Reserves Act 1977 No 66 (as at 27 March 2008), Public Act

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Reprint
as at 27 March 2008

Reserves Act 1977

Public Act1977 No 66
Date of assent23 December 1977

Note

Changes authorised by section 17C of the Acts and Regulations Publication Act 1989 have been made in this eprint.

A general outline of these changes is set out in the notes at the end of this eprint, together with other explanatory material about this eprint.

This Act was originally administered by the Department of Lands and Survey and is now administered by the Department of Conservation.


Contents

Title

Classification and purpose of reserves

Management and control of reserves

Functions of administering body

General powers of Minister and of administering body

Particular powers of Minister and administering body

Special provisions as to recreation reserves set apart for racecourse purposes

Farming and other leases

Afforestation

Protected private land, and conservation covenants

Offences

Bylaws

Mining

General provisions


An Act to consolidate and amend certain enactments of the General Assembly relating to public reserves, to make further provision for their acquisition, control, management, maintenance, preservation (including the protection of the natural environment), development, and use, and to make provision for public access to the coastline and the countryside

BE IT ENACTED by the General Assembly of New Zealand in Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:

1 Short Title and commencement
  • (1) This Act may be cited as the Reserves Act 1977.

    (2) This Act shall come into force on the 1st day of April 1978.

2 Interpretation
  • (1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires,—

    Activity includes a trade, business, or occupation

    Activity: this definition was inserted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 2(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Administering body, in relation to any reserve, means the Board, Trustees, local authority, society, association, voluntary organisation, or person or body of persons, whether incorporated or not, appointed under this Act or any corresponding former Act to control and manage that reserve or in which or in whom that reserve is vested under this Act or under any other Act or any corresponding former Act; and includes any Minister of the Crown (other than the Minister of Conservation) so appointed

    Administering body: this definition was amended, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65) by substituting the word Conservation for the word Lands.

    Animal means any mammal, bird, reptile, amphibian, fish (including shellfish) or related organism, insect, crustacean, or organism of every kind; but does not include a human being

    Antiquity

    [Repealed]

    Antiquity: this definition was repealed, as from 1 November 2006, by section 35 Protected Objects Amendment Act 2006 (2006 No 37).

    Authority means the New Zealand Conservation Authority established under section 6A of the Conservation Act 1987

    Authority: this definition was inserted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 91 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

    Board means any Reserves Board, Trust, Trust Board, or other special Board appointed under this Act or any corresponding former Act

    Boat means every description of vessel (including barges, rafts, lighters, and like vessels) used in navigation, however propelled

    Certified aerodrome means an aerodrome licensed under the Civil Aviation Regulations 1953 or certificated under rules made under the Civil Aviation Act 1990

    Certified aerodrome: this definition was inserted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 2(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Commissioner, in relation to any reserve, means an officer designated by the Director-General for the purposes of this Act

    Commissioner: this definition was substituted, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65).

    Concession or concession document

    • (a) Means—

      • (i) A lease; or

      • (ii) A licence; or

      • (iii) A permit; or

      • (iv) An easement—

      granted under section 59A of this Act; and

    • (b) Includes any activity authorised by the concession document:

    Concession or Concession document: this definition was inserted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 2(3) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Concessionaire means a person who is—

    • (a) A lessee; or

    • (b) A licensee; or

    • (c) A permit holder; or

    • (d) The grantee of an easement—

    under section 59A of this Act

    Concessionaire: this definition was inserted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 2(3) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Conservation Board means a Conservation Board established under section 6L of the Conservation Act 1987

    Conservation Board: this definition was inserted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 91 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

    Conservation management plan means a conservation management plan approved under section 40B of this Act

    Conservation management plan: this definition was inserted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 91 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

    Conservation management strategy means a conservation management strategy approved under section 17F of the Conservation Act 1987

    Conservation management strategy: this definition was inserted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 91 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

    Crown land has the same meaning as in the Land Act 1948

    Crown lease means any lease or licence granted under the Land Act 1948 or under any former Land Act; and lessee, in relation to any Crown land, has a corresponding meaning

    Department means the Department of Conservation

    Department: this definition was amended, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65) by substituting the word Conservation for the words Lands and Survey.

    Director-General means the Director-General of Conservation

    Director-General: this definition was substituted, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65).

    Fauna means animals of any kind

    Flora means plants of any kind

    Foreshore means all land lying between the high-water mark of the sea at ordinary spring tides and its low-water mark at ordinary spring tides

    Land Settlement Board means the Land Settlement Board established by the Land Act 1948

    Lease, in relation to a reserve vested in the Crown,—

    • (a) Means—

      • (i) A grant of an interest in land that—

        • (A) Gives exclusive possession of the land; and

        • (B) Makes provision for any activity on the land that the lessee is permitted to carry out:

      • (ii) Any document purporting to be a lease (whether or not the document gives the lessee exclusive possession of the land concerned) and issued under any enactment passed before the commencement of section 2 of the Reserves Amendment Act 1996:

      • (iii) Any document purporting to be a lease (whether or not the document gives the lessee exclusive possession of the land concerned) and issued under this Act before the commencement of the said section 2; but

    • (b) Does not include a licence referred to in paragraph (b)(ii) of the definition of the term licence;—

    and lessee has a corresponding meaning

    Lease: this definition was inserted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 2(4) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Licence, in relation to a reserve vested in the Crown,—

    • (a) Means—

      • (i) A profit a prendre or any other grant that gives a non-exclusive interest in land; or

      • (ii) A grant that makes provision for any activity on the land that the licensee is permitted to carry out; and

    • (b) Includes—

      • (i) Any document purporting to be a licence (whether or not the licence gives an interest, or makes any provision, referred to in paragraph (a) of this definition) and issued under any enactment relating to reserves that was passed before the commencement of section 2 of the Reserves Amendment Act 1996; and

      • (ii) Any document purporting to be a licence and purporting to grant an exclusive interest in land, and issued under this Act before the date of commencement of the said section 2 or issued under any other enactment relating to reserves that was passed before that date; and

      • (iii) Any document purporting to be a licence (whether or not the licence gives an interest, or makes any provision, referred to in paragraph (a) of this definition) and issued under this Act before the commencement of the said section 2;—

    and licensee has a corresponding meaning

    Licence: this definition was inserted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 2(4) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    local authority means—

    • (a) a territorial authority, a regional council, a river board, a drainage board, and a regional water board; and

    • (b) includes any other public body declared by any other enactment to be a local authority for the purposes of this Act or any corresponding former Act; and

    • (c) includes such other public bodies or classes of public bodies as are from time to time declared by the Minister, by notice in the Gazette, to be local authorities for the purposes of this Act; and

    • (d) where necessary, includes the corporation of the district governed by any body that is a local authority for the purposes of this Act by virtue of paragraph (a) or paragraph (b) or paragraph (c)

    Local authority: this definition was amended, as from 1 January 2001, by section 111(1) New Zealand Public Health and Disability Act 2000 (2000 No 91) by omitting the words a Hospital Board. The comma following these words has been omitted without statutory authority.

    local authority: this definition was substituted, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84). See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Manawhenua means customary authority exercised by an iwi or hapu or individual in an identified area

    Manawhenua: this definition was inserted, as from 24 March 1993, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act 1993 (1993 No 8).

    Maori and Maori land have the same meanings as in Te Ture Whenua Maori Act 1993

    Maori and Maori land: The reference to Te Ture Whenua Maori Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to the Maori Affairs Act 1953.

    Maori reservation means a Maori reservation constituted under section 338 of Te Ture Whenua Maori Act 1993 or the corresponding provisions of any former Act

    Maori reservation: The reference to section 338 of Te Ture Whenua Maori Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to section 439 of the Maori Affairs Act 1953.

    Minister means the Minister of Conservation

    Minister: this definition was amended, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65) by substituting the word Conservation for the word Lands.

    National Parks and Reserves Authority

    [Repealed]

    National Parks and Reserves Authority: this definition was substituted, as from 1 April 1981, by section 80(1) National Parks Act 1980 (1980 No 66)

    National Parks and Reserves Authority and Nature Conservation Council: these definitions were repealed, as from 10 April 1990, by section 91 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31), and replaced by definitions for Authority, Conservation Board, Conservation management plan, and Conservation management strategy.

    New Zealand Historic Places Trust means the New Zealand Historic Places Trust established by the Historic Places Act 1993

    New Zealand Historic Places Trust: the reference to the Historic Places Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to the Historic Places Act 1954, which was consolidated by the Historic Places Act 1980. The 1980 Act was consolidated, as from 1 July 1993, by section 118(1) Historic Places Act 1993 (1993 No 38).

    Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata means an agreement entered into under section 77A of this Act

    Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata: this definition was inserted, as from 24 March 1993, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act 1993 (1993 No 8).

    Owner, in relation to any land, means the person who is the owner of an estate in fee simple in the land; and, in relation to Crown land that is subject to a lease or licence, means the lessee or licensee

    Permit, in relation to section 59A of this Act,—

    • (a) Means a grant of rights to carry out an activity that does not require an interest in land; and

    • (b) Includes any authorisation or licence granted before the commencement of this definition that granted similar rights;—

    and permit holder has a corresponding meaning

    Permit: this definition was inserted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 2(5) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Plant means any angiosperm, gymnosperm, fern, or fern ally; and includes any moss, liverwort, algae, fungus, or related organism

    Private land means any land which is for the time being held in fee simple by any person other than Her Majesty; and includes any Maori land

    protected New Zealand object has the same meaning as in the Protected Objects Act 1975

    protected New Zealand object: this definition was inserted, as from 1 November 2006, by section 35 Protected Objects Amendment Act 2006 (2006 No 37).

    Racecourse reserve means a recreation reserve within the meaning of this Act set apart for racecourse purposes; and includes any reserve within the meaning of this Act set apart as a racecourse reserve under any former Act

    Racing includes trotting

    Racing club includes a jockey club, trotting club, hunt club, and polo club

    Ranger means any person appointed or deemed to be appointed under section 8 of this Act as a ranger for the purposes of this Act

    Ranger: this definition was inserted, as from 27 December 1983, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43).

    regional council means a regional council within the meaning of the Local Government Act 2002

    regional council: this definition was inserted, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84). See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Reserve or public reserve, except as hereinafter provided in this definition, means any land set apart for any public purpose; and includes—

    • (a) Any land which immediately before the commencement of this Act was a public reserve within the meaning of the Reserves and Domains Act 1953:

    • (b) Any land vested in the Crown which after the commencement of this Act is reserved or set apart under Part 12 of the Land Act 1948 or other lawful authority as a reserve, or alienated from the Crown for the purpose of a reserve:

    • (c) Any land which after the commencement of this Act is vested in the Crown by or under the authority of any Act as a reserve:

    • (d) Any land which after the commencement of this Act is taken, purchased, or otherwise acquired in any manner whatever by the Crown as a reserve or in trust for any particular purpose:

    • (e) Any land acquired after the commencement of this Act in any manner by an administering body as a reserve within the meaning of this Act, and any land vested in any local authority which, not theretofore being a public reserve, is by resolution of the local authority pursuant to section 14 of this Act declared to be set apart as a reserve:

    • (f) Any private land set apart as a reserve in accordance with the provisions of any Act:

    • (g) Any land which immediately before the commencement of this Act was a domain or public domain within the meaning of the Reserves and Domains Act 1953:

    • (i) Any land taken or otherwise acquired or set apart by the Crown under the Public Works Act 1981 or any corresponding former Act, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, for the purposes of a reserve, a recreation ground, a pleasure ground, an agricultural showground, or a tourist and health resort:

    but does not include—

    • (j) Any land taken or otherwise acquired or set apart under the Public Works Act 1981 or any corresponding former Act, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, for any purpose not specified in paragraph (i) of this definition:

    • (l) Any land taken, purchased, or otherwise in any manner acquired, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, by a local authority, unless the land is acquired subject to a trust or a condition that it shall be held by the local authority as a reserve:

    • (m) Any Maori reservation:

    Reserve or public reserve: in paragraph (h), the reference to the National Parks Act 1980 has been substituted for a reference to the National Parks Act 1952 which was consolidated by section 80(2) National Parks Act 1980 (1980 No 66).

    Reserve or public reserve: paragraph (i) of this definition was substituted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 2(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63). The reference to the Public Works Act 1981 has been substituted for a reference to the Public Works Act 1928 which was consolidated by section 248(1) Public Works Act 1981 (1981 No 35).

    Reserve or public reserve: paragraph (j) of this definition was amended, as from 1 January 1980, by section 2(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63) by inserting the word corresponding. The reference to the Public Works Act 1981 has been substituted for a reference to the Public Works Act 1928 which was consolidated by section 248(1) Public Works Act 1981 (1981 No 35).

    territorial authority means a territorial authority within the meaning of the Local Government Act 2002

    Territorial authority: the original definition was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 2(3) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63). Part 2 of the Local Government Act 1974, referred to in this definition, was repealed, as from 1 November 1989, by section 6(1) Local Government Amendment Act (No 2) 1989 (1989 No 29).

    territorial authority: this definition was substituted, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84). See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Trustees includes a body corporate

    Vehicle means a contrivance equipped with wheels or revolving runners upon which it moves or is moved; and includes a contrivance from which the road wheels or revolving runners have been removed

    Voluntary organisation means any body of persons (whether incorporated or not) not formed for private profit

    Wharf includes all wharves, quays, piers, and jetties on or from which passengers or goods may be taken on board or landed from boats

    Wildlife means all animals that are living in a wild state; but does not include any animals of any species for the time being specified in Schedule 6 to the Wildlife Act 1953.

    (2) Any land, whether Crown land or not, shall be deemed to be set apart for a public purpose within the meaning of this Act if it is granted, reserved, or set apart or purchased or given or dedicated in any lawful manner, whether by or pursuant to any Act, or by will, or by deed, or by other like instrument, for the use, benefit, enjoyment, safety, or defence of the people of New Zealand or the inhabitants of any district or locality therein.

Part 1
Administration

3 General purpose of this Act
  • (1) It is hereby declared that, subject to the control of the Minister, this Act shall be administered in the Department of Conservation for the purpose of—

    • (a) Providing, for the preservation and management for the benefit and enjoyment of the public, areas of New Zealand possessing—

      • (i) Recreational use or potential, whether active or passive; or

      • (ii) Wildlife; or

      • (iii) Indigenous flora or fauna; or

      • (iv) Environmental and landscape amenity or interest; or

      • (v) Natural, scenic, historic, cultural, archaeological, biological, geological, scientific, educational, community, or other special features or value:

    • (b) Ensuring, as far as possible, the survival of all indigenous species of flora and fauna, both rare and commonplace, in their natural communities and habitats, and the preservation of representative samples of all classes of natural ecosystems and landscape which in the aggregate originally gave New Zealand its own recognisable character:

    • (c) Ensuring, as far as possible, the preservation of access for the public to and along the sea coast, its bays and inlets and offshore islands, lakeshores, and riverbanks, and fostering and promoting the preservation of the natural character of the coastal environment and of the margins of lakes and rivers and the protection of them from unnecessary subdivision and development.

    (2) In the exercise of its administration of this Act, the Department may take any action approved or directed from time to time by the Minister so far as it is consistent with this Act or is provided for in any other Act and is not inconsistent with this Act.

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65) by substituting the word Conservation for the words Lands and Survey.

4 Minister may require reports as to land to be reserved or otherwise protected
  • (1) The Minister may from time to time, in order to decide whether any land should be reserved or otherwise protected, cause inquiries or general surveys to be made regarding any land which may possess scenic, historic, cultural, archaeological, biological, geological, or other scientific features or interest, or indigenous flora or fauna, or wildlife, or recreational or natural environment interest:

    Provided that no excavation or other activities may be made or carried on on any private land or any Crown land subject to a Crown lease without the consent of the owner of the land first being obtained:

    Provided also that no excavation or other activities shall be made or carried on that would contravene the provisions of the Historic Places Act 1993.

    (2) Where any such land is Crown land, it may be set apart as a reserve under section 167 of the Land Act 1948.

    (3) Without limiting the generality of subsection (1) of this section, every New Zealand wide—

    • (a) Survey of the sea coast, its bays and inlets and off-shore islands, or of lakeshores and riverbanks; or

    • (b) Survey of conservation and outdoor-recreation requirements; or

    • (c) Biological survey of scenic, nature, and scientific reserves—

    that has been commenced but not completed before the commencement of this Act, shall be continued, completed, and from time to time kept under review.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 57, 67

    In subsection (1) the reference to the Historic Places Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to the Historic Places Act 1954, which was consolidated by the Historic Places Act 1980. The 1980 Act was consolidated, as from 1 July 1993, by section 118(1) Historic Places Act 1993 (1993 No 38).

5 Restricting application of this Act
  • (1) This Act shall not apply with respect to any land that is subject to the Forests Act 1949:

    Provided that, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in that Act, the Minister may from time to time, by notice in the Gazette, declare that any State forest land shall be a recreation reserve, an historic reserve, a scenic reserve, a nature reserve, or a scientific reserve subject to this Act, and the land shall thereupon be held as a reserve for recreation, historic, scenic, nature, or scientific purposes, as the case may be, accordingly; but no such declaration shall be made except with the consent of the Minister of Forestry.

    (2) Except as otherwise specially provided herein, this Act in its application to any reserve shall be read subject to—

    • (a) Any Act (whether passed before or after the commencement of this Act) or any Provincial Ordinance in force at the commencement of this Act making any special provision with respect to that reserve, whether by direct reference thereto or by reason of the reserve being vested in any particular local authority, Board, or Trustees, or in any local authority of a particular class, or by reason of the reserve being one of any particular class, or authorising the setting apart of any reserve for any purpose:

    • (b) The provisions of any will, deed, or other instrument creating the trusts upon which the reserve is held:

    Provided that nothing in this subsection shall limit the power of the Minister to classify any reserve or change the classification thereof.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 11, 41, 55(3)

    In subsection (1) the reference to Minister of Forestry has been substituted for Minister of Forests. The definition of Minister in the Forests Act 1949 was substituted, as from 1 April 1987, by section 32(1) State-Owned Enterprises Act 1986 (1986 No 124).

5A Director-General to administer special leases and grazing permits over certain reserves
6 Powers of Minister in cases of doubt
  • (1) If in the opinion of the Minister there is any doubt or uncertainty as to whether any land was immediately before the commencement of this Act a reserve within the meaning of section 2 of the Reserves and Domains Act 1953, he may, by notice in the Gazette, declare either that the land as defined in the notice is a reserve within the meaning of this Act for such purpose or purposes as are stated in the notice, or that it is not a reserve; and every such notice shall have effect according to its tenor.

    (2) The Minister may in like manner define the purpose for which any reserve (whether reserved or set apart before or after the commencement of this Act) shall be classified in any case where doubt exists as to that purpose.

    (3) Where in any notice issued in the Gazette under this Act or under any Act repealed by this Act there has been made any error of description (whether with respect to the boundaries or area of the land to which the notice relates or with respect to classification or nomenclature, or otherwise howsoever), the Minister may revoke the notice, and may thereafter issue in its place a fresh notice with amended particulars and descriptions, or may by notice amend the original notice.

    (4) Every notice of revocation or amendment issued under subsection (3) of this section shall, according to its tenor, take effect as from the date on which the original notice was intended to take effect or as from such other date as may be therein specified in that behalf.

7 Director of Reserves
  • There may from time to time be appointed under the State Sector Act 1988 a suitable person to be the Director of Reserves, who shall carry out such directions and perform such duties for the administration of this Act as may from time to time be given or assigned to him by the Director-General.

    The reference to the State Sector Act 1988 replaced a reference to the State Services Act 1962, as from 1 April 1988, pursuant to section 90(a) State Sector Act 1988 (1988 No 20).

8 Rangers
  • (1) There may from time to time be appointed under the State Sector Act 1988 suitable persons to be rangers for the purposes of this Act.

    (2) The Minister may from time to time appoint—

    • (a) Any suitable person to be a ranger in a part-time capacity for the purposes of this Act:

    • (b) Any suitable person to be a ranger in an honorary capacity for the purposes of this Act.

    (3) A ranger may be appointed under subsection (1) or subsection (2) of this section for a particular reserve or reserves or area or to exercise his duties generally throughout New Zealand.

    (4) The Director-General shall supply to every ranger appointed under this section a written warrant signed by the Director-General or on his behalf evidencing the appointment, and the production of that warrant shall be sufficient proof of the appointment.

    (5) Any ranger appointed under this section shall, on the expiration of the term of his appointment, or on the sooner expiry of his appointment by removal from office or resignation, surrender to the Director-General his warrant of appointment and any badge of office that may have been issued to him.

    (6) Every ranger appointed under subsection (2) of this section shall be appointed to hold office during the pleasure of the Minister or for such specified term as the Minister thinks fit.

