Ovation = 1 – Central Hawke’s Bay District Council

NNNZ Casings = 1 – Central Hawke’s Bay District Council

Wallace Group Keep it Clean = 1 – Dunedin City Council

Wallace Group Dukes Road = 1 – Dunedin City Council

Alliance Group = 1 – Occured on 17/12/19. Horowhenua District Council

Lowe Corp Napier = 1 – Occurred between July 2019 and July 2020. Napier City Council

NZ Wool Testing = 1 – Occurred between July 2019 and July 2020

FIL (GEA) = 1 – Occurred on 2/6/20. Tauranga City Council

Active Tank = 1 – breach number unclear but charged penalty fee once. Palmerston North City Council

Moana Fisheries -= 1 – breach number unclear but charged penalty fees twice. Palmerston North City Council

FIL (GEA) Occurred on 2/6/20 – Tauranga City Council

Active Tank- 1 breach number unclear but charged penalty fee once. Palmerston North City Council

Moana Fisheries- 1 breach number unclear but charged penalty fees twice. Palmerston North City Council

BUT THEY JUST KEEP BLAMING THE FARMERS…..

WakeUpNZ. RESEARCHER: Cassie

...
Carol Sakey
Uncategorized

TOXIC POLUTION OF NEW ZEALAND WATERWAYS -BLAME THE STATE STOP TARGETING THE FARMERS

25TH January 2021 This story was originally published on RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission.

Frank van Betuw watches as blood-red water and globs of yellow animal fat gush from Dunedin’s sewers into the Green Island wastewater treatment plant. The visceral, greasy liquid will clog the filters and coat the ultraviolet lights used to disinfect the effluent. They’ll have to be scrubbed clean, yet again.

Van Betuw knows where the wastewater comes from and he knows the company that dumped it down the drain isn’t allowed to do it, but the Dunedin City Council senior compliance officer also fears it will happen again and again.

“It’s been happening for many, many years,” he says with a sigh.

The waste comes from a Mosgiel rendering factory a few kilometres up the road. Wallace Group’s ‘Keep It Clean’ plant takes carcasses discarded from meatworks and boils and grinds them up to make tallow and animal meal for export.

https://www.stuff.co.nz/environment/300213642/revealed-the-companies-dumping-contaminants-down-the-drain

Revealed: The companies dumping contaminants down the drain

The resulting wastewater must be treated at the factory to remove most of the blood, fat and animal parts before being poured into the sewer. But this doesn’t always happen. That’s when Van Betuw watches the effluent wreak havoc on the wastewater plant before it’s sent out to sea off Dunedin’s coast.

The same sorts of bloody, greasy scenes are playing out across New Zealand. Even once treated, the waste being dumped can destroy biodiversity – choking rivers and wreaking havoc on marine life.

Hundreds of companies have dumped contaminants – like blood, fat, and toxic chemicals such as ammonia and sulphides – into sewers in breach of their trade waste consents over the past year, RNZ can reveal.

Some are bakeries, supermarkets and takeaway shops dumping the contents of their dirty grease traps. But some of New Zealand’s biggest manufacturers and brands are also discharging contaminants – many of them dangerous – and most have breached the conditions of their consents multiple times.

The companies respond: read their full statements here

Data obtained from 68 city and district councils paints a grim picture of compliance, showing at least 267 companies have breached their conditions, while in several areas compliance is rare or non-existent.

In Timaru, every trade waste consent holder has breached their conditions, while in Central Hawke’s Bay, six of eight have done so. They include the seafood supplier, frozen vegetable and ice cream maker Talley’s, and its meatworks subsidiary AFFCO.

There’s also the sustainable fishing company Sanford, DB Draught brewery, frozen foods manufacturer McCains, Heartland Potato Chips, Medallion Pet Foods, premium lamb producer Ovation and another of Wallace Group’s rendering plants, South Canterbury By-Products.

In Palmerston North, eight of the nine consent holders have broken their consents multiple times, including two sites belonging to the dairy giant Fonterra, Goodman Fielder’s Ernest Adams and Yoplait factories, and the largest Māori-owned fishing company in the country, Moana New Zealand.

Some of the breaches are so unbelievable they are almost comical. Horowhenua District Council failed to meet consent conditions it imposed upon itself by allowing Levin Landfill to discharge more leachate – a chemical-filled liquid heavy in ammonia and nitrogen that drains from the dump – than the wastewater treatment plant could cope with.

Even after forking out $28,606 in clean-up costs to Tauranga City Council for trade waste breaches in 2019, upmarket pet food company ZiwiPeak racked up another 12 breaches last year, council records show.

