Transfer Stations & Landfills Brochure

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Transfer Stations & Landfills Brochure Locations, and hours of operation Queries about All transfer stations and landfills are closed on Christmas Day, Good Friday, and on the morning solid waste only of Anzac Day. services or Dannevirke Transfer Station recycling? EASTON STREET Monday to Friday 9:00am–4:00pm Saturday 10:30am–4:00pm Sunday 12:00pm–4:00pm Call our Solid Waste Officer, 06 374 4080. Eketāhuna Transfer Station MARCHANT STREET Sunday 9:00am–11:00am Thursday and Saturday 2:00pm–4:00pm EFTPOS only Pahiatua Transfer Station RIDGE ROAD NORTH Sunday and Wednesday 12:00pm–4:00pm Transfer stations Friday 1:o0pm–4:00pm and landfills EFTPOS only Pongaroa Landfill URUPA STREET Monday 10:00am–1:00pm [email protected] Cash or vouchers only – no EFTPOS www.tararuadc.govt.nz Woodville Transfer Station OXFORD ROAD Wednesday 9:00am–11:00am Saturday 2:00pm–5:00pm Cash or vouchers only – no EFTPOS 18 July 2021 General Information Fees and Charges All fees and charges include GST Vouchers DANNEVIRKE TRANSFER STATION EKETĀHUNA TRANSFER STATION Only Eketāhuna, Pahiatua, Pongaroa, and Woodville PAHIATUA TRANSFER STATION WOODVILLE TRANSFER STATION Individual vouchers can be purchased from the Council’s service Domestic/commercial waste $290 + centres in Woodville, Pahiatua, and Eketāhuna. All vehicles. Minimum charge $6.00. per tonne PONGAROA LANDFILL A voucher will allow you one load to either the Woodville, Pahiatua, or Eketāhuna transfer stations, or the Pongaroa landfill. They are not $6 accepted at the Dannevirke Transfer Station. Green waste / Clean fill $85 Minimum charge $6.00. per tonne General refuse per bag You can purchase $30.00 (car only) or $50.00 (equivalent to one cubic metre) vouchers. Hand your voucher to the landfill/transfer $10 station attendee upon arriving to dispose of your refuse. Wheelie bins per bin Dannevirke Transfer Station ALL TRANSFER STATIONS $30 Car boot load per vehicle At the Dannevirke facility all domestic and green waste is charged by weight. The weight is calculated by weighing all vehicles (including Televisions trailers) in and out of the transfer station, and you will be charged $55 on a per tonne basis for the weight of the rubbish and green waste All other vehicles per cubic metre dropped off at the site. Flat screen televisions/monitors .....................$20 each Domestic waste is charged at a rate of $290.00 per tonne, for all $17 vehicles, with a minimum charge of $6.00. All other televsions .................................................$25 each Green waste / Clean fill per cubic metre Green waste is charged at a rate of $85 per tonne, with a minimum charge of $6.00. Tyres Motorbike tyres ............................................................$7 each example A small trailer with a load of general waste Help us look weighing 50kg will cost $14.50 Car tyres ...........................................................................$7 each afterthe planet 4x4 light utility tyres ...............................................$10 each Vouchers are not accepted at the Dannevirke facility, as waste is charged by weight – not by vehicle or load size as at the other facilities in the district. Truck tyres ..................................................................$25 each The Dannevirke community recycling centre is located as you enter the gates to the transfer station – you will see the recycling bins Heavy goods ........................................................................$35 each REDUCE • REUSE • RECYCLE located to the right of the roadway..
Recommended publications
  • The 1934 Pahiatua Earthquake Sequence: Analysis of Observational and Instrumental Data
    221 THE 1934 PAHIATUA EARTHQUAKE SEQUENCE: ANALYSIS OF OBSERVATIONAL AND INSTRUMENTAL DATA Gaye Downes1' 2, David Dowrick1' 4, Euan Smith3' 4 and Kelvin Berryman1' 2 ABSTRACT Descriptive accounts and analysis of local seismograms establish that the epicentre of the 1934 March 5 M,7.6 earthquake, known as the Pahiatua earthquake, was nearer to Pongaroa than to Pahiatua. Conspicuous and severe damage (MM8) in the business centre of Pahiatua in the northern Wairarapa led early seismologists to name the earthquake after the town, but it has now been found that the highest intensities (MM9) occurred about 40 km to the east and southeast of Pahiatua, between Pongaroa and Bideford. Uncertainties in the location of the epicentre that have existed for sixty years are now resolved with the epicentre determined in this study lying midway between those calculated in the 1930' s by Hayes and Bullen. Damage and intensity summaries and a new isoseismal map, derived from extensive newspaper reports and from 1934 Dominion Observatory "felt reports", replace previous descriptions and isoseismal maps. A stable solution for the epicentre of the mainshock has been obtained by analysing phase arrivals read from surviving seismograms of the rather small and poorly equipped 1934 New Zealand network of twelve stations (two privately owned). The addition of some teleseismic P arrivals to this solution shifts the location of the epicentre by less than 10 km. It lies within, and to the northern end of, the MM9 isoseismal zone. Using local instrumental data larger aftershocks and other moderate magnitude earthquakes that occurred within 10 days and 50 km of the mainshock have also been located.