    (7) Any ranger appointed under subsection (2) of this section may at any time be removed from office by the Minister for incapacity, neglect of duty, or misconduct, or may at any time resign his office by writing addressed to the Director-General.

    (8) No person appointed under subsection (2) of this section to be a ranger shall by virtue of that appointment be deemed to be employed in the service of Her Majesty for the purposes of the State Sector Act 1988 or of the Government Superannuation Fund Act 1956.

    (9) The administering body of any reserve may from time to time appoint any officer or servant of that body, or, if the administering body is a local authority, then any suitable person, whether an officer or servant of that body or not, to be a ranger for the purposes of this Act to exercise his duties in that reserve, and with respect to every such ranger the following provisions shall apply:

    • (a) He shall hold office during the pleasure of the administering body and may at any time be removed from office by the administering body, or may at any time resign his office by writing addressed to the principal administrative officer or chief executive of the administering body:

    • (b) The administering body shall supply to him a written warrant signed by the principal administrative officer or chief executive of the administering body evidencing the appointment, and the production of that warrant shall be sufficient proof of the appointment:

    • (c) He shall, on the expiry of his appointment by removal from office or resignation, surrender to the principal administrative officer or chief executive of the administering body his warrant of appointment and any badge of office that may have been issued to him.

    (10) Every member of an administering body of a reserve (not being an officer of the Department) shall, by virtue of his office, be deemed to be a ranger in an honorary capacity for the purposes of this Act during his period of membership of that body, and with respect to every such member the following provisions shall apply:

    • (a) He shall exercise the duties of a ranger only in or with respect to the reserve controlled by the administering body of which he is a member:

    • (b) The administering body shall supply to him a written warrant signed by the principal administrative officer or chief executive of the administering body signifying that he is an honorary ranger, and production of that warrant shall be sufficient proof for all purposes that he is an honorary ranger for the purposes of this Act:

    • (c) On the termination of his membership of the administering body, he shall surrender to the principal administrative officer or chief executive of that body the warrant of office issued to him pursuant to paragraph (b) of this subsection.

    (11) Every constable shall by virtue of his office be deemed to be a ranger appointed by the Minister to exercise his duties generally throughout New Zealand.

    (12) Every warranted officer within the meaning of the Conservation Act 1987 shall by virtue of that person's office be deemed to be a ranger appointed by the Minister to exercise duties generally throughout New Zealand.

    Subsections (9)(a) to (c), (10)(b), (10)(c) were amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by inserting the words or chief executive after the words principal administrative officer. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Subsection (12) was inserted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 92 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

    The references to the State Sector Act 1988 in subsections (1) and (8) replaced references to the State Services Act 1962, as from 1 April 1988, pursuant to section 90(a) State Sector Act 1988 (1988 No 20).

9 Committees
  • (1) The Minister may from time to time appoint one or more committees for the purposes of this Act, each such committee to exercise on his behalf such powers and functions under this Act as may be delegated to it pursuant to section 10 of this Act, or to advise him either as to matters within his jurisdiction generally, or in any particular case or matter or any particular class of cases or matters, or on the administration of any reserves or group of reserves. In the exercise of its powers, every committee shall be under the control of the Minister.

    (2) A committee may consist entirely of officers of the Department or partly of officers of the Department and partly of other persons, or may consist entirely of persons who are not officers of the Department.

    (3) The Minister may appoint the Authority or any Conservation Board to be a committee for the purposes of this section.

    (4) There shall be paid, out of money appropriated by Parliament for the purpose, to the members of any committee who are not members by virtue of being officers of any Department of State remuneration by way of fees, salary, or allowances and travelling allowances and expenses in accordance with the Fees and Travelling Allowances Act 1951, and the provisions of that Act shall apply accordingly as if the committee were a statutory Board within the meaning of that Act.

    Subsection (3) was substituted, as from 1 April 1981, by section 80(1) National Parks Act 1980 (1980 No 66).

    Subsection (3) was substituted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 93 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

10 Delegation of Minister's powers
  • (1) The Minister may from time to time delegate any of his powers and functions under this Act (not being the power to approve any bylaw) to any individual, committee, body, local authority, or organisation, or to any officer or officers of the Department specified by the Minister, either as to matters within his jurisdiction generally, or in any particular case or matter, or any particular class of cases or matters, or in respect of any reserve or reserves.

    (2) The officer or officers referred to in subsection (1) of this section may be an officer or officers referred to by name or the officer or officers who for the time being and from time to time hold specified positions in the Department.

    (3) Subject to any general or special directions given by the Minister, any person, committee, body, local authority, organisation, or officer to which or to whom any powers have been so delegated may exercise those powers in the same manner and with the same effect as if they had been directly conferred on that person, committee, body, local authority, organisation, or officer by this Act and not by delegation.

    (4) Every person, committee, body, local authority, organisation, or officer purporting to act under any delegation under this section shall, in the absence of proof to the contrary, be presumed to be acting within the terms of the delegation.

    (5) Any such delegation may at any time be revoked by the Minister in whole or in any part, but that revocation shall not affect in any way anything done under the delegated authority.

    (6) No such delegation shall prevent the exercise by the Minister himself of any of the powers and functions conferred on him by this Act.

11 Department may engage persons on contract
  • (1) With the consent of the Minister, the Department may from time to time on behalf of the Crown enter into any contracts with persons, on such terms and conditions as it thinks fit, to provide such services or perform such work for any purpose of this Act as the Department may require.

    (2) No person shall, by reason only of his entering into a contract with the Department under subsection (1) of this section, be regarded as being employed in the State Services for the purposes of the State Sector Act 1988 or in the Government Service for the purposes of the Government Superannuation Fund Act 1956.

    The reference to the State Sector Act 1988 replaced a reference to the State Services Act 1962, as from 1 April 1988, pursuant to section 90(a) State Sector Act 1988 (1988 No 20).

Part 2
Acquisition of land for reserves

12 Minister's powers
  • (1) Where the Minister considers that any private land or any interest in or over private land or any interest in a Crown lease should be acquired by the Crown for the purposes of a reserve or for the improvement, protection, or extension of or access to an existing reserve, or to establish a public right to wander at will on foot within specified limits in any reserve, or to provide recreational tracks in the countryside,—

    • (a) The Minister may, in the name and on behalf of Her Majesty, treat and agree for the purchase or taking on lease of the land or any interest therein or the acceptance of the land or interest therein as a gift, and for any such purpose enter into any contract he thinks fit; or

    • (b) The land or interest therein (other than a public right to wander therein) may be taken or otherwise acquired under the Public Works Act 1981:

    Provided that no Maori land or interest in Maori land may be taken under this paragraph without the consent of the Minister of Maori Affairs:

    Provided also that, notwithstanding anything in subsection (2) of section 23 of the Public Works Act 1981, where any Maori land in multiple ownership is proposed to be taken under the Public Works Act 1981 for the purposes of a reserve and the title to the land is not registered under the Land Transfer Act 1952, a copy of the notice and description referred to in subsection (1) of the said section 23 shall be served on the Registrar of the Maori Land Court in accordance with Part 9 of the Maori Affairs Amendment Act 1974, and the provisions of that Part shall apply accordingly.

    (2) All land or interests in land acquired by way of purchase or gift or taken as aforesaid shall vest in Her Majesty for the purposes of this Act as a reserve or as an addition to or for the purposes of an existing reserve, as the case may require, and all land acquired by the Minister by way of lease under this section shall during the term of the lease be subject to this Act.

    (3) The Minister may purchase, take on lease, or acquire any such land or interest therein for cash, or by instalments with or without interest, or by gift, or by way of exchange of Crown land, subject in the last-mentioned case to the approval of the Commissioner of Crown Lands being first obtained.

    (4) Subject to sections 78, 82, 83, 84, 89, 90, 95, 105, and 110 of this Act, the purchase price of any land, or any interest in land, or any right of way or other easement, or equality of exchange, or rent for land leased, or the compensation money payable in respect of any land or interest in land acquired or taken as aforesaid shall be paid out of money appropriated by Parliament.

    In subsection (1) references to the Public Works Act 1981 have been substituted for references to the Public Works Act 1928, as from 1 February 1982, which was consolidated by section 248(1) Public Works Act 1981 (1981 No 35).

    In subsection (3) the words Commissioner of Crown Lands have been substituted for the words Land Settlement Board, as from 1 February 1990, pursuant to section 9 Survey Amendment Act (No 3) 1989 (1989 No 139).

13 Governor-General may declare reserve to be National reserve
  • (1) In order to protect values of national or international importance the Governor-General may, by Order in Council made on the recommendation of the Minister, declare that any reserve that has been classified pursuant to section 16 of this Act shall be a National reserve.

    (2) Where any reserve has been declared to be a National reserve under subsection (1) of this section, neither that declaration nor the classification of that reserve under section 16 of this Act shall be changed except by Act of Parliament.

    (3) Before the Minister recommends to the Governor-General that an Order in Council be made under subsection (1) of this section,—

    • (a) The Minister shall give public notice of the proposal, in accordance with section 119 of this Act, stating that a plan of the proposal is available for inspection at a place and at times specified in the notice, and calling upon persons or organisations interested to lodge with the administering body written objections to or submissions in support of or suggestions on the proposal before a specified date, being not less than 3 months after the date of publication of the notice. The Minister shall give full consideration, in accordance with section 120 of this Act, to all objections and submissions in relation to the proposal received pursuant to the said section 120; and

    • (b) The Minister shall give to the Minister of Energy not less than 3 months' notice of the proposal.

    (4) In any case where a reserve that the Minister considers should be declared a National reserve is one which another Minister of the Crown or the New Zealand Historic Places Trust has been appointed to control and manage, he shall obtain the consent of that other Minister or, as the case may be, of the Trust before making any recommendation to the Governor-General that an Order in Council be made under subsection (1) of this section.

    (5) When a reserve has been declared by Order in Council to be a National reserve the reserve shall—

    • (a) Retain its classification under section 16 of this Act; and

    • (b) Be administered—

      • (i) By the Commissioner; or

      • (ii) By a Reserves Board appointed by the Minister under section 30 of this Act; or

      • (iii) In such other manner as the Minister directs,—

    in order to provide for the application of management policies to protect the values of national or international significance and for the co-ordination of management with other National reserves.

    This section was substituted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 3(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsections (1), (2), and (5) were amended, as from 13 January 1981, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act (No 2) 1980 (1980 No 139) by substituting the expression section 16 for the expression section 17.

14 Local authority may declare land vested in it to be a reserve
  • (1) Subject to this section, any local authority may by resolution declare any land vested in it to be a reserve within the meaning of this Act subject to any conditions specified in the resolution, to be held for any of the purposes specified in sections 17 to 23 of this Act.

    (2) No such resolution shall be passed before the expiration of one month after notice of intention to pass the same and calling for objections thereto in writing has been published in one or more newspapers circulating in its district, and until it has considered all such objections received within that period:

    Provided that such a notice of intention shall not be necessary where a district plan makes provision for the use of the land as a reserve or the land is designated as a proposed reserve under an operative district plan under the Resource Management Act 1991.

    (3) A copy of the resolution shall be forwarded to the Commissioner for transmission to the Minister, together with all objections (if any) received as aforesaid and the comments of the local authority thereon.

    (4) The Minister shall consider the resolution and such objections (if any) as have been received by the local authority and the comments of the local authority thereon, and shall then in his discretion either cause the resolution to be gazetted or refuse to do so.

    (5) No resolution under this section shall have any force or effect until it is gazetted as aforesaid.

    The proviso to subsection (2) was substituted, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991 (1991 No 69).

15 Exchange of reserves for other land
  • (1) The Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, authorise the exchange of the land comprised in any reserve or any part or parts thereof for any other land to be held for the purposes of that reserve:

    Provided that this power shall not be exercised with respect to any reserve vested in an administering body except pursuant to a resolution of that body requesting the exchange.

    (2) No such resolution shall be passed before the expiration of one month after notice of intention to pass the resolution and calling for objections thereto in writing has been published in one or more newspapers circulating in the district of the administering body or, as the case may be, in the district or locality the inhabitants of which benefit from or enjoy the reserve, and until the administering body has considered all such objections received within that period. A copy of the resolution shall be forwarded to the Commissioner for transmission to the Minister, and shall be accompanied by all objections received as aforesaid and the comments of the local authority thereon:

    Provided that such a notice of intention shall not be necessary where, in order to enable the exchange to be made, a change has been made in an operative district scheme under the Resource Management Act 1991.

    (3) The Minister in the name and on behalf of Her Majesty or the administering body, as the case may require, may do all things necessary to effect any exchange authorised as aforesaid, including the payment of or receipt of any money by way of equality of exchange.

    (4) Subject to sections 78, 82, 83, 84, 89, 90, 95, 105, and 110 of this Act, any money payable by the Crown by way of equality of exchange shall be paid out of money appropriated by Parliament.

    (5) The land comprised in any reserve or part thereof given by way of exchange pursuant to this section shall upon the exchange being effected be no longer subject to any reservation theretofore affecting it.

    (6) The land acquired by the Crown or by the administering body, as the case may be, by way of that exchange shall be held as a reserve under this Act or as part of an existing reserve, as the case may be, subject to the same control and management and for the same objects and purposes as those for which the land given in exchange was held.

    (7) Where—

    • (a) For the purpose of giving effect to any exchange under this section a memorandum of transfer affecting the whole or part of the land comprised in any reserve is presented to the District Land Registrar for registration; and

    • (b) There is a certificate of title for the land or any part thereof under the Land Transfer Act 1952, but pursuant to section 116 of this Act no duplicate certificate of title has been issued or the duplicate certificate of title has been cancelled—

    the District Land Registrar shall, on registration of the memorandum of transfer, issue and deliver to the person entitled to the custody thereof a duplicate certificate of title in respect of the land or part thereof, as the case may be, and shall note the copy in the register accordingly.

    (8) Nothing in section 40 of the Public Works Act 1981 applies to the exchange of land under this section.

    Subsection (8) was inserted, as from 25 November 1994, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act 1994 (1994 No 110).

Part 2A
Policy

  • Part 2A, comprising section 15A, was inserted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 94 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

15A General policy
  • (1) The Minister may approve statements of general policy for the implementation of this Act and for any reserve or reserves of any class or description; and may from time to time amend any such statement in the light of changing circumstances or increased knowledge.

    (2) Nothing in any such general policy shall derogate from any provision in this Act or any other Act.

    (3) The administering body shall in the exercise of its functions comply with general policies under this section.

    (4) For the purposes of this section, sections 17B (except subsections (1) and (2)) and 17N (except subsection (2)) of the Conservation Act 1987 shall, with any necessary modifications, apply with respect to such general policies, subject to the following provisions:

    • (a) Where the draft policy relates solely to the implementation of this Act in relation to reserves administered by bodies other than the Department, the Minister may approve the draft without consulting the Authority; and, in that case,—

      • (i) The Director-General shall send the draft and the summary prepared under section 17B(3)(i) of that Act directly to the Minister; and

      • (ii) Paragraphs (j) to (l) of section 17B(3) of that Act shall not apply:

    • (b) No such general policy shall restrict or affect the exercise of any legal right or power by any person other than the Minister or the Director-General or an administering body.

    Part 2A (comprising section 15A) was inserted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 94 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

Part 3
Classification and management of reserves

Classification and purpose of reserves

16 Classification of reserves
  • (1) To ensure the control, management, development, use, maintenance, and preservation of reserves for their appropriate purposes, the Minister shall, by notice in the Gazette, classify according to their principal or primary purpose, as defined in sections 17 to 23 of this Act,—

    • (a) All reserves existing immediately before the commencement of this Act:

    • (b) All reserves created after the commencement of this Act,—

    and for the purposes of this section, the Minister may classify part of a reserve for one purpose and the other part or parts of the same reserve for any other purpose or purposes:

    Provided that, where a reserve is controlled or managed by an administering body, the Minister shall not classify the reserve under this subsection without consulting the administering body.

    (2) Notwithstanding subsection (1) of this section, where a resolution is gazetted under section 14(4) of this Act, the reserve shall, without further notice or gazetting, be held and administered for the purpose specified in the resolution, and shall be deemed to be classified accordingly.

    (2A) Notwithstanding subsection (1) of this section, where any reserve was—

    • (a) Vested in a local authority which did not derive its title to the land from the Crown; or

    • (b) Created under section 17 of the Land Laws Amendment Act 1920; or

    • (c) Created under section 16 of the Land Act 1924; or

    • (d) Created under section 13 of the Land Subdivision in Counties Act 1946; or

    • (e) Purchased out of money paid out of the Land for Settlements Account in accordance with section 14(2) of the Land Subdivision in Counties Act 1946; or

    and is or remains vested in a local authority, that local authority shall, by resolution, classify the reserve according to its principal or primary purpose, as defined in sections 17 to 23 of this Act.

    (2B) Any local authority that classifies a reserve in accordance with subsection (2A) of this section shall forthwith give notice of that classification to the Commissioner.

    (2C) The Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, declare that any land—

    • (a) Identified in the first column of Schedule 4 to this Act for protection as an amenity reserve; and

    • (c) Adjacent to any reserve held under this Act as a scenic reserve—

    is held under this Act as a reserve and—

    • (d) Classified as a scenic reserve; and

    • (e) Added to the adjacent scenic reserve;—

    and, subject to this Act, the land shall therefore be so held.

    (2D) The Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, declare that any land—

    • (a) Identified in the first column of Schedule 4 to this Act for protection as a wildlife corridor or wildlife management reserve; and

    • (c) Adjacent to any reserve held under this Act as a government purpose (wildlife management) reserve—

    is held under this Act as a reserve and—

    • (d) Classified as a government purpose (wildlife management) reserve; and

    • (e) Added to the adjacent government purpose (wildlife management) reserve;—

    and, subject to this Act, the land shall thereafter be so held.

    (2E) Where any boundary of any land identified in Schedule 4 to this Act is defined in any document referred to in the third column of that Schedule, the boundary defined in the document shall be conclusive for the purposes of this Act.

    (2F) Where any boundary of any land identified in the said Schedule 4 is not defined in any document referred to in that Schedule, the Minister shall describe the land in the notice under subsection (2C) or subsection (2D) of this section after having regard—

    • (a) In the case of any land identified as Category A in Appendix C of the Final Report of the West Coast Forests Working Party dated the 31st day of October 1986, to the maps contained or referred to in that report:

    • (b) In the case of any land identified as Category B in the said Appendix C, to the maps contained or referred to in the discussion document dated the 17th day of January 1987 issued pursuant to the said Final Report by the Acting Director-General of Forests.

    (2G) If the boundary of any land cannot be ascertained in accordance with subsection (2E) or subsection (2F) of this section, the Minister shall describe the land in the notice under subsection (2C) or subsection (2D) of this section after consultation with such persons or organisations as the Minister considers appropriate and after having regard to such documents as he or she considers appropriate.

    (2H) Notwithstanding subsections (2E), (2F), and (2G) of this section, the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, make any necessary or practical or appropriate adjustments to the description of any land under this section.

    (3) In classifying any reserve as a Government purpose or local purpose reserve, the Minister or the local authority, as the case may be, shall specify as part of that classification the particular purpose or purposes for which the reserve is classified.

    (4) Before classifying any reserve under subsection (1) of this section, the Minister shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act specifying the classification proposed, and shall give full consideration in accordance with section 120 of this Act to all objections against and submissions in relation to the proposal received pursuant to the said section 120.

    (5) Notwithstanding subsection (4) of this section, no such public notice shall be necessary where—

    • (a) The classification proposed for any reserve is substantially the same as the purpose for which the reserve was held and administered immediately before the commencement of this Act; or

    • (c) The classification proposed is a condition subject to which the land was acquired for reserve purposes; or

    • (d) The land is classified under subsection (2C) or subsection (2D) of this section.

    (6) Subject to subsection (7) of this section, every existing reserve shall be held and administered for the purpose of its existing reservation, and the administering body shall continue to control and manage the reserve under the appropriate provisions of this Act pending its classification under subsection (1) of this section.

    (7) Where any existing reserve was, immediately before the commencement of this Act, a domain under the Reserves and Domains Act 1953 or any corresponding former Act, it shall be controlled and managed under the provisions of this Act relating to recreation reserves, pending its classification under this Act. Every such reserve shall be controlled and managed, by its Domain Board, in accordance with the following provisions:

    • (a) Every such Domain Board that is a local authority shall act in the capacity of a local authority as if it had been appointed under section 28(1) of this Act, as the administering body of the reserve, and all the provisions of this Act, except section 26A, shall apply accordingly:

    • (b) Every such Domain Board that is not a local authority shall act in the capacity of a Reserves Board as if it had been appointed under section 30(1) of this Act, to be, in that capacity, the administering body of the reserve, and all the provisions of this Act shall apply accordingly.

