Record Waikato fine ‘a wake-up call’ on the correct management of farm effluent.
Farmer fined $300,000 for dairy effluent breaches
A Waikato Regional Council officer samples a waterway at Flint Farms on the Hauraki Plains.

Record Waikato fine ‘a wake-up call’ on the correct management of farm effluent.

A Waikato farming company, one of its directors and a farm manager have been fined a record $305,900 for discharging contaminants into the environment.

The fine is for unlawful discharges of dairy effluent into the environment and the contravention of abatement notices on numerous occasions between August 2022 and June 2023.

Flint Farms Limited, farm owner Barry Flint and farm manager Gavin Flint were sentenced by Hamilton District Court Judge Melinda Dickey this week on 14 charges under the Resource Management Act as a result of a prosecution taken by Waikato Regional Council.

It is the largest fine for discharging contaminants into the environment in the Waikato region since the Act was introduced over 30 years ago.

Judge Dickey also issued an Enforcement Order against Flint Farms Limited, requiring it to upgrade the farm effluent system and implement an effluent management plan to avoid further adverse effects on the environment.

In August 2022, council officers conducted an inspection at the dairy farm at Ngātea, on the Hauraki Plains, south of Thames.

They found numerous breaches of environmental regulation related to the discharge of dairy effluent from two effluent ponds, a sump and a stock underpass.

Two abatement notices were issued by the council to prevent further discharges into the environment.

However, during follow-up inspections over the next 10 months, additional breaches were identified.

Waikato Regional Council compliance manager Patrick Lynch said the fine should be a sharp wake-up call for those farming operations who still have shoddy systems or are not managing effluent systems properly.

“It’s 2024. There simply can be no tolerance for not having adequate infrastructure on farm to manage animal effluent.

“This region has had clear rules in place for the last 30 years prohibiting this kind of activity. It is very concerning that we still find contamination like this, even after putting a farm formally on notice.

“To need a court order to ensure appropriate infrastructure is installed, that should have been in place decades ago, is incredibly disappointing. But those are the lengths we are having to go to in situations such as this to get some farming operations to do the right thing.”

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