Source: http://www.legislation.govt.nz/act/public/2014/0007/23.0/whole.html
Timestamp: 2020-01-20 12:50:59
Document Index: 236006033

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 1', 'art 2', 'art 3', 'art 5', 'art 1', 'art 3', 'art 4', 'art 5', 'art 2', 'art 3', 'art 4', 'art 2', 'art 10', 'art 5', 'art 3', 'art 2', 'art 2', 'art 3', 'arts 1', 'art 2', 'art 3', 'art 3', 'art 1', 'art 1', 'art 4', 'art 6', 'art 4', 'art 5', 'art 3', 'art 5', 'art 3', 'art 5', 'art 4', 'art 6', 'art 7', 'art 4', 'art 1', 'art 2', 'art 5', 'art 3']

Raukawa Claims Settlement Act 2014 No 7, Public Act – New Zealand Legislation
Raukawa Claims Settlement Act 2014
View whole (372KB)
Public Act 2014 No 7
Date of assent 19 March 2014
13 Meaning of Raukawa
Subpart 1—Statutory acknowledgement, geothermal statutory acknowledgement, and deeds of recognition
22 Statutory acknowledgement by the Crown
23 Purposes of statutory acknowledgement
24 Relevant consent authorities to have regard to statutory acknowledgement
25 Environment Court to have regard to statutory acknowledgement
26 Historic Places Trust and Environment Court to have regard to statutory acknowledgement
27 Recording statutory acknowledgement on statutory plans
28 Provision of summary or notice to trustees
29 Use of statutory acknowledgement
30 Geothermal statutory acknowledgement by the Crown
31 Purposes of geothermal statutory acknowledgement
32 Relevant consent authorities to have regard to geothermal statutory acknowledgement
33 Environment Court to have regard to geothermal statutory acknowledgement
34 Recording geothermal statutory acknowledgement on statutory plans
36 Use of geothermal statutory acknowledgement
General provisions relating to statutory acknowledgement, geothermal statutory acknowledgement, and deeds of recognition
38 Application of statutory acknowledgement and deed of recognition to river, stream, or lake
39 Exercise of powers and performance of functions and duties
40 Rights not affected
Subpart 2—Overlay classification
43 Declaration of overlay classification and the Crown's acknowledgement
45 Agreement on protection principles
Subpart 3—Official geographic names
61 Whakakahonui
62 Whakamaru Hydro Village site
63 Te Tuki
64 Whenua ā-kura
65 Pureora
66 Whakamaru (Site A)
67 Whakamaru (Site B)
68 Korakonui
69 Properties vest subject to or together with interests
70 Interests that are not interests in land
71 Registration of ownership
75 Vesting of Pureora no longer exempt in certain cases
76 Removal of notifications from computer freehold register
77 Application of other enactments
Names of Crown protected areas
Subpart 5—Maungatautari Mountain Scenic Reserve
85 Statement of significance
Subpart 1—Transfer of commercial property and deferred selection properties
88 Tokoroa Golf Club site
89 Minister of Conservation may grant easements
90 Computer freehold registers for deferred selection properties
91 Computer freehold register for licensed land subject to single Crown forestry licence
92 Authorised person may grant covenant for later creation of computer freehold register
93 Application of other enactments
94 Transfer of Waikeria Prison subject to lease
95 Requirements if lease terminates or expires
96 Licensed land ceases to be Crown forest land
97 Trustees are confirmed beneficiaries and licensors of licensed land
98 Effect of transfer of licensed land
Subpart 3—Unlicensed land
99 Unlicensed land
100 Management of marginal strips
Subpart 4—Access to protected sites
101 Right of access to protected sites
102 Right of access over licensed land
103 Right of access over unlicensed land
104 Right of access to be recorded on computer freehold registers
Subpart 5—Right of first refusal over RFR land
106 Meaning of RFR land
107 Restrictions on disposal of RFR land
108 Requirements for offer
109 Expiry date of offer
110 Withdrawal of offer
111 Acceptance of offer
112 Formation of contract
113 Disposal to the Crown or Crown bodies
114 Disposal of existing public works to local authorities
115 Disposal of reserves to administering bodies
116 Disposal in accordance with obligations under enactment or rule of law
117 Disposal in accordance with legal or equitable obligations
118 Disposal under certain legislation
119 Disposal of land held for public works
120 Disposal for reserve or conservation purposes
121 Disposal for charitable purposes
122 Disposal to tenants
123 Disposal by Housing New Zealand Corporation
124 Disposal by Waikato District Health Board
127 Notice by trustees that land ceases to be RFR land
128 Notice to trustees of disposal of RFR land to others
129 Notice to LINZ of land ceasing to be RFR land
130 Notice requirements
131 Right of first refusal to be recorded on computer registers for RFR land
132 Removal of notifications when land ceases to be RFR land
133 Removal of notifications when RFR period ends
134 Waiver and variation
135 Disposal of Crown bodies not affected
136 Assignment of rights and obligations under this subpart
Provisions relating to Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment
138 Amendments to Ngati Tuwharetoa, Raukawa, and Te Arawa River Iwi Waikato River Act 2010
139 Section 42 of 2010 Act applies to Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment
140 Conservation regulations made under 2010 Act or 2012 Act may be made in relation to Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment
141 Customary fishing regulations apply to Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment
142 Fishing (bylaw) regulations in relation to Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment
143 Fisheries bylaws that apply to Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment
144 Application of provisions of components of Upper Waikato River integrated management plan
145 Process for preparation of provisions that apply to Waipā River under section 144
146 Modifications to component preparation process
147 Non-derogation
This Act is the Raukawa Claims Settlement Act 2014.
(a) to record the acknowledgements and apology given by the Crown to Raukawa in the deed of settlement; and
(b) to give effect to certain provisions of the deed of settlement that settles the historical claims of Raukawa.
(d) sets out a summary of the historical account given in Part 2 of the deed of settlement and records the acknowledgements and apology given by the Crown to Raukawa as recorded in the deed of settlement; and
(e) defines terms used in this Act, including key terms such as Raukawa and historical claims; and
(a) cultural redress that does not involve the vesting of land, namely,—
(i) statutory acknowledgements by the Crown of the statements made by Raukawa of their cultural, historical, spiritual, and traditional association with certain statutory areas and the geothermal resource, and the effect of that acknowledgement, together with deeds of recognition for the specified areas; and
(ii) an overlay classification applying to certain areas of land; and
(iii) the assignment and alteration of place names; and
(b) cultural redress requiring vesting in the trustees of the fee simple estate in certain cultural redress properties.
(4) Part 3 provides for the commercial property and deferred selection properties.
(5) Part 4 contains provisions relating to the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment.
(6) There are 5 schedules, as follows:
(a) Schedule 1 describes the statutory areas to which the statutory acknowledgement relates and, in some cases, for which deeds of recognition are issued:
(b) Schedule 2 describes the geothermal resource to which the geothermal statutory acknowledgement relates:
(c) Schedule 3 describes the overlay areas to which the overlay classification applies:
(d) Schedule 4 describes the cultural redress properties:
(e) Schedule 5 sets out provisions that apply to notices given in relation to RFR land.
(1) Section 8 summarises the historical account in the deed of settlement, setting out the basis for the acknowledgements and the apology.
(2) Sections 9 and 10 record the text of the acknowledgements and apology given by the Crown to Raukawa in the deed of settlement.
(3) The acknowledgements and apology are to be read together with the historical account recorded in Part 2 of the deed of settlement.
(1) The Crown acknowledgements and apologies are based on the historical account. Raukawa have practised mana whakahaere, kaitiakitanga, and ahikaroa within their rohe and have a special relationship to the land and the waterways in this area. Waterways in particular have been the centre of Raukawa commercial, social, cultural, and spiritual life.
(2) The Crown’s actions and omissions impacted upon Raukawa’s commercial, social, cultural, and spiritual relationships with the land and waterways in their rohe.
(3) The wars of the 1860s caused Raukawa great prejudice. The Crown acted unjustly in sending Crown forces into the Waikato in July 1863 and occupying land in the region during 1863 and 1864. While some Raukawa appear to have participated in the conflict in 1863, it was not until 1864 when Crown forces reached the Raukawa rohe near Cambridge, Rangiaowhia, and Paterangi, that significant numbers of Raukawa fought as a tribe.
(4) The final battle of the Waikato war took place between 31 March and 2 April 1864, at Ōrākau, near Rangiaowhia. Approximately 250 to 300 Māori, a significant proportion of whom were Raukawa, defended Ōrākau pā against up to 1 800 Crown troops for 3 days until the defenders broke out of the pā on 2 April. Some, such as the Raukawa chief Te Paerata, were killed, while others successfully escaped.
(5) After the battle at Ōrākau, Raukawa participated in fighting in Tauranga, particularly at the battles of Gate Pā and Te Ranga. While many Tauranga hapū and iwi made peace with the Crown following the end of open conflict in 1864, 3 years later some Raukawa joined hapū from Tauranga in what are known as the “Bush Campaigns”.
(6) The Crown confiscated land at Tauranga and the Waikato that Raukawa had interests in as punishment for what the Crown regarded as rebellion. The Crown returned some land to individual members of Raukawa hapū residing in Tauranga and none to Raukawa hapū in the Waikato. The loss of life and property because of war and raupatu had a severe impact on the well-being of Raukawa.
Impact of Māori land legislation on Raukawa
(7) Before the Crown completed the confiscation, it reformed Māori land legislation leading to the introduction of the Native Land Court within the Raukawa rohe in 1866 at a time of uncertainty and economic and social disruption. Raukawa, as part of the Kīngitanga, sought to retain control and ownership of Māori land within the wider Te Rohe Pōtae; but the Crown encouraged Raukawa to detach itself from the authority of the Māori King.