    (8) When classified under this section, each reserve shall be held and administered for the purpose or purposes for which it is classified and for no other purpose.

    (9) Classification of a reserve under subsection (1) of this section shall not, unless the Minister in the notice otherwise directs, affect the appointment or term of the administering body controlling and managing the reserve or of any member thereof.

    (10) The Minister, or the territorial authority or regional council in the case of a reserve vested in a territorial authority or regional council, may from time to time, by notice in the Gazette, declare that a reserve shall be known by such name as is specified in the notice, and the Minister or the territorial authority or the regional council, as the case may be, may in like manner change the name of any reserve. Any change of name shall not affect the appointment or term of the administering body controlling the reserve or any member thereof:

    Provided that the Minister shall not change the name of a reserve that is controlled and managed by an administering body without consulting that administering body.

    (11) Notwithstanding anything in subsections (1) to (10) of this section,—

    • (a) All reserves which immediately before the commencement of this Act were set apart as racecourse reserves or for racecourse purposes under the Reserves and Domains Act 1953 shall, after the commencement of this Act, and without further notice or gazetting, be held and administered as recreation reserves under section 17 of this Act, subject to sections 65 to 70 of this Act:

    • (b) All reserves created before the commencement of this Act pursuant to Part 28 of the Municipal Corporations Act 1933, Part 25 of the Municipal Corporations Act 1954 or Part 2 of the Counties Amendment Act 1961 shall, after the commencement of this Act, and without further notice or gazetting, be held and administered as follows:

      • (i) As recreation reserves under section 17 of this Act, if their purpose was recreation:

      • (ii) As historic reserves under section 18 of this Act, if their purpose was historic:

      • (iii) As scenic reserves under section 19 of this Act, if their purpose was scenic or the preservation of scenery:

      • (iv) As local purpose reserves under section 23 of this Act, if their purpose was utility, road, street, access way, esplanade, service lane, playcentre, kindergarten, plunket room, or other like purpose:

    • (c) All reserves for the preservation of flora and fauna existing immediately before the commencement of this Act shall, after the commencement of this Act, and without further notice or gazetting, be held and administered as nature reserves under section 20 of this Act:

    • (d) The reserves described in the Second Schedule to the notice by the Minister of Lands dated the 14th day of December 1972 and published in the Gazette on the 11th day of January 1973 at page 8 (being reserves forming part of the Marlborough Sounds Maritime Park) shall, after the commencement of this Act, and without further notice or gazetting, be deemed to be classified as local purpose reserves for sounds foreshore purposes under section 23 of this Act, but subject to the provisions of section 17 of the Reserves and Other Lands Disposal Act 1955:

    • (e) All reserves which immediately before the commencement of this Act were set apart for Government railway purposes shall, after the commencement of this Act, and without further notice or gazetting, be held and administered as Government purpose reserves for railway purposes under section 22 of this Act under the control and management of the Minister of Railways.

    Section 16 was substituted, as from 1 April 1978, by section 4(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (2) was substituted, and subsections (2A) and (2B) inserted, as from 27 December 1983, by section 3(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43).

    Subsection (2A)(g) was inserted, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991 (1991 No 69).

    The expression ; and has been inserted at the end of paragraph (f) without specific authority.

    Subsections (2C) to (2H) were inserted, as from 13 March 1996, by section 3(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Subsection (5)(b) was inserted, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991 (1991 No 69).

    Subsection (5)(c) was amended, as from 13 March 1996, by section 3(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by inserting the expression ; or.

    Subsection (5)(d) was inserted, as from 13 March 1996, by section 3(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Subsection (8) was amended, as from 27 December 1983, by section 3(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43) by omitting the words subsection (1) or subsection (2) of.

    Subsection (10) was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by substituting the words or regional council in the case of a reserve vested in a territorial authority or regional council for the words in the case of a reserve vested in that authority. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Subsection (10) was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by inserting the words or the regional council after the words or the territorial authority in the second place where they occur. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Subsection (11)(b) was amended, as from 27 December 1983, by section 3(3) Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43) by inserting the words Part 28 of the Municipal Corporations Act 1933,.

17 Recreation reserves
  • (1) It is hereby declared that the appropriate provisions of this Act shall have effect, in relation to reserves classified as recreation reserves, for the purpose of providing areas for the recreation and sporting activities and the physical welfare and enjoyment of the public, and for the protection of the natural environment and beauty of the countryside, with emphasis on the retention of open spaces and on outdoor recreational activities, including recreational tracks in the countryside.

    (2) It is hereby further declared that, having regard to the general purposes specified in subsection (1) of this section, every recreation reserve shall be so administered under the appropriate provisions of this Act that—

    • (a) The public shall have freedom of entry and access to the reserve, subject to the specific powers conferred on the administering body by sections 53 and 54 of this Act, to any bylaws under this Act applying to the reserve, and to such conditions and restrictions as the administering body considers to be necessary for the protection and general well-being of the reserve and for the protection and control of the public using it:

    • (b) Where scenic, historic, archaeological, biological, geological, or other scientific features or indigenous flora or fauna or wildlife are present on the reserve, those features or that flora or fauna or wildlife shall be managed and protected to the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve:

      Provided that nothing in this subsection shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to fauna that would contravene any provision of the Wildlife Act 1953 or any regulations or Proclamation or notification under that Act, or the doing of anything with respect to archaeological features in any reserve that would contravene any provision of the Historic Places Act 1993:

    • (c) Those qualities of the reserve which contribute to the pleasantness, harmony, and cohesion of the natural environment and to the better use and enjoyment of the reserve shall be conserved:

    • (d) To the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve, its value as a soil, water, and forest conservation area shall be maintained.

    In the proviso to subsection (2)(b) the reference to the Historic Places Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to the Historic Places Act 1954 which was consolidated by the Historic Places Act 1980. That Act was consolidated, as from 1 July 1993, by section 118(1) Historic Places Act 1993 (1993 No 38).

18 Historic reserves
  • (1) It is hereby declared that the appropriate provisions of this Act shall have effect, in relation to reserves classified as historic reserves, for the purpose of protecting and preserving in perpetuity such places, objects, and natural features, and such things thereon or therein contained as are of historic, archaeological, cultural, educational, and other special interest.

    (2) It is hereby further declared that, having regard to the general purposes specified in subsection (1) of this section, every historic reserve shall be so administered and maintained that—

    • (a) The structures, objects, and sites illustrate with integrity the history of New Zealand:

    • (b) The public shall have freedom of entry and access to the reserve, subject to the specific powers conferred on the administering body by sections 58 and 58A of this Act, to any bylaws under this Act applying to the reserve, and to such conditions and restrictions as the administering body considers to be necessary for the protection and general well-being of the reserve and for the protection and control of the public using it:

    • (c) Where scenic, archaeological, geological, biological, or other scientific features, or indigenous flora or fauna, or wildlife are present on the reserve, those features or that flora or fauna or wildlife shall be managed and protected to the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve:

    • (d) To the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve, its value as a soil, water, and forest conservation area shall be maintained:

    • (e) Except where the Minister otherwise determines, the indigenous flora and fauna and natural environment shall as far as possible be preserved:

    Provided that nothing in paragraph (c) of this subsection shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to fauna or wildlife that would contravene any provision of the Wildlife Act 1953 or any regulations or Proclamation or notification under that Act, and nothing in this subsection shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to archaeological features in any reserve that would contravene any provision of the Historic Places Act 1993.

    Subsection (2)(b) was amended, as from 1 January 1980, by section 19(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63) by substituting the expression sections 58 and 58A for the expression section 58.

    In the proviso to subsection (2) the reference to the Historic Places Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to the Historic Places Act 1954 which was consolidated by the Historic Places Act 1980. That Act was consolidated, as from 1 July 1993, by section 118(1) Historic Places Act 1993 (1993 No 38).

19 Scenic reserves
  • (1) It is hereby declared that the appropriate provisions of this Act shall have effect, in relation to reserves classified as scenic reserves—

    • (a) For the purpose of protecting and preserving in perpetuity for their intrinsic worth and for the benefit, enjoyment, and use of the public, suitable areas possessing such qualities of scenic interest, beauty, or natural features or landscape that their protection and preservation are desirable in the public interest:

    • (b) For the purpose of providing, in appropriate circumstances, suitable areas which by development and the introduction of flora, whether indigenous or exotic, will become of such scenic interest or beauty that their development, protection, and preservation are desirable in the public interest.

    (2) It is hereby further declared that every scenic reserve classified for the purposes specified in subsection (1)(a) of this section shall be so administered and maintained under the appropriate provisions of this Act that—

    • (a) Except where the Minister otherwise determines, the indigenous flora and fauna, ecological associations, and natural environment and beauty shall as far as possible be preserved, and for this purpose, except where the Minister otherwise determines, exotic flora and fauna shall as far as possible be exterminated:

    • (b) The public shall have freedom of entry and access to the reserve, subject to the specific powers conferred on administering bodies by sections 55 and 56 of this Act, to any bylaws under this Act applying to the reserve, and to such conditions and restrictions as the administering body considers to be necessary for the protection and well-being of the reserve and for the protection and control of the public using it:

    • (c) To the extent compatible with the principal or primary purposes of the retention and preservation of the natural or scenic values, open portions of the reserve may be developed for amenities and facilities where these are necessary to enable the public to obtain benefit and enjoyment from the reserve:

    • (d) Where historic, archaeological, geological, biological, or other scientific features are present in the reserve, those features shall be managed and protected to the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve:

      Provided that nothing in this paragraph shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to fauna that would contravene any provision of the Wildlife Act 1953 or any regulations or Proclamation or notification under that Act, or the doing of anything with respect to archaeological features in any reserve that would contravene any provision of the Historic Places Act 1993:

    • (e) To the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve, its value as a soil, water, and forest conservation area shall be maintained.

    (3) It is hereby further declared that every scenic reserve classified for the purposes specified in subsection (1)(b) of this section shall be so administered and maintained under the appropriate provisions of this Act that—

    • (a) Except where the Minister otherwise determines, the flora and fauna, ecological associations, and natural environment and beauty shall as far as possible be preserved:

    • (b) The public shall have freedom of entry and access to the reserve, subject to the specific powers conferred on administering bodies by sections 55 and 56 of this Act, to any bylaws under this Act applying to the reserve, and to such conditions and restrictions as the administering body considers to be necessary for the protection and well-being of the reserve and for the protection and control of the public using it:

    • (c) To the extent compatible with the principal or primary purposes of the retention and preservation of the natural or scenic values, open portions of the reserve may be developed for amenities and facilities where these are necessary to enable the public to obtain benefit and enjoyment from the reserve:

    • (d) Where historic, archaeological, geological, biological, or other scientific features are present in the reserve, those features shall be managed and protected to the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve:

      Provided that nothing in this paragraph shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to fauna that would contravene any provision of the Wildlife Act 1953 or any regulations or Proclamation or notification under that Act, or the doing of anything with respect to archaeological features in any reserve that would contravene any provision of the Historic Places Act 1993:

    • (e) To the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve, its value as a soil, water, and forest conservation area shall be maintained.

    The references to the Historic Places Act 1993 has been substituted for references to the Historic Places Act 1954 which was consolidated by the Historic Places Act 1980. That act was consolidated, as from 1 July 1993, by section 118(1) Historic Places Act 1993 (1993 No 38).

20 Nature reserves
  • (1) It is hereby declared that the appropriate provisions of this Act shall have effect, in relation to reserves classified as nature reserves, for the purpose of protecting and preserving in perpetuity indigenous flora or fauna or natural features that are of such rarity, scientific interest or importance, or so unique that their protection and preservation are in the public interest.

    (2) It is hereby further declared that, having regard to the general purposes specified in subsection (1) of this section, every nature reserve shall be so administered and maintained under the appropriate provisions of this Act that—

    • (a) It shall be preserved as far as possible in its natural state:

    • (b) Except where the Minister otherwise determines, the indigenous flora and fauna, ecological associations, and natural environment shall as far as possible be preserved and the exotic flora and fauna as far as possible be exterminated:

    • (c) For the better protection and preservation of the flora and fauna in its natural state, no person shall enter the reserve, except under the authority of a permit granted under section 48A or section 57 of this Act or in accordance with a notice given under subsection (2) of that section and, for the purposes of this paragraph, the expression enter the reserve shall, in the case of a nature reserve or part of a nature reserve that is an island or that comprises most of an island, be deemed to include any physical contact with the land by a boat; and for this purpose any physical contact with the land shall be deemed to include the attaching (by rope or otherwise) of a boat to the reserve or to a wharf constructed on or partly on the reserve:

    • (d) Where scenic, historic, archaeological, biological, geological, or other scientific features are present on the reserve, those features shall be managed and protected to the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve:

      Provided that nothing in this paragraph shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to fauna that would contravene any provision of the Wildlife Act 1953 or any regulations or Proclamation or notification under that Act, or the doing of anything with respect to archaeological features in any reserve that would contravene any provision of the Historic Places Act 1993:

    • (e) To the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve, its value as a soil, water, and forest conservation area shall be maintained.

    (3) For the purposes of subsection (2)(c) of this section, where the foreshore of any nature reserve which is an island or part of an island does not form part of the reserve which it adjoins, the foreshore shall be deemed to form part of the reserve.

    Subsection (2)(c) was amended, as from 23 September 1981, by section 3(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1981 (1981 No 30) by inserting the expression section 48A or.

    Subsection (2)(c) was amended, as from 27 December 1983, by section 6(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43) by inserting the words or in accordance with a notice given under subsection (2) of that section.

    In subsection (2)(d) the reference to the Historic Places Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to the Historic Places Act 1954 which was consolidated by the Historic Places Act 1980. That Act was consolidated, as from 1 July 1993, by section 118(1) Historic Places Act 1993 (1993 No 38).

21 Scientific reserves
  • (1) It is hereby declared that the appropriate provisions of this Act shall have effect, in relation to reserves classified as scientific reserves, for the purpose of protecting and preserving in perpetuity for scientific study, research, education, and the benefit of the country, ecological associations, plant or animal communities, types of soil, geomorphological phenomena, and like matters of special interest.

    (2) It is hereby further declared that, having regard to the general purposes specified in subsection (1) of this section, every scientific reserve shall be so administered and maintained under the appropriate provisions of this Act that—

    • (a) Except where the Minister otherwise determines, the indigenous flora and fauna shall as far as possible be preserved and the exotic flora and fauna shall as far as possible be exterminated:

    • (b) For the adequate protection and management of the reserve, the Minister may from time to time, by notice in the Gazette, prohibit access to the whole or any specified part of the reserve, and in that case no person shall enter the reserve or, as the case may be, the part so specified, except under the authority of a permit issued under section 48A or section 59 of this Act:

    • (c) Where scenic, historic, archaeological, biological, or natural features are present on the reserve, those features shall be managed and protected to the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve:

      Provided that nothing in this paragraph shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to fauna that would contravene any provision of the Wildlife Act 1953 or any regulations or Proclamation or notification under that Act, or the doing of anything with respect to archaeological features in any reserve that would contravene any provision of the Historic Places Act 1993:

    • (d) To the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve, its value as a soil, water, and forest conservation area shall be maintained:

    • (e) With the consent of the Minister, the reserve, or any specified part of the reserve, may be manipulated for experimental purposes or to gain further scientific knowledge.

    (3) For the purposes of subsection (2)(b) of this section, where access to the whole or any specified part of a scientific reserve has been prohibited except under the authority of a permit to enter the reserve or that part of the reserve, the expression enter the reserve or, as the case may be, the part of the reserve so specified shall, where the reserve or that part is an island or comprises most of an island, be deemed to include making any physical contact with the land by a boat; and for this purpose any physical contact with the land shall be deemed to include the attaching (by rope or otherwise) of a boat to the reserve or to a wharf constructed on or partly on the reserve.

    (4) For the purposes of subsections (2)(b) and (3) of this section, where the foreshore of any scientific reserve which is an island or part of an island does not form part of the reserve which it adjoins, the foreshore shall be deemed to form part of the reserve.

    Subsection (2)(b) was amended, as from 23 September 1981, by section 3(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1981 (1981 No 30) by inserting the expression section 48A or.

    In subsection (2)(d) the reference to the Historic Places Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to the Historic Places Act 1954 which was consolidated by the Historic Places Act 1980. That Act was consolidated, as from 1 July 1993, by section 118(1) Historic Places Act 1993 (1993 No 38).

22 Government purpose reserves
  • (1) It is hereby declared that the appropriate provisions of this Act shall have effect, in relation to reserves classified as Government purpose reserves for the purpose of providing and retaining areas for such Government purpose or purposes as are specified in any classification of the reserve.

    (2) For the avoidance of doubt, and without limiting the purposes for which a Government purpose reserve may be classified, it is hereby declared that a reserve may be classified as a Government purpose reserve for wildlife management or for other specified wildlife purposes.

    (3) Where any Minister of the Crown other than the Minister of Conservation is appointed to control and manage any Government purpose reserve or any part thereof, the reserve or that part, as the case may be, may by that notice be made subject to the provisions of any other Act or Acts administered by the first-mentioned Minister in addition to being subject to this Act, but shall remain a reserve, and that Minister may expend out of the money appropriated by Parliament in respect of the administration of that other Act such sum or sums as he thinks fit on the maintenance and improvement and development of the reserve.

    (4) It is hereby further declared that, having regard to the general purpose specified in subsection (1) of this section, every Government purpose reserve shall be so administered and maintained under the appropriate provisions of this Act that—

    • (a) Where scenic, historic, archaeological, biological, cultural, scientific, or natural features or wildlife are present on the reserve, those features or wildlife shall be managed and protected to the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve:

      Provided that nothing in this paragraph shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to fauna that would contravene any provision of the Wildlife Act 1953 or any regulations or Proclamation or notification under that Act, or the doing of anything with respect to archaeological features in any reserve that would contravene any provision of the Historic Places Act 1993:

    • (b) To the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve, its value as a soil, water and forest conservation area shall be maintained.

    (5) Subject, in the case of a Government purpose reserve for railway purposes, to the New Zealand Railways Corporation Act 1981, the administering body of a Government purpose reserve or the Minister appointed to control and manage a Government purpose reserve or any part thereof may from time to time, by notice in the Gazette, prohibit access to the whole or part of the reserve, or, as the case may be, the whole or any specified part of that part of the reserve, and no person shall be entitled to enter the reserve or, as the case may be, the part specified in the notice, except under the authority of a permit granted under section 48A of this Act or a permit issued by the administering body or that Minister.

    Subsection (1) was substituted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 5 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (3) was amended, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65) by substituting the word Conservation for the word Lands.

    In subsection (4) the reference to the Historic Places Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to the Historic Places Act 1954 which was consolidated by the Historic Places Act 1980. That Act was consolidated, as from 1 July 1993, by section 118(1) Historic Places Act 1993 (1993 No 38).

    Subsection (5) was amended, as from 23 September 1981, by section 3(3) Reserves Amendment Act 1981 (1981 No 30) by inserting the words granted under section 48A of this Act or a permit. It was further amended, as from 1 April 1982, by substituting the New Zealand Railways Corporation Act 1981 (1981 No 119) for the repealed Government Railways Act 1949.

23 Local purpose reserves
  • (1) It is hereby declared that the appropriate provisions of this Act shall have effect, in relation to reserves classified as local purpose reserves for the purpose of providing and retaining areas for such local purpose or purposes as are specified in any classification of the reserve.

    (2) It is hereby further declared that, having regard to the specific local purpose for which the reserve has been classified, every local purpose reserve shall be so administered and maintained under the appropriate provisions of this Act that—

    • (a) Where scenic, historic, archaeological, biological, or natural features are present on the reserve, those features shall be managed and protected to the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve:

      Provided that nothing in this paragraph shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to fauna that would contravene any provision of the Wildlife Act 1953 or any regulations or Proclamation or notification under that Act, or the doing of anything with respect to archaeological features in any reserve that would contravene any provision of the Historic Places Act 1993:

      Provided also that nothing in this paragraph shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to any esplanade reserve created under section 167 of the Land Act 1948, or section 190(3) or Part 25 of the Municipal Corporations Act 1954 or Part 2 of the Counties Amendment Act 1961 and existing at the commencement of this Act, or any local purpose reserve for esplanade purposes created under the said Part 25 or Part 2 or under Part 20 of the Local Government Amendment Act 1978 or under Part 10 of the Resource Management Act 1991 after the commencement of this Act, that would impede the right of the public freely to pass and repass over the reserve on foot, unless the administering body determines that access should be prohibited or restricted to preserve the stability of the land or the biological values of the reserve:

    • (b) To the extent compatible with the principal or primary purpose of the reserve, its value as a soil, water, and forest conservation area shall be maintained.

