Hastings Mayor questioned over failure to act on potential risk of Drinking Water Contamination in her City

The potential risk of contamination to Hastings drinking water has surfaced raising questions over why the Hastings Mayor Sandra Hazlehurst has failed take urgent action on protecting an “at risk fresh water body” in her city.

Hastings mayoral candidate Damon Harvey is demanding answers on why Mayor Hazlehurst has not informed the public, nor taken action to remove the risk.

The water body, Lowes Pit (also known as Lake Lowe) at 15 Hazelwood Street, is on a property owned by the Hastings District Council. Situated in the city’s Omahu industrial area, it is part of the Heretaunga unconfined aquifer and is within the Frimley Bore source protection zone.

Harvey said council has known about road runoff (storm-water) contaminants such as sediment, zinc, copper and oil and grease being discharged into the aquifer and in June 2018 it was presented in a report to the Works and Services Committee as “a potential risk to the Heretaunga Plains aquifer”. (note copy of report page supplied)

“This is a very serious matter of public interest happening on Mayor Hazlehurst’s watch. By not taking urgent action, it appears she is continuing to support a mindset that allows this identified contamination to keep putting our drinking water at potential risk.”

Harvey is calling for discharge limits to be set immediately with the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council and that Hastings Council commits publicly to alternative ways to collect road runoff and storm-water than going into the aquifer.

His call comes after meeting with a local resident who wrote to him, asking for “positive action”. The resident also wrote to Hazlehurst, the HBRC, HBDHB, iwi and the Minister of Health David Clark.

“On receiving these letters, I have met with the resident concerned and visited Lowes Pit. It is Hastings council’s responsibility to act with urgency.

“With his permission I am releasing these letters and over the coming days I will be asking council to advise what our legal obligations are under the Health Act,” he said.

Harvey said right now Mayor Hazlehurst is out campaigning that she’s making drinking water her “top priority”, but at the same time she is not acting on the potential risk of drinking water contamination in Hastings.

“Look at what happened in Havelock North where council ignored the warning signs, and failed to inform the public, we can never afford to let any risk go unknown again,” Harvey said.

“Time and time again we are seeing a repetitive culture where the public are the last to know. This is unacceptable, especially when it comes to protecting our drinking water,” he said.

Consultants Tonkin & Taylor was commissioned by council to look at options to improve the water quality being discharged to the pit (lake) as well as provide enhancement options to treat the run off prior.

“Based on the report, this is a case where “road runoff” is being discharged straight into a freshwater body which is directly connected to ground water.

“During the water crisis we were told of contamination within this protection zone from young water which forced the closure of the hospital bore,” Harvey said.

Lowes Pit is within one kilometre of 13 bores used for food processing, irrigation and drinking water supplies.

 

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