(8) The native land law made Raukawa land more susceptible to alienation. Raukawa consider that the court did not recognize all of their land interests. Raukawa did not fully participate in the 1868 Native Land Court hearings for Maungatautari as the Crown had not negotiated peace with Raukawa and other Kīngitanga iwi following the armed conflict of the 1860s. Raukawa unsuccessfully used legal processes to challenge the exclusion of their tupuna, Raukawa, from the tūpuna of the Taupō-nui-a-Tia Block.
The impact of private land speculation on Raukawa
(9) Systematic large-scale land speculation by private parties resulted in rapid and substantial land loss for Raukawa in the late nineteenth century. Private parties and the Crown purchased nearly 800 000 acres (80 percent) of land within the Waikato basin before 1900. In the twentieth century, the iwi lost further land through public works takings, including for hydro-electric projects. Raukawa have a long-standing grievance relating to the Crown’s 1915 gift of 20 000 acres of land in the Pouakani Block to an iwi with no ancestral ties to the area, which exacerbated the grievance that Raukawa continue to feel today about the earlier loss of their interests in the Pouakani lands.
(10) The Crown failed to protect Raukawa from becoming virtually landless. This restricted their ability to participate in new economic opportunities and contributed to the economic, social, and cultural impoverishment of Raukawa.
(1) The Crown has previously acknowledged that its representatives and advisers acted unjustly and in breach of the Treaty of Waitangi in its dealings with the Kīngitanga, which included Raukawa, in sending its forces across the Mangatawhiri in July 1863, and occupying and subsequently confiscating land in the Waikato region, and these actions resulted in Raukawa being unfairly labelled as rebels.
(2) The Crown hereby recognises those grievances and acknowledges that it has failed for many years to deal with the remaining long-standing grievances of Raukawa in an appropriate way and that recognition of those grievances is long overdue. Accordingly, it now makes the following further acknowledgements.
(3) The Crown acknowledges—
(a) that, after it sent armed forces into the Waikato in 1863, Raukawa were drawn into the fighting through their whakapapa connections and links to the Kīngitanga and, especially, after Crown troops attacked the unfortified village of Rangiaowhia on 20 February 1864; and
(b) that Raukawa suffered a prolonged period of disruption during the armed conflict of the 1860s, suffering loss of life and destruction of property during the first Taranaki war of 1860 and 1861, the Waikato war of 1863–1864, and the conflicts in Tauranga in 1864 and 1867; and
(c) that the final battle in the Waikato war took place in the Raukawa rohe when Crown troops attacked the pā fortified by Raukawa and other iwi at Ōrākau between 31 March and 2 April 1864 killing over 80 Māori during the battle and when fleeing the pā; and
(d) that, during the wars of the 1860s, Raukawa lost prominent leaders, which had a severe impact on the social structure and rangatiratanga of Raukawa, and on the strength of Raukawa as a people; and
(e) the sense of grievance suffered by Raukawa and the distress to generations of Raukawa who felt they were unfairly considered to be rebels during the 1860s.
(a) Raukawa hapū suffered loss of life when the Crown attacked Pukehinahina and Te Ranga in 1864; and
(b) it was ultimately responsible for extending the conflict in the Waikato to Tauranga, for the battles at Pukehinahina and Te Ranga in 1864, and the resulting loss of life, and its actions were in breach of the Treaty of Waitangi and its principles; and
(c) when Crown forces attacked Māori during the “Bush Campaigns” inland of Tauranga in 1867, they destroyed kainga and cultivations, thereby forcing Raukawa living in the area to flee their homes, and this conduct was unreasonable and breached the Treaty of Waitangi and its principles.
(5) In addition to the compulsory extinguishment of Raukawa interests in Waikato land confiscated in 1865, the Crown also acknowledges that—
(a) the compensation court did not sit in the southern most part of the Waikato raupatu block, and later reserves granted in this area were not awarded to Raukawa hapū. As a result, Raukawa were not awarded any land in this area and became alienated from those lands and resources; and
(b) its confiscation of land in the Tauranga confiscation district compulsorily extinguished customary interests in that land, including those of Raukawa, and this was unjust and breached the Treaty of Waitangi and its principles; and
(c) the prejudicial effect of the confiscation was compounded by the delay in returning land in the Tauranga area to Raukawa hapū with claims to the land.
(6) The Crown acknowledges that its armed conflict with a leader from another iwi, which spread into the Raukawa rohe during 1869 and 1872, created tensions between and caused disruption for Raukawa hapū.
(7) The Crown acknowledges that—
(a) it did not consult Raukawa prior to the introduction of the native land laws; and
(b) the operation and impact of the native land laws, in particular the award of land to individual Raukawa and the enabling of individuals to deal with that land without reference to iwi or hapū, made those lands more susceptible to partition, fragmentation, and alienation. This undermined the traditional tribal structures, mana, and rangatiratanga of Raukawa, which were based on collective tribal and hapū custodianship of the land. The Crown failed to protect those collective tribal structures, which had a prejudicial effect on Raukawa and was a breach of the Treaty of Waitangi and its principles.
(8) The Crown also acknowledges that—
(a) Raukawa did not fully participate in the 1868 Native Land Court hearings for Maungatautari as they were held at a time when the Crown had not negotiated peace with Raukawa and other Kīngitanga iwi following the armed conflict of 1863–1864 in the Waikato and 1864 and 1867 in Tauranga; and
(b) Raukawa used legal processes to challenge the exclusion of their tūpuna, Raukawa, from the tūpuna of the Taupō-nui-a-Tia block, but their appeals were unsuccessful; their sense of grievance remains to this day;
(c) until 1883, native land laws did not penalise those who made payments for Māori land before the Native Land Court had determined title to that land. Such payments could commit Raukawa landowners to Native Land Court title investigations that they did not want and to sell land to pay for surveys and associated court and legal costs, including living expenses to attend hearings; and
(d) Raukawa has a long-standing grievance about the extent of land acquired by private interests who paid money in the late 1870s and early 1880s for Māori land before title had been awarded for that land.
(9) The Crown acknowledges—
(a) that Raukawa, as part of the Kīngitanga, sought to retain control and ownership of Māori land within Te Rohe Pōtae by opposing the construction of roads, surveys, and the introduction of the Native Land Court up until the early 1880s; and
(b) the sense of grievance held by Raukawa regarding the Crown’s attempts in the 1870s to encourage Raukawa to detach itself from the authority of the Māori King by funding the construction of roads and surveys and introducing the Native Land Court into the Raukawa rohe.
(a) Crown and private purchases led to the alienation of more than three-quarters of the landholdings of Raukawa by 1910; and
(b) the cumulative effect of the Crown’s actions and omissions, particularly its failure to actively protect the interests of Raukawa in the land it wished to retain, left Raukawa virtually landless by the mid-twentieth century. The Crown’s failure to ensure Raukawa had sufficient land for their present and future needs was a breach of the Treaty of Waitangi and its principles.
(11) The Crown acknowledges that in 1915 it gifted 20,000 acres of land in the Pouakani block to an iwi with no ancestral ties to the area and that this gift exacerbated the grievance that Raukawa continue to feel today about the earlier loss of their interests in the Pouakani lands.
(12) The Crown acknowledges that the loss of land had a negative impact on the ability of Raukawa to participate in new economic opportunities and challenges emerging within their rohe in the twentieth century.
(13) The Crown acknowledges that it did not recognise the iwi status of Raukawa until the late twentieth century and this failure to respect the rangatiratanga of Raukawa created an ongoing grievance.
(1) The Crown makes this apology to Raukawa, to their ancestors, and to their descendants.
(2) The Crown profoundly regrets and unreservedly apologises to Raukawa for its actions and omissions that led to the virtual landlessness of Raukawa in the Waikato, and which caused suffering and hardship to generations of Raukawa.
(3) The Crown deeply regrets its actions during the New Zealand wars of the 1860s, which resulted in the loss of life and was destructive and demoralising to Raukawa.
(4) The Crown apologises for its past failures to acknowledge the mana and rangatiratanga of Raukawa and looks forward to building an enduring relationship of mutual trust and cooperation with Raukawa that is based on respect for the Treaty of Waitangi and its principles.
commercial property has the meaning given in section 86
cultural early release property means each property described in part 10 of the property redress schedule that has transferred to the trustees
cultural redress property has the meaning given in section 60
(a) means a deed of recognition issued under section 37 by—
(b) includes any amendments made under section 37(4)
(a) means the deed of settlement dated 2 June 2012 and signed by—
(ii) Gaylene Te Ute Roberts, John Taka Edmonds, Vanessa Jonella Eparaima, Christopher Owen McKenzie, Cheryl Marie Pakuru, and George Whakatoi Rangitutia for and on behalf of Raukawa and the Raukawa Settlement Trust; and
member of Raukawa means an individual referred to in section 13(1)(a)
Raukawa Settlement Trust means the trust of that name established by a trust deed dated 17 October 2009 and includes the trustees from time to time appointed
(i) the collective group referred to in section 13(1)(a); or
(ii) 1 or more members of Raukawa; or
(iii) 1 or more of the whānau, hapū, or groups referred to in section 13(1)(c)
reserve property has the meaning given in section 60
RFR means the right of first refusal provided for by subpart 5 of Part 3
RFR land has the meaning given in section 106
statutory acknowledgement has the meaning given in section 21
trustees of the Raukawa Settlement Trust and trustees mean the trustees, acting in their capacity as trustees, of the Raukawa Settlement Trust
(b) the Monday following a Saturday or a Sunday that is Waitangi Day or Anzac Day:
(1) In this Act, Raukawa—
(a) means the iwi of Raukawa, being the collective group composed of all those people who are descended from Raukawa and affiliate to a Raukawa marae in the Waikato area; and
(b) includes every individual referred to in paragraph (a); and
(c) includes any iwi, whānau, hapū, or group of individuals to the extent that iwi, hapū, whānau, or group of individuals is composed of individuals referred to in paragraph (a); and
(d) does not include Ngāti Raukawa ki te Tonga.