    (3) Where a local purpose reserve is vested in a local authority or where the administering body is a local authority, it may from time to time, by public notice, prohibit access to the whole or any specified part of the reserve, and in that case no person shall enter the reserve or, as the case may be, that part, except under the authority of a permit issued by the local authority.

    (4) Where a local purpose reserve is not vested in a local authority and a local authority has not been appointed to control and manage it, the Minister may from time to time, by public notice, prohibit access to the whole or any specified part of the reserve, and in that case no person shall enter the reserve or, as the case may be, that part, except under authority of a permit issued by the Minister.

    Subsection (1) was substituted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 6(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (2) was amended, as from 1 January 1980, by section 6(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63) by substituting the words specific local purpose for which the reserve has been classified for the words the general purposes specified in subsection (1) of this section. It would appear the word the at the beginning of the omission was omitted in error.

    In the first proviso to subsection (2) the reference to the Historic Places Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to the Historic Places Act 1954 which was consolidated by the Historic Places Act 1980. That Act was consolidated, as from 1 July 1993, by section 118(1) Historic Places Act 1993 (1993 No 38).

    The second proviso to subsection (2)(a) was substituted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 7 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    The second proviso to subsection (2)(a) was substituted, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991 (1991 No 69) by inserting the words or under Part 10 of the Resource Management Act 1991.

24 Change of classification or purpose or revocation of reserves
  • (1) Subject to section 13(2), where—

    • (a) the Minister considers for any reason that a change of classification or purpose of the whole or part of any reserve is advisable or that the reservation of any land as a reserve should be revoked; or

    • (b) the local authority within whose district a reserve is situated or the administering body of any reserve notifies the Commissioner in writing that, pursuant to a resolution of the local authority or of the administering body, as the case may be, it considers for any reason, to be stated in the resolution, that the classification or purpose of the whole or part of the reserve should be changed to another classification or purpose, or that the reservation of the whole or part of the land as a reserve should be revoked,—

    then, subject to the succeeding provisions of this section, the Minister may, in his discretion, by notice in the Gazette, change the classification or purpose of the whole or part of the reserve, which thereafter shall be held and administered for that changed classification or purpose, or revoke the reservation of the whole or part of the land as a reserve:

    provided that the classification of any Government purpose reserve for railway purposes shall not be changed and the reservation of the land or any part thereof as such a reserve shall not be revoked except with the consent of the Minister of Railways.

    (2) Before any classification or purpose is changed or any reservation is revoked pursuant to subsection (1),—

    • (a) where subsection (1)(a) applies and there is an administering body of the reserve, the Commissioner shall notify the administering body in writing as to the Minister's reasons for considering that a change of classification or purpose is advisable or, as the case may be, that the reservation should be revoked, and shall invite the administering body to comment thereon in writing to the Commissioner:

    • (b) the administering body of the reserve after consulting the Commissioner, or the Commissioner if there is no administering body, shall publicly notify the proposed change of classification or purpose or proposed revocation of reservation, as the case may be, specifying the reason or reasons for the proposal:

    • (c) every person claiming to be affected by the proposed change of classification or purpose or revocation shall have a right of objection to the change or revocation, and may, at any time within 1 month after the date of the first publication of the notice of the proposal, give notice in writing of his objections to the proposed change or revocation and of the grounds thereof to the Commissioner if there is no administering body, and to the principal administrative officer or chief executive of the administering body in any other case, who shall forward all such objections to the Commissioner with a copy of the resolution of the administering body in relation to those objections, after the administering body has considered those objections:

      provided that, where the date of the first publication of the notice of the proposal falls between the period commencing with 10 December in any year and ending with 10 January in the next succeeding year, notice of objection to the proposed change or revocation may be given at any time before 10 February next following that period:

    • (d) where a local authority which is not the administering body initiates action under subsection (1)(b) to change the classification or purpose of or to revoke the reservation of the whole or part of the land as a reserve, the local authority shall notify the administering body in writing of the resolution of the local authority, and the reasons for it, and the administering body shall notify the Commissioner in writing of the attitude of the administering body to the proposed change of classification or purpose or to the proposed revocation:

    • (e) the Minister shall as soon as practicable consider the proposed change of classification or purpose or revocation and all objections received thereto and, in the case of objections made to an administering body, the resolution of the administering body thereon, and, in any case where paragraph (d) applies, the attitude of the administering body to the proposal:

    • (f) the Minister shall have power to receive such submissions and make such inquiries as he thinks fit on the proposal:

    • (g) the procedure to be followed by the Minister in any matter arising under this section shall be as prescribed in regulations made under this Act or, where there are no such regulations or so far as the regulations do not extend, as the Minister determines:

    • (h) any person who does not lodge an objection in accordance with this subsection shall be deemed to have assented to the change of classification or purpose or the revocation of reservation set forth in the public notification.

    (3) No change of classification or purpose of a scenic, nature, or scientific reserve, or any part thereof, to a recreation, historic, government purpose, or local purpose reserve shall be made, except where, in the opinion of the Minister, the reserve or the part thereof is by reason of the destruction of the forest, bush, or other vegetation, or of the fauna or scientific or natural features thereon, or for any other like cause, no longer suitable for the purposes of its classification.

    (4) No revocation of the reservation of any land as a nature or scientific reserve, or any part thereof, shall be made except where in the opinion of the Minister the reserve or the part thereof is, by reason of the destruction of the forest, bush, or other vegetation, or of the fauna or scientific or natural features thereon, or for any other like cause, no longer suitable for the purposes of its classification.

    (5) No change of classification or purpose nor any revocation of reservation of an historic reserve or any part thereof shall be made, except where, in the opinion of the Minister, the reserve or the part thereof is by reason of the destruction of the historic features or for any other cause no longer suitable for the purpose of its classification, or where, in the opinion of the Minister, the change of classification or purpose or the revocation is required in the public interest. The Minister shall obtain a report from the New Zealand Historic Places Trust before making his decision.

    (6) Subsection (2) shall not apply to any government purpose reserve, but no change of classification or purpose or revocation of the reservation of such a reserve or any part of such a reserve shall be made without the prior approval of the Minister appointed under section 22 or section 36 to control and manage that reserve.

    (7) Subsection (2) shall not apply to any local purpose reserve, other than a reserve made on a subdivision of land under section 13 of the Land Subdivision in Counties Act 1946 or a reserve vested in the Corporation of a borough pursuant to the Municipal Corporations Act 1954 or the Corporation of a county pursuant to Part 2 of the Counties Amendment Act 1961 or section 16 of the Land Act 1924 or section 17 of the Land Laws Amendment Act 1920 or Part 20 of the Local Government Act 1974 (as enacted by section 2 of the Local Government Amendment Act 1978) or as a condition of any resource consent under the Resource Management Act 1991:

    provided that the Minister may, after considering such evidence as may be submitted to him, direct that the proposals be publicly notified, and in that case subsection (2) shall apply.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 18(1)–(5); 1965 No 108 s 2(1)

    Section 24(1): amended, on 1 January 1980, by section 3(2) of the Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Section 24(2)(b): amended, on 1 January 1980, by section 8 of the Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Section 24(2)(c): amended, on 1 July 2003, by section 262 of the Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84).

    Section 24(2)(c) proviso: added, on 1 January 1980, by section 9 of the Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Section 24(7): amended, on 1 April 1979, by section 3(5) of the Local Government Amendment Act 1978 (1978 No 43).

    Section 24(7): amended, on 17 December 1997, by section 76(2) of the Resource Management Amendment Act 1997 (1997 No 104).

24A Change of purpose of reserve by territorial authority or regional council
  • (1) Notwithstanding section 24 of this Act, where any local purpose reserve is vested in a territorial authority or regional council, that territorial authority or regional council may, by notice in the Gazette, change the purpose for which that reserve is classified within its classification as a local purpose reserve.

    (2) Before the specified purpose of any local purpose reserve is changed pursuant to subsection (1) of this section,—

    • (a) The territorial authority or regional council shall publicly notify the proposed change of purpose, specifying the reason or reasons for the proposal:

    • (b) Every person claiming to be affected by the proposed change of purpose shall have a right of objection to the change, and may, at any time within 1 month after the date of the first publication of the notice of the proposal, give notice in writing of his objections to the proposed change and of the grounds thereof to the chief executive of the territorial authority:

      Provided that, where the date of the first publication of the notice of the proposal falls between the period commencing with the 10th day of December in any year and ending with the 10th day of January in the next succeeding year, notice of objection to the proposed change may be given at any time before the 10th day of February next following that period:

    • (c) The territorial authority or regional council shall as soon as practicable consider all objections lodged in accordance with paragraph (b) of this subsection:

    • (d) Any person who does not lodge an objection in accordance with this subsection shall be deemed to have assented to the change of purpose set forth in the public notification.

    (3) Nothing in subsection (2) of this section shall apply in any case where the reason for the proposed change of purpose is to bring the specific purpose for which the reserve is classified into conformity with—

    • (b) Any resource consent applying to the reserve granted by the territorial authority or regional council in accordance with Part 6 of that Act.

    Section 24A was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 10 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    The heading to section 24A was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by inserting the words or regional council. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by substituting the words or regional council, that territorial authority or regional council for the words that authority. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Subsection (2)(a) was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by inserting the words or regional council after the words territorial authority. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Subsection (2)(b) was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by substituting the words chief executive for the words principal administrative officer. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Subsection (2)(c) was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by inserting the words or regional council after the words territorial authority. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Subsection (3)(a) and (b) were substituted, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991 (1991 No 69).

    Subsection (3)(b) was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by substituting the words territorial authority or regional council for the word council. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

25 Effect of revocation of reserve or change of classification or purpose
  • (1) Upon the revocation of the reservation of any public reserve or of any part thereof pursuant to section 24 of this Act, the land comprised therein shall, if vested in the Crown or in any local authority or trustees deriving title from the Crown, become Crown land available for disposal under the Land Act 1948, and in any other case may be disposed of in such manner and for such purpose as may be specified by the Minister.

    (2) Upon any change of classification or purpose or revocation of reservation in respect of any reserve, the land specified in the Gazette notice under section 24(1) of this Act shall be held subject to such restrictions, encumbrances, liens, and interests as are specified in the notice.

    (3) Notwithstanding anything in subsection (1) or subsection (2) of this section, where any land the reservation of which is revoked had been transferred to the Crown by way of gift for the purposes of a reserve, the following provisions shall apply:

    • (a) In the case of land that immediately before its transfer to the Crown was Maori land, the Minister, unless he considers it would not be in the public interest, shall offer the land, on such terms and conditions as he thinks fit, to the former owner or, if he is deceased, to his descendants, those descendants being as determined by order of the Maori Land Court:

    • (b) In the case of any other land, the Minister, unless he considers it would not be in the public interest, shall offer the land, on such terms and conditions as he thinks fit, to the former owner or, if he is deceased, to his personal representative.

    (4) For the purposes of subsection (1) of this section, where any reserve in any county was vested in Her Majesty under section 13 of the Land Subdivision in Counties Act 1946 or section 16 of the Land Act 1924 or section 17 of the Land Laws Amendment Act 1920 or was purchased out of money in the Land for Settlements Account or the Land Settlement Account under section 14(2)(a) of the Land Subdivision in Counties Act 1946 and was later vested in the Corporation of the county as a reserve, the title of the Corporation to that reserve shall be deemed to have been derived by the Corporation otherwise than from the Crown.

    (5) For the purposes of subsection (1) of this section, where any land has been vested in the Corporation of a local authority as a reserve for the purposes of this Act or any former Act on the subdivision under any enactment, for residential, commercial, or industrial purposes, of any land of the Crown, the title of the local authority to that reserve shall be deemed to have been derived by the Corporation otherwise than from the Crown.

Management and control of reserves

26 Vesting of reserves
  • (1) For the better carrying out of the purposes of any reserve (not being a Government purpose reserve) vested in the Crown, the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, vest the reserve in any local authority or in any trustees empowered by or under any Act or any other lawful authority, as the case may be, to hold and administer the land and expend money thereon for the particular purpose for which the reserve is classified.

    (2) All land so vested shall be held in trust for such purposes as aforesaid and subject to such special conditions and restrictions as may be specified in the said notice.

    (3) Before vesting a reserve under this section, the Minister shall—

    • (a) Give public notice of the intention to do so in accordance with section 119 of this Act; and

    • (b) In accordance with section 120 of this Act, give full consideration to relevant objections and submissions received under that section.

    (4) Notwithstanding subsection (3) of this section, the Minister shall not be required to publicly notify the proposed vesting where—

    • (a) The body in whom the reserve is to be vested has had the financial or other responsibility for its acquisition; or

    • (b) The reserve is either a local purpose reserve or a recreation reserve being vested in a local authority; or

    • (c) The Minister has consulted the relevant Conservation Board and Fish and Game Council, and those bodies have advised the Minister that—

      • (i) The proposed vesting does not have any adverse effects on the management of and the interest of the public in the reserve; and

      • (ii) Public notification is considered by them to be unnecessary.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 19

    Subsections (3) and (4) were inserted, as from 13 March 1996, by section 4 Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

26A Vesting of certain reserves
  • (1) Where any administering body that is a territorial authority has, before the 1st day of January 1980 been appointed to control and manage any reserve classified under section 16 of this Act (whether before or after the 1st day of January 1980) as a recreation reserve or local purpose reserve, that reserve shall, without further authority than this section, vest in that administering body.

    (2) All land so vested shall be held in trust for the purpose or purposes for which the reserve is classified.

    (3) Where any such administering body wishes to have a certificate of title issued to it in respect of any reserve vested in that administering body pursuant to subsection (1) of this section, the administering body shall, if the District Land Registrar so requests, provide the District Land Registrar with such evidence as he may require of the classification of that reserve and the appointment of that administering body to control and manage that reserve.

    This section was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 11 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

27 Cancelling vesting of reserves
  • (1) Any vesting (whether by any Provincial Ordinance, Act, grant, Order in Council, or in any other manner, and whether before or after the commencement of this Act) in an administering body of any reserve which before that vesting was the property of the Crown may, with the consent of the administering body, be cancelled by the Minister, by notice in the Gazette, and thereupon the land shall cease to be vested in that administering body and shall revest in the Crown subject to the trusts affecting the land and to any valid leases, rights, or easements subsisting thereover at the date of revesting.

    (2) If at any time the Minister is satisfied that a breach of the trusts upon which any such reserve is vested has been committed, or that after the expiration of 5 years from the date of the vesting of the reserve the land is not being used for the purpose for which it is vested, whether that period of 5 years has expired before the commencement of this Act or will thereafter expire, or that the administering body has failed to comply with the provisions of this Act, he may cause to be served on the administering body a notice in writing stating that unless cause to the contrary is shown in writing within 2 months he will cancel the vesting.

    (3) If within that period of 2 months the administering body shows cause as aforesaid, the Minister may in his discretion either decide to take no further action or he may inquire into the question whether or not the vesting should be cancelled.

    (4) If the Minister is of the opinion that the vesting should be cancelled, or if within that period of 2 months the administering body does not show cause as aforesaid, the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, cancel the vesting, and thereupon the reserve shall revest in the Crown subject to the trusts affecting the same and to any valid leases, rights, or easements subsisting thereover at the date of revesting.

    (5) On the cancellation as aforesaid of any vesting, any certificate or other instrument of title issued in respect of the reserve shall, upon the written request of the Commissioner, be noted accordingly by the District Land Registrar, who may require the copy of any such instrument then in the possession or control of the former administering body to be delivered up to him. Omission so to deliver up any such instrument shall not in any way affect the cancellation.

    (6) Subsection (1) of this section shall extend and apply with respect to reserves the control of which has been vested in the Minister of Tourism, but subject to the consent of that Minister, and any notice issued cancelling that vesting of control shall have the effect both of removing the land concerned from the control of that Minister and also of removing the land concerned from the operation and provisions of the Tourist and Health Resorts Control Act 1908.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 20

28 Appointing a local authority to control and manage a reserve
  • (1) For the better carrying out of the purposes of any reserve vested in the Crown, the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, appoint any local authority to control and manage the reserve for the particular purpose for which the reserve is classified.

    (2) Every appointment of a local authority under this section shall be subject to such special conditions and restrictions as may be specified in the notice in the Gazette, and shall take effect according to the tenor thereof, and every appointment of a local authority and any special conditions and restrictions attached to that appointment may in like manner, by notice in the Gazette, be revoked or amended.

    (3) Every local authority appointed under this section shall by virtue of that appointment be authorised to expend and apply money in controlling and managing the reserve in accordance with the particular purpose for which the reserve is classified.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 21, 47; 1970 No 101 s 2(2), (3)

29 Appointing a voluntary organisation to control and manage a reserve
  • For the better carrying out of the purposes of any reserve vested in the Crown, the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, appoint a voluntary organisation to control and manage the reserve for the purpose of its classification and in accordance with the appropriate provisions of this Act, and subject to such additional conditions and restrictions as may be specified in the notice. A notice under this section shall take effect according to its tenor, and may at any time be in like manner amended or revoked.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 21

30 Appointing a Board to control and manage a reserve
  • (1) For the better carrying out of the purposes of any reserve vested in the Crown, the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, appoint such persons as he thinks fit to be a Reserves Board, Trust, Trust Board, or other special Board to control and manage the reserve for the purpose of its classification and in accordance with the appropriate provisions of this Act, and subject to such additional conditions or restrictions as may be specified in the notice. Every such notice shall take effect according to its tenor. Any person so appointed may be appointed by virtue of any office.

    (2) Notwithstanding anything in section 10 of this Act, the Minister may from time to time, by notice in the Gazette, authorise the Commissioner to appoint, by instrument under his hand publicly notified once in one or more newspapers circulating in the locality in which the reserve is situated, such persons as the Commissioner thinks fit, not exceeding 9 in number, to be a Reserves Board to control and manage any reserve specified in the Gazette notice. A Reserves Board so appointed shall control and manage the reserve for the purpose of its classification in accordance with the appropriate provisions of this Act, and subject to such additional conditions and restrictions as may be specified in the instrument. Every such notice shall take effect according to its tenor. Any person so appointed may be appointed by virtue of any office.

    (3) The Minister, or the Commissioner, as the case may be, may, by the notice appointing those persons or by a subsequent notice under his hand, appoint one of them to be Chairman of the Board for the term of his appointment or for such period as the Minister or the Commissioner, as the case may be, thinks fit:

    Provided that the Minister or the Commissioner, as the case may be, may from time to time, by notice under his hand, remove any Chairman from his office as such and appoint a new Chairman in his place.

    (4) The Minister may from time to time, by notice in the Gazette, or, in any case to which subsection (2) of this section applies, the Commissioner may by instrument under his hand publicly notified once in one or more newspapers circulating in the locality in which the reserve is situated, make such additional appointments of members as he thinks necessary, but the appointments made by the Commissioner shall not increase the number of members of the Board to more than 9. Those members shall be appointed for the remainder of the term for which the Board was originally appointed.

    (5) The Minister or the Commissioner, as the case may be, may from time to time by like notice reduce the number of members of any Board, and for that purpose may revoke the appointments of such members as may thereby be rendered necessary.

    (6) The Minister or the Commissioner, as the case may be, may from time to time by a like notice revoke the appointment of any Board or of any member of any Board.

    (7) Notwithstanding anything in subsection (2) or subsection (4) of this section, where there is no newspaper circulating in the locality in which the reserve is situated, an instrument under the said subsection (2) or subsection (4) shall be notified once in the Gazette.

    (8) There shall be paid, out of money appropriated by Parliament for the purpose, to the members of any Reserves Board, Trust, Trust Board, or other special Board appointed under subsection (1) of this section who are not members by virtue of being officers of any Department of State remuneration by way of fees, salary, or allowances and travelling allowances and expenses in accordance with the Fees and Travelling Allowances Act 1951, and the provisions of that Act shall apply accordingly as if the Reserves Board, Trust, Trust Board, or other special Board, as the case may be, were a statutory Board within the meaning of that Act.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 6, 6A; 1970 No 101 s 2(1)

31 Term of office of members of Boards
  • The following provisions shall apply with respect to every appointed member of any Board, namely:

    • (a) Subject to the succeeding provisions of this section and to section 30 of this Act, he shall hold office for such term not exceeding 7 years as may be specified in the notice of his appointment, and may from time to time be reappointed:

    • (b) He shall vacate office on the happening of any of the following events:

      • (i) If he becomes bankrupt; or

      • (ii) If he resigns by writing addressed to the Secretary to the Board; or

      • (iii) If he is absent from 3 consecutive meetings of the Board without the leave of the Board; or

      • (iv) If he is absent from New Zealand for 3 consecutive months without the leave of the Board:

    • (c) The Minister may remove from office any appointed member of the Board, whether appointed by the Minister or by the Commissioner, who in his opinion becomes incapable of acting as a member or is guilty of such neglect of duty or misconduct as in the Minister's opinion makes it expedient that he should cease to be a member of the Board:

    • (d) If he dies, or vacates his office pursuant to paragraph (b) or paragraph (c) of this section, the vacancy so created shall be filled in the manner in which the appointment to the vacant office was originally made:

      Provided that if the Board was originally appointed by the Minister and the Minister has authorised the Commissioner to appoint the Board under section 30(2) of this Act, the Commissioner shall make the appointment. Any person so appointed shall be appointed for the residue of the term for which his predecessor was appointed:

    • (e) Unless he sooner vacates his office as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, he shall continue in office until his successor comes into office, notwithstanding that the term for which he was appointed may have expired:

    • (f) Where any member of the Board is appointed by virtue of any office, he shall vacate his appointment on ceasing to hold that office, and shall be replaced by his successor in office without any further appointment.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 8; 1970 No 101 s 2(2)(c); 1972 No 99 s 2

32 Meetings of Boards
  • (1) The first meeting of any Board appointed after the commencement of this Act shall be held not later than 2 months after the date of the gazetting or publication of the notice appointing the Board.

