Northland man fined more than $33,000 for incident involving burnt tyres


Whangārei District Court.

Bernard Glen Stewart was fined $33,250 in Whangārei District Court, after admitting to three charges relating to discharging contaminants and polluting the air and groundwater.
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A Northland man has been fined more than $33,000 for an incident that saw dozens of tyres burnt on a property south of Kaiwaka.

Bernard Glen Stewart was sentenced earlier this month in the Whangārei District Court, after admitting to three charges relating to discharging contaminants and polluting the air and groundwater.

Stewart earlier told enforcement officers that he had to burn a pile of waste left by a previous tenant to prevent his stock from getting tangled in it, and that he did not know that he was not allowed to burn tyres.

In early January last year, firefighters attended a smouldering pile of burnt material on the land which Stewart used for grazing livestock, after being called to the scene by a neighbour.

The burnt area was 20 by 15 metres and contained steel belts from tyres, as well as the remains of over 100 tyres.

The fire took about 13,600 litres of water to fully extinguish.

Neighbours had told council staff that Stewart had returned to the property the day after the burning and used a digger to bury the remains of the burnt material.

The Northland Regional Council said an estimated 40 cubic metres of waste had to be removed and disposed of in Northland’s Puwera landfill in mid-May this year, after “lime stabilisation” was done on the land to reduce the mobility of zinc in the waste.

But the land remains on the hazardous activities and industries list.

Judge DA Kirkpatrick said the thick smoke and noxious fumes should make any person realise that burning tyres was unlikely to be permitted.

“Taking that one step further, a person using land for farming activities should recognise that burying the remains of such a fire could have adverse effects, including the leaching of contaminants into ground water,” he said.

Judge Kirkpatrick said while the disposal of tyres was not a simple matter, the tyres could have been disposed of at the Kaiwaka transfer station which would have cost $25 tyre.

Meanwhile, Stewart’s lawyer stressed that his client had been cooperative with the council and had paid for cleaning the roofs of his neighbours.

Stewart was initially fined $47,500 but was given a 5 percent discount for his previous good character and efforts at remediation, and another 23 percent discount for an early guilty plea – taking his fine to $33,250.



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