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Whakatipu next?

Whakatipu next?
scene.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from scene.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Jobs for Nature roles cost $200,000 each, report shows

Jobs for Nature roles cost $200,000 each, report shows
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Local Matters - Sage given roasting on protest page

Sage given roasting on protest page Eugenie Sage Green Party list MP Eugenie Sage was met with a barrage of criticism when she turned up on Fight the Tip’s Facebook page last week and tried to defend her approval of the Government land sale to Waste Management in 2018. The former Conservation and Land Information Minister said she and former Associate Finance Minister David Clark were legally restricted in what they could consider under the Overseas Investment Act. She said there was no public submission process or requirement for them to take issues such as community concerns and mana whenua into account.

Boost in funding to deliver jobs while restoring Central Otago s lakes and waterways

Source: New Zealand Government The Government is significantly increasing its investment in restoring Central Otago’s waterways while at the same time delivering jobs to the region hard-hit by the economic impact of Covid-19, says Land Information Minister, Damien O’Connor.   Mr O’Connor says two new community projects under the Jobs for Nature funding programme will deliver more than 23 jobs in the region over the next four years, while contributing to the restoration of the region’s precious waterways.     Aspiring Biodiversity Trust – up to $321,000 over four years The Aspiring Biodiversity Trust will carry out monitoring, pest and weed management, and restoration on the Wilkins and Makarora rivers which flow into Lake Wānaka.

Lawyers called in to disentangle 119-year reserve land mistake

When Lukas Travnicek flew over Canterbury’s Mt White Station he’d done his research. The Czech Republic native, and New Zealand resident, knew the average rainfall of the Crown pastoral lease property, which borders the Arthur’s Pass National Park, and factored its 40,000 hectares (about a quarter of Stewart Island) into his development plans, should he buy it. “I saw it from the chopper the very first time, and they didn’t want me to land because they said that it would be disturbing for the manager and you’re not sure if you really want to buy it. But I made the pilot land.”

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