    (2) An annual meeting of the Board must be held within 2 months after the end of the financial year.

    (3) Other meetings shall be held as the Board determines from time to time.

    (4) A special meeting of the Board may at any time be convened by the Chairman, and the Chairman shall call a special meeting whenever requested to do so in writing by 2 members of the Board:

    Provided that not less than 7 clear days' notice of every special meeting and of the business to be transacted thereat shall be given to each member, and no business other than that specified in the notice shall be transacted at any such meeting.

    (5) Where the Chairman of the Board has not been appointed by the Minister or by the Commissioner, as the case may be, under section 30(3) of this Act, then, at the first meeting of the Board and at every annual meeting and as often as the office of Chairman becomes vacant, the members shall elect one of their number to be Chairman, who, while he continues to be a member of the Board, shall hold office as such until the appointment of his successor.

    (6) The Chairman shall preside at each meeting of the Board at which he is present, but in his absence from any meeting the members present shall elect a member to act as Chairman at that meeting.

    (7) The member presiding at any meeting shall have a deliberative vote, and in the case of an equality of votes shall also have a casting vote.

    (8) No business shall be transacted at any meeting of the Board unless at least a quorum of members (whether voting or not) is present thereat during the whole time at which the business is transacted.

    (9) A quorum shall consist of half of the whole number of the members of the Board (irrespective of any vacancies) when that number is even and a majority of the members when that number is odd.

    (10) Every question before the Board shall be determined by a majority of the votes of the members present and voting on that question.

    (11) Subject to this Part of this Act, every Board may regulate its own proceedings.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 9; 1970 No 101 s 2(2)(d)

    Subsection (2) was substituted, as from 17 May 2005, by section 3 Reserves Amendment Act 2005 (2005 No 68).

33 Form of contracts of Boards
  • (1) A contract which, if made by private persons, is not enforceable unless made in writing signed by the persons to be charged therewith may be made on behalf of the Board in writing signed by any person acting under its authority, express or implied.

    (2) A contract which, if made by private persons, may be made orally, may be made orally on behalf of the Board by any person acting under its authority, express or implied.

34 Members of Boards not personally liable
  • The members of any Board shall not be personally liable for any act done or omitted to be done in good faith in the course of the operations of the Board or for any debt or other liability lawfully incurred by the Board.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 10

35 Appointing Trustees to control and manage reserve vested in Crown
  • For the better carrying out of the purposes of any reserve vested in the Crown, the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, appoint any Trustees (being empowered by or under any Act or other lawful authority to administer land and expend money thereon) or any Maori Trust Board to control and manage the reserve for the purpose of its classification and in accordance with the appropriate provisions of this Act, and subject to such additional conditions and restrictions as may be specified in the notice. Every such notice shall take effect according to its tenor, and may at any time in like manner be amended or revoked.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 19, 21

36 Appointing Minister of the Crown to control and manage reserve
  • (1) For the better carrying out of the purposes of any reserve vested in the Crown, the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, appoint any other Minister of the Crown to control and manage the reserve, or any part of the reserve, for the purpose of its classification and in accordance with the appropriate provisions of this Act, and with such powers and subject to such conditions and restrictions as may be specified in the notice. A notice under this subsection shall take effect according to its tenor, and may at any time be in like manner amended or revoked.

    (2) Where any Minister of the Crown other than the Minister of Lands is appointed under this section to control and manage any reserve or part thereof, the reserve may by that notice be made subject to any other Act administered by the first-mentioned Minister in addition to being subject to this Act, but shall remain a reserve, and that Minister may expend out of money appropriated by Parliament in respect of the administration of that other Act such sum or sums as he thinks fit on the maintenance and improvement and development of the reserve.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 21

37 Administering body may control and manage more than one reserve
  • An administering body appointed under this Act to control and manage any reserve of a specified classification may be appointed to control and manage any other reserve, whether of the same classification or not.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 21(3)

38 Control and management of land that is not a reserve
  • (1) The Minister, or an administering body of a reserve with the consent of the Minister, may also control and manage any land that is not a reserve (including any Maori reservation) for any of the purposes specified in sections 17 to 23 of this Act:

    Provided that the administering body shall not control and manage any land under this subsection except with the agreement of the owner, trustee, or controlling authority of the land to the appointment and to the use of the land for that specified purpose, and subject to such terms and conditions as to the use of the land as are approved by the Minister and the owner, trustee, or controlling authority of the land:

    Provided further that the Minister shall not control and manage any land under this subsection except with the agreement of the owner, trustee, or controlling authority of the land to the use of the land for that specified purpose.

    (2) For the better carrying out of the purposes of this Act, the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, appoint such persons, trustees (including trustees appointed under section 438 of the Maori Affairs Act 1953), trust, voluntary organisation, Maori Trust Board, or Maori Incorporation as he thinks fit to be an administering body to control and manage any land which is not a reserve (including any Maori reservation) for any of the purposes specified in sections 17 to 23 of this Act:

    Provided that an administering body shall not be appointed under this subsection except with the agreement of the owner, trustee, or controlling authority of the land to the appointment and to the use of the land for that specified purpose, and subject to such terms and conditions as to the use of the land as are approved by the Minister and the owner, trustee, or controlling authority of the land.

    (3) While an arrangement as aforesaid remains in force, sections 93 to 105 of this Act shall, as far as they are applicable and with the necessary modifications, apply to that land in all respects as if it were a reserve under this Act:

    Provided that in their application to any such land sections 93 to 105 of this Act shall be read subject to any agreement between the owner, lessee, or licensee of the land and the Minister preserving to the owner, lessee, or licensee the right to do any act or thing forbidden by this Act.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 58, 75A; 1966 No 26 s 3; 1971 No 144 s 4

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 1 January 1980, by section 12(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63) by substituting the words The Minister, or an administering body of a reserve with the consent of the Minister, for the words Subject to the approval of the Minister, an administering body of a reserve.

    Subsection (1) second proviso was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 12(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

39 Provision of technical assistance to administering body
  • The Minister may provide, with or without charge, advice, guidance, and technical and related assistance or services to—

    • (a) Any administering body in connection with the administration, management, or development of any reserve vested in it or which it has been appointed to control and manage:

    • (b) Any person, trustees (including trustees appointed under section 438 of the Maori Affairs Act 1953), trust, voluntary organisation, Maori Trust Board, or Maori Incorporation owning, or appointed under section 38(2) of this Act to control and manage, any land that is not a reserve.

39A Annual financial statements
  • (1) A Board may, with the consent of the Minister of Finance, dispense with preparing any of the statements referred to in section 150, section 153, or section 154 of the Crown Entities Act 2004.

    (2) The consent may be given on any conditions the Minister thinks fit (which may include a requirement that the financial statements of any Board include other statements, figures, or accounts in place of the statements dispensed with).

    (3) The Minister must not give a consent unless satisfied on reasonable grounds that in all the circumstances the preparation of all the statements referred to in subsection (1)

    • (a) is not essential because any remaining statements for the financial year (including those appended to the Department of Conservation annual report in accordance with section 45O of the Public Finance Act 1989) can fairly reflect the financial position and operations of the Board; and

    • (b) would be unduly onerous on the Board.

    Section 39A was inserted, as from 25 January 2005, by section 37(1) Public Finance Amendment Act 2004 (2004 No 113).

Functions of administering body

40 Functions of administering body
  • (1) The administering body shall be charged with the duty of administering, managing, and controlling the reserve under its control and management in accordance with the appropriate provisions of this Act and in terms of its appointment and the means at its disposal, so as to ensure the use, enjoyment, development, maintenance, protection, and preservation, as the case may require, of the reserve for the purpose for which it is classified.

    (2) Every administering body of a reserve that includes any part of the Wanganui River shall, in carrying out its functions, have regard to the spiritual, historical, and cultural significance of the river to the Whanganui iwi.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 7

    Subsection (2) was inserted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 95 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

40A Conservation management strategies
  • (1) Every conservation management strategy shall implement statements of general policy and establish objectives for the management of reserves administered by the Department under this Act.

    (2) Nothing in any conservation management strategy shall derogate from the relevant provisions of this Act or the purpose for which a reserve is held.

    (3) The Department shall manage such reserves in accordance with conservation management strategies.

    (4) While any conservation management strategy affecting a reserve administered by the Department is in force, conservation management plans in respect of that reserve—

    • (a) Shall not be required to be reviewed:

    • (b) May be revoked by the Director-General, after giving notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act; and section 120 of this Act shall, with any necessary modifications, apply with respect to every such notice.

    Sections 40A and 40B were inserted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 96 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

40B Conservation management plans in respect of reserves administered by Department
  • (1) The purpose of a conservation management plan under this section is to implement conservation management strategies and to establish objectives for the management of a reserve or reserves administered by the Department, according to the purpose or purposes for which that reserve is classified or those reserves are classified.

    (2) Nothing in section 41 of this Act shall apply in respect of any conservation management plan under this section.

    (3) Any such plan may relate to any reserve or reserves of any classification.

    (4) The Department shall manage such reserves in accordance with conservation management plans.

    (5) Nothing in any conservation management plan shall derogate from any provision in—

    • (a) This Act or any other Act; or

    • (b) Any general policy approved under section 15A of this Act; or

    • (c) Any conservation management strategy.

    (6) Every management plan in force at the commencement of this section, that has been approved under section 41 of this Act in respect of a reserve administered by the Department, is hereby deemed to be approved as a conservation management plan under this section, and shall have effect accordingly.

    (7) Every draft management plan that, at the commencement of this section, is proposed to be approved under section 41 of this Act in respect of a reserve administered by the Department, is hereby deemed to be a draft conservation management plan prepared under this section, and may be approved accordingly.

    (8) For the purposes of this section, sections 17E (except subsections (1), (4), and (6)), 17G, 17H, 17I, and 17N of the Conservation Act 1987 shall, with any necessary modifications, apply with respect to management plans under this section.

    Sections 40A and 40B were inserted, as from 10 April 1990, by section 96 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31).

    Subsection (8) was substituted, as from 22 June 1993, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act (No 2) 1993 (1993 No 42).

41 Management plans
  • (1) The administering body shall, within 5 years after the date of its appointment or within 5 years after the commencement of this Act, whichever is the later, prepare and submit to the Minister for his approval a management plan for the reserve under its control, management, or administration.

    (2) The Minister may extend the time within which an administering body is required to submit its management plan to him for approval, where he is satisfied with the progress the administering body has made with the preparation of its management plan.

    (3) The management plan shall provide for and ensure the use, enjoyment, maintenance, protection, and preservation, as the case may require, and, to the extent that the administering body's resources permit, the development, as appropriate, of the reserve for the purposes for which it is classified, and shall incorporate and ensure compliance with the principles set out in section 17, section 18, section 19, section 20, section 21, section 22, or section 23, as the case may be, of this Act for a reserve of that classification.

    (4) The administering body of any reserve shall keep its management plan under continuous review, so that, subject to subsection (3) of this section, the plan is adapted to changing circumstances or in accordance with increased knowledge; and the Minister may from time to time require the administering body to review its management plan, whether or not the plan requires the approval of the Minister under this section.

    (5) Before preparing a management plan for any one or more reserves under its control, the administering body shall—

    • (a) Give public notice of its intention to do so; and

    • (b) In that notice, invite persons and organisations interested to send to the administering body at its office written suggestions on the proposed plan within a time specified in the notice; and

    • (c) In preparing that management plan, give full consideration to any such comments received.

    (5A) Nothing in subsection (5) of this section shall apply in any case where the administering body has, by resolution, determined that written suggestions on the proposed plan would not materially assist in its preparation.

    (6) Every management plan shall be prepared by the administering body in draft form in the first place, and the administering body shall—

    • (a) Give public notice complying with section 119 of this Act stating that the draft plan is available for inspection at a place and at times specified in the notice, and calling upon persons or organisations interested to lodge with the administering body written objections to or suggestions on the draft plan before a specified date, being not less than 2 months after the date of publication of the notice; and

    • (aa) On giving notice in accordance with paragraph (a) of this subsection, send a copy of the draft plan to the Commissioner; and

    • (b) Give notice in writing, as far as practicable, to all persons and organisations who or which made suggestions to the administering body under subsection (5) of this section stating that the draft plan has been prepared and is available for inspection at the place and during the times specified in the notice, and requiring any such person or organisation who or which desires to object to or comment on the draft plan to lodge with the administering body a written objection or written comments before a specified date, being not less than 2 months after the date of giving of the notice; and

    • (c) Make the draft management plan available for inspection, free of charge, to all interested persons during ordinary office hours at the office of the administering body; and

    • (d) Before approving the management plan, or, as the case may require, recommending the management plan to the Minister for his approval, give every person or organisation who or which, in lodging any objection or making any comments under paragraph (a) or paragraph (b) of this subsection, asked to be heard in support of his or its objection or comments, a reasonable opportunity of appearing before the administering body or a committee thereof or a person nominated by the administering body in support of his or its objection or comments; and

    • (e) Where the management plan requires the approval of the Minister, attach to the plan submitted to him for approval a summary of the objections and comments received and a statement as to the extent to which they have been allowed or accepted or disallowed or not accepted.

    (7) Where under subsection (4) of this section the Minister requires an administering body to review its management plan, he may direct that the administering body follow the procedure specified in subsections (5) and (6) of this section, and the administering body shall follow that procedure accordingly as if the review were the preparation of a management plan.

    (8) Where in terms of its responsibilities under this Act the administering body of any reserve resolves to undertake a comprehensive review of its management plan, the administering body shall follow the procedure specified in subsections (5) and (6) of this section as if the review were the preparation of a management plan.

    (9) Where under subsection (4) of this section the administering body considers any change not involving a comprehensive review to its management plan is required, it may, if it thinks fit, follow the procedure specified in subsections (5) and (6) of this section.

    (10) The administering body or committee or person before which or whom any person appears at any hearing in support of any objection or comments shall determine its or his own procedure at the hearing.

    (11) The administering body shall in the exercise of its functions comply with the management plan for the reserve and any amendment thereof, being, in the case of a plan or an amendment that requires the approval of the Minister, a plan or an amendment so approved.

    (12) No approval by the Minister for the purposes of this section shall operate as an approval or a consent for any other purpose of this Act.

    (13) Where a recreation reserve is vested in a local authority or a local authority is appointed to control and manage a recreation reserve, the local authority shall not be required to submit its management plan to the Minister for approval, unless the terms of vesting or of appointment to control and manage the reserve so require:

    Provided that the local authority shall make its management plan available for inspection by or on behalf of the Minister whenever so required.

    (14) The Minister may, by notice to them, require the administering bodies of reserves in any locality to consult with each other in the preparation of their management plans so that the management plans are integrated for the benefit of the locality.

    (15) Where under this Act the approval or consent of the Minister is required to any action by an administering body, the Minister may, at his discretion, refuse to grant his approval or consent unless and until the administering body has submitted its management plan for approval (whether or not the plan otherwise requires the approval of the Minister under this section) and the plan has been approved by him.

    (16) This section shall not apply in respect of any Government purpose reserve or local purpose reserve unless the reserve is vested in an administering body or an administering body is appointed to control and manage the reserve, and the Minister in the notice of vesting or notice to control and manage directs that this section is to apply in respect of the reserve.

    Subsection (5A) was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 13 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (6)(aa) was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 14 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (16) was substituted, as from 27 December 1983, by section 4(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43).

General powers of Minister and of administering body

42 Preservation of trees and bush
  • (1) The trees and bush on any historic reserve or scenic reserve or nature reserve or scientific reserve shall not be cut or destroyed, except in accordance with a permit granted under section 48A of this Act or with the express consent in writing of the Minister and subject to such terms and conditions as the Minister may determine, including (as appropriate) the method of cutting, extraction, and restoration.

    (2) The trees or bush on any recreation reserve, or Government purpose reserve, or local purpose reserve shall not be cut or destroyed, except in accordance with a permit granted under section 48A of this Act or unless the administering body of the reserve is satisfied that the cutting or destruction is necessary for the proper management or maintenance of the reserve, or for the management or preservation of other trees or bush, or in the interests of the safety of persons on or near the reserve or of the safety of property adjoining the reserve, or that the cutting is necessary to harvest trees planted for revenue producing purposes.

    (3) Where in the case of any recreation reserve or Government purpose reserve or local purpose reserve the administering body is satisfied that the cutting or destruction of trees or bush is necessary for any of the reasons mentioned in subsection (2) of this section, the administering body shall not proceed with the cutting or destruction and extraction except in a manner which will have a minimal impact on the reserve and until, as circumstances warrant, provision is made for replacement, planting, or restoration; and the administering body shall not proceed to authorise the cutting or destruction, except subject to conditions as to the method of cutting or destruction and extraction which will have minimal impact on the reserve and, as circumstances warrant, replacement, planting, or restoration; and any other conditions which the administering body considers to be appropriate in the circumstances.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 34, 54, 62(1), (2)

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 23 September 1981, by section 3(4) Reserves Amendment Act 1981 (1981 No 30) by inserting the words in accordance with a permit granted under section 48A of this Act or.

    Subsection (2) was amended, as from 23 September 1981, by section 3(5) Reserves Amendment Act 1981 (1981 No 30) by inserting the words except in accordance with a permit granted under section 48A of this Act or.

43 Fencing and maintenance of reserves
  • (1) The Minister may from time to time take such steps as he thinks fit for the fencing and maintenance of any reserve vested in the Crown.

    (2) Where any fence within the meaning of the Fencing Act 1978 is erected by authority of the Minister on the common boundary of any reserve vested in the Crown and the adjoining land, the occupier of the adjoining land shall be liable, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in that Act, for half of the cost of the erection and maintenance of the fence, and that half cost may be recovered from him in any Court of competent jurisdiction by the Commissioner.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 59

    Subsection (2) was amended, as from 1 April 1979, by substituting the Fencing Act 1978 (1978 No 50) for the repealed Fencing Act 1908.

44 Unauthorised use of reserve
  • (1) Except with the consent of the Minister, no person shall use a reserve, or any building, vehicle, boat, caravan, tent, or structure situate thereon, for purposes of permanent or temporary personal accommodation:

    Provided that nothing in this subsection shall be deemed to prohibit the use, for purposes of personal accommodation, of any reserve or any building, vehicle, boat, caravan, tent, or structure situate on any reserve, subject to compliance with every term or condition on which such use is permitted,—

    • (a) In areas set apart under the appropriate provisions of this Act for residences for officers or servants of the administering body or for rangers appointed under section 8(1) of this Act; or

    • (b) In camping grounds set apart under the appropriate provisions of this Act; or

    • (c) In shelters, huts, cabins, lodges, or similar resting or sleeping accommodation approved by the Minister under section 45 of this Act; or

    • (d) In a Government purpose reserve or local purpose reserve, where living or sleeping accommodation is necessary because of the purposes specified in the classification of the reserve; or

    • (e) In areas defined on management plans prepared under section 41 of this Act and for the time being in force; or

    • (f) [Repealed]

    (2) Except with the consent of the Minister, the owner of any vehicle, caravan, tent, or removable structure shall not permit it to remain on a reserve for a total period of more than 4 weeks during the period commencing on the 1st day of November in any year and ending with the 31st day of March.

    (3) The provisions of this section are in addition to and not in substitution for any other provisions of this Act.

    Subsection (1) proviso paragraph (e) was amended, as from 23 September 1981, by inserting the expression ; or, and paragraph (f) inserted, by section 3(6) Reserves Amendment Act 1981 (1981 No 30).