(2) In this section and section 14, descended means that a person is descended from another person by—
(c) Māori customary adoption in accordance with Raukawa tikanga.
(2) The historical claims are every claim that Raukawa or a representative entity had on or before the settlement date, or may have after the settlement date, and that—
(v) in any other way; and
(a) a claim to the Waitangi Tribunal that relates exclusively to Raukawa or a representative entity, including each of the following claims, to the extent that subsection (2) applies to the claim:
(i) Wai 254 Ngāti Mōtai lands claim:
(ii) Wai 255 Ngāti Mahana claim:
(iii) Wai 290 Whakaaratamaiti Block Inquiry claim:
(iv) Wai 389 Ngāti Raukawa land and resource claim:
(v) Wai 443 Ngāti Raukawa claim:
(vi) Wai 538 Ngāti Whāita land claim:
(vii) Wai 547 Pātetere, Huihuitaha, and Pokaiwhenua claim:
(viii) Wai 557 Te Kaokaoroa o Pātetere claim:
(ix) Wai 667 Manutahi Block claim:
(x) Wai 1340 Ngāti Mōtai claim:
(xi) Wai 1473 Ngāti Āhuru claim:
(xii) Wai 1474 Ngāti Mōtai and Ngāti Te Apunga claim; and
(b) any other claim to the Waitangi Tribunal, including each of the following claims, to the extent that subsection (2) applies to the claim and the claim relates to Raukawa or a representative entity:
(i) Wai 557 Te Kaokaoroa o Pātetere claim; and
(ii) Wai 1472 Ngāti Wairangi claim.
(a) a claim that a member of Raukawa, or a whānau, hapū, or group referred to in section 13(1)(c), had or may have that is founded on a right arising by virtue of being descended from an ancestor who is not a person referred to in section 13(1)(a); or
(b) a claim that a representative entity had or may have that is based on a claim referred to in paragraph (a); or
(c) any claims of a descendant of Raukawa in respect of the Waitangi Tribunal's Porirua ki Manawatu inquiry district.
(4) Except as provided in this Act, the rights and obligations of the Crown and Raukawa remain unaffected.
(5) Without limiting subsection (4), nothing in this Act—
(a) extinguishes or limits any aboriginal title or customary right that Raukawa may have; or
(b) constitutes or implies an acknowledgement by the Crown that any aboriginal title or customary right exists.
(6) Except as expressly provided by this Act, nothing in this Act—
(a) affects a right that Raukawa may have, including a right arising—
(ii) under any enactment; or
(iii) at common law (including in relation to aboriginal title or customary law); or
(v) in any other way:
(b) affects any action or decision under the deed of settlement between Māori and the Crown dated 23 September 1992 in relation to Māori fishing claims:
(c) affects any action or decision under any enactment and, in particular, under any enactment giving effect to the deed of settlement referred to in paragraph (b), including—
(i) the Treaty of Waitangi (Fisheries Claims) Settlement Act 1992:
(ii) the Fisheries Act 1996:
(iii) the Maori Fisheries Act 2004:
(iv) the Maori Commercial Aquaculture Claims Settlement Act 2004.
(7) Nothing in subsection (5) or (6) limits subsections (1) and (2).
(8) Despite any other enactment or rule of law, on and from the settlement date, no court, tribunal, or other judicial body has jurisdiction (including the jurisdiction to inquire or further inquire, or to make a finding or recommendation) in respect of—
(9) Subsection (8) does not exclude the jurisdiction of a court, tribunal, or other judicial body in respect of the interpretation or implementation of the deed of settlement or this Act.
(2) In Schedule 3, insert in its appropriate alphabetical order “Raukawa Claims Settlement Act 2014, section 15(8) and (9)” .
(a) to a cultural early release property; or
(b) to a cultural redress property; or
(c) to the commercial property, but only on and from the date on which settlement of the property takes place; or
(d) to a deferred selection property (other than a Ministry of Education property), but only on and from the date of transfer for that property to the trustees; or
(e) to the RFR land; or
(f) for the benefit of Raukawa or a representative entity.
(1) The chief executive of LINZ must issue to the Registrar-General 1 or more certificates that specify the legal description of, and identify the computer register for, each allotment that—
(i) a cultural early release property; or
(ii) a cultural redress property; or
(iii) the commercial property; or
(iv) a deferred selection property (other than a Ministry of Education property); or
(v) the RFR land; and
(b) is subject to a resumptive memorial recorded under any enactment listed in section 17(2).
(a) the settlement date, for a cultural early release property, a cultural redress property, or the RFR land; or
(b) the date of transfer of the property to the trustees, for the commercial property or a deferred selection property (other than a Ministry of Education property).
(a) register the certificate against each computer register identified in the certificate; and
(b) cancel each memorial recorded under an enactment listed in section 17(2) on a computer register identified in the certificate, but only in respect of each allotment described in the certificate.
(i) the Raukawa Settlement Trust may exist in law; or
(2) However, if the Raukawa Settlement Trust is, or becomes, a charitable trust, the application (if any) of the rule against perpetuities or of any provision of the Perpetuities Act 1964 to that trust must be determined under the general law.
(a) means the geothermal energy and the geothermal water within each of the geothermal fields described in Schedule 2, the general location of which is indicated on deed plan OTS-113-32; but
geothermal statutory acknowledgement means the acknowledgment made by the Crown in section 30 in respect of the geothermal resource, on the terms set out in this subpart
relevant consent authority,—
(a) for a statutory area, means a consent authority of a region or district that contains, or is adjacent to, the statutory area:
(b) for the geothermal resource, means a consent authority of a region or district that contains, or is adjacent to, the geothermal resource
statement of association—
(a) for a statutory area, means the statement—
(i) made by Raukawa of their particular cultural, historical, spiritual, and traditional association with the statutory area; and
(ii) set out in part 2 of the documents schedule:
(b) for the geothermal resource, means the statement—
(i) made by Raukawa of their particular cultural, historical, spiritual, and traditional association with, and their use of, the geothermal resource; and
(ii) set out in part 2.9 of the documents schedule
statutory acknowledgement means the acknowledgement made by the Crown in section 22 in respect of the statutory areas, on the terms set out in this subpart
(b) includes a proposed plan, as defined in section 43AAC of that Act
Te Kohera-Kawakawa Bay statutory area means the area described in Part 3 of Schedule 1, the general location of which is indicated on the deed plan for that area.
(a) the statements of association for the statutory areas described in Parts 1 and 2 of Schedule 1; and
(b) the statement of association for Te Kohera-Kawakawa Bay statutory area arising through the tupuna Te Kohera.
(a) require relevant consent authorities, the Environment Court, and the Historic Places Trust to have regard to the statutory acknowledgement, in accordance with sections 24 to 26; and
(b) require relevant consent authorities to record the statutory acknowledgement on statutory plans that relate to the statutory areas and to provide summaries of resource consent applications or copies of notices of applications to the trustees, in accordance with sections 27 and 28; and
(c) enable the trustees and any member of Raukawa to cite the statutory acknowledgement as evidence of the association of Raukawa with a statutory area, in accordance with section 29.
(1) This section applies to an application made under section 11 or 12 of the Historic Places Act 1993 for an authority to destroy, damage, or modify an archaeological site within a statutory area.
(2) On and from the effective date, the Historic Places Trust must have regard to the statutory acknowledgement relating to the statutory area in exercising its powers under section 14 of the Historic Places Act 1993 in relation to the application.
(3) On and from the effective date, the Environment Court must have regard to the statutory acknowledgement relating to the statutory area—
(a) in determining whether the trustees are persons directly affected by the decision; and
(b) in determining, under section 20 of the Historic Places Act 1993, an appeal against a decision of the Historic Places Trust in relation to the application.
(a) a copy of sections 22 to 26, 28, and 29; and
(4) A copy of a notice must be provided under subsection (1)(b) not later than 10 working days after the day on which the consent authority receives the notice.
(1) The trustees and any member of Raukawa may, as evidence of the association of Raukawa with a statutory area, cite the statutory acknowledgement that relates to that area in submissions concerning activities within, adjacent to, or directly affecting the statutory area that are made to or before—
(a) neither the trustees nor members of Raukawa are precluded from stating that Raukawa has an association with a statutory area that is not described in the statutory acknowledgement; and
The Crown acknowledges the statement of association for the geothermal resource.
The only purposes of the geothermal statutory acknowledgement are to—
(a) require relevant consent authorities and the Environment Court to have regard to the geothermal statutory acknowledgement, in accordance with sections 32 and 33; and
(b) require relevant consent authorities to record the geothermal statutory acknowledgement on statutory plans that relate to the geothermal resource and to provide summaries of resource consent applications or copies of notices of applications to the trustees, in accordance with sections 34 and 35; and
(c) enable the trustees and any member of Raukawa to cite the geothermal statutory acknowledgement as evidence of the association of Raukawa with the geothermal resource, in accordance with section 36.
(1) This section applies in relation to an application for a resource consent for an activity within, adjacent to, or directly affecting the geothermal resource.
(2) On and from the effective date, a relevant consent authority must have regard to the geothermal statutory acknowledgement relating to the geothermal resource in deciding, under section 95E of the Resource Management Act 1991, whether the trustees are affected persons in relation to the activity.
(1) This section applies to proceedings in the Environment Court in relation to an application for a resource consent for an activity within, adjacent to, or directly affecting the geothermal resource.
(2) On and from the effective date, the Environment Court must have regard to the geothermal statutory acknowledgement relating to the geothermal resource in deciding, under section 274 of the Resource Management Act 1991, whether the trustees are persons with an interest in the proceedings greater than that of the general public.
(1) On and from the effective date, each relevant consent authority must attach information recording the geothermal statutory acknowledgement to all statutory plans that wholly or partly cover the geothermal resource.