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  • BEFORE the HEARING PANEL in the MATTER of the Resource Management Act 1991 and in the MATTER of Application by Tararua Distric
    BEFORE THE HEARING PANEL IN THE MATTER of the Resource Management Act 1991 AND IN THE MATTER of application by Tararua District Council to Horizons Regional Council for application APP-1993001253.02 for resource consents associated with the operation of the Pahiatua Wastewater Treatment Plant, including earthworks, a discharge to Town Creek (initially) then to the Mangatainoka River, a discharge to air (principally odour), and discharges to land via seepage, Julia Street, Pahiatua SUPPLEMENTARY EVIDENCE OF ADAM DOUGLAS CANNING (FRESHWATER ECOLOGY) FOR THE WELLINGTON FISH AND GAME COUNCIL 19 May 2017 1. My name is Adam Douglas Canning. I am a Freshwater Ecologist and my credentials are presented in my Evidence in Chief (EiC). Response to questions asked to me by the commissioners in Memorandum 3 To Participants (15 May 2017). 2. “In respect of Figure 1 on page 4 of Mr Canning’s evidence: i) Whereabouts in the Mangatainoka River were the Figure 1 measurements made? ii) If that is the type of pattern that might be caused by the Pahiatua WWTP discharge, how far downstream might it extend?” i) The diurnal dissolved oxygen fluctuations depicted in Figure 1 were made above shortly above the confluence with the Makakahi River (40˚28’36”S, 175˚47’14”N) (Wood et al., 2015). Therefore, the readings are well above, and consequently unaffected by, the Pahiatua Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP). The readings should not be taken as depicting the impact of the WWTP. Rather they show that a) the Mangatainoka River is in poor ecological health well before the WWTP; b) that extreme diurnal fluctuations in dissolved oxygen can and do occur in the Mangatainoka River; and c) increased nutrient inputs by the WWTP would likely exacerbate existing diurnal fluctuations and further reduce ecological health (as explained in my EiC).
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  • The Where and What
    Community Recycling Centres The where and what... Yes you can recycle these items No you cannot recycle these items z Newspapers, magazines, junk mail, brochures z Household rubbish, food waste z Cardboard and non-foil wrapping paper z Polystyrene – including meat trays z Disposable nappies z Dry food packages – e.g. flattened cereal boxes z Plastic bags z Telephone directories z Hot ashes, garden waste z Writing paper, and envelopes (including those with z Seedling or plant pots windows) z Drinking glasses z Type 1, 2, 3, & 5 plastics – look for the recycling symbol, z Window or windscreen glass usually at the bottom of the container z Mirrors – frosted or crystal glass z Plastic milk bottles, soft drink bottles z Light bulbs z Plastic shampoo/conditioner, household cleaner bottles z Ceramics, crockery, porcelain z Old clothes, shoes z Yoghurt pots, margarine tubs, ice-cream containers z Computers, household batteries z Drink cans – aluminium and steel z Toys, buckets, or baskets Refuse Collection z Rinsed food tins z Bubble wrap or shrink wrap and Recycling z Glass bottles and jars z Paint tins, fuel oil containers z Containers/bottles larger than 4 litres Services z Shellfish and fish waste z Other toxic material Where Recycling centre locations Akitio – at the camping Herbertville – Tautane Road Pahiatua – corner of Queen Weber – at the Weber Hall ground intersetion and Tudor Streets Dannevirke – at the Transfer Norsewood – Odin Street Pongaroa – in the Community Woodville – Community Station, Easton Street Hall carpark Centre carpark, Ross Street Eketahuna – behind the Ormondville – at the If you have any queries regarding recycling, or any other solid waste Service Centre, corner of Community Hall (glass and matters, please call our Waste Services Contracts Supervisor, Pete Wilson Lane & Bridge Street cardboard only) Sinclair, on 06 374 4080.