    Subsection (1) proviso paragraph (f) was repealed, as from 1 July 1996, by section 5(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

45 Erection of shelters, huts, cabins, and lodges
  • The administering body may, with the prior approval of the Minister, erect, or authorise any voluntary organisation or educational institution to erect, shelters, huts, cabins, lodges, and similar resting or sleeping accommodation on any recreation reserve or scenic reserve in order to encourage the public to appreciate and enjoy the benefits of the outdoors and nature, where, because of the isolation, rugged contour, or very large area of the reserve, this type of accommodation is necessary and cannot be provided outside and in close proximity to the reserve. Any approval granted under this section shall be on such terms and conditions as to location, structure, custody, use, and otherwise as the Minister approves.

46 Grant of rights to Maoris
  • (1) The Minister may from time to time, by notice in the Gazette, grant to Maoris the right to take or kill birds within any scenic reserve which immediately before the reservation or taking thereof was Maori land, provided the taking and killing of the birds would not be in contravention of the Wildlife Act 1953 or any regulations or Proclamation or notification under that Act.

    (2) Where any scenic or historic reserve includes any ancestral burial grounds of Maoris, the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, grant the right to bury or inter the remains of deceased Maoris in a place to be specified therein.

    (3) Any rights so granted may at any time in like manner be withdrawn or varied by the Minister.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 60

47 Wilderness areas
  • (1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3) of this section, the Minister (in the case of a reserve in respect of which there is no administering body) or the administering body with the consent of the Minister (in the case of a reserve in respect of which there is an administering body) may from time to time, by notice in the Gazette, set apart the whole or any specified part of a reserve as a wilderness area, and may in like manner revoke or vary any such setting apart.

    (2) Before any reserve or any part of a reserve is set apart as a wilderness area,—

    • (a) The administering body shall give public notice of the proposal in accordance with section 119 of this Act,—

      • (i) Stating that a plan of the proposal is available for inspection at a place and at times specified in the notice; and

      • (ii) Calling upon persons or organisations interested to lodge with the administering body written objections to, or written submissions in support of, or suggestions on, the proposal before a specified date, being not less than 3 months after the date of publication of the notice; and

    • (b) The Minister shall give full consideration in accordance with section 120 of this Act to all objections and submissions in relation to the proposal received pursuant to the said section 120.

    (3) No part of a Government purpose reserve shall be set apart as a wilderness area without the consent of the Minister appointed under section 22 or section 36 of this Act to control and manage that reserve.

    (4) Subject to subsections (5) to (7) of this section, while any reserve or part of a reserve is set apart as a wilderness area,—

    • (a) Its indigenous natural resources shall be preserved:

    • (b) No building or machinery shall be erected on the area:

    • (c) No building, machinery, or apparatus shall be constructed or maintained on the area:

    • (d) No livestock, vehicles, or motorised vessels (including hovercraft and jet boats) shall be allowed to be taken into or used in the area and no helicopter or other motorised aircraft shall land or take off or hover for the purpose of embarking or disembarking passengers or goods in the area:

    • (e) No roads, tracks, or trails shall be constructed on the area.

    (5) If—

    • (a) The doing of anything in a wilderness area is in conformity with the conservation management strategy or conservation management plan or other management plan for the area; and

    • (b) The Minister is satisfied that its doing is desirable or necessary for the preservation of the indigenous natural resources,—

    the Minister may authorise it.

    (6) If satisfied that the undertaking of any scientific test or study in a wilderness area is necessary or desirable for the preservation of indigenous natural resources, the Minister may authorise it.

    (7) Nothing in subsection (4) of this section prevents the doing of anything necessary for any person's protection or because of some emergency involving any person's property.

    Section 47 was substituted, as from 25 November 1994, by section 3 Reserves Amendment Act 1994 (1994 No 110).

48 Grants of rights of way and other easements
  • (1) Subject to subsection (2) of this section and to the Resource Management Act 1991, in the case of reserves vested in an administering body, the administering body, with the consent of the Minister and on such conditions as the Minister thinks fit, may grant rights of way and other easements over any part of the reserve for—

    • (a) Any public purpose; or

    • (b) Providing access to any area included in an agreement, lease, or licence granted under the powers conferred by this Act; or

    • (c) The distribution or transmission by pipeline of natural or manufactured gas, petroleum, or geothermal energy; or

    • (e) The provision of water systems; or

    • (f) Providing or facilitating access or the supply of water to or the drainage of any other land not forming part of the reserve or for any other purpose connected with any such land.

    (2) Before granting a right of way or an easement under subsection (1) of this section over any part of a reserve vested in it, the administering body shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act specifying the right of way or other easement intended to be granted, and shall give full consideration, in accordance with section 120 of this Act, to all objections and submissions received in respect of the proposal under that section.

    (3) Subsection (2) of this section shall not apply in any case where—

    • (a) The reserve is vested in an administering body and is not likely to be materially altered or permanently damaged; and

    • (b) The rights of the public in respect of the reserve are not likely to be permanently affected—

    by the establishment and lawful exercise of the right of way or other easement.

    (4) The District Land Registrar for the land registration district in which is situated any reserve in respect of which any right or easement has been granted under this section shall, on the application of the administering body, register the instrument granting the right or easement against any certificate of title that may have been issued for the reserve, and, if the reserve is held on registered lease or licence, any such instrument may be registered in the same way as any dealing with the lease or licence.

    (5) Where no certificate of title has been issued for any reserve over which a right or easement has been granted under this section, the instrument granting the right or easement may be registered with the District Land Registrar in the same manner and with any necessary modifications as any lease or licence of Crown land may be registered under the Land Act 1948.

    (6) Rights of way and other easements may be granted under this section to any person, including, notwithstanding any rule of law to the contrary, the administering body in which the reserve is vested, and, where the right of way or other easement is granted to the administering body, covenants and agreements in respect of any such transaction may be entered into by the administering body in the one capacity so as to bind or benefit the administering body in the other capacity as fully and effectually as if the administering body were a separate person in each capacity.

    Subsection (1)(f) was substituted, as from 1 April 1980, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act 1980 (1980 No 35). The Petroleum Act 1937 referred to was repealed, as from 1 April 1993, by section 62(1) Health and Safety in Employment Act 1992 (1992 No 96).

    Subsection (1A) was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 16 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (4) was inserted, as from 27 December 1983, by section 5 Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43).

    Sections 48 and 48A were substituted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 6(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

48A Use of reserve for communications station
  • (1) The administering body of a reserve vested in the administering body acting with the consent of the Minister may grant a licence to any person or department of State—

    • (a) To erect, maintain, and use buildings, dwellings, masts, and other structures, and plant and machinery; and

    • (b) To construct, maintain, and use tracks and engage in other works—

    comprising or in connection with and for the purposes of any station for the transmission, emission, or reception of any form of radio, electric, or electronic communication on any reserve or part of a reserve that is not set apart as a wilderness area under section 47 of this Act.

    (2) No licence shall be granted under subsection (1) of this section unless the administering body is satisfied—

    • (a) That the buildings, dwellings, masts, structures, plant, machinery, tracks, or works are necessary for the purposes of the station; and

    • (b) That they cannot readily be provided outside the reserve.

    (3) Every licence issued under subsection (1) of this section shall be subject to such terms and conditions as to duration, design, materials, situation, use, rental, inspection, maintenance, and public access, or otherwise, as the administering body determines with the approval of the Minister.

    (4) Except as provided in subsection (5) of this section, where the granting of any licence under subsection (1) of this section is not in conformity with and contemplated by a management plan approved for the reserve, the administering body shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act of the proposal to grant a licence, and shall give full consideration, in accordance with section 120 of this Act, to all objections and submissions received in respect of the proposal under that section.

    (5) Subsection (4) of this section shall not apply in any case where—

    • (a) The reserve is not likely to be materially altered or permanently damaged; and

    • (b) The rights of the public in respect of the reserve are not likely to be permanently affected—

    by the granting and lawful exercise of the rights and powers contained in the licence.

    (6) This section applies only to reserves vested in an administering body under section 26 of this Act.

    This section was inserted, as from 23 September 1981, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act 1981 (1981 No 30).

    Subsection (4) was amended, as from 10 April 1990, by section 97 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31) by substituting the words a conservation management ... for the reserve for the words the approved management plan for the reserve.

    Sections 48 and 48A were substituted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 6(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

49 Taking of specimens
  • The Minister may from time to time, by writing under his hand, and subject to such conditions as he may impose in that behalf, grant any qualified person who in the Minister's opinion has the necessary credentials a right to take specified specimens of flora or fauna or rock mineral or soil from a reserve for scientific or educational purposes, provided the taking of such specimens does not unduly deplete the number of any species, damage ecological associations, or damage the values of the reserve:

    Provided that nothing in this section shall authorise the doing of anything with respect to fauna that would contravene anything in the Wildlife Act 1953 or in any regulations or Proclamation or notification under that Act.

50 Taking or killing of fauna
  • (1) The Minister, in the case of any scenic, historic, nature, or scientific reserve, and the administering body, in the case of any recreation, Government purpose, or local purpose reserve, may from time to time, subject to such conditions as may be imposed in that behalf by the Minister or the administering body, as the case may be, authorise any person to take and kill any specified kind of fauna that may be found therein, and may for that purpose, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Act, authorise the use of firearms, traps, nets, or other like objects within the reserve:

    Provided that neither the Minister nor the administering body shall authorise the taking or killing for commercial purposes of any indigenous fauna in any reserve, unless it was a condition of the establishment of that reserve that the donor, vendor, or lessor, as the case may be, of the land has reserved the right to take or kill for commercial purposes that species of fauna in the reserve.

    (2) Any authorisation under subsection (1) of this section, and any authorisation in any case where the administering body has decided that all or any part of a recreation reserve or Government purpose reserve for wildlife management purposes may be used pursuant to bylaws made under this Act for the hunting or killing of game or the catching of acclimatised fish, shall be in writing.

    (3) Subsections (1) and (2) of this section shall apply only where the taking and killing of fauna would not be in contravention of Part 5B of the Conservation Act 1987, or of the Wildlife Act 1953, or of any regulations or Proclamation or notification under those Acts.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 61

    Subsection (3) was amended, as from 13 March 1996, by section 7 Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by substituting the words Part 5B of the Conservation Act 1987 for the words Part 2 of the Fisheries Act 1908.

51 Introduction of flora and fauna
  • (1) For the purpose of—

    • (a) Restoring ecological communities in any historic, scenic, nature, or scientific reserve; or

    • (b) Promoting the survival of any indigenous species of flora or fauna in any nature or scientific reserve; or

    • (c) Developing a scenic reserve of a type specified in section 19(1)(b) of this Act,—

    the Minister may from time to time, by writing under his hand, authorise the administering body to introduce indigenous flora or fauna into the reserve, and also, in the case of a scientific reserve or of a scenic reserve to which section 19(1)(b) of this Act applies, to introduce exotic flora into the reserve. Any such authorisation may be subject to such conditions as the Minister may impose on that behalf.

    (2) Before granting any authorisation under this section, the Minister shall have due regard to the principles set out in sections 18, 19, 20, and 21 of this Act, as the case may require, and shall also have regard to the possible effects of such introduction on other flora and fauna already within the reserve.

51A Introduction of biological control organisms
  • (1) Notwithstanding anything in this Act or any other enactment, but subject to subsections (2) and (3) of this section, the Minister may authorise the introduction of any biological control organism to control wild animals or animal pests or plant pests in any reserve vested in the Crown or in any other reserve if so requested by the administering body of that reserve.

    (2) Before granting an approval under subsection (1) of this section, the Minister shall—

    • (a) Consult the New Zealand Conservation Authority; and

    • (b) Have regard to whether—

      • (i) Any introduced organism will itself become a problem or adversely affect any other indigenous organisms, or have a negative impact on any ecosystem; and

      • (ii) There is sufficient scientific advice, supported by research, to indicate that none of these will occur.

    (3) An authority granted under subsection (1) of this section shall not be inconsistent with any provision in—

    • (a) Any other Act applicable to the import, genetic modification, or use of the organism or organisms concerned; or

    • (b) Any general policy approved under section 15A of this Act; or

    • (c) Any conservation management strategy or conservation management plan or other management plan approved for the reserve.

    This section was inserted, as from 25 November 1994, by section 4 Reserves Amendment Act 1994 (1994 No 110).

52 Union of reserves
  • (1) The Minister may, in the case of reserves of the same classification, by notice in the Gazette, declare that any 2 or more reserves, or parts of 2 or more reserves, or parts of one or more reserves and the whole of one or more other reserves, shall, as from a date to be specified in that behalf in the notice, be united to form one reserve, with such name as he thinks fit:

    Provided that where there is an administering body or bodies of one or more of those reserves, the consent of the administering body or bodies shall first be obtained.

    (2) Where 2 or more reserves, or parts of 2 or more reserves, or parts of one or more reserves and the whole of one or more other reserves, have been so declared to be united as one reserve, the Minister may appoint an administering body to control the reserve, and thereupon the previous administering body or bodies (if any) shall cease to hold office as such, and the new administering body shall have in respect of the united reserve all the rights and liabilities of the several former administering bodies of the several reserves.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 46, 48; 1970 No 101 s 2(2)

Particular powers of Minister and administering body

53 Powers (other than leasing) in respect of recreation reserves
  • (1) The administering body of a recreation reserve may from time to time, in the exercise of its functions under section 40 of this Act and to the extent necessary to give effect to the principles set out in section 17 of this Act,—

    • (a) Enclose the reserve, or any part thereof, which it may at any time decide is necessary or desirable—

      • (i) To lay down or renew in grass or to plant or improve; or

      • (ii) To farm or graze or afforest as a part of a development, improvement, or management programme,—

      and may lay down or renew in grass, or plant or improve, or, as the case may be, farm or graze or afforest, the reserve or that part:

      Provided that the administering body shall not afforest the reserve or any part thereof except in accordance with section 75 of this Act:

    • (b) Prohibit from time to time the public from entering or encroaching on any part of the reserve so laid down, renewed in grass, planted, improved, grazed, farmed, or afforested:

    • (c) Prescribe the games, sports, or other activities for public recreation or enjoyment which may take place in the reserve or in any specified part thereof, and regulate the use of the reserve for those games, sports, and other activities, and prohibit altogether the playing of any particular game, sport, or other activity therein:

    • (d) Prescribe, as to not more than 40 days in any year as it thinks fit, that the public shall not be entitled to have admission to the reserve or to any part or parts thereof set apart for a particular purpose or purposes unless on payment of a charge or charges as hereinafter mentioned:

      Provided that with the prior consent of the Minister the number of days that the public shall not be entitled to have admission as aforesaid may be increased:

      Provided also that this paragraph shall not apply to any part of the reserve to which paragraph (h) of this subsection applies or to any lease granted under the authority of section 54(1)(a) of this Act or a lease or licence granted under the authority of section 54(1)(d) of this Act:

    • (e) Grant the exclusive use of the reserve or any part thereof on any one or more of the days provided for in paragraph (d) of this subsection, but not for more than 6 days consecutively at any time, to any person, body, voluntary organisation, or society (whether incorporated or not) for the purpose of particular games, sports, or other activities or for public recreation or enjoyment, with authority for that person, body, organisation, or society to demand a fee or charge for admission on that day or those days to the reserve or part thereof so granted and also to any stand or enclosure, not exceeding the amount or amounts from time to time specified by the Minister:

      Provided that the Minister may from time to time approve with respect to any specified reserve the fixing of such other charges as he thinks fit, either generally or with respect to specified occasions:

      Provided also that the Minister may consent to an increase in the number of consecutive days specified in this paragraph for the purposes of any specified occasion or event:

    • (f) Enter into an agreement with any such person, body, society, or voluntary organisation for the use by him or it of the reserve or any specified part thereof on a specified number of days in each year during the term of the agreement, which (save as otherwise authorised by the Minister in any particular case) shall not be for a longer period than 10 years at any one time, subject to—

      • (i) The limitations imposed by paragraphs (d) and (e) of this subsection; and

      • (ii) No buildings being permitted under the terms of the agreement other than buildings of a temporary nature required during the period of use in any particular year:

    • (g) Erect on some portion of the reserve stands, pavilions, gymnasiums, or other buildings and structures associated with and necessary for the use of the reserve for outdoor recreation, and (subject to paragraphs (d) and (e) of this subsection as to the number of days on which a charge may be made for admission to any such building or structure) may fix reasonable charges for the use of and generally regulate the use and custody of and admission to any such buildings or structures:

      Provided that where the Minister considers it to be in the public interest, the administering body may, with the prior consent of the Minister, erect buildings and structures for public recreation and enjoyment not directly associated with outdoor recreation:

    • (h) At any time and from time to time set apart any part or parts of the reserve—

      • (i) For gardens, open spaces, footpaths, driveways, or picnic grounds, or for the provision of any other like facilities for public recreation or enjoyment or for facilities and amenities necessary for the public using the reserve; and construct or develop those gardens, open spaces, footpaths, driveways, picnic grounds, or other facilities for public recreation or enjoyment or facilities and amenities necessary for the public using the reserve; and fix reasonable charges for the use of those picnic grounds, facilities, and amenities:

      • (ii) With the prior consent of the Minister, for baths, camping grounds, parking places for vehicles, or mooring places for boats, necessary for the convenience of persons using the reserve, and construct and develop such baths, camping grounds, and parking or mooring places, and fix reasonable charges for the use of such baths, camping grounds, and parking or mooring places:

      • (iii) With the prior consent of the Minister, for compounds for animals for display to persons using the reserve, and construct and develop such compounds, and fix reasonable charges for viewing the animals therein:

    • (i) Make, stop, divert, widen, or alter any bridges, ways, or watercourses in, upon, through, across, or over any part of the reserve, subject to the payment of compensation for damage thereby to adjacent land:

      Provided that any such power in relation to watercourses shall be exercised subject to the Resource Management Act 1991:

    • (j) With the prior consent of the Minister and subject to the Resource Management Act 1991, and having regard to the need to conserve the natural beauty of any sea, lake, river, or stream bounding the reserve or of any lake, river, or stream within the reserve, do all such things on the reserve as it considers necessary, including the erection of buildings and structures on the reserve, to enable the public to obtain the maximum recreational use and enjoyment of that sea, lake, river, or stream:

    • (k) With the prior consent of the Minister, set apart and use any part of the reserve as sites for residences for officers or servants of the administering body or of rangers or for other buildings considered desirable or necessary for the proper and beneficial management, administration, control, protection, and maintenance of the reserve:

    • (l) Appoint officers and servants, whether paid or unpaid:

    • (m) With the prior consent of the Minister, erect or authorise the erection of huts for the use of officers of any department of State or other persons engaged under lawful authority in the destruction or eradication of introduced flora and fauna:

    • (n) Subject to any lease or licence granted pursuant to section 54(1)(d) of this Act, prohibit or regulate the carrying on of any trade, business, or occupation within the reserve:

    • (o) Do such other things as may be considered desirable or necessary for the proper and beneficial management, administration, and control of the reserve.

    (2) Notwithstanding anything in subsection (1) of this section, but subject to the first proviso to paragraph (d) of that subsection and to the second proviso to paragraph (e) of that subsection, where the administering body is a local authority it shall not be necessary for that administering body to obtain the consent, authority, or approval of the Minister, and it may exercise any power or discretion vested in the Minister by virtue of that subsection:

    Provided that the administering body shall not afforest the reserve or any part thereof except in accordance with section 75 of this Act.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 32, 49; 1964 No 108 s 2(1), (3)

    Subsection (1)(i) proviso was substituted, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991 (1991 No 69).

    Subsection (1)(j) was amended, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991 (1991 No 69) by substituting the words and subject to the Resource Management Act 1991 for the words and subject to the Harbours Act 1950.

54 Leasing powers in respect of recreation reserves (except farming, grazing, or afforestation leases)
  • (1) With the prior consent of the Minister, the administering body, in the case of a recreation reserve that is vested in the administering body, may from time to time, in the exercise of its functions under section 40 of this Act, may from time to time, to the extent necessary to give effect to the principles set out in section 17 of this Act,—

    • (a) Lease to any person, body, voluntary organisation, or society (whether incorporated or not) any area set apart under section 53(1)(h) of this Act for baths, a camping ground, a parking or mooring place, or other facilities for public recreation or enjoyment. The lease—

      • (i) May require the lessee to construct, develop, control, and manage the baths, camping ground, parking or mooring place, or other facilities for public recreation or enjoyment, or may require the lessee to control and manage those provided by the administering body; and

      • (ii) Shall be subject to the further provisions set out in Schedule 1 to this Act relating to leases of recreation reserves issued pursuant to this paragraph:

    • (b) Lease to any voluntary organisation part of the reserve for the erection of stands, pavilions, gymnasiums, and, subject to sections 44 and 45 of this Act, other buildings and structures associated with and necessary for the use of the reserve for outdoor sports, games, or other recreational activities, or lease to any voluntary organisation any such stands, pavilions, gymnasiums, and, subject to section 44 of this Act, other buildings or structures already on the reserve, which lease shall be subject to the further provisions set out in Schedule 1 to this Act relating to leases of recreation reserves issued pursuant to this paragraph:

      Provided that a lease granted by the administering body may, with the prior consent of the Minister given on the ground that he considers it to be in the public interest, permit the erection of buildings and structures for sports, games, or public recreation not directly associated with outdoor recreation:

    • (c) Lease to any voluntary organisation the whole or part of the reserve for the playing of any outdoor sport, games, or other recreational activity where the preparation and maintenance of the area for such sport, games, or other recreational activity requires the voluntary organisation to spend a sum of money that in the opinion of the administering body is substantial. The lease shall be subject to the further provisions set out in Schedule 1 to this Act relating to leases of recreation reserves issued pursuant to this paragraph:

    • (d) Grant leases or licences for the carrying on of any trade, business, or occupation on any specified site within the reserve, subject to the provisions set out in Schedule 1 to this Act relating to leases or licences of recreation reserves issued pursuant to this paragraph:

      Provided that the trade, business, or occupation must be necessary to enable the public to obtain the benefit and enjoyment of the reserve or for the convenience of persons using the reserve:

      Provided also that the prior consent of the Minister shall not be required to a lease or licence under this paragraph where the trade, business, or occupation is to be carried on in the reserve only temporarily and the term of the lease or licence does not exceed 6 consecutive days.