(a) a copy of sections 30 to 33, 35, and 36; and
(b) a description of the geothermal resource wholly or partly covered by the plan; and
(c) the statement of association for the geothermal resource.
(1) Each relevant consent authority must, for a period of 20 years on and from the effective date, provide the following to the trustees for each resource consent application for an activity within, adjacent to, or directly affecting the geothermal resource:
(1) The trustees and any member of Raukawa may, as evidence of the association of Raukawa with the geothermal resource, cite the geothermal statutory acknowledgement in submissions concerning the taking, use, damming, or diverting of any geothermal water or geothermal energy from the geothermal resource that are made to or before—
(2) The content of a statement of association is not, by virtue of the geothermal statutory acknowledgement, binding as fact on—
(3) However, the bodies and persons specified in subsection (2) may take the geothermal statutory acknowledgement into account.
(a) neither the trustees nor members of Raukawa are precluded from stating that Raukawa has an association with a geothermal resource that is not described in the geothermal statutory acknowledgement; and
(b) the content and existence of the geothermal statutory acknowledgement do not limit any statement made.
(1) This section applies in respect of the statutory areas listed in Part 2 of Schedule 1.
(2) The Minister of Conservation and the Director-General must issue a deed of recognition in the form set out in part 3.1 of the documents schedule for the statutory areas administered by the Department of Conservation.
(3) The Commissioner of Crown Lands must issue a deed of recognition in the form set out in part 3.2 of the documents schedule for the statutory areas administered by the Commissioner.
(1) If any part of the statutory acknowledgement applies to a river or stream, including a tributary, that part of the acknowledgement—
(2) If any part of a deed of recognition applies to a river or stream, including a tributary, that part of the deed—
(3) If any part of a statutory acknowledgement or deed of recognition applies to a lake,—
(a) that part of the acknowledgement or deed of recognition applies only to—
(i) the body of fresh water in the lake; and
(ii) the bed of the lake; and
(b) in the case of a statutory acknowledgement, that part of the acknowledgement does not apply to any part of the bed of the lake that is not owned by the Crown; and
(c) in the case of a deed of recognition, that part of the deed of recognition does not apply to any part of the bed of the lake that is not owned or managed by the Crown; and
(d) that part of the acknowledgement or deed of recognition does not apply,—
(i) in the case of a lake not controlled by artificial means, to any land that the waters of the lake do not cover at their highest level without overflowing the banks of the lake; or
(ii) in the case of a lake controlled by artificial means, to any land that the waters of the lake do not cover at the maximum operating level; or
(iii) to any river, stream, or watercourse, whether artificial or otherwise, draining into or out of a lake.
lake means a body of fresh water that is entirely or nearly entirely surrounded by land, and includes a lake controlled by artificial means
maximum operating level means the level of water prescribed for an activity carried out in or on a lake under a resource consent or a rule in a regional plan or proposed plan within the meaning of the Resource Management Act 1991.
(1) The statutory acknowledgement, the geothermal statutory acknowledgement, and a deed of recognition do not affect, and must not be taken into account by, a person exercising a power or performing a function or duty under an enactment or a bylaw.
(2) A person, in considering a matter or making a decision or recommendation under an enactment or a bylaw, must not give greater or lesser weight to the association of Raukawa with a statutory area than that person would give if there were no statutory acknowledgement or deed of recognition for the statutory area.
(3) A person, in considering a matter or making a decision or recommendation under an enactment or a bylaw, must not give greater or lesser weight to the association of Raukawa with the geothermal resource than that person would give if there were no geothermal statutory acknowledgement for the geothermal resource.
(5) This section is subject to—
(1) The statutory acknowledgement, the geothermal statutory acknowledgement, and a deed of recognition do not—
(b) have the effect of granting, creating, or providing evidence of an estate or interest in, or rights relating to, a statutory area or the geothermal resource.
(2) In Schedule 11, insert in its appropriate alphabetical order “Raukawa Claims Settlement Act 2014” .
(a) means an area that is declared under section 43(1) to be subject to the overlay classification; but
(b) does not include an area that is declared under section 53(1) to be no longer subject to the overlay classification
protection principles, for an overlay area, means the principles set out for the area in part 1 of the documents schedule, or as those principles are amended under section 45(3)
(a) made by Raukawa of their values relating to their cultural, historical, spiritual, and traditional association with the overlay area; and
(b) set out in part 1 of the documents schedule.
(1) Each area described in Schedule 3 is declared to be subject to the overlay classification.
(2) The Crown acknowledges the statements of values for the overlay areas.
The only purposes of the overlay classification are to—
(a) require the New Zealand Conservation Authority and relevant Conservation Boards to comply with the obligations in section 46; and
(b) enable the taking of action under sections 47 to 52.
(1) The trustees and the Minister of Conservation may agree on and publicise protection principles that are intended to prevent the values stated in the statement of values for an overlay area from being harmed or diminished.
(4) The Minister of Conservation may, after consulting the trustees, amend the protection principles to give effect to a deed of settlement with another claimant group with an interest in an overlay classification site recognised by that deed.
(1) When the New Zealand Conservation Authority or a Conservation Board considers a conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or national park management plan that relates to an overlay area, the Authority or Board must have particular regard to—
(2) Before approving a strategy or plan that relates to an overlay area, the New Zealand Conservation Authority or a Conservation Board must—
(3) If the trustees advise the New Zealand Conservation Authority in writing that they have significant concerns about a draft conservation management strategy in relation to an overlay area, the Authority must, before approving the strategy, give the trustees an opportunity to make submissions in relation to those concerns.
(1) The application of the overlay classification to an overlay area must be noted in any conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or national park management plan affecting the area.
(2) The noting of the overlay classification is—
(1) The Minister of Conservation must notify in the Gazette, as soon as practicable after the settlement date,—
(a) the declaration made by section 43 that applies to each overlay area; and
(b) the protection principles for each overlay area.
(2) Any amendment to the protection principles agreed under section 45(3) must be notified by the Minister in the Gazette as soon as practicable after the amendment has been agreed in writing.
(3) Any amendment to the protection principles made under section 45(4) must be notified by the Minister in the Gazette as soon as practicable after the amendment has been made.
(4) The Director-General may notify in the Gazette any action (including any specified action) taken or intended to be taken under section 49 or 50.
(1) The Director-General must take action in relation to the protection principles that relate to an overlay area, including the specified actions.
(1) The Director-General may initiate an amendment to a conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or national park management plan to incorporate objectives for the protection principles that relate to an overlay area.
(3) The amendment is an amendment for the purposes of section 17I(1) to (3) of the Conservation Act 1987 or section 46(1) to (4) of the National Parks Act 1980.
(a) to provide for the implementation of objectives included in a strategy or plan under section 50(1):
(b) to regulate or prohibit activities or conduct by members of the public in relation to an overlay area:
(ii) for a continuing offence, an additional amount not exceeding $50 for every day on which the offence continues.
(1) The Governor-General may, by Order in Council made on the recommendation of the Minister of Conservation, declare that all or part of an overlay area is no longer subject to the overlay classification.
(a) the trustees and the Minister of Conservation have agreed in writing that the overlay classification is no longer appropriate for the relevant area; or
(c) the responsibility for managing the relevant area is to be, or has been, transferred to a different Minister of the Crown or the Commissioner of Crown Lands.
(3) The Crown must take reasonable steps to ensure that the trustees continue to have input into the management of the relevant area if—
(b) there is a change in the statutory management regime that applies to all or part of the overlay area.
(1) The overlay classification does not affect, and must not be taken into account by, any person exercising a power or performing a function or duty under an enactment or a bylaw.
(2) A person, in considering a matter or making a decision or recommendation under legislation or a bylaw, must not give greater or lesser weight to the values stated in the statement of values for an overlay area than that person would give if the area were not subject to the overlay classification.
(1) The overlay classification does not—
(b) have the effect of granting, creating, or providing evidence of an estate or interest in, or rights relating to, an overlay area.
Board has the meaning given in section 4 of the NZGB Act
(1) A name specified in the first column of the table in clause 5.13.1 of the deed of settlement is assigned to the feature described in the second and third columns of that table.
(2) The name specified in the first column of the table in clause 5.13.2 of the deed of settlement for the feature described in the third and fourth columns of that table is altered to the name specified in the second column of that table.
(3) Each assignment or alteration is to be treated as if it were an assignment or alteration of the official geographic name by virtue of a determination of the Board made under section 19 of the NZGB Act.
(1) The Board must, as soon as practicable after the settlement date, give public notice of each assignment or alteration of a name under section 57 in accordance with section 21(2) and (3) of the NZGB Act.
(1) In making a determination to alter the official geographic name of a feature named by this subpart, the Board—
(a) need not comply with sections 16, 17, 18, 19(1), and 20 of the NZGB Act; but
(2) To avoid doubt, the Board must give public notice of a determination made under subsection (1) in accordance with section 21(2) and (3) of the NZGB Act.
cultural redress property means each of the following properties, and each property means the land of that name described in Schedule 4:
(a) Te Tuki:
(b) Whakakahonui:
(c) Whakamaru Hydro Village site:
(d) Korakonui:
(e) Pureora:
(f) Whakamaru (Site A):
(g) Whakamaru (Site B):
(h) Whenua ā-kura
operating easement means the easement in gross to store water and install and operate hydroelectricity works in favour of Mighty River Power Limited, created by deed of easement 8672068.1 held in computer interest register 544115 in relation to that part of the cultural redress property known as Pureora being the area shown as B on SO 464134, and includes any variations or replacements of that easement
reserve property means each of the properties named in paragraphs (d) to (h) of the definition of cultural redress property.
The fee simple estate in Whakakahonui vests in the trustees.
The fee simple estate in the Whakamaru Hydro Village site vests in the trustees.
(1) Te Tuki ceases to be a conservation area under the Conservation Act 1987.
(2) The fee simple estate in Te Tuki vests in the trustees.