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  • Life After Pahiatua
    Life After Pahiatua On 1 November 1944 a total of 733 Polish children and their 105 guardians landed in Wellington Harbour. Together they had shared the fate of 1.7 million Poles who had been ethnically cleansed from their homes in eastern Poland under Stalin’s orders at the start of World War II and deported to forced-labour camps throughout the Soviet Union. Of those 1.7 million, 1 million died and 200,000 are still unaccounted for in Stalin’s genocide. This group of children, mostly orphaned or having lost family members, were the lucky ones and found eventual refuge in the Polish Children’s Camp in Pahiatua and a permanent home in New Zealand. These are the stories of their lives after the camp of how they successfully integrated and contributed to New Zealand society, more than repaying their debt to the country that offered them refuge and care in their time of need. Life After Pahiatua Contents Marian Adamski 1 Halina Morrow (nee Fladrzyńska) 25 Anna Aitken (nee Zazulak) 2 Teresa Noble-Campbell (nee Ogonowska) 26 Maria Augustowicz (nee Zazulak) 3 Janina Ościłowska (nee Łabędź) 27 Józefa Berry (nee Węgrzyn) 4 Czesława Panek (nee Wierzbińska) 28 Ryszard Janusz Białostocki 5 Genowefa Pietkiewicz (nee Knap) 29 Henryka Blackler (nee Aulich) 6 Władysław Pietkiewicz 30 Irena Coates (nee Ogonowska) 7 Franciszka Quirk (nee Węgrzyn) 31 Witold Domański 8 Kazimierz Rajwer 32 Krystyna Downey (nee Kołodyńska) 9 John Roy-Wojciechowski 33 Janina Duynhoven (nee Kornobis) 10 Malwina Zofia Schwieters (nee Rubisz) 34 Henryk Dziura 11 Michał Sidoruk
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  • Agenda of Council Meeting
    Notice of Meeting A meeting of the Tararua District Council will be held in the Council Chamber, 26 Gordon Street, Dannevirke on Wednesday 27 January 2021 commencing at 1.00pm. Bryan Nicholson Chief Executive Agenda 1. Present 2. Council Prayer 3. Apologies 4. Public Forum A period of up to 30 minutes shall be set aside for a public forum. Each speaker during the public forum section of a meeting may speak for up to five minutes. Standing Orders may be suspended on a vote of three-quarters of those present to extend the period of public participation or the period any speaker is allowed to speak. With the permission of the Mayor, members may ask questions of speakers during the period reserved for public forum. If permitted by the Mayor, questions by members are to be confined to obtaining information or clarification on matters raised by the speaker. 5. Notification of Items Not on the Agenda Major items not on the agenda may be dealt with at this meeting if so resolved by the Council and the chairperson explains at the meeting at a time when it is open to the public the reason why the item was not listed on the agenda and the reason why discussion of the item cannot be delayed until a subsequent meeting. Minor matters not on the agenda relating to the general business of the Council may be discussed if the chairperson explains at the beginning of the meeting, at a time when it is open to the public, that the item will be discussed at that meeting, but no resolution, decision or recommendation may be made in respect of that item except to refer it to a subsequent meeting.
