The West Coast Regional Council is cutting back on the number of visits it makes to dairy farms to check if farmers are doing the right thing by the region’s rivers.
And it says that is because by and large, they are.
A report to next Tuesday’s assurance and risk committee notes the council failed to meet all the targets it set itself for regular inspections to check if farmers were complying with their effluent discharge consents.
But over the last three quarters, it failed to achieve its target of inspecting all dairy farms that operate under permitted activity rules at least bi-annually, depending on the farmer’s compliance record.
The report says the council had reprioritised that work programme.
"Dairy farm visits continue ... but as a result of maturing relationships with our dairy farming community and continued performance by that sector we have transitioned away from this work to other higher priority work programmes."
Although that meant a "not achieved" mark, the result still represented a good outcome for the West Coast community, the report said.
Regional Councillor and farmer Andy Campbell said essentially that meant farmers were doing a good job of meeting the conditions of their resource consents.
"Everyone’s pretty compliant these days — the Freshwater Farm Plans the council was working on were the carrot that would have replaced our present stick approach — though that’s now on hold."
The former government’s Freshwater Farm Plan regulations came in under the RMA last August and were to be the central tool for farmers to manage water issues, with rules tailored to specific catchments.
The West Coast Regional Council had completed much of that work but it paused the process in May after the government signalled it wanted to simplify the regulations.
• LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.
By Lois Williams