'Forgotten we're still stuck': Upset in Tokomaru Bay over handling of convoys

9:14 pm on 20 March 2023
Tokomaru Bay is a small Tairāwhiti community between Tolaga Bay and Ruatoria, north of Gisborne.

People in Tokomaru Bay have been cut off due to severe damage to State Highway 35, both north and south of the East Coast town. (File photo from 2022). Photo: Local Democracy Reporting/ Gisorne Herald - Ben Cowper

Tensions have run high in Tokomaru Bay over the district council's handling of convoys which have proven a life-line to residents needing to access Gisborne.

When Cyclone Gabrielle hit the small town was cut off from Ruatoria in the north and Gisborne in the south due to slips and washouts on State Highway 35.

But on 5 March, Te Akau o Tokomaru Civil Defence began group trips to and from Gisborne on dangerous backroads which bypass the closed section of highway near Tolaga Bay.

The convoys began independent of the council, but Civil Defence - many of whom are volunteers - piloted the trips in council-marked vehicles.

Te Akau o Tokomaru Civil Defence logistics volunteer Colin Skudder said travelling in convoy had been important for safety reasons, as an RT (radio) was essential due to the presence of logging trucks.

"We were doing it voluntarily. We were taking time off work to lead these convoys through," Skudder said.

"The thing with Gisborne is a lot of people have forgotten we're still stuck in our little town."

On Wednesday, Tokomaru residents were told via a community Facebook page that the organised convoys would be stopped, and were encouraged to complain to the council about the matter.

A number of users expressed frustration, with one saying he needed to get to town to collect his wife's medication.

On Friday, the council responded by saying it would begin three convoys a day to and from Tokomaru Bay, beginning on Friday.

But this came as only a partial relief to Civil Defence who said they felt unappreciated for the long hours they had already put in following the cyclone.

A member of the group, who did not wish to be named, said they were fatigued from running the convoys on top of 20 hour days they had already put in.

When concerns were raised with the council, along with the need for a contingency plan for when the state of emergency was lifted, it took two weeks to receive a response, the person said.

The council contracted the convoy work to a third-party who would operate from opposite ends of the Tokomaru Bay and Gisborne route, piloting vehicles to a halfway point at the intersection of Tauwhareparae Road and Hokoroa Road.

Gisborne District Council community lifelines director David Wilson said Civil Defence had asked for a formalised convoy system, but there had been a delay in organising it.

"We apologise to the Tokomaru Bay community for any frustration this has caused."

Wilson said the convoy had been using council staff vehicles, as the organisation was fortunate enough to have four staff volunteers in the Tokomaru Bay Civil Defence team.

The council was now using contractors who were qualified in health and safety on roads.

"We also want to ensure those volunteers who are leading the convoys are able to take a well-earned break or head back to their normal roles and responsibilities."

In the past couple of weeks, up to 30 vehicles at a time had travelled in a group at predetermined times on Thursdays and Sundays.

Normal journey times of one and a half hours between the two centres had ballooned to as long as three and a half hours because of the state of the roads on the alternate route.

The new convoy system would leave from Tokomaru Bay 4 Square at one end, and the intersection of Waimata Valley Road and Back Ormond Road at the other end.

Both convoys would be piloted and leave independently at 8am, 11am and 2pm.

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