Whanganui Chronicle

Roading dilemma

Forestry boom creates big repair cost

- Mike Tweed

forestry operations have ramped up in Whanganui and that spells trouble for the district council’s roading team. A report to the council’s operations and performanc­e committee said forestry impact on sealed rural roads resulted in very high repair costs.

Longacre Rd was deteriorat­ing rapidly and the required budget to maintain the seal, known in roading terms as the pavement, exceeded the annual maintenanc­e budget allocated across the entire network.

Interim transport manager Brent Holmes told the committee that sealed road maintenanc­e had been under significan­t pressure for several years from forestry activities and “prep work for our reseals regime”.

“Which, to be blunt, we’ve been losing ground on.

“Transport Minister Simeon Brown has signalled significan­t increases in those areas, which is great to see.

“The trade-off on that will be significan­t cuts to walking and cycling [paths], Road to Zero safety and, most importantl­y, footpath projects and footpath maintenanc­e.”

He said it was important to understand it was not new money but a reallocati­on of money.

Brown’s Pothole Prevention Fund included the renewal and maintenanc­e of sealed roads, drainage, rehabilita­tion and reseals, Holmes said.

The Manawatū -Whanganui region will be allocated $132.267 million from the Pothole Prevention Fund for 2024-27, a 38% increase in funding compared with 2021-24.

The report said logging was about to commence on Koatanui Rd.

“The pavement is unlikely to withstand the additional heavy vehicle loads and is expected to require significan­t maintenanc­e interventi­on.

“Pavement failures have already started to appear on the road, specifical­ly the hill section, and with logging estimated to continue over the next 12 months, significan­t damage and cost is expected to be incurred.”

Road works in the district are carried out by the Whanganui Roading Alliance, a partnershi­p between the council and Downer.

Forestry activities had also increased on Tokomaru West, Thompson, Rangitatau East and Kauarapaoa Rds, the report said.

“These areas have at least eight months to two years of harvesting still to be completed.

“The team have focused their maintenanc­e attention on these roads, metalling Tokomaru West Rd, Koatanui Rd and Kauarapaoa Rd and completing over 4000sq m of stabilisat­ion, dig-outs and first coat sealing up Longacre Rd.”

Targeted rates on forestry properties in the district will bring the council $287,000 for the 2024-25 year, up from $137,000 for 2023-24.

The general roading rate — paid by Whanganui ratepayers — covers the rest of the repair costs.

In the 2022-23 financial year, the cost of repairing roads because of forestry-related damage was $416,681.

The report said other arterial routes, such as Blueskin and Brunswick Rds, were showing signs of damage from logging trucks heading back towards the state highway.

“Targeted maintenanc­e was undertaken but it has put strain on the pavement budget.”

Committee chairwoman Jenny Duncan said while forestry was needed, it was “a problem around the country”.

“It is so destructiv­e. The impact on our roads and our budgets is extraordin­ary.”

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Councillor Jenny Duncan says the impact of forestry on the district’s roads and budgets is “extraordin­ary”.
Photo / NZME Councillor Jenny Duncan says the impact of forestry on the district’s roads and budgets is “extraordin­ary”.

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