But not every council keeps track of consent breaches in this way – or, if they do, is transparent about what they find.

In several regions, it’s hard to get an accurate picture of how companies behave because councils don’t have rules about what can be dumped into the sewers, rarely monitor dumping, or will not answer RNZ’s questions.

uckland Council’s Watercare, which manages the largest wastewater network in the country, refuses to answer any questions about who has consents and who is breaching them because of “privacy reasons”.

Many other councils simply don’t know what’s occurring because they test a company’s wastewater as seldom as once a year, or leave it to the companies to monitor their own discharges.

Despite hundreds of consent holders dumping contaminants into the sewers in the past year, not a single one has been prosecuted. Councils can’t stomach the cost of taking a prosecution under the Local Government Act or the Resource Management Act.

How many have been slapped with fines? None. A legal loophole means councils have no power to issue them, so are instead forced to take an “educative” approach with errant firms.

The upshot is hundreds of companies getting away with breaking the rules, and potentially damaging public infrastructure and polluting the environment. And RNZ can reveal successive governments have known about the issue for nearly two decades but have done nothing to stop it.

There’s a video on the Talley’s Group website with the tagline “Bringing you the best of New Zealand”. In it, fresh mussels are pulled out of pristine waters, fresh fish are stacked neatly in buckets of gleaming ice, and smiling factory workers gently mix peas, corn and carrots on a production line into a quintessential family staple.

But are four of Talley’s 17 factories doing their best when it comes to their waste?

Test results obtained by RNZ show in the past year, Talley’s Timaru fish processing plant has consistently discharged wastewater that’s too alkaline, while its two Whanganui AFFCO plants have together breached their oil and grease limits a combined 190 times and their sulphide limits 519 times. (Whanganui City Council says while AFFCO has breached daily limits, it hasn’t breached its consent as its discharge limits are averaged across a week and there are days AFFCO has been below as well as above its caps.)

Meanwhile, AFFCO’s Napier meatworks has breached its consent 33 times in the two years to July 2020, though Napier City Council won’t say how.

Due to a blocked pipe that Napier City Council is struggling to fix, waste from AFFCO’s Napier site, along with that of 21 other trade waste consent holders, has, for the past five years, been diverted to the city’s biological trickling plant, which is not designed to treat industrial waste. The partially-treated sewage is then being discharged into the sea off Napier’s coast.

Talley’s and its subsidiary AFFCO didn’t respond to RNZ’s repeated requests for comment.

Tasman Tanning is also causing issues at Whanganui’s wastewater plant. Its website declares “Leather, it’s in our nature” amid images of pristine landscapes and waterways, but it dumps too much chromium – a toxic heavy metal – into the sewer. In the past year, the company breached its chromium limits 205 times. It also clocked up 221 sulphide and 205 oil and grease breaches over that period.

The company admits it’s at fault, though it says the high levels of grease and sulphides are “not much of an issue” for the Whanganui Wastewater Treatment Plant.

The high levels of chromium, however, are.

Tasman Tanning installed a special filter at the factory last year but it didn’t work and the company is now spending $1 million on a new system to filter the chromium out of its wastewater.

Still, Tasman has doubts about the quality of the council’s testing, saying it is carrying out its own tests because it doesn’t believe it’s breaching its consent as much as Whanganui District Council reports.

Meanwhile, the company’s Timaru plant breached its consent 73 times between October 2019 and August 2020, including by dumping too much sulphide, zinc, chromium and ammonia down the drain.

Before Tara Okan was a waste expert, he was a professional magician, but even he can’t magic up an easy solution to the country’s sewage mess. It’s “no surprise at all” that so many companies are breaching their consents, he says

“It’s the reason we formed the New Zealand Trade and Industrial Waters Forum nine years ago. We recognised this as a huge problem.”

With qualifications in freshwater ecology and marine zoology, Okan has been a trade waste adviser for more than two decades, working on some of the biggest wastewater projects in New Zealand and Australia.

This country’s issue stems from ageing infrastructure and councils with little to no wastewater expertise, he says. Added to that are companies that don’t know they’re doing anything wrong and companies that do know, but don’t care, Okan says.

“You have industries that deliberately push their consents so close to the mark to maximise profit, they’re essentially cowboys running roughshod over our environment. They don’t want to fix the problems, they want to maximise shareholder value.”

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Trade waste is typically only a small part of the total wastewater most councils deal with, but Okan says it’s crucial it’s monitored and dealt with correctly. However, the cost of a trade waste officer is something some smaller councils can’t afford – or where they can, that person often has to multitask.

“I know one where they’re monitoring the stormwater, the rainwater, the trade waste from abattoir, which damages their local wastewater plant, and is also responsible for the pigeons in the park,” Okan says, his tone exasperated.