    (1A) Notwithstanding subsection (1) of this section, where—

    • (a) the administering body of a recreation reserve is a territorial authority or a regional council; and

    • (b) that reserve is vested in that territorial authority or regional council; and

    • (c) A management plan for that reserve has been approved in accordance with section 41 of this Act; and

    • (d) The lease or licence is in conformity with and contemplated by that management plan,

    the prior consent of the Minister shall not be required before the administering body grants a lease or licence under subsection (1) of this section.

    (2) Before granting any lease or licence under subsection (1) of this section (other than a lease or licence to which the second proviso to paragraph (d) applies), the administering body shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act specifying the lease or licence proposed to be granted, and shall give full consideration in accordance with section 120 of this Act to all objections and submissions in relation to the proposal received pursuant to the said section 120.

    (2A) Nothing in subsection (2) of this section shall apply in any case where the proposal—

    • (a) Is in conformity with and contemplated by the approved management plan for the reserve; or

    • (b) Is made following the granting of a resource consent under the Resource Management Act 1991 where the application for the resource consent was notified in accordance with section 93(2) of that Act.

    (3) [Repealed]

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 27(2)-(9)

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 8(1)(a) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words and the Minister, in the case of any other recreation reserve,.

    The proviso to subsection (1)(b) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 8(1)(b) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words and a lease granted by the Minister may, where he considers it to be in the public interest,.

    Subsection (1)(c) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 8(1)(c) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words or the Minister, as the case may be,.

    Subsection (1A) was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 17 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (1A)(a) and (1A)(b) was substituted, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84). See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

    Subsection (2) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 8(1)(c) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words or the Minister, as the case may be,.

    Subsection (2A) was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 18(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (2A)(a) was amended, as from 10 April 1990, by section 98 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31) by inserting the words conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or.

    Subsection (2A)(a) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 8(1)(d) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or.

    Subsection (2A)(b) was substituted, as from 23 July 1993, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act (No 3) 1993 (1993 No 75).

    Subsection (2A)(b) was amended, as from 1 August 2003, by section 99 Resource Management Amendment Act 2003 (2003 No 23) by substituting the expression section 93(2) for the expression section 93. See sections 109 to 113 of that Act as to the transitional and savings provisions.

    Subsection (3) was repealed, as from 1 January 1980, by section 20(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

55 Powers (other than leasing) in respect of scenic reserves
  • (1) The administering body of a scenic reserve may from time to time, in the exercise of its functions under section 40 of this Act and to the extent necessary to give effect to the principles set out in section 19 of this Act,—

    • (a) Enclose the reserve or any part or parts thereof which the administering body may at any time decide is necessary or desirable to improve or allow to regenerate, and may improve the reserve or that part or those parts, or, as the case may be, allow the reserve or that part or those parts to regenerate:

      Provided that the prior approval of the Minister shall be obtained to any planting of trees or shrubs:

    • (b) Prohibit the public from entering or encroaching on any part of the reserve so improved or being allowed to regenerate:

    • (c) Subject to section 42 of this Act, lay out and construct footpaths and driveways necessary for the management of the reserve or to enable the public to use and enjoy the reserve:

    • (d) Make, stop, divert, widen, or alter any bridges, ways, or watercourses in, upon, through, across, or over any part of the reserve, subject to the payment of compensation for damage thereby to adjacent lands:

      Provided that any such power in relation to watercourses shall be exercised subject to the Resource Management Act 1991:

      Provided also that the exercise of any such power shall not alter or impair the natural water table or any stands of indigenous swamp vegetation or other indigenous vegetation:

    • (e) Appoint officers, servants, and rangers, whether paid or unpaid:

    • (f) Do such other things as may be considered desirable or necessary for the proper and beneficial management, administration, and control of the reserve.

    (2) The administering body of a scenic reserve, in the exercise of its functions under section 40 of this Act and to the extent necessary to give effect to the principles set out in section 19 of this Act, may also from time to time on the open portions of the reserve—

    • (a) With the prior consent of the Minister and having regard to the conservation of natural vegetation and features, enclose any open parts of the reserve which the administering body may at any time decide is necessary or desirable to lay down or renew in grass or graze:

    • (b) Prohibit the public from entering or encroaching on any part so laid down, renewed, or grazed:

    • (c) Subject to any lease or licence granted pursuant to section 56(1)(b) of this Act, prohibit or regulate the carrying on of any trade, business, or occupation within the reserve:

    • (d) With the prior consent of the Minister and having regard to the conservation of natural vegetation and features, set apart any areas for gardens, baths, picnic grounds, camping grounds, parking places for vehicles, or mooring places for boats necessary for the convenience of the public using the reserve or for facilities and amenities necessary for the public using the reserve; and construct or develop such gardens, baths, picnic grounds, camping grounds, parking or mooring places, or other facilities and amenities; and fix reasonable charges for the use of such baths, picnic grounds, camping grounds, parking or mooring places, facilities, and amenities:

    • (e) With the prior consent of the Minister, erect buildings and other structures on such terms as to plans, size, structure, situation, and otherwise in all respects as the administering body determines:

    • (f) With the prior consent of the Minister, and subject to the Resource Management Act 1991, and having regard to the need to conserve the natural beauty of any sea, lake, river, or stream bounding the reserve, or of any lake, river, or stream within the reserve, do all such things as it considers necessary, including the erection of buildings and structures for public use, to enable the public to obtain the benefit and enjoyment of that sea, lake, river, or stream:

    • (g) With the prior consent of the Minister, set apart and use any part of the reserve as sites for residences for officers or servants of the administering body or for rangers, and for other buildings and structures necessary for the proper and beneficial management, administration, and control of the reserve, and for the protection, maintenance, and well-being of the reserve.

    (3) The Minister shall not give his consent under any provision of paragraphs (d) to (g) of subsection (2) of this section, unless he is satisfied that the facilities or amenities or buildings or structures referred to in that provision are necessary for the purposes specified in the relevant paragraph and cannot readily be provided outside and in close proximity to the reserve.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 61A, 61B, 61C; 1956 No 35 s 14; 1958 No 90 ss 2, 3; 1968 No 126 s 4

    Subsection (1)(d) first proviso was substituted, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991 (1991 No 69).

    Subsection (2)(f) was amended, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991, by substituting the words and subject to the Resource Management Act 1991 for the words and subject to the Harbours Act 1950.

56 Leasing powers in respect of scenic reserves
  • (1) With the prior consent of the Minister, the administering body, in the case of a scenic reserve that is vested in the administering body, may from time to time, in the exercise of its functions under section 40 of this Act, may from time to time, to the extent necessary to give effect to the principles set out in section 19 of this Act,—

    • (a) Lease to any person, body, voluntary organisation, or society (whether incorporated or not) any area set apart under section 55(2)(d) of this Act for baths, a picnic ground, a camping ground, a parking or mooring place, or other facilities or amenities for public recreation and enjoyment. The lease shall be subject to the further provisions set out in Schedule 1 to this Act relating to leases of scenic reserves:

    • (b) Grant leases or licences for the carrying on of any trade, business, or occupation on any specified site within the reserve, subject in the case of any such lease or licence to the provisions set out in Schedule 1 to this Act relating to scenic reserves:

      Provided that the trade, business, or occupation must be necessary to enable the public to obtain the benefit and enjoyment of the reserve or for the convenience of persons using the reserve:

      Provided also that the prior consent of the Minister shall not be required to a lease or licence under this paragraph where the trade, business, or occupation is to be carried on in the reserve only temporarily and the term of the lease or licence does not exceed 6 consecutive days.

    (2) Before granting any lease or licence under subsection (1) of this section (other than a lease or licence to which the second proviso to paragraph (b) applies), the administering body shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act specifying the lease or licence proposed to be granted, and shall give full consideration in accordance with section 120 of this Act to all objections and submissions in relation to the proposal received pursuant to the said section 120.

    (3) Nothing in subsection (2) of this section shall apply in any case where the proposal—

    • (a) Is in conformity with and contemplated by the approved management plan for the reserve; or

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 27(10A); 1956 No 35 s 9

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 9(1)(a) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words and the Minister, in the case of any other scenic reserve,.

    Subsection (2) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 9(1)(b) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words or the Minister, as the case may be,.

    Subsection (3) was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 18(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (3)(a) was amended, as from 10 April 1990, by section 99 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31) by inserting the words conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or.

    Subsection (3)(a) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 9(1)(c) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or.

    Subsection (3)(b) was substituted, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991 (1991 No 69).

57 Powers in respect of nature reserves
  • (1) The Minister or the administering body of any nature reserve authorised by the Minister may issue permits granting access to a nature reserve subject to any conditions that are specified in any such permit.

    (2) The Minister or the administering body of any nature reserve authorised by the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, declare that access to all or part of any nature reserve in the North Island, South Island, Stewart Island, or Chatham Island (but not any other island of the Chatham group) is permitted without a permit during such times or periods as are specified in the notice, and subject to any other conditions that are specified in the notice.

    (3) The Minister or the administering body of any nature reserve authorised by the Minister may, where he considers it necessary for the purposes specified in section 20(1) of this Act, by notice in the Gazette, prohibit the anchoring or mooring of boats within a specified area not more than half a nautical mile of the shore of any island that is wholly or principally a nature reserve, otherwise than in accordance with a permit granted under subsection (7) of this section.

    (4) No notice given under subsection (3) of this section shall specify any area that is within a marine reserve constituted under the Marine Reserves Act 1971.

    (5) The Minister or the administering body, as the case may be, shall not give any notice under subsection (3) of this section without the consent of the Minister of Fisheries given after consultation with an organisation considered by the Minister of Fisheries to be representative of the classes of persons having an interest in the giving of the notice, the consent of the Minister of Transport, and, where the area proposed to be specified in the notice is within the limits of any harbour, the consent of the appropriate harbour board.

    (6) Nothing in any notice given under subsection (3) of this section shall affect any right of navigation or apply in an emergency.

    (7) Where any notice has been given under subsection (3) of this section, the Minister or the administering body, as the case may be, may issue permits allowing any person to anchor or moor a specified vessel or any vessel within any area to which the notice relates subject to any conditions that are specified in the permit.

    (8) Where the giving of any notice under subsection (2) or subsection (3) of this section is not in conformity with and contemplated by the approved conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or management plan for the reserve, the Minister or the administering body, as the case may be, shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act of the proposal to give the notice, and shall give full consideration to all objections and submissions received pursuant to section 120 of this Act in relation to the proposal.

    (9) The administering body of a nature reserve may from time to time, in the exercise of its functions under section 40 of this Act and to the extent necessary to give effect to the principles set out in section 20 of this Act,—

    • (a) Subject to subsection (10) of this section, set apart and use any part or parts of the reserve as sites for residences for officers or servants of the administering body or for rangers, and for other buildings and structures necessary for the proper and beneficial management, administration, and control of the reserve and for the protection, preservation, and well-being of the indigenous flora and fauna and other features in the reserve:

    • (b) Appoint officers, servants, and rangers, whether paid or unpaid:

    • (c) Do such other things as may be considered necessary for the proper and beneficial management, administration, and control of the reserve and for the protection, preservation, and well-being of the indigenous flora and fauna and other features in the reserve.

    (10) The powers conferred on administering bodies by paragraph (a) of subsection (9) of this section shall not be exercised without the consent of the Minister, which shall not be given unless the Minister is satisfied that the residences, buildings, or structures are necessary for the purposes specified in that paragraph, and cannot readily be provided outside and in close proximity to the reserve.

    Section 57 was substituted, as from 27 December 1983, by section 6(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43).

    Subsection (5) was amended, as from 1 October 2002, by section 5(3) Fishing Industry Board Repeal Act 2001 (2001 No 34) by substituting the words an organisation considered by the Minister of Fisheries to be representative of the classes of persons having an interest in the giving of the notice for the words the Fishing Industry Board.

    Subsection (8) was amended, as from 10 April 1990, by section 100 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31) by inserting the words conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or.

58 Powers in respect of historic reserves
  • The administering body of an historic reserve may from time to time, in the exercise of its functions under section 40 of this Act and to the extent necessary to give effect to the principles set out in section 18 of this Act,—

    • (a) Appoint officers, servants, and rangers, whether paid or unpaid:

    • (b) With the prior consent of the Minister, set apart and use part of the reserve as sites for residences for officers or servants of the administering body or for rangers, and for other buildings necessary for the proper and beneficial management, protection, and maintenance of the reserve, and for the provision of displays and information for visitors to the reserve:

      Provided that the Minister shall not give his consent under this paragraph, unless he is satisfied that the residences or buildings are necessary for the purposes specified in this paragraph and cannot readily be provided outside and in close proximity to the reserve:

    • (c) Charge such fees for admission to the whole or any part of the reserve, and for the use of amenities and facilities thereon, as the Minister approves:

    • (d) Do such other things as may be considered necessary or desirable for the proper and beneficial management, administration, and control of the reserve.

58A Leasing powers in respect of historic reserves
  • (1) The administering body with the prior consent of the Minister and in the exercise of its functions under section 40 of this Act (in the case of an historic reserve that is vested in an administering body), may from time to time grant leases or licences to any person, body, voluntary organisation, or society (whether incorporated or not) for domestic residential purposes or for the carrying on of any activity, trade, business, or occupation in any building or on any specified site within the reserve and grant leases of any such building or site for any such purpose or purposes.

    (2) Before granting any lease or licence under subsection (1) of this section , the administering body shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act specifying the lease or licence proposed to be granted, and shall give full consideration in accordance with section 120 of this Act to all objections and submissions in relation to the proposal received pursuant to the said section 120.

    (3) Nothing in subsection (2) of this section shall apply in any case where the proposal—

    • (a) Is in conformity with and contemplated by the approved management plan for the reserve; or

    • (b) Is made following the granting of any appropriate resource consent granted by the territorial authority or regional council in accordance with Part 6 of the Resource Management Act 1991.

    (4) A lease granted pursuant to subsection (1) of this section shall be subject to the following conditions:

    • (a) It shall be for a term not exceeding 33 years, with or without a right of renewal, perpetual or otherwise, for the same or any shorter term, but with no right of acquiring the fee simple, and, subject to paragraph (b) of this subsection, shall be on such other conditions as the administering body determines:

    • (b) It shall include a condition that the land leased shall be used solely for such purposes as are specified in the lease, and that upon breach of that condition the administering body may terminate the lease in such manner as is prescribed or implied in the lease, whereupon the land, together with all improvements, shall revert to the lessor without compensation being payable to the lessee for improvements or otherwise.

    Section 58A was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 19(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (1) was substituted, as from 27 December 1983, by section 7(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43).

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 10(1)(a) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words , or the Minister, (in the case of any other historic reserve),

    Subsection (2) was amended, as from 27 December 1983, by section 7(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43) by omitting the words (other than a lease or licence to which the proviso to paragraph (b) of that subsection applies).

    Subsection (2) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 10(1)(b) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words or the Minister, as the case may be,.

    Subsection (3)(a) was amended, as from 10 April 1990, by section 101 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31) by inserting the words conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or.

    Subsection (3)(a) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 10(1)(b) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or.

    Subsection (3)(b) was substituted, as from 1 October 1991, by section 362 Resource Management Act 1991 (1991 No 69).

    Subsection (3)(b) was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by substituting the words territorial authority or regional council for the word council. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

59 Powers in respect of scientific reserves
  • (1) Where the Minister has issued a notice under section 21(2)(b) of this Act prohibiting entry to a scientific reserve or to any part of such a reserve, he may from time to time authorise the administering body, or the Commissioner where there is no administering body, to issue to any person who in the opinion of the administering body or the Commissioner, as the case may be, has the necessary credentials or qualifications a permit affording access to the reserve or to that part for scientific study or for control and management purposes, upon such terms and conditions as the administering body or the Commissioner, as the case may be, may determine.

    (2) The administering body of a scientific reserve may from time to time, in the exercise of its functions under section 40 of this Act and to the extent necessary to give effect to the principles set out in section 21 of this Act,—

    • (a) Appoint officers, servants, and rangers, whether paid or unpaid:

    • (b) Do such other things, including the erection of buildings, as may be necessary or desirable for the proper and beneficial management, control, and administration of the reserve:

    Provided that the administering body shall not erect any building on the reserve unless it cannot readily be provided outside and in close proximity to the reserve.

    (3) The Minister or the administering body of any scientific reserve authorised by the Minister may, where he considers it necessary for the purposes specified in section 21(1) of this Act, by notice in the Gazette, prohibit the anchoring or mooring of boats within a specified area not more than half a nautical mile off the shore of any island that is wholly or principally a scientific reserve, otherwise than in accordance with a permit granted under subsection (7) of this section.

    (4) No notice given under subsection (3) of this section shall specify any area that is within a marine reserve constituted under the Marine Reserves Act 1971.

    (5) The Minister or the administering body, as the case may be, shall not give any notice under subsection (3) of this section without the consent of the Minister of Fisheries given after consultation with an organisation considered by the Minister of Fisheries to be representative of the classes of persons having an interest in the giving of the notice, the consent of the Minister of Transport, and, where the area proposed to be specified in the notice is within the limits of any harbour, the consent of the appropriate harbour board.

    (6) Nothing in any notice given under subsection (3) of this section shall affect any right of navigation or apply in an emergency.

    (7) Where any notice has been given under subsection (3) of this section, the Minister or the administering body, as the case may be, may issue permits allowing any person to anchor or moor a specified vessel or any vessel within any area to which the notice relates, subject to any conditions that are specified in the permit.

    (8) Where the giving of any notice under subsection (3) of this section is not in conformity with and contemplated by the approved conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or management plan for the reserve, the Minister or the administering body, as the case may be, shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act of the proposal to give the notice, and shall give full consideration to all objections and submissions received pursuant to section 120 of this Act in relation to the proposal.

    Subsections (3) to (5) were inserted, as from 27 December 1983, by section 8 Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43).

    Subsection (5) was amended, as from 1 October 2002, by section 5(3) Fishing Industry Board Repeal Act 2001 (2001 No 34) by substituting the words an organisation considered by the Minister of Fisheries to be representative of the classes of persons having an interest in the giving of the notice for the words Fishing Industry Board. The word the was editorially omitted.

    Subsections (6) to (8) were inserted, as from 27 December 1983, by section 8 Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43).

    Subsection (8) was amended, as from 10 April 1990, by section 102 Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31) by inserting the words conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or.

59A Granting of concessions on reserves administered by Crown
  • (1) The Minister may, in accordance with Part 3B of the Conservation Act 1987, grant a concession in respect of any reserve vested in the Crown, including any reserve controlled or managed by an administering body under any of sections 28, 29, 30, 35, and 36 of this Act; and the said Part 3B shall apply as if references in that Part to a conservation area were references to such a reserve and with any other necessary modifications.

    (2) The Minister may impose a reasonable charge for the use of any facilities (other than a path or track) provided by the Minister in or in respect of any such reserve.

    (3) In the case of any concession over or in respect of a reserve controlled or managed by an administering body, any reference in the provisions referred to in subsection (1) of this section to any conservation management strategy or conservation management plan shall be read as if it were a reference to a management plan approved under section 41 of this Act.

    (4) A concessionaire of any part of any such reserve may, to the extent that the relevant concession document so provides, impose a reasonable charge for the use of any facility (other than a path or track) provided by the Minister in or in respect of any such reserve.