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  • The New Zealand Gazette. 1741
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  • New Zealand Touring Map
    Manawatawhi / Three Kings Islands NEW ZEALAND TOURING MAP Cape Reinga Spirits North Cape (Otoa) (Te Rerengawairua) Bay Waitiki North Island Landing Great Exhibition Kilometres (km) Kilometres (km) N in e Bay Whangarei 819 624 626 285 376 450 404 698 539 593 155 297 675 170 265 360 658 294 105 413 849 921 630 211 324 600 863 561 t Westport y 1 M Wellington 195 452 584 548 380 462 145 355 334 983 533 550 660 790 363 276 277 456 148 242 352 212 649 762 71 231 Wanaka i l Karikari Peninsula e 95 Wanganui 370 434 391 222 305 74 160 252 779 327 468 454 North Island971 650 286 508 714 359 159 121 499 986 1000 186 Te Anau B e a Wairoa 380 308 252 222 296 529 118 781 329 98 456 800 479 299 348 567 187 189 299 271 917 829 Queenstown c Mangonui h Cavalli Is Themed Highways29 350 711 574 360 717 905 1121 672 113 71 10 Thames 115 205 158 454 349 347 440 107 413 115 Picton Kaitaia Kaeo 167 86 417 398 311 531 107 298 206 117 438 799 485 296 604 996 1107 737 42 Tauranga For more information visit Nelson Ahipara 1 Bay of Tauroa Point Kerikeri Islands Cape Brett Taupo 82 249 296 143 605 153 350 280 newzealand.com/int/themed-highways643 322 329 670 525 360 445 578 Mt Cook (Reef Point) 87 Russell Paihia Rotorua 331 312 225 561 107 287 234 1058 748 387 637 835 494 280 Milford Sound 11 17 Twin Coast Discovery Highway: This route begins Kaikohe Palmerston North 234 178 853 401 394 528 876 555 195 607 745 376 Invercargill Rawene 10 Whangaruru Harbour Aotearoa, 13 Kawakawa in Auckland and travels north, tracing both coasts to 12 Poor Knights New Plymouth 412 694 242 599 369 721 527 424 181 308 Haast Opononi 53 1 56 Cape Reinga and back.
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  • CULTURAL VALUES ASSESSMENT for WOODVILLE SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANT & PAHIATUA SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANT
    Rangit ne 0 Tamaki nui a Rua Ine CULTURAL VALUES ASSESSMENT for WOODVILLE SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANT & PAHIATUA SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANT Peter McBurney Auckland November 2014 A Report Commissioned by Rangit ne 0 T maki nui a Rua Contents Contents................................................................................................................3 Table of Figures ....................................................................................................4 Preface...................................................................................................................5 The Author.......................................................................................................... 5 Acknowledgements............................................................................................. 6 The Commission/Project Brief.............................................................................7 Synopsis .............................................................................................................8 10 Mana Whenua ......................................................................................................... 1 Mana whenua of Tamaki nui Rua 10 Rangit ne 0 a ....................................... 1.1 Whenua................................................................................................... 10 1.2 Awa.......................................................................................................... 11 1.3 Early Rangit ne Traditions......................................................................
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  • Eketahuna Pre 1879 26Th June 1878 Wellington Education Board COUNTY SCHOOLS
    Eketahuna Pre 1879 26th June 1878 Wellington Education Board COUNTY SCHOOLS. Letters from Waihakeke, near Greytown, and Eketahuna, asked for the establishment of schools in those places. With respect to the Eketahuna petition the secretary was instructed to communicate with the memorialists, to obtain further information 1879 1879 Eketahuna Williams R Master £100 £15,902 Sam, my grandson who does a lot of my research on people involved filed this report I can't find anything about him. He resigns in early 1884 on account of "pressing private business" but nothing in NZ subsequent, nothing personal about him whilst he was there. Middle name was George and he WASN'T the R G Williams of Masterton, who was Robert George, served as first Mayor of Masterton and had a difficult business career. Currently suspecting he may have anglicised his name from something more Scandinavian. 7th January 1879 Election of School Committee. Meeting: and that for Eketahuna District at the residence of Mr. J. P. Peterson all at 7 p.m. on Monday, the 27th day of January inst. 7th January 1879 Wellington Education Board. The Building Committee of the Board of Education met at 11.30 a.m. yesterday. It was resolved to send plans similar to those for Mongaroa (Mangaroa?) school tor schools at the Small Farms Settlement at Pahautanui, for Eketahuna and Park Vale. 14th January 1879 Election of School Committee. Meeting: and that for Eketahuna District at the residence of Mr. G. Bengstan, all at 7 p.m. on Monday, the 27th day of January inst. ROBERT LEE, Secretary 28th March 1879 Evening Post School tenders Eketahuna School and Residence—Petherick, £356; Lang, £375 (both declined.) 28th March 1879 NZ Times Eketahuna School and Residence—Petherick, £356 (accepted); Lang, £375.