“Trade waste is usually a lot more toxic than the other things. And consequently even though it is a small complement, it can have a major impact. It can kill rivers.”

Chemicals poured down the drain can produce sulphuric acid, which can dissolve concrete infrastructure, he says. “So the expensive infrastructure you put in the ground at a minimum of $5000 a metre is now being eaten away and lost.

“Pipes burst … we’ve had situations where vehicles and people have been walking across the ground and actually fallen into pipes because they’ve collapsed underneath the ground.”

Contaminated wastewater can kill microorganisms inside a wastewater treatment plant and suffocate creatures in the waterways where it’s eventually discharged, as the contaminants suck up all the oxygen.

It’s a huge problem – more than 100 wastewater treatment plants breached their consents in 2018-19, according to Water NZ.

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That is why the monitoring, treatment and the mitigation of trade waste is vitally important. It protects ratepayers’ assets and it maintains life in our environment,” Okan says.

Another burst of white noise comes from another sigh of frustration – this time down a phone line from Wellington.

“To be honest … it annoys us greatly,” Local Government New Zealand (LGNZ) principal policy adviser Mike Reid says.

He’s explaining the loophole in the law that allows companies to get away with dumping their waste, knowing the council can’t fine them and they’re highly unlikely to face prosecution. Reid is frustrated that successive governments have failed to fix the error in the Local Government Act 2002 that prevents councils from enforcing their own bylaws with fines.

For the past 18 years, his organisation has written to every incoming local government minister urging an amendment to allow councils to issue fines to those that breach consents.

LGNZ president Stuart Crosby dispatched the latest letter just last month to Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta and Environment Minister David Parker and reminded them officials have been fobbing off concerns for 18 years.

“It is an issue that LGNZ has raised with multiple governments since 2002, but with no success,” the letter reads.

He signs off the missive: “We write to both of you because until councils are able to infringe breaches of, for example, trade waste bylaws, there will continue to be adverse effects on the quality of our freshwater.”

The act was always supposed to give councils the power to issue fines of up to $200,000 for trade waste consent breaches.

“The ability to have an infringement fine was an essential way to being able to change behaviours without a lot of bureaucratic waste of time,” Reid says.

But after the act passed and the regulations were being written up, Crown Law discovered a problem.

“What we had intended was that there would be one regulation that would be applied to every bylaw made under the act … The way the legislation was written, it actually required regulation to be written for every bylaw a council wished to use. Given there are 78 councils … if a regulation was needed for every bylaw adopted … it would be totally, utterly impractical,” he says.

And repeated pleas to tidy up the act so the rules could be carried out as intended have fallen on deaf ears.

“We’ve not succeeded in getting this through. It was just not a priority for governments,” Reid says.

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New ministers prefer to tackle the “big sexy stuff” they can stamp their name on, according to Reid’s colleague at LGNZ, Clare Wooding. “But actually, what we really need is someone to fix up the day-to-day, practical stuff that councils need to be able to improve the wellbeing of their communities.”

At one point, LGNZ got so “desperate” it drafted a private members’ bill for National’s Palmerston North MP Jono Naylor to drop in the ballot box. “But his caucus never agreed to it,” Reid says.

When LGNZ surveyed councils three years ago, one of the key issues raised was the need to fine for trade waste breaches, Wooding says.

“We still get regular correspondence from council officials along the lines of ‘when is this going to be fixed?’”

If they’re waiting for Local Government Minister Nanaia Mahuta to ride to the rescue, they may be waiting a while. Though she has held the portfolio since 2017, when asked about the issue she seemed perplexed, telling RNZ she’d “have to seek some advice”. When asked why, the minister said it was a concern that had only “just been raised with me”.

Her reply to LGNZ’s latest plea, sent just 10 days ago, is more telling.

“While I recognise that the law is not working as well as it could, it is not clear to me that infringement offences are always effective in changing behaviour.”

Bylaws, Mahuta says, give councils flexibility to establish rules suited to their circumstances in order to control behaviour in public spaces from shopping malls, sports fields to cemeteries.

“This flexibility does not sit well with the power to decide guilt and impose potentially significant penalties without a court process. It is my view that careful consideration should be given before extending these powers,” she writes.

The minister’s key adviser on the matter, Department of Internal Affairs deputy chief executive of local government Michael Lovett, also seems unconvinced a law change is needed. Why change the legislation when you could change the infrastructure? he argues.

Although it’s never been done, councils can prosecute those who break bylaws, he says, though he accepts that to do so can be complex and expensive.