(3) Subsections (1) and (2) do not take effect until the trustees have provided the Crown with a registrable right of way easement in gross to the Minister of Conservation over the area shown as A on SO 464201 on the terms and conditions set out in part 4.3 of the document schedule.
(1) Whenua ā-kura (being part of the Kaimai Mamaku Conservation Park) ceases to be part of that park.
(2) Whenua ā-kura ceases to be a conservation area under the Conservation Act 1987.
(3) The fee simple estate in Whenua ā-kura vests in the trustees.
(4) Whenua ā-kura is declared a reserve and classified as an historic reserve subject to section 18 of the Reserves Act 1977.
(5) The reserve is named Whenua ā-kura Historic Reserve.
(1) Any part of Pureora that is a conservation area ceases to be a conservation area under the Conservation Act 1987.
(2) The fee simple estate in Pureora vests in the trustees.
(3) Pureora is declared a reserve and classified as an historic reserve subject to section 18 of the Reserves Act 1977.
(4) The reserve is named Pureora Historic Reserve.
(5) Subsections (1) to (4) do not take effect until the trustees have provided the Crown with the deed of covenant on the terms and conditions set out in part 6 of the documents schedule to give effect to clause 20.2(b) of the operating easement.
(6) To avoid doubt, the vesting of that part of Pureora being the area shown as B on SO 464134 is also subject to compliance with clause 20.2 of the operating easement.
(1) Whakamaru (Site A) ceases to be a conservation area under the Conservation Act 1987.
(2) The fee simple estate in Whakamaru (Site A) vests in the trustees.
(3) Whakamaru (Site A) is declared a reserve and classified as a recreation reserve subject to section 17 of the Reserves Act 1977.
(4) The reserve is named Whakamaru Recreation Reserve.
(1) Whakamaru (Site B) ceases to be a conservation area under the Conservation Act 1987.
(2) The fee simple estate in Whakamaru (Site B) vests in the trustees.
(3) Whakamaru (Site B) is declared a reserve and classified as an historic reserve subject to section 18 of the Reserves Act 1977.
(4) The reserve is named Whakamaru Historic Reserve.
(1) The reservation of Korakonui as a local purpose (community use) reserve subject to the Reserves Act 1977 is revoked.
(2) The fee simple estate in Korakonui vests in the trustees.
(3) Korakonui is declared a reserve and classified as a local purpose (community use) reserve subject to section 23 of the Reserves Act 1977.
(4) The reserve is named Korakonui Local Purpose (Community Use) Reserve.
(5) Subsections (1) to (4) do not take effect until the trustees have entered into a management agreement with Korakonui Community Hall Incorporated that—
(a) enables the reasonable and continued use of the Korakonui Public Hall by the Korakonui community; and
(b) protects the trustees from any undue burden arising from the upkeep and maintenance of the Korakonui Public Hall.
Each cultural redress property vested under this subpart is subject to, or has the benefit of, any interests listed for the property in the third column of the table in Schedule 4.
(1) This section applies if a cultural redress property is subject to an interest (other than an interest in land) listed for the property in Schedule 4, for which there is a grantor, whether or not the interest also applies to land outside the cultural redress property.
(8) In this section, authorised person means, in relation to—
(a) Whakakahonui and Whakamaru Hydro Village site, a person authorised by the chief executive of LINZ:
(b) each other cultural redress property, a person authorised by the Director-General.
In sections 73 and 74, reserve property does not include Pureora.
(2) Section 24 of the Conservation Act 1987 does not apply to the vesting of—
(a) a reserve property; or
(b) Pureora.
(3) If the reservation of a reserve property under this subpart is revoked for all or part of the property, the vesting of the property is no longer exempt from section 24 (except subsection (2A)) of the Conservation Act 1987 for all or that part of the property.
(a) a reserve property,—
(ii) that the land is subject to sections 73(3) and 79; and
(b) Pureora,—
(ii) that the land is subject to sections 75 and 79; and
(c) any other cultural redress property, that the land is subject to Part 4A of the Conservation Act 1987.
(ii) the property is subject to sections 73(3) and 79; or
If the reservation of Pureora under this subpart is revoked for all or part of the property, and the operating easement is surrendered for all or part of the property, the vesting of the property is no longer exempt from section 24 (except subsection (2A)) of the Conservation Act 1987 for all or that part of the property.
(1) If the reservation of Pureora is revoked for all of the property, and the operating easement has already been surrendered, the Director-General must apply in writing to the Registrar-General to remove from the computer freehold register for the property the notifications that—
(a) section 24 of the Conservation Act 1987 does not apply to the property; and
(b) the property is subject to sections 75 and 79.
(2) If the reservation of Pureora is revoked for part of the property, and the operating easement has already been surrendered from that part, the Registrar-General must ensure that the notifications referred to in subsection (1)(a) and (b) remain only on the computer freehold register for the part of the property that remains a reserve.
(3) If the reservation of Pureora is revoked for all of the property, and the operating easement has not already been surrendered, the Director-General must apply in writing to the Registrar-General to remove from the computer freehold register for the property the notification that the property is subject to section 79.
(4) If the reservation of Pureora is revoked for a part of the property, and the operating easement has not already been surrendered from that part, the Registrar-General must—
(a) ensure that the notifications referred to in subsection (1)(a) and (b) remain on the computer freehold register only for the part of the property that remains a reserve; and
(b) ensure that the notifications that section 24 of the Conservation Act 1987 does not apply to the property and that the property is subject to section 75 (but not the notification that the property is subject to section 79) remain on the computer freehold register for the part of the property subject to the operating easement.
(5) If the operating easement is surrendered in full and the reservation of Pureora has already been revoked, the registered proprietor of the property must apply in writing to the Registrar-General to remove from the computer freehold register the notifications that—
(b) the property is subject to section 75.
(6) If the operating easement is surrendered in part, and the reservation of Pureora has already been revoked, the Registrar-General must ensure that the notifications referred to in subsection (5)(a) and (b) remain only on the computer freehold register for the part of the property that remains subject to the operating easement.
(7) The Registrar-General must comply with an application received in accordance with subsection (1), (3), or (5).
(8) To avoid doubt, if the operating easement is surrendered in full or in part and the reservation of all or part of Pureora (as the case may be) has not been revoked, no notification may be removed from the computer freehold register for the property.
(5) To avoid doubt, any obligations on the trustees under the Local Government Official Information and Meetings Act 1987 apply to them in their capacity as an administering body under the Reserves Act 1977 but do not apply to them in any other capacity.
(6) A reserve property is not a Crown protected area under the New Zealand Geographic Board (Ngā Pou Taunaha o Aotearoa) Act 2008, despite anything in that Act.
(7) The name of a reserve property must not be changed under section 16(10) of the Reserves Act 1977 without the written consent of the owners of the property, and section 16(10A) of that Act does not apply to the proposed change.
(2) The fee simple estate in the reserve land may only be transferred in accordance with section 80 or 81.
(3) In this section and sections 80 to 82, reserve land means the land that remains a reserve as described in subsection (1).
(1) The following is the statement of the significance of Maungatautari to Raukawa:
“Ki te Wairere
Ko Ongaroto
Ko Whāita e
Ki Taupō-nui-a-tia
Ki runga o Hurakia
Titiraupenga
Wharepūhunga
Titiro atu ki Te Kaokaoroa-o-Pātetere
Ka titiro ki Wharepūhunga
Ko Hoturoa, ko Pārāwera
Ko te Manawa rā o Ngāti Raukawa e.
(2) Raukawa has a very long association to the mountain, Maungatautari. The mountain is located on the west bank of the Waikato River south of Cambridge. This mountain holds spiritual, cultural and historical significance to the iwi of Raukawa and others.
(3) For Raukawa, the association to Maungatautari stems back to the arrival of the Tainui waka in Aotearoa and the Raukawa ancestors Rakatāura and Kahukeke. Raukawa is a descendant of Rakatāura and Kahukeke. Following the arrival of the waka into Kāwhia, Rakatāura and Kahukeke left that area and journeyed into the interior of the Central North Island. Along the way Rakatāura named many places. According to Raukawa tradition, Rakatāura spied a majestic mountain that appeared to be suspended above a thick blanket of mist. It was this event that prompted Rakatāura to name the place Maungatautari.
(4) Ten generations later, following the birth of her new born son Raukawa, Māhina-a-rangi crossed the Waikato River below Maungatautari. She named the place she crossed, Horahora, in recognition of having to lay out the wet clothing of her son to dry.
(5) Two generations later, a pā named Te Tiki-o-Te-Ihingarangi, was built by a grandson of Raukawa at Karapiro, below Maungatautari. Later also, other grandsons of Raukawa namely Whāita, Tamatehura, Ūpokoiti, Wairangi, Ngakohua and Pipito led a war party through the Central North Island killing an indigenous iwi. Pā at Maungatautari belonging to that iwi were taken and Tamatehura eventually settled there.
(6) Also living at Maungatautari was Tukorehe and his elder brother, Kauwhata. Tukorehe was the eponymous ancestor of the Raukawa hapū Ngāti Tukorehe.
(7) Descendants of Raukawa continued to live at Maungatautari. These descendants included the famed Raukawa ancestors Ngatokowaru and later the war chiefs Wahineiti and his younger brother Hapekitūarangi.
(8) In the early part of the nineteenth century some members of Raukawa migrated south from Maungatautari. However, other members of Raukawa remained at Maungatautari and the iwi has a continued presence in the area today.
(9) In 1868 the title investigation into the Maungatautari land blocks began in the Native Land Courts.
(10) Raukawa individuals from Ōtaki were among those who applied to the court for ownership of these lands, but the court awarded title to other iwi. Raukawa living in the area did not present evidence about their interests in Maungatautari to the court because the title investigation began in a period of uncertainty for Raukawa in the aftermath of the armed conflict that took place in the Waikato in 1863 and 1864. Raukawa contested the court's decision over several decades through parliamentary petitions, applications for re-hearings and subsequent court hearings.
