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Taranaki Regional Council has no regrets over hefty fines
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Black officers say racism in York police force hurt careers and health
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Taranaki Regional Council (TRC) operations director Dan Harrison told Tuesday s meeting that the council had begun a 10-year rural mustelid trapping programme in 2018 as part of the Towards Predator-Free Taranaki project. Towards Predator-Free Taranaki is working to eradicate possums over 4500ha from the Kaitake Ranges to the coastline, and has an urban project trapping rats. The programme has so far covered 75,000ha with more than 6000 traps, and included a trap barrier around the national park Te Papakura o Taranaki resulting in a 90 per cent reduction in mustelid populations, he said. Harrison said the new rule will identify predator control areas where landowners agree to set traps and maintain mustelid numbers at a reduced level.
If the regional council agrees to establish a Māori constituency after hearing public feedback, a representation review would begin to address constituency boundaries, and the number of eligible voters. The addition of a Māori constituency would not necessarily replace an existing ward boundary, and the number of councillors could increase by one to 12, eliminating any fears of a sitting councillor becoming a “sacrificial lamb”, chairman David MacLeod said. MacLeod said the point of the discussion was whether the council should create a constituency without consulting the public, or iwi. Discussion with the region’s eight iwi showed support for Māori representation on the regional council, he said.
Winnipeg Free Press By: Alan Small | Posted: 7:00 PM CST Friday, Jan. 15, 2021 Save to Read Later
Dig into the life of Curtis Jonnie, the man behind Shingoose, the singer and songwriter, and you’ll discover the fascinating journey of a person who bristled at discrimination against Indigenous people and spent his life doing something about it.
Dig into the life of Curtis Jonnie, the man behind Shingoose, the singer and songwriter, and you’ll discover the fascinating journey of a person who bristled at discrimination against Indigenous people and spent his life doing something about it.
In a way, Jonnie’s life, from his childhood at Roseau River Anishinaabe First Nation until his final days, symbolized what previous generations of Indigenous people in Canada faced and what they confront today.
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