
As long ago as 1990, Government sought to lease this land from the former Pa titleholder. It sought and obtained favourable terms for doing so, says lawyer Tim Arnold. Photo: LOSIRENE LACANIVALU / 23100418
Dear Editor,
I have read with interest the recent articles and smoke signals in your paper relating to the proposed and scary horseshoe road plan for the old Sheraton site.
I
have two questions for the developers and responsible government agencies:
1.
When and how will the affected Rarotonga community, road safety and emergency
organisations be asked for opinions and input?
2.
Why not leave the road as it is and plan a pedestrian crossing across to the
“beach” for the hotel guests?
Such
questions should not be ignored.
A
road bypass may have been approved way back when conditions and traffic was
different but this is now!
We
need to “unapprove” the bypass for common sense reasons!
(Name
and address supplied)
Response:
The position is shortly stated.
- As
long ago as 1990, Government sought to lease this land from the former Pa
titleholder. It sought and obtained favourable terms for doing so. In return,
among other promises, it promised to restore the land to its original
beachfront status – to allow that to happen, Pa was asked to allow a larger
parcel of her land to be taken for the relocated road, without being
compensated for the difference in area.
- That
offer was accepted by the then Pa Ariki; as a result of which the land is now
‘encumbered’ with a beachfront oriented development that remains less than
beachfront – and the Crown has not yet performed its agreed obligation of road
relocation.
- The
consideration payable for the lease at the time was at less than market rental,
and, itself, reflected the valuable concession around road relocation and
restoration of beachfront status.
- The
Crown has repeatedly promised the current titleholder and lessees to perform
its promise of road relocation – the only question has been as to who meets the
cost of constructing the actual roadway.
- Were
the Crown to “change its mind”, it would need, statutorily, to extinguish its
liability to relocate and would need to pay Article 40 compensation to Pa Ariki
and to Radun Ltd as Lessee; the difference in value between this land (and
improvements oriented as they are) as beachfront as compared with the current
configuration would cost taxpayers several million dollars.
- As
matters stand, the current lessee, Radun Ltd, has agreed to meet the road
relocation costs; the bridges in question are life-expired and will be replaced
by the Crown as and when it is convenient to the Crown to do so.
- The
relocation of the road is not the subject of any current EIA as the issues to
which you refer were considered and approved at the time of the original
development – which is why the roadway was formed some 30 years ago. What has
been approved cannot, now be “unapproved” without an Act of Parliament and
compensation paid.
- The
remaining issues, therefore, do not arise under the Environment Act 2003;
rather, they arise as a matter of appropriate roading standards – in respect of
which it is generally accepted that a safe road speed of 30kmh (as in Town and
through Muri) will be appropriate for engineering calculations for curvature,
camber etc – that, of course, is the generally accepted minimum for State
Highway 1 in New Zealand for curvature.
- The
roadway for the relocation as currently constructed and planned meets the
standards for the main road around Rarotonga in this and all other respects.
- Road
safety and emergency vehicle access form part of the overall planning and
construction of the road as relocated.
Yours sincerely,
Tim Arnold.