Its official - Minister for the Environment David Parker confirmed yesterday that the Resource Management Act (RMA) will be repealed and replaced with three new laws during the current parliamentary term. The three new Acts will be:

Minister Parker has stated that The new laws will improve the natural environment, enable more development within environmental limits, provide an effective role for Mori, and improve housing supply and affordability. There is a clear focus on housing problems. The Cabinet Paper states that New Zealands housing is now amongst the least affordable in the OECD.

Minister Parker proposes to base the reform on the Resource Management Review Panels (also known as the Randerson Report) recommendations which were released in June 2020, with refinement in some places. Importantly, it is proposed that the Review Panels purpose and supporting provisions of the NBA are adopted.

It is proposed to advance the NBA first through a special process due to the significance of the reform. An exposure draft, which will contain the main structure and proposed headings of the full NBA, would be the subject of a select committee inquiry before legislation is formally introduced to the house. The exposure draft is expected to be released in mid-2021 for consultation, before it is introduced to the House at the end of this year. Minister Parker intends the NBA to be passed by late 2022. The SPA and CAA will be developed alongside the NBA but will not go through the same special process as the NBA.

Due to the scale and pace of the policy decision making required, Minister Parker is recommending that Cabinet establish a Ministerial Oversight Group with delegated decision-making powers to advance the exposure draft NBA, including policy details and consultation material.

The Government is working with a collective of pan-Mori entities on key elements of the NBA, and further engagement with the newly formed Mori collective is proposed after development of the exposure draft NBA. The Mori Collective was formed in late 2020 with the purpose of engaging with the Crown on Mori rights and interests in freshwater and resource management reform.

Minister Parker seeks agreement to three initial in-principle policy decisions needed to proceed quickly (noting these can be revisited later as result of engagement and the select committee inquiry):

It comes as no surprise that reform of the RMA is being progressed this parliamentary term. The Government seems to be up for the challenge and is planning to put a lot of effort and resources into it. The exposure draft approach is not widely used, but is entirely appropriate here, where draft legislation will benefit from testing at an early stage, and where the impacts of new legislation will be wide-reaching and enduring. This is legislation which many aspects of the community will have a view on.

There is widespread agreement amongst resource management practitioners, and much of the public, that a simpler resource management regime is needed. However, there will not be widespread agreement when it comes to balancing the interests of different stakeholders. Reform of New Zealands environment and planning law is a once-in-a generation opportunity to set ourselves up for future success. Now is the time for critics of the RMA to suggest solutions which will benefit us all, and the generations who will come after us.

Read more here:
RIP RMA - The Resource Management Act (RMA) will be repealed and replaced with three new laws during the current parliamentary term. - JD Supra

Related Posts
February 14, 2021 at 6:52 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Cabinet Replacement