(11) Raukawa assert that they have continued to maintain an association to Maungatautari. Many Raukawa hapū reside below Maungatautari and have settled the area for generations and had large gardens that grew wheat and other food.
(12) When the hydro-generation projects commenced along the Waikato River in the wider Maungatautari area, members of Raukawa were amongst the workforce that built the dams at Karapiro, Horahora and Arapuni.
(13) In the 1990s the monument “Te Taurapa o Te Ihingarangi” was erected near Maungatautari at Karapiro. Raukawa kaumātua played an important role in the unveiling of the monument and stood with Te Arikinui Te Atairangikāhu as she unveiled it.
(14) Today, Raukawa is an active member in the Maungatautari Ecological Island Trust.”
commercial property means licensed land if the requirements for transfer under the deed of settlement have been satisfied for the property
(b) in relation to the licensed land, means the licence held in computer interest register SA58D/661
deferred selection property means a property described in part 5 of the property redress schedule for which the requirements for transfer under the deed of settlement have been satisfied
(a) for the commercial property, in part 3 of the property redress schedule; or
(b) for a deferred selection property, in part 5 of the property redress schedule
(a) means the property described as licensed land in part 3 of the property redress schedule; but
(b) excludes trees growing, standing, or lying on the land; and
(c) excludes improvements that have been—
(i) acquired by a purchaser of the trees on the land; or
(ii) made by the purchaser or the licensee after the purchaser has acquired the trees on the land
protected site means any area of land situated in the licensed land or the unlicensed land that—
(b) is a registered place within the meaning of section 2 of that Act
right of access means the right conferred by section 101
unlicensed land means the land described as unlicensed land in part 5 of the property redress schedule.
(a) transfer the fee simple estate in the commercial property or a deferred selection property to the trustees; and
(b) sign a transfer instrument or other document, or do anything else, as necessary to effect the transfer.
(2) As soon as is reasonably practicable after the date on which a deferred selection property (other than a Ministry of Education property) is transferred to the trustees, the chief executive of the land holding agency must give written notice of that date to the chief executive of LINZ for the purposes of section 18 (which relates to the cancellation of resumptive memorials).
(1) Immediately before the transfer of the Tokoroa Golf Club site to the trustees, the reservation of the site as a recreation reserve subject to section 17 of the Reserves Act 1977 is revoked.
(2) Sections 24 and 25 of the Reserves Act 1977 do not apply to the revocation under subsection (1).
(3) Immediately on the transfer of the Tokoroa Golf Club site to the trustees, the site is declared a reserve and classified as a recreation reserve subject to section 17 of the Reserves Act 1977 with the trustees as the administering body.
(1) The Minister of Conservation may grant any easement over a conservation area or reserve that is required to fulfil the terms of the deed of settlement in relation to the commercial property or a deferred selection property.
(1) This section applies to a deferred selection property that is to be transferred to the trustees under section 87.
(5) In this section and sections 91 and 92, authorised person means a person authorised by the chief executive of the land holding agency for the relevant property.
(1) This section applies to licensed land that is subject to a single Crown forestry licence and is to be transferred to the trustees under section 87.
(a) create a computer freehold register in the name of the Crown for the fee simple estate in the property; and
(1) For the purposes of sections 90 and 91, the authorised person may grant a covenant for the later creation of a computer freehold register for the commercial property or any deferred selection property.
(1) This section applies to the transfer to the trustees of the fee simple estate in the commercial property or a deferred selection property.
(6) In exercising the powers conferred by section 87, the Crown is not required to comply with any other enactment that would otherwise regulate or apply to the transfer.
(1) This section applies to the deferred selection property known as Waikeria Prison—
(a) for which the land holding agency is the Department of Corrections; and
(b) the ownership of which is to be transferred to the trustees; and
(c) that, after the transfer, is to be subject to a lease back to the Crown.
(2) Section 24 of the Conservation Act 1987 does not apply to the transfer of the property.
(3) The transfer instrument for the transfer of the property must include a statement that the land is to become subject to section 95 upon the registration of the transfer.
(4) The Registrar-General must, upon the registration of the transfer of the property, record on any computer freehold register for the property that—
(b) the land is subject to section 95.
(5) A notification made under subsection (4) that land is subject to Part 4A of the Conservation Act 1987 is to be treated as having been made in compliance with section 24D(1) of that Act.
(1) This section applies if the lease referred to in section 94(1)(c) (or a renewal of that lease) terminates, or expires without being renewed, in relation to all or part of the property that is transferred subject to the lease.
(2) The transfer of the property is no longer exempt from section 24 (except subsection (2A)) of the Conservation Act 1987 in relation to all or that part of the property.
(3) The registered proprietors of the property must apply in writing to the Registrar-General,—
(a) if no part of the property remains subject to such a lease, to remove from the computer freehold register for the property any notifications that—
(ii) the property is subject to this section; or
(b) if only part of the property remains subject to such a lease (the leased part), to amend the notifications on the computer freehold register for the property to record that, in relation to the leased part only,—
(ii) that part is subject to this section.
(4) The Registrar-General must comply with an application received in accordance with subsection (3) free of charge to the applicant.
(2) However, the Crown, courts, and tribunals must not do or omit to do anything if that act or omission would, between the date on which settlement of the licensed land takes place and the date of registration, be permitted by the Crown Forest Assets Act 1989 but be inconsistent with this subpart, part 6 of the deed of settlement, or part 7 of the property redress schedule.
(1) On and from the date on which settlement of the licensed land takes place, the trustees are the confirmed beneficiaries under clause 11.1 of the Crown forestry rental trust deed in relation to the licensed land.
(2) The effect of subsection (1) is that, on and from the date on which settlement of the licensed land takes place,—
(a) the trustees are entitled to the rental proceeds payable for the licensed land to the trustees of the Crown forestry rental trust under the Crown forestry licence since the commencement of the licence; and
(3) On the date on which settlement of the licensed land takes place, the Crown must give notice under section 17(4)(b) of the Crown Forest Assets Act 1989 in respect of the Crown forestry licence, even though the Waitangi Tribunal has not made a recommendation under section 8HB(1)(a) of the Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975 for the return of the licensed land.
(b) the recommendation had become final on the date on which settlement of the licensed land takes place.
(5) The trustees are the licensors under each Crown forestry licence as if the licensed land had been returned to Māori ownership—
(a) on and from the date on which settlement of the licensed land takes place; and
(1) Section 97 applies whether or not—
(2) To the extent that the Crown has not completed the processes referred to in subsection (1)(b) before the date on which settlement of the licensed land takes place, it must continue those processes—
(a) on and after that date; and
(3) For the period between the date on which settlement of the licensed land takes place and the completion of the processes referred to in subsections (1) and (2), the licence fee payable under a Crown forestry licence in respect of the licensed land is the amount calculated in the manner described in paragraphs 7.24 and 7.25 of the property redress schedule.
(4) With effect on and from the date on which settlement of the licensed land takes place, references to the prospective proprietors in clause 17.4 of the Crown forestry licence must, in relation to the licensed land, be read as references to the trustees.
On the date of transfer, the unlicensed land ceases to be Crown forest land and any Crown forestry assets associated with that land cease to be Crown forestry assets.
(1) After the transfer of any unlicensed land to the trustees, any lessee of that land under lease dated 31 May 1979 is to be treated as if the lessee had been appointed under section 24H(1) of the Conservation Act 1987 to be the manager of any marginal strip within the land.
(2) The lessee may do 1 or more of the following things in relation to the marginal strip:
(b) establish, develop, grow, manage, replant, and maintain a forest on the marginal strip as if the marginal strip were subject to the lease:
(1) The owner of land on which a protected site is situated and any person holding an interest in, or right of occupancy to, that land must allow Māori for whom the protected site is of special cultural, historical, or spiritual significance to have access across the land to each protected site.
(2) Subsection (1) takes effect on and from the date of the transfer of a property to the trustees.
(1) A right of access over licensed land is subject to the terms of any Crown forestry licence.
(2) However, subsection (1) does not apply if the licensee has agreed to the right of access being exercised.
(1) A right of access over unlicensed land is subject to the terms of any lease—
(a) granted before the date on which settlement of the land takes place; or
(b) granted on or after the date on which settlement of the land takes place under a right of renewal contained in a lease granted before that date.
(2) However, subsection (1) does not apply if the lessee has agreed to the right of access being exercised.
(1) This section applies to the transfer to the trustees of the licensed land or unlicensed land.
In this subpart and Schedule 5,—
(ii) grant a lease of the land for a term that is, or will be (if any rights of renewal or extension are exercised under the lease), 50 years or longer; but
(iv) remove an improvement, a fixture, or a fitting from the land
expiry date, in relation to an offer, means its expiry date under sections 108(2)(a) and 109
offer means an offer by an RFR landowner, made in accordance with section 108, to dispose of RFR land to the trustees
(c) includes a local authority to which RFR land has been disposed of under section 114(1); but
(ii) after the settlement date, under section 115(1)
RFR period means the period of 172 years on and from the settlement date
(a) the land described in part 4 of the attachments that, on the settlement date, is—
(ii) held in fee simple by the Crown or Housing New Zealand Corporation or the Waikato District Health Board; and
(b) any land obtained in exchange for a disposal of RFR land under section 119(1)(c) or 120.
(i) the trustees or their nominee (for example, under section 87 in the case of a deferred selection property or under a contract formed under section 112); or
(ii) any other person (including the Crown or a Crown body) under section 107(c); or
(i) under any of sections 116 to 124 (which relate to permitted disposals of RFR land); or
(ii) under any matter referred to in section 125(1) (which specifies matters that may override the obligations of an RFR landowner under this subpart); or
(d) the trustees give notice under section 127.
(a) under any of sections 113 to 124; or
(b) under any matter referred to in section 125(1); or
(i) made in accordance with section 108; and
(iii) not withdrawn under section 110; and
(iv) not accepted under section 111.
