Environment Court of New Zealand explained

Court Name:Environment Court of New Zealand
Native Name:Te Kōti Taiao o Aotearoa (Māori)
Established:1996
Jurisdiction:New Zealand
Authority:Resource Management Act 1991
Appealsto:High Court of New Zealand
Chiefjudgetitle:Chief Environment Court Judge
Chiefjudgename:Judge D A Kirkpatrick
Termstart:2020

The Environment Court of New Zealand (Maori: Te Kōti Taiao o Aotearoa) is a specialist court for plans, resource consents and environmental issues. It mainly deals with issues arising under the Resource Management Act, meaning that it covers a wide range of potential future effects of planning applications, which can include such areas as traffic congestion, noise/pollution emissions and social and commercial consequences, rather than just the 'ecological' aspects that could be implied by the 'environmental' term.

History

The history of independent appeal courts addressing environmental matters began with the establishment of Appeal Boards under the Town and Country Planning Act 1953. The first planning appeals were heard in February 1955. The Appeal Boards were replaced by the Planning Tribunal following the passing of the Town and Country Planning Act 1977.[1]

The Environment Court replaced the Planning Tribunal as a result of the Resource Management Amendment Act 1996.[2]

Jurisdiction

The Environment Court has a substantially larger role than the Planning Tribunal, with expanded functions and powers over planning, resource consents and enforcement. Virtually all important processes and decisions under the Resource Management Act 1991, such as regional policy statements, regional and district plans, resource consents and Water Conservation Orders, may be appealed to the Environment Court.[3]

In particular, the Environment Court hears appeals on decisions on applications for resource consent on a 'de novo' basis. The Environment Court does not review the decision: it hears any evidence it requires and makes its own decision, which replaces that of the local authority. It focuses on "the merits and substance of the particular decision at issue, not the deliberative process of the executive authority that made the initial decision."[4]

The Environment Court also has the power to make declarations that interpret the law under the Resource Management Act.

The Environment Court has the status and powers of a District Court, so it can conduct prosecutions and enforcement of the Resource Management Act through civil or criminal proceedings.[5]

The Environment Court also has functions under other statutes:

Decisions of the Environment Court may only be appealed to the High Court of New Zealand on a point of law.[7]

Structure

The Environment Court is a single court, but it has no centralised courthouse and it sits in courthouses across the country. Judges for the court are permanently stationed in Wellington, Auckland, and Christchurch, but they travel to other centres on circuit as needed.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Politics and Planning: The Independence of the Environment Court – Judge John Bollard, New Zealand Planning Institute 2007 Conference, Wednesday 28 March 2007
  2. http://www.justice.govt.nz/environment/ Environment Court
  3. Web site: Birdsong. Bret. October 1998. Adjudicating Sustainability: The Environment Court and New Zealand's Resource Management Act. 18. 25 December 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20080228234814/http://www.fulbright.org.nz/voices/axford/docs/birdsongb.pdf. 28 February 2008. dead.
  4. Birdsong, B. (1998), page 22.
  5. Birdsong, B. (1998), page 77.
  6. http://www.justice.govt.nz/environment/legislation-and-resources/default.asp Legislation and Resources
  7. Section 299 Resource Management Act 1991 (New Zealand)