Strong interest in Whangārei freedom camping bylaw review

6:33 pm on 4 December 2020

Whananaki North residents are calling for freedom camping to be banned from their local seaside reserve after complaints of urinating in the sea and nudity.

Freedom campers at Kowharewa Bay, on the Tutukaka coast.

Banning peak summer freedom camping at this Kowharewa Bay, Tutukaka site is among proposed changes in Whangārei District Council changes to its Camping in Public Places bylaw. Photo: Northern Advocate / John Stone

The Whananaki Beach Residents and Ratepayers Association will be among more than two dozen people raising their freedom camping concerns at next week's Whangārei District Council (WDC)'s Camping in Public Places Bylaw review submissions hearing.

Whangārei's faced a 160 percent increase in freedom campers into the district in the last five years. Last summer, 13,000 freedom camping vehicles visited Whangārei - up from 5000 in 2017/2018.

The association's chair, Wendy O'Shea, said nudity and urinating in the sea, along with limited toilet capacity and overcrowding on the tennis court-sized Whananaki North estuary site created ongoing issues locally.

The association will be calling on freedom camping to be prohibited from the site, or at the least banned over the peak summer season.

Its submission is among more than 200 to WDC about its first review of the bylaw - and associated proposed change to the Public Places Bylaw 2014 - after a just-finished month-long public consultation.

The submissions will be published on the council's website before next week's hearing.

Councillors will hear from at least 30 submitters at the 8 December council meeting hearing.

WDC strategic planner (bylaws) Vita Strohush said there had been 207 submissions, almost double what had been received when the 2017 bylaw first came in. A petition had also been received.

Strohush said in her 8 December submission hearing agenda item that late registrations for the hearing would also be added if needed.

She said people who wanted to speak to the council on the freedom camping bylaw review no longer had to have made a written submission first.

"It is no longer a requirement that written submissions are provided in order to speak to council on the matter being consulted on."

Jan Boyes', Whangārei Heads Citizens Association chair, is urging all those interested in freedom camping's impact around the district to attend the hearing.

Boyes will be among those speaking, along with the Whangārei Heads association.

The hearing comes shortly after Minister of Tourism Stuart Nash spoke out against freedom camping's non-self contained vehicles.

"I certainly want tighter controls on this industry. I want to know what's possible and how we can ensure our long-suffering ratepayers and residents in the most idyllic parts of the country aren't left cleaning up human waste," Nash said.

WDC will produce a summary report from the meeting. This will be used at a follow-up deliberations hearing expected for later this month or in February.

The council has said permanent vehicle dwellers were outside the intent of the Camping in Public Places Bylaw.

But expected hearing submitters include several from the Whangārei Vehicle Dwellers group, which is calling for the bylaw to be revoked with changes to rules around self-containment.

Margaret Hicks, longtime Ruakākā environmental campaigner, will be presenting to the hearing. She has called for freedom camping to be prohibited at Marsden Point's Ralph Trimmer Drive, Peter Snell Road, Sime Road, Mair Road's Department of Conservation carpark and Billar Road.

James Imlach, New Zealand Motor Caravan Association manager for property and policy and expected hearing submitter, said WDC should maintain a permissive approach to freedom camping to accommodate growth in camping vehicles.

no metadata

Local Democracy Reporting is a public interest news service supported by RNZ, the News Publishers' Association and NZ On Air.

Get the RNZ app

for ad-free news and current affairs