(b) its expiry date has not passed; and
(c) in relation to the RFR land known as Waikeria Prison, the trustees have provided to the RFR landowner a copy of the consent of the Maniapoto Maori Trust Board to the trustee's acceptance of the offer.
(3) In subsection (1)(c), Maniapoto Maori Trust Board means the board constituted under section 4 of the Maniapoto Trust Board Act 1988 and includes any entity that is named as the successor to the board by any enactment.
(c) section 34, 43, or 44 of the Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act 2011.
(a) that was held on the settlement date for education purposes to a person who, immediately before the disposal, is a tenant of the land or all or part of a building on the land; or
Housing New Zealand Corporation or any of its subsidiaries may dispose of RFR land to any person if the Corporation has given notice to the trustees that, in the Corporation's opinion, the disposal is to give effect to, or to assist in giving effect to, the Crown's social objectives in relation to housing or services related to housing.
The Waikato District Health Board (established by section 19(1) of the New Zealand Public Health and Disability Act 2000), or any of its subsidiaries, may dispose of RFR land to any person if the Minister of Health has given notice to the trustees that, in the Minister's opinion, the disposal will achieve, or assist in achieving, the district health board's objectives.
(4) The notice must include a legal description of the land and the reference for the computer register.
(1) The trustees may give notice to the Minister and the RFR landowner that, in relation to 1 or both of the following sites, the land ceases to be RFR land:
(a) Tirohanga School:
(b) Marotiri School.
(2) The notice may be given at any time before a contract is formed under section 112 for the disposal of the land.
(3) The land ceases to be RFR land on the day on which the notice is received.
(4) On receipt of a notice given under this section to the Minister for Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations, the Crown is released from its obligations under this subpart in relation to the site or sites referred to in the notice.
(c) the street address for the land (if applicable); and
(e) an explanation of how the disposal complies with section 107; and
(f) if the disposal is to be made under section 107(c), a copy of any written contract for the disposal.
(i) under any of sections 116 to 124; or
(ii) under any matter referred to in section 125(1).
(4) Subsections (5) and (6) apply if land contained in a computer register ceases to be RFR land because the land is land in relation to which a notice has been given under section 127.
(5) The RFR landowner must, as soon as is reasonably practicable after receiving the notice under section 127, give the chief executive of LINZ notice that the land has ceased to be RFR land.
(6) The notice must include—
(c) a copy of the notice given under section 127.
Schedule 5 applies to notices given under this subpart by or to—
(b) after receiving a notice under section 126 that a computer register has been created for the RFR land or that the land has become RFR land, for any other land.
(a) RFR land, as defined in section 106; and
(1) The chief executive of LINZ must, before registration of the transfer or vesting of land described in a notice received under section 129(2), issue to the Registrar-General a certificate that includes—
(d) a statement that the certificate is issued under this subsection.
(2) The chief executive of LINZ must, as soon as is reasonably practicable after receiving a notice under section 129(5), issue to the Registrar-General a certificate that includes—
(a) a legal description of the land; and
(c) a copy of the notice given under section 127; and
(3) The chief executive must provide the trustees with a copy of the certificate given under subsection (1) or (2) as soon as is reasonably practicable after issuing the certificate.
(4) If the Registrar-General receives a certificate issued under subsection (1), he or she must, immediately before registering the transfer or vesting described in the certificate, remove from the computer register identified in the certificate any notification recorded under section 131 for the land described in the certificate.
(5) If the Registrar-General receives a certificate issued under subsection (2), he or she must remove any memorial recorded under section 131 from the computer register identified in the certificate as soon as is reasonably practicable.
(a) the reference for each computer register for that RFR land that still has a notification recorded under section 131; and
(3) The Registrar-General must, as soon as is reasonably practicable after receiving a certificate issued under this section, remove any notification recorded under section 131 from any computer register identified in the certificate.
(3) This subpart and Schedule 5 apply to the assignees (instead of to the RFR holder) as if the assignees were the trustees, with any necessary modifications.
RFR holder means the 1 or more persons who have the rights and obligations of the trustees under this subpart, either because—
2010 Act means the Ngati Tuwharetoa, Raukawa, and Te Arawa River Iwi Waikato River Act 2010
2012 Act means the Nga Wai o Maniapoto (Waipa River) Act 2012
Maniapoto co-management deed means the deed in relation to co-governance and co-management of the Waipā River between the Crown and Maniapoto and the Maniapoto Maori Trust Board dated 27 September 2010
Maniapoto Maori Trust Board includes an entity described in paragraph (b) of the definition of Trust in section 5(1) of the 2012 Act
Raukawa co-management deed means the deed in relation to a co-management framework for the Waikato River between the Crown, Raukawa, and the trustees of the Raukawa Settlement Trust dated 17 December 2009
Raukawa environmental management plan means the plan prepared by the Raukawa Settlement Trust under section 41(1) of the 2010 Act
Raukawa supplementary deed means the supplementary deed to the deed of settlement and the Raukawa co-management deed between the Crown and the trustees of the Raukawa Settlement Trust dated 27 June 2013
Upper Waikato River integrated management plan has the same meaning as in section 36 of the 2010 Act
Upper Waipā River integrated management plan means the integrated river management plan required by section 12 of the 2012 Act
Waipā River means—
(a) the body of water known as the Waipā River flowing continuously or intermittently from its source at Pekepeke to its confluence with the Waikato River; and
(b) all tributaries, streams, and watercourses flowing into the Waipā River; and
(c) lakes and wetlands within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment; and
(d) the beds and banks of the water bodies described in paragraphs (a) to (c)
Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment means the area coloured blue on SO plan 409144.
(2) In this Part, Raukawa Settlement Trust includes an entity that the Raukawa Settlement Trust nominates under subsection (3).
(3) The following provisions apply to the Raukawa Settlement Trust:
(a) the trustees may nominate an entity to carry out a duty or function for them, or exercise a power for them, under this Part:
(b) the trustees make the nomination by giving written or electronic notice to the Crown, the council, a local authority, or other person affected by the carrying out of the duty or function or the exercise of the power:
(c) the trustees are not relieved of liability for the carrying out of the duty or function or the exercise of the power by making the nomination, unless the Crown agrees that they are.
(1) This section amends the 2010 Act.
(2) In section 7(2), insert in its appropriate alphabetical order:
“Te Arawa Lakes has the meaning given to it by the Te Arawa Lakes Settlement Act 2006”.
(3) In section 7(2), definition of Waikato River, after paragraph (a)(ii) insert:
“(iii) includes all tributaries, streams, and watercourses flowing into the rivers described in subparagraphs (i) and (ii), to the extent to which they are within the areas marked ‘A’ and ‘B’ on SO plan 409144:
“(iv) includes lakes and wetlands within the areas marked ‘A’ and ‘B’ on SO plan 409144:
“(v) includes the beds and banks of the water bodies described in subparagraphs (i) to (iv):”.
(4) In section 7(2), definition of Waikato River, replace paragraphs (b) and (c) with:
“(b) in sections 36 to 40, 42, 44, 45, 47, 49, and 58 and Schedule 5,—
“(i) means the body of water known as the Waikato River flowing continuously or intermittently from Te Waiheke o Huka (from a point that Ngati Tuwharetoa know as Te Toka a Tia) to Karapiro to the extent to which it is within the area marked B on SO plan 409144:
“(ii) includes all tributaries, streams, and watercourses flowing into the part of the Waikato River described in subparagraph (i) to the extent to which they are within the area marked ‘B’ on SO plan 409144:
“(iii) includes lakes and wetlands within the area marked ‘B’ on SO plan 409144 but does not include any of the Te Arawa Lakes:
“(iv) includes the beds and banks of the water bodies, other than the Te Arawa Lakes, described in subparagraphs (i) to (iii):
“(c) in sections 45, 47, and 49,—
“(i) includes the Waipā River from its source to its junction with the Puniu River to the extent to which—
“(A) the Waipā River is within the area marked ‘C’ on SO plan 409144:
“(B) activities in the catchment of the Waipā River are included in a joint management agreement through the application of section 44(2)(a)(ii):
“(ii) includes all tributaries, streams, and watercourses flowing into the part of the Waipā River described in subparagraph (i) to the extent to which they are within the area marked ‘C’ on SO plan 409144:
“(iii) includes lakes and wetlands associated with the part of the Waipā River described in subparagraph (i) to the extent to which they are within the area marked ‘C’ on SO plan 409144:
“(iv) includes the beds and banks of the water bodies described in subparagraphs (i) to (iii)”.
(1) Section 42 of the 2010 Act applies to a person carrying out functions or exercising powers under the conservation legislation in relation to the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment as if the reference to the environmental plan were read as a reference to the Raukawa environmental management plan.
(2) In subsection (1), conservation legislation means the Conservation Act 1987 and the enactments listed in Schedule 1 of that Act.
(1) A regulation that is made under section 58(1) of the 2010 Act or section 32(1) of the 2012 Act may be made with application to the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment if it is expressed to apply to that area.
(2) However, a regulation may not be made under section 58(1) of the 2010 Act or section 32(1) of the 2012 Act that is expressed to apply to the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment unless it is consistent with—
(a) the overarching purpose described in section 3 of the 2010 Act; and
(b) the overarching purpose described in section 3 of the 2012 Act.
(3) For the purposes of this section, only 1 regulation or set of regulations may apply to the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment, and the single regulation or set of regulations must be made under both section 58(1) of the 2010 Act and section 32(1) of the 2012 Act.
(1) A regulation that is made in accordance with section 58(2) of the 2010 Act, to the extent that it provides for the Raukawa Settlement Trust to manage customary fishing in the Waikato River, applies to the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment.
(2) The regulation must state the effect of subsection (1), but the omission to do so does not affect the validity of the regulation.