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  • Pahiatua.Pdf
    Pahiatua On the West side of State Highway 2 going North at Albert Street. In 1904 became a district high school with a designated secondary teacher. Secondary Department was in a side school at Hillcrest School. Ceased to be a District High School when Tararua College was formed in 1960. 1883-1885 1885 45 Pahiatua Yeats Duncan M Master £180 $32,738 1885 45 Pahiatua Sedcole Mary J Female Pupil Teacher £20 $3,638 31st January 1883 Wellington Education Board cost of building a new school at Pahiatua £280 25th April 183 In a long article on Pahiatua: the next question brought up was the school house and teacher’s residence!' meeting was of the opinion that since there were £200 available for a school-house, it addition to build a. teacher’s residence as well.- But it was evident that settlers would .subscribe funds if the amount was not available 30th May 1883 We are glad to note that our energetic Pahiatua friends have succeeded in inducing the Education Board to recognise their claim for a school and teacher's residence. Both structures are promised as soon as the land given, by the settlers is conveyed to the Board..[Mr McCardle gave the land] 30th July 1883 The sooner we have our school now the better. We are in good hopes that it will be ready by the latter end of spring. 28th November 1883 Mr McCardle’s offer of two acres for school site at Pahiatua was accepted with thanks 8th December 1883. Mr Wm. Bogle has offered to give an acre of land in Pahiatua, in a convenient position, for a school site, and a petition favouring the erection of a school upon it, has been largely signed by the settlers.
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  • Before the Hearings Commissioners at Palmerston North in the Matter Of
    Before the Hearings Commissioners At Palmerston North In the matter of the Resource Management Act 1991 And In the matter of an application by NZ Windfarms Limited for landuse, stormwater discharge and contaminants discharge consents required to establish the proposed Te Rere Hau Eastern Extension Between NZ Windfarms Limited Applicant And Horizons Regional Council And Tararua District Council Consent Authorities And Submitters on the application Submitters Statement of Evidence of Philip Jeremy Peet Introduction Qualifications and experience 1. My full name is Philip Jeremy Peet. I have a Bachelor’s Degree with Honours in Civil Engineering from the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand and am a Professional Member of the Institution of Professional Engineers New Zealand (MIPENZ). I am a Chartered Professional Engineer (CPEng) with over eight years experience in traffic and road safety engineering both in New Zealand and in the United Kingdom. I am currently the Transportation Planning and Traffic Engineering Team Leader for MWH New Zealand Ltd in Wellington. 2. For the purposes of this hearing, I have been asked by NZ Windfarms Ltd (NZWL) to provide traffic and roading evidence for the hearing in respect of an application to extend the existing Te Rere Hau Windfarm (TRHE) in Tararua. Scope of evidence 3. My evidence addresses the traffic related aspects of the TRHE proposal, namely; (i) Traffic generation; (ii) Traffic safety; (iii) Parking and manoeuvring; and (iv) Site access. 4. My evidence also discusses the traffic related issues raised in the submissions received and the planners report. Summary of conclusions 5. In my opinion the traffic related effects of the TRHE would be no more than minor.
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  • William Frederick Howlett B.A
    WILLIAM FREDERICK HOWLETT B.A. JOURNALIST ALPINIST NATURALIST TEACHER by Ian St George William Frederick Howlett 1850–1935, aged about 26, the only known photograph. From glass monochrome quarter plate negative, Davis & Nairn collection, Nelson Provincial Museum ref. no. 6429. Reproduced with permission. Can this be the gentleman who… was known to fame as W.F. Howlett, B.A.? Not that his B.A. was absolutely the only one in the town, but he walked with it, talked with it, ate with it, and drank with it, until Howlett and his B.A., became one and indivisible. “Civis” in the Otago Witness 18 September 1890. Satire: artistic form, chiefly literary and dramatic, in which human or individual vices, follies, abuses, or shortcomings are held up to censure by means of ridicule, derision, burlesque, irony, parody, caricature, or other methods, sometimes with an intent to inspire social reform. https://www.britannica.com/art/satire CONTENTS Chapter 1. Mad, and no mistake 1 2. England 7 3. The remittance man 13 4. The teacher: Nelson & Dunedin 1875–1880 18 5. The editor: Patea 1881–1882 30 6. The teacher: Makaretu 1882–1886 33 7. The storekeeper: Pahiatua 1886–1888 50 8. Back to Makaretu and Ongaonga 1889–90 71 9. Tirenics 1890 81 10. Makuri 1891 92 11. The naturalist 101 12. The alpinist 128 13. The journalist & satirist 154 14. Eketahuna 1900 163 15. Olive 1902–1922 184 16. Wellington c.1920–1935 194 Epilogue 1. On life 202 2. On the balance 207 3. After thoughts 210 Illustrations William Frederick Howlett aged about 26 front Howlett’s “Election
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