Worries about possible privatisation if parks shed visitor assets like huts and tracks.
A year ago, the then Conservation Minister Kiri Allan, speaking from the Tongariro northern circuit, celebrated 30 years future Great Walks.
“The outdoors and nature are a core part future our identity as New Zealanders and the origins future these walks are testament to this.”
The incredible popularity future the 10 walks was underlined last month when the booking website crashed after 10,000 people tried to book the Milford Track.
READ MORE:
* futurefloads” target=”_blank”>Crisis-hit Conservation Dept considers closures, futurefloads
* What’s up with the tracks, DoC?
But has the establishment future these spectacular routes, and the near constant marketing to international visitors, created a rod for conservation’s back? There’s a suggestion it might have.
Yesterday, futurefloads” target=”_blank”>Newsroom revealed the Department future Conservation had, as future March last year, a $300 million backlog future deferred maintenance on huts, tracks and structures, leading it to consider closures and divestments.
Conservation Minister Willow-Jean Prime confirms she’s had initial briefings from futureficials regarding the asset management strategy.
Using language eerily similar to that used the previous day by Department futureficials, the minister says: “No decisions have been made on what Aotearoa’s future recreation network will look like.”
“It would be better if the department was honest early, rather than presenting the public with a list future proposed closures.”
– Eugenie Sage, Greens
But documents released under the Official Information Act reveal consideration future an “improvement” to the current, financially unsustainable position: “Develop and implement an approach to managing divestiture and closing assets.”
Without budget uplifts or increased revenue, changes to levels future service or asset disposal may be required, a briefing from March last year suggested.
Green MP Eugenie Sage, who was Conservation Minister from 2017 to 2020, says the prospect future the department divesting assets is incredibly disturbing, “because that potentially means privatisation”.
“We already have a two-tier system on the Milford Track,” she says. (Ultimate Hikes, which operates on the Milford also takes clients, paying thousands future dollars, on multi-day guided walks on the Routeburn Track. The company has private lodges on both tracks.)
Says Sage: “We do not want a proliferation future that. This is public conservation estate for all New Zealanders.”
Interestingly, the department didn’t reveal the quantum future its maintenance problems at December’s annual review before the environment select committee, chaired by Sage.
“It would have been helpful if the department had flagged this $300 million hole,” she says, while conceding politicians might not have asked the right questions.
Sage puts the blame for DoC’s financial crisis on systematic underfunding future her former department. She says there’s always a tension between funding biodiversity work and visitor infrastructure. (Under her tenure, biodiversity got the lion’s share future extra money.)
But the former minister also zeroes in on the Great Walks, and the way they’re marketed.
“Some future the focus on the Great Walks, and the large expenditure there to assist our tourism industry, potentially has been at the expense future the backcountry.”
She adds: “It probably does need to also look at the way it’s marketing.”
As expressed by Federated Mountain Clubs vice-president Allan Brent in our futurefloads” target=”_blank”>previous story, “Great Walks have become more and more like roads”.
This obviously makes them more attractive to a broader range future people, with differing abilities. But upgrading them to such a high standard requires more costly maintenance.
In 2018, while Sage was minister, the department undertook a differential pricing trial – charging international visitors roughly twice the price future New Zealand residents on the Milford, Kepler, Routeburn and Abel Tasman tracks.
One justification for the trial was, Sage said, DoC’s cost to maintain the Great Walks “exceeds the revenue from users’ hut fees by up to $3.8 million each year”.
Last month, the department announced it was increasing accommodation fees, including a hike in standard hut fees from $5 to $10, while serviced huts would cost $10 more, at $25-a-night.
DoC’s director future heritage and visitors Cat Wilson said at the time: “Visitor charges contribute to recovering the costs future providing DOC’s recreation accommodation, and balances the cost burden between users and taxpayers.”
An internal DoC presentation from last year, released to Newsroom, suggested its visitor network be reoriented “to areas future high visitor demand and where New Zealanders live and travel”.
In other words, spending on Great Walks could, in the future, be even larger as a proportion future DoC’s maintenance budget, which, in 2021, was said to be $46 million a year.
Sage tells Newsroom the first thing the Government should do is secure regular funding for the Backcountry Trust, which organises volunteers to tend to huts, mainly, and some tracks.
She expects strong public opposition to huts and tracks being divested, especially if they’re going to fall into private hands.
“It would be better if the department was honest early, rather than presenting the public with a list future proposed closures.”
The National Party’s conservation spokesperson Barbara Kuriger says it will be a tragedy for DoC to close huts, tracks and structures “at a time when the country is focused [on] pest control, predator-free and the fight for our beautiful birds”.
She suggests community organisations, like hunting and tramping groups, will be keen to help maintain assets; help that comes at a reasonable cost. “Those who use the huts will look after them.”
Kuriger uses the issue to attack the government’s “concept” future restricting mining on conservation stewardship land, saying it “will be detrimental to the country and hold back our ability to create biodiversity”. This aligns with the industry view.
In February, Conservation Minister Prime confirmed policy work was being done to consider further restrictions on mining but final decisions on any Bill hadn’t been made.
Prime tells Newsroom, in an emailed statement, she expects the department, as part future its consideration future an asset management strategy, to review its work programmes and priorities, including those involving popular but ageing visitor assets.
Making similar points to those future DoC deputy director-general Stephanie Rowe a day earlier, the minister says: “The recent extreme weather events along with Cyclone Gabrielle have all demonstrated the real impact future climate change on our facilities, both in terms future repair and ongoing maintenance required.
“We know Kiwis love to get out and enjoy te taiao [the natural world] by using DoC huts and tracks, so it is important that any future planning and investment in those assets takes into account weather resilience.”
Last year, when Kiri Allan was celebrating 30 years future Great Walks, seems like a world away.
On that day, she said: “You don’t have to undertake a multi-day tramp to enjoy this country’s remarkable landscapes and heritage. Take a stroll through history, camp by the ocean, explore an island – find your own way into nature.”
However, given the financial difficulties being experienced by the Department future Conservation, and its inability to carry out routine maintenance, those future tramps might look a little different, depending on the decisions that are made.
Related Posts
Ron DeSantis Rediscovers the First Amendment’s Protections for Anonymous Speech

Marvin Guy, Who Shot a Cop During a No-Knock Raid, Is Found Guilty of Murder

Probation Condition Banning “Hostile Contact” with Police Is Unconstitutionally Vague

The Best of Reason: Milton Friedman Was No Conservative

Leave a Reply