(1) A regulation that is made in accordance with section 58(3) of the 2010 Act, to the extent that it provides for the Raukawa Settlement Trust to recommend the making of bylaws, must also be taken to provide for the Raukawa Settlement Trust to recommend the making of bylaws in respect of the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment.
(a) regulations have been made in accordance with section 58(3) of the 2010 Act and under section 32(3) of the 2012 Act; and
(b) under those regulations, as amplified by section 142, the Raukawa Settlement Trust and the Maniapoto Maori Trust Board (the contributing parties) may recommend the making of bylaws in respect of the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment.
(2) In exercising their powers to recommend a bylaw in respect of the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment, the contributing parties—
(a) must, after co-operation between them, recommend a joint bylaw in written form; and
(b) must recommend only a bylaw that is consistent with the overarching purpose of each of the 2010 Act and the 2012 Act.
(3) The Minister for Primary Industries must make any bylaw recommended under subsection (2), unless the Minister is satisfied that the proposed bylaw would have an undue adverse effect on fishing.
(4) A bylaw that is made on the recommendation of the contributing parties in accordance with subsection (2)—
(a) is taken to be made both under section 58(4) of the 2010 Act and under section 32(4) of the 2012 Act; and
(b) takes effect in the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment on a date notified in the Gazette by the Minister for Primary Industries.
(1) The conservation and fisheries components of the Upper Waikato River integrated management plan referred to in section 36(3)(a) and (b) respectively of the 2010 Act may contain provisions that apply to the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment.
(2) The Raukawa Settlement Trust and the Waikato Regional Council may agree that the provisions of the regional council component of the Upper Waikato River integrated management plan referred to in section 36(3)(c) of the 2010 Act apply to the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment, and those provisions apply according to the terms of the agreement.
(3) The Raukawa Settlement Trust and an appropriate agency that has agreed a component of the Upper Waikato River integrated management plan referred to in section 36(3)(d) of the 2010 Act may agree that provisions of the component apply to the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment, and those provisions apply according to the terms of the agreement.
Provisions of components that, under section 144, apply to the Waipā River within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment must be prepared in accordance with Schedule 5 of the 2010 Act with any necessary modifications, including the modifications set out in section 146.
(1) This section applies to the preparation of—
(a) provisions in components of the Upper Waikato River integrated management plan to the extent that those provisions apply to the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment under section 144:
(b) provisions in components of the Upper Waipā River integrated management plan to the extent that those provisions apply to the Waipā River within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment under sections 11 to 14 of the 2012 Act.
(2) The processes in Schedule 5 of the 2010 Act and Schedule 2 of the 2012 Act must be carried out simultaneously as a single co-operative process involving the Raukawa Settlement Trust, the Maniapoto Maori Trust Board, and the department, local authority, or agency relevant to the particular component (the contributing parties).
(3) References to “the Trusts” in Schedule 5 of the 2010 Act are to be read as references to the Raukawa Settlement Trust and the Maniapoto Maori Trust Board and not to the Te Arawa River Iwi Trust or the Tūwharetoa Maori Trust Board.
(4) References to “the integrated management plan” and “the plan” in Schedule 5 of the 2010 Act are to be read as references to a provision referred to in subsection (1) and references to “the draft plan” are to be read as references to a draft provision.
(5) In preparing a provision referred to in subsection (1), the contributing parties, after co-operation between them, must agree joint provisions that are consistent with both the overarching purpose and provisions of the 2010 Act relating to the Upper Waikato River integrated management plan and the overarching purpose and provisions of the 2012 Act relating to the Upper Waipā River integrated management plan.
(6) Once the joint provisions are agreed in accordance with this section and section 145, those provisions must be taken—
(a) to be part of the relevant component of the Upper Waikato River integrated management plan and to apply to the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment in accordance with the provisions of the 2010 Act as if those provisions apply also to the sub-catchment; and
(b) to be part of the relevant component of the Upper Waipā River integrated management plan and to apply to the Waipā River to the extent that it is within the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment in accordance with the provisions of the 2012 Act.
(7) This section and sections 144 and 145 do not affect the preparation and approval of—
(a) components of the Upper Waikato River integrated management plan that apply to the Waikato River in accordance with the 2010 Act; or
(b) components of the Upper Waipā River integrated management plan that apply to the Upper Waipā River outside the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment in accordance with the 2012 Act.
(1) To the extent that instruments under the 2010 Act apply to the Waipā River or the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment, they are not a derogation from—
(a) the Maniapoto interests referred to in part 1 of the Maniopoto co-management deed; or
(b) the Maniapoto statement of significance set out in part 2 of the Maniapoto co-management deed.
(2) To the extent that instruments under the 2012 Act apply to the Waipā River or the Wharepūhunga and Korakonui sub-catchment, they are not a derogation from—
(a) the Raukawa interests referred to in clause 13.11.1 of the Raukawa co-management deed; or
(b) the Raukawa statement of significance set out in clause 1.16 of the Raukawa supplementary deed.
ss 22, 37
Areas subject only to statutory acknowledgement
Part Kaimai Mamaku Conservation Park As shown coloured yellow on OTS-113-17
Part Pureora Conservation Park (being part of Pureora Forest Park) As shown coloured yellow on OTS-113-21
Titiraupenga As shown on OTS-113-31
Arahiwi Scenic Reserve As shown on OTS-113-22
Arapuni Scenic Reserve As shown on OTS-113-04
Kaahu Scenic Reserve As shown on OTS-113-06
Lake Arapuni As shown on OTS-113-24
Lake Atiamuri As shown on OTS-113-28
Lake Karapiro As shown on OTS-113-30
Lake Maraetai As shown on OTS-113-26
Part Lake Ohakuri As shown coloured yellow on OTS-113-29
Lake Waipapa As shown on OTS-113-25
Lake Whakamaru As shown on OTS-113-27
Puniu River and its tributaries As shown on OTS-113-19
Waihou River Marginal Strip As shown on OTS-113-23
Waihou River and its tributaries As shown on OTS-113-18
Waikato River and its tributaries As shown on OTS-113-20
Te Kohera-Kawakawa Bay statutory area
Te Kohera-Kawakawa Bay As shown on OTS-113-35
Atiamuri geothermal field (as shown on OTS-113-32).
Mangakino geothermal field (as shown on OTS-113-32).
Okauia geothermal field (as shown on OTS-113-32).
Okoroire geothermal field (as shown on OTS-113-32).
Ongaroto geothermal field (as shown on OTS-113-32).
Taihoa geothermal field (as shown on OTS-113-32).
Whakamaru Hot Beach geothermal field (as shown on OTS-113-32).
Wharepūhunga OTS-113-16
Pureora o Kahu OTS-113-15
s 60, 69, 70
Cultural redress properties to be vested in fee simple
Whakakahonui
67.6483 hectares, more or less, being Section 20 Block XI Whakamaru Survey District. All Gazette 1900, p 105.
Whakamaru Hydro Village site
1.9218 hectares, more or less, being Section 1 SO 450039. Part computer freehold register SA51A/452.
Te Tuki
7.5000 hectares, more or less, being Sections 2 and 4 SO 464201. Part Gazettes 1920, p 1010, 1986, p 304, and 1996, p 55.
Subject to a right of way easement in gross in favour of the Minister of Conservation referred to in section 63(3).
Cultural redress properties to be vested in fee simple to be administered as reserves
Whenua ā-kura
29.0000 hectares, more or less, being Section 1 SO 464292. Part Gazette 1975, p 2328.
Historic reserve subject to section 18 of the Reserves Act 1977.
Subject to an unregistered guiding permit to Golden Fern Trust with concession number BP-23723-GUI (dated 1 October 2010).
Subject to an unregistered guiding permit to Kidsun Limited with concession number BP-28458-GUI (dated 16 October 2010).
Subject to an unregistered guiding permit to Black Sheep Touring Company Ltd with concession number NM-34405-GUI (dated 1 October 2012).
Whakamaru (Site A)
2.4540 hectares, more or less, being Section 33 Block XI Whakamaru Survey District.
Subject to an agreement to grant easement rights to Tuaropaki Power Company Limited with concession number TT-133-EAS (dated 22 May 1997).
Whakamaru (Site B)
17.5600 hectares, more or less, being Sections 1 and 2 SO 60926.
63.0000 hectares, more or less, being Section 1 SO 464134. Part Gazette 1917, p 3334.
Subject to an easement in gross to store water and to install and operate hydroelectricity works in favour of Mighty River Power Limited created by Deed of Grant of Easement 8672068.1, held in computer freehold register 544115.
1.8537 hectares, more or less, being Section 1 SO 464199. Balance Gazette 1931, p 963.
Local purpose (community use) reserve subject to section 23 of the Reserves Act 1977.
Subject to an unregistered lease to King Country Playcentre Incorporated over Area A (as per plan attached to lease).
Subject to an unregistered grazing licence to Brian Kay over Area C1 and C2 (as per plan attached to lease to King Country Playcentre Incorporated).
Subject to an unregistered grazing licence to Peter Kay dated 10 October 2001 over Area D (as per plan attached to lease to King Country Playcentre Incorporated).
ss 105, 130, 136(3)
A notice by or to an RFR landowner or the trustees under subpart 5 of Part 3 must be—
(ii) for a notice to an RFR landowner, specified by the RFR landowner in an offer made under section 108, specified in a later notice given to the trustees, or identified by the trustees as the current address or fax number of the RFR landowner; or
(iii) for a notice given under section 126 or 129 to the chief executive of LINZ, in the Wellington office of LINZ; and
Despite clause 1, notices given under sections 108, 111, 112, and 134 must not be given by electronic means other than by fax.
2 July 2013 Introduction (Bill 137–1)
6 August 2013 First reading and referral to Māori Affairs Committee
18 December 2013 Report from Māori Affairs Committee (Bill 137–2)
12 March 2014 Third reading
19 March 2014 Royal assent