“But it’s important to balance from a compliance approach your promotional or education work with the use of a strong signal to commercial operators about acceptable standards of behaviour.”

Building bigger and better wastewater treatment plants so they can cope with large amounts of contaminated wastewater is a much better solution, he says.

“I totally accept that the issues with trade waste are playing into an already stressed system of infrastructure. But one of the fundamental issues that requires attention is reforming the way that we organise and pay for that infrastructure.”

The government’s Three Waters reforms, currently under way, will help councils pay for these upgrades, he says. But the country’s new water regulator, Taumata Arowai, created to oversee these reforms, will not monitor wastewater networks for at least two more years.

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Lovett is at a loss to explain why nothing was done prior. “Yeah … that’s a really good question,” he says before pausing to think.

“Local authorities are always balancing a bunch of difficult problems. On one hand they want to attract business … they want to create jobs. But it creates cost for the underlying infrastructure.

“What they have to wrestle with is the necessary investments in the infrastructure upgrades and the rates that get charged to these new businesses, with a desire to get them in and have them as part of their economy.”

Bay of Plenty Regional Council’s compliance manager Alex Miller sees the impact of those decisions all too often.

The pressure to attract industry and jobs into a region can result in trade waste consents being approved even though the council knows its wastewater plant can’t handle them, he says.

“In our region we see it from time to time. We’ve got two cases at the moment which are linked to that.”

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He convenes a group of regional council compliance managers and they factor this in when deciding whether to prosecute local councils that have discharged contaminated effluent from a wastewater plant after consent breaches from industry further up the line.

Councils could choose to stop taking wastewater from factories that consistently break the rules, he says, though he admits that’s easier said than done.

Trade waste officers, who RNZ agreed not to name, say big industry will quickly get on the phone to elected councillors if their business operations are threatened.

That concerns Tara Okan.

“We have situations where the local fish and chip shop gets fined for not cleaning its grease trap in time, but the big industry in town gets left alone because they’re a major employer.”

Trade waste officers are being prevented from doing their jobs, he says. “We have got cases where trade waste officers have been asked to stand down and when they wouldn’t, they’ve been moved out of their jobs.” Some businesses compare councils’ trade waste rules then play them off against each other, Okay says.

“I know that industries have said ‘if you don’t let us do this we’ll move to another town and you’ll lose all this work’.

“If we had national standards of discharge this would relieve the pressure. Basically they can no longer bully councils.”

He’d like to see the Environmental Protection Agency set and monitor such standards, with exceptions granted for certain industries and audited by the government agency, he says.

It’s an old idea. The Trade and Industrial Waters Forum, a voluntary organisation, has been advocating for this for nearly a decade. Though it is yet to succeed, it’s an idea Okan says can’t be abandoned.

“The environment is all we’ve got. Everyone has to be able to use the water we have here … Not just one or two big players on a river who pollute it. It’s for everybody.”

Back in Dunedin, Wallace Group admits its Mosgiel and Timaru factories have been non-compliant for years. Attempts to fix its wastewater treatment have frequently failed, says operations manager Manfredo Hintze.

“This has been a weak spot in our systems.”

The company has installed and is fine-tuning new equipment at the Timaru plant, South Canterbury By-Products, to ensure it meets its consent limits. Similar work will be completed at the Mosgiel Keep It Clean plant by the end of next month.

While that will be welcome news to Dunedin City Council’s Frank van Betuw, he’d like to know he could fine Wallace Group – or any other company – that dumps again.

“The threat of a fine would make the job a lot easier,” he says.

This story originally said there were at least 270 companies that had breached their trade waste consents. The story has been corrected to say 267. This is because IXOM (Morrinsville), Waste Management and NZ Meat Processors were originally named as having breached their consents, when they had not. This was incorrect information, supplied to us by the Matamata-Piako District Council, and has now been removed

This story was originally published on RNZ.co.nz and is republished with permission.

https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/435189/contaminant-dumping-minister-says-companies-must-comply-with-consents. Contaminant dumping: Minister says companies must comply with consents

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Carol Sakey
Uncategorized

INTERNATIONAL LAW AND NZ DOMESTIC LAW

https://rumble.com/v5ty29q-nz-government-cannot-protect-its-people-from-terrorist-risks.html

NZ GOVERNMENT CANNOT PROTECT ITS PEOPLE FROM TERRORIST RISKS

International Law over-rides New Zealand’s legislative power thus leaving New Zealand vulnerable to the risk of terrorists acts in our country..

 

This video gives an example of how this has already occurred  in New Zealand and how people were seriously harmed through the inability of NZ Legislation and the over-reaching power of UN International Obligations

WakeUpNZ

Researcher: Carol Sakey (Cassie)

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