    (5) Any person who—

    • (a) Has, in accordance with any concession or other consent of the Minister, erected any structure or facility in any reserve; or

    • (b) Uses for camping sites or for parking places for vehicles any part of any reserve; or

    • (c) Carries on any activity in any reserve—

    may, subject to the relevant conservation management strategy or conservation management plan (if any) and the terms and conditions (if any) of the concession document concerned, impose a reasonable charge in respect of access to or the use of structures, sites, or places, or the carrying on or products of the activity.

    (6) Nothing in this section authorises any person to do anything on or in respect of any private land.

    (7) This section does not apply to any permit granted under section 57 of this Act that authorises a person to enter a nature reserve or a permit granted under section 59 of this Act that authorises a person to enter a scientific reserve.

    (8) This section does not apply to any reserve vested in an administering body under section 26 of this Act.

    (9) This section is subject to Part 2 of the Forests (West Coast Accord) Act 2000, in relation to land that is a reserve, or added to an existing reserve, as a result of a declaration under section 8(1) of that Act.

    Section 59A was inserted, as from 30 July 1988, by section 2(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1988 (1988 No 137).

    The original subsection (2) was amended, as from 10 April 1990, by section 103(a) Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31) by substituting the words a conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or management plan applicable to the reserve concerned for the words the management plan of the reserve concerned.

    The original subsection (7) was amended, as from 10 April 1990, by section 103(b) Conservation Law Reform Act 1990 (1990 No 31) by substituting the words any conservation management strategy, conservation management plan, or management plan applicable to the reserve, for the words the reserve's management plan.

    Section 59A was substituted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 11(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3). See also section 11(4) to (6) of that Act, and section 21 of that Act as to the transitional provisions relating to existing leases.

    Subsection (9) was added, as from 21 October 2000, by section 22 Forests (West Coast Accord) Act 2000 (2000 No 45).

60 Powers in respect of Government purpose reserves
  • Subject to sections 22 and 40 of this Act, the administering body of a Government purpose reserve may do such things as are necessary or desirable for the proper and beneficial administration, management, and control of the reserve and for its use for the purposes specified in its classification.

61 Powers (including leasing) in respect of local purpose reserves
  • (1) The administering body of a local purpose reserve may, in the exercise of its functions under section 40 of this Act, do such things as it may from time to time consider necessary or desirable for the proper and beneficial management, administration, and control of the reserve and for the use of the reserve for the purpose specified in its classification.

    (2) The administering body, in the case of a local purpose reserve that is vested in the administering body, is hereby declared to be a leasing authority of that reserve for the purposes of the Public Bodies Leases Act 1969.

    (2A) In addition to the powers of leasing conferred by subsection (2) of this section, the administering body, in the case of a local purpose reserve that is vested in the administering body, may lease all or any part of the reserve to any person, body, voluntary organisation, or society (whether incorporated or not) for any of the following purposes:

    • (a) Community building, playcentre, kindergarten, plunket room, or other like purposes:

    • (b) Farming, grazing, cultivation, cropping, or other like purposes.

    (2B) A lease granted pursuant to subsection (2A) of this section shall be subject to the following provisions:

    • (a) The lease shall be for a term not exceeding 33 years, with or without a right of renewal, perpetual or otherwise, for the same or any shorter term, but with no right of acquiring the fee simple, and, subject to paragraph (b) of this subsection, shall be on such other conditions as the administering body determines:

    • (b) The lease shall include a condition that the land leased shall be used solely for such purposes as are specified in the lease, and that upon breach of that condition the administering body may terminate the lease in such manner as is prescribed or implied in the lease, whereupon the land, together with all improvements, shall revert to the lessor without compensation being payable to the lessee for improvements or otherwise.

    (3) The powers of leasing conferred on an administering body by this section shall, with respect to any local purpose reserve which is not vested in an administering body, be exercised by the Commissioner.

    Subsections (2A) and (2B) were inserted, as from 20 October 1978, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act 1978 (1978 No 121).

61A Leases in respect of reserves for aerodrome purposes
  • Nothing in this Act shall prevent any airport authority (as defined in the Airport Authorities Act 1966) from exercising the powers conferred by section 6 of that Act in respect of any reserve vested in that authority as a local purpose reserve for aerodrome purposes.

    Section 61A was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 20(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

62 Powers of Commissioner
  • (1) The powers, functions, and duties conferred and imposed on an administering body by this Act shall, with respect to any reserve which is not under the control and management of an administering body, be exercised and performed by the Commissioner, who shall have and may exercise over the reserve all the powers of an administering body.

    (2) The Commissioner for the land district in which is situated any reserve vested in Her Majesty shall, where not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act, have and may exercise and perform over that reserve all rights, powers, duties, and functions which he has over Crown land.

    (3) If the Director-General considers that a reserve which is not under the control and management of an administering body or of a Minister of the Crown other than the Minister of Conservation would be better administered by the Commissioner for an adjoining land district, or that the whole of such a reserve which is partly situated in 2 or more land districts would be better administered by the Commissioner for one of those districts, he may, by notice in writing, direct that that other Commissioner or, as the case may be, a specified Commissioner shall exercise and perform in respect of that reserve the rights, powers, duties, and functions conferred or imposed by subsections (1) and (2) of this section; and he may by like notice revoke or from time to time amend that direction.

    (4) If the Director-General considers that a reserve which is not under the control and management of an administering body or of a Minister of the Crown other than the Minister of Conservation would be better administered by a committee appointed under section 9 of this Act, he may by notice in writing direct that that committee shall exercise and perform the rights, powers, duties, and functions conferred or imposed on the Commissioner by subsections (1) and (2) of this section; and he may by like notice revoke or from time to time amend that direction.

    (5) If the Director-General considers that a reserve which is not under the control and management of an administering body or of a Minister of the Crown other than the Minister of Lands would be better administered by himself, he may, by notice in writing to the Commissioner or Commissioners concerned, assume the rights, powers, duties, and functions conferred or imposed on Commissioners by subsections (1) and (2) of this section; and he may, by like notice, relinquish those rights, powers, duties, and functions, which shall thereupon be exercised and performed by a Commissioner in accordance with this section.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 25, 52

    Section 62 heading: amended, on 27 March 2008, by section 4 of the Reserves Amendment Act 2008 (2008 No 17).

    Subsections (3) and (4) were amended, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65) by substituting the word Conservation for the word Lands..

63 Reserves not vested in the Crown
  • (1) The rights, powers, duties, and functions conferred or imposed on Commissioners by section 62(2) of this Act shall, in the case of any reserve not vested in the Crown, be had and exercised or performed by the administering body in which the reserve is vested.

    (2) The powers vested in any local authority by virtue of this section or of any other provisions of this Act shall be exercised by it in the manner in which it exercises any like powers conferred on it by the Act by or under which it is constituted.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 26

64 Administering body may purchase land on deferred payments
  • (1) Any administering body may enter into a contract for the purchase of land upon terms providing for payment of the whole or part or parts of the purchase money at a future date or dates, and for payment of interest upon any unpaid purchase money at a rate authorised by the Minister:

    Provided that no such contract shall be valid unless—

    • (a) The Minister expressly approves the same by writing endorsed thereon; and

    • (b) It is expressly provided therein—

      • (i) That the vendor shall have no claim or right of action in respect of any unpaid purchase money or interest against the Crown or upon the Government or public revenues of New Zealand; and

      • (ii) That upon payment in full of the purchase money the land shall, by conveyance or transfer from the vendor, be vested in the administering body in any case where the reserve administered by it is vested in that body, and be vested in the Crown in any other case.

    (1A) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of the proviso to subsection (1) of this section, the approval of the Minister shall not be required in any case where the administering body is a territorial authority or regional council.

    (2) All land so purchased shall, on the taking possession thereof by the administering body, be administered in accordance with the appropriate provisions of this Act as if it were part of the reserve controlled by the administering body, and on the conveyance or transfer thereof to the administering body or to the Crown, as the case may be, shall become part of that reserve.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 50

    Subsection (1A) was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 21 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (1A) was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by inserting the words or regional council. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

Special provisions as to recreation reserves set apart for racecourse purposes

65 Bylaws
  • (1) The administering body of any recreation reserve set apart for racecourse purposes may from time to time, subject to section 108 of this Act, make bylaws with respect to all or any of the following matters:

    • (a) Regulating its own proceedings:

    • (b) Excluding the public from such parts of the reserve as it may be found necessary and desirable to plant, improve, lay down, or renew in grass:

    • (c) Prescribing the conditions on which persons shall have access to or be excluded from the reserve when it is used for racing purposes, and for regulating the price for admission of persons to the reserve or to any stand erected thereon and for the admission of horses and vehicles of any description to the reserve on those occasions:

    • (d) Granting the exclusive use and control of the reserve, or of any part set apart as a racecourse, to any racing club when the reserve is used for racing purposes, and prescribing the terms and conditions on which that use and control shall be granted:

    • (e) Regulating the charges that may be made for the occupation of portions of the reserve for the erection of booths or stalls for the sale of refreshments, merchandise, goods, or chattels:

    • (f) The preservation of order on the reserve during race meetings.

    (2) All bylaws made under subsection (1) of this section shall be notified once by advertisement as to the nature thereof in one or more newspapers circulating in the locality in which the reserve is situate, and by being posted on some conspicuous place on the reserve so that they may be easily read.

    (3) In this section and in sections 66 to 70 of this Act the expression recreation reserve set apart for racecourse purposes includes a reserve which immediately before the commencement of this Act was a reserve set apart for racecourse purposes.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 35

66 Club may use reserve on conditions
  • Every recreation reserve set apart for racecourse purposes shall be available to any racing club for the purpose of holding race meetings on such terms and conditions as are from time to time advertised by the administering body, and on such dates as that body in every such case appoints:

    Provided that no such club shall be entitled to use the reserve unless it consists of not fewer than 50 members who each pays an annual subscription of not less than $10 towards the funds of the club.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 36

67 Leasing
  • (1) The administering body may from time to time lease the whole or any part of a recreation reserve set apart for racecourse purposes at such rent and on such conditions, not inconsistent with the purposes of the reserve, as it thinks reasonable—

    • (a) To any person for any term or terms of years not exceeding 7 years at any one time:

    • (b) With the prior consent of the Minister and subject to such conditions as he prescribes, to any racing club for a term of years not exceeding 33 years, with or without provision for renewal for one or more further similar terms.

    (2) The powers of leasing conferred by this section are in addition to and not in substitution for the power of leasing conferred by sections 54 and 73 of this Act.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 37

68 Application of revenue
  • (1) All money received by the administering body of a recreation reserve set apart for racecourse purposes as the rents, issues, and profits of the reserve shall, within 7 days after receipt by the Treasurer or other proper officer of the administering body, be paid into such bank as that body from time to time appoints to an account to be called The [Name of racecourse reserve] Trustees Account, and, after deducting therefrom all necessary expenses incurred in the management of the reserve, be applied in and towards the fencing of the reserve or any part thereof, the erection of stands and pavilions thereon, the cultivation and improvement thereof, and in rendering any part thereof that may be set apart as a racecourse suitable for that purpose.

    (2) The administering body may also, with the prior consent of the Minister, expend such part of its funds, including money to which subsection (1) of this section applies, as it from time to time thinks fit towards the assistance of charitable, educational, or cultural purposes, or for the management, improvement, and maintenance of any reserve of any kind under this Act.

    Subsection (2) was amended, as from 17 December 1985, by section 2(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1985 (1985 No 188) by inserting the words , including money to which subsection (1) of this section applies,.

69 Annual statement of accounts and report
  • Every administering body of a recreation reserve set apart for racecourse purposes shall, within one month after the close of each financial year of that body, prepare and submit to the Audit Office for audit the statements specified in section 88 of this Act, together with the report referred to in that section.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 39

70 Special Acts dealing with racecourse reserves to be read subject to this Act
  • (1) The provisions of any Act of the General Assembly or of any Provincial Ordinance or of any Crown grant dealing with or referring to any racecourse reserve, shall, so far as they may be inconsistent with this Act, be read subject to this Act, and the powers conferred by sections 65 to 69 of this Act on the administering body of a recreation reserve set apart for racecourse purposes are hereby likewise conferred on any bodies or persons having control of any such reserve as aforesaid.

    (2) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any other Act or Provincial Ordinance, the Minister may from time to time, by notice under his hand, appoint members of the administering body of a recreation reserve set apart for racecourse purposes to fill any vacancies.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 40

Farming and other leases

71 Farming by administering body
  • (1) Where all or any part of any recreation reserve or any local purpose reserve is not for the time being required for the purpose for which it is classified, or where the administering body of a recreation reserve has decided under section 53(1)(a)(ii) of this Act that it is necessary or desirable to farm or graze the reserve or any part of the reserve in a development, improvement, or management programme, the administering body may, with the prior consent of the Minister, and subject to such conditions as the Minister determines, farm or graze the reserve or that part thereof.

    (2) The administering body must satisfy the Minister that it has the financial resources and managerial ability to carry out such farming or grazing, and that it has provided or will provide adequate safeguards to prevent the destruction of or damage to any natural, scenic, historic, archaeological, geological, or other scientific features or indigenous flora and fauna.

    (3) Where the administering body is a local authority, it shall not be necessary for that administering body to obtain the Minister's consent under subsection (1) of this section or to satisfy the Minister under subsection (2) of this section.

72 Farming by another person or body
  • (1) Where all or any part of any recreation reserve or local purpose reserve is not for the time being required for the purpose specified in its classification, or where the administering body of a recreation reserve has decided under section 53(1)(a)(ii) of this Act that it is necessary or desirable to farm or graze any part of the reserve as part of a development, improvement, or management programme, the administering body may enter into an agreement or lease with the Minister providing for the carrying out by another person or body of farming or grazing operations, including the development and improvement of the land on behalf of the administering body, on such terms and conditions (including the repayment of development costs) as may be agreed upon between the Minister and the administering body:

    Provided that where in the case of a recreation reserve or local purpose reserve vested in the Crown there is no administering body, the Commissioner may, with the approval of the Minister, enter into an agreement with another person or body to farm or graze the reserve or part thereof as part of any development, improvement, or management programme.

    (2) [Repealed]

    (3) The agreement or lease shall include a condition providing adequate safeguards to prevent the destruction of or damage to any natural, scenic, historic, cultural, archaeological, geological, or other scientific features or indigenous flora and fauna.

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 1 April 1987, by section 11(1) State-Owned Enterprises Amendment Act 1987 (1987 No 117) by substituting the words another person or body for the words Land Settlement Board.

    The original subsection (2) was amended, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65) by substituting the word Conservation for the word Lands.

    Subsection (2) was repealed, as from 1 April 1987, by section 11(1) State-Owned Enterprises Amendment Act 1987 (1987 No 117).

73 Leasing of recreation reserves for farming, grazing, afforestation, or other purposes
  • (1) Where any recreation reserve or any part of such a reserve is not for the time being required for the purpose for which it was classified, or where the Minister considers it in the public interest, or where the administering body of any recreation reserve has decided under section 53(1)(a)(ii) of this Act that it is necessary or desirable to farm or graze the reserve or any part thereof, leases of the reserve or of any part thereof may be granted by the administering body with the prior consent of the Minister in cases where the reserve is vested in such a body, or by the Minister in any other case.

    (2) Where the administering body has decided under section 53(1)(a)(ii) of this Act that it is necessary or desirable to afforest any part of a recreation reserve, leases of the whole or any part thereof may be granted by the administering body with the prior consent of the Minister in cases where the reserve is vested in such a body, or by the Minister in any other case.

    (3) Where any recreation reserve or any part of such a reserve is not being used for the purposes of a recreation reserve and in the opinion of the Minister is not likely to be used for that purpose, but it is inadvisable or inexpedient to revoke the reservation, leases of the whole or any part thereof may be granted by the administering body with the prior consent of the Minister in cases where the reserve is vested in such a body, or by the Minister in any other case.

    (3A) Every lease granted under subsection (1) or subsection (2) or subsection (3) of this section,—

    • (a) In the case of a reserve vested in an administering body, shall be subject to the further provisions set out in Schedule 1 to this Act relating to leases of recreation reserves issued pursuant to that subsection:

    • (b) In the case of a reserve vested in the Crown, shall be issued in accordance with the provisions of Part 3B of the Conservation Act 1987 and those provisions shall apply as follows:

      • (i) In the case of any concession over or in respect of a reserve controlled or managed by an administering body, every reference in the said Part 3B to a conservation management strategy or conservation management plan shall be read as a reference to a management plan approved under section 41 of this Act, but otherwise the said Part 3B shall apply as if every reference to a conservation area were a reference to such a reserve and with any other necessary modifications:

      • (ii) In the case of any other reserve vested in the Crown, the said Part 3B shall apply as if every reference to a conservation area were a reference to such a reserve and with any other necessary modifications.

    (4) Before granting any lease under subsection (1), or subsection (2), or subsection (3) of this section, the administering body shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act specifying the lease proposed to be granted, and shall give full consideration in accordance with section 120 of this Act to all objections and submissions in relation to the proposal received pursuant to the said section 120.

    (5) No member of an administering body may become the lessee of any land under the control of that body without the prior consent in writing of the Minister.

    (6) Any lease granted under this section may, with the approval of the administering body, be surrendered on such terms as are agreed upon by the lessee and the administering body.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 27

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 12(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words The lease shall be subject to the further provisions set out in Schedule 1 to this Act relating to leases of recreation reserves issued pursuant to this subsection.

    Subsection (2) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 12(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words The lease shall be subject to the further provisions set out in Schedule 1 to this Act relating to leases of recreation reserves issued pursuant to this subsection.

    Subsection (3) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 12(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words The lease shall be subject to the further provisions set out in Schedule 1 to this Act relating to leases of recreation reserves issued pursuant to this subsection.

    Subsection (3A) was inserted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 12(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Subsection (4) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 12(3) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by omitting the words or the Minister, as the case may be,.

    Subsection (6) was substituted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 12(4) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

74 Licences to occupy reserves temporarily
  • (1) Licences may be granted under subsection (2) of this section for any purpose specified in that subsection, and the conditions thereof and the rents, royalties, and fees payable thereunder shall be fixed—

    • (a) In the case of a Government purpose reserve, by the Minister of the Crown (other than the Minister of Conservation) appointed to control and manage the reserve:

    • (aa) In the case of a Government purpose reserve controlled by the Minister, by the Minister in accordance with the provisions of Part 3B of the Conservation Act 1987:

    • (b) In the case of any other reserve except a nature reserve—

      • (i) By the administering body where the reserve is vested in or controlled and managed by such a body:

      • (ii) By the Commissioner in any other case:

    Provided that a licence to occupy any historic, scenic, or scientific reserve, or any part thereof, shall not be granted without the consent of the Minister.

    (2) Where, in the opinion of the Minister or, as the case may be, the administering body or the Commissioner, it is necessary or desirable for the management of the reserve for the purpose for which it is classified, licences to occupy any recreation, historic, scenic, scientific, Government purpose, or local purpose reserve, or any part of any such reserve, may be granted for the following purposes:

    • (a) Grazing, gardening, or other similar purposes:

    • (b) Cutting, felling, or removing timber or flax, or to win and remove timber or flax or to win and remove kauri gum.

    (3) Before granting any licence under subsection (2) of this section, the administering body or the Minister of the Crown (not being the Minister of Conservation), as the case may be, shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act specifying the licence proposed to be granted, and shall give full consideration in accordance with section 120 of this Act to all objections and submissions in relation to the proposal received pursuant to the said section 120.

    (3A) Nothing in subsection (3) of this section shall apply—

    • (a) In the case of any Government purpose reserve or local purposes reserve; or

    • (b) In the case of any recreation, historic, scenic, or scientific reserve, where public notice of the proposal has been given under any other provision of this Act or where the reserve is vested in the Crown.

    (3B) The Minister may, in respect of any reserve administered or controlled by him or her, grant a concession in accordance with the provisions of Part 3B of the Conservation Act 1987 as if the reserve were a conservation area; and that Act shall apply accordingly.

    (4) The duration of a licence under this section to occupy a reserve or any part thereof shall not exceed 5 years.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 29; 1955 No 83 s 3; 1971 No 25 s 245

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 27 December 1983, by section 9(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43) by substituting the words may be granted ... in that subsection, for the words under this section may be granted.

    Subsection (3A) was inserted, as from 1 January 1980,, by section 18(3) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Subsection (3) was amended, as from 27 December 1983, by section 9(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1983 (1983 No 43) by omitting the words subsection (1) or.

    Subsection (1)(a) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 13(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by inserting after the word Crown the words (other than the Minister of Conservation).

    Subsection (1)(aa) was inserted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 13(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Subsection (3) was amended, as from 1 July 1996, by section 13(3) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3) by substituting the words (not being the Minister of Conservation) for the words or the Commissioner.

    Subsection (3A) was substituted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 13(4) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

    Subsection (3B) was inserted, as from 1 July 1996, by section 13(5) Reserves Amendment Act 1996 (1996 No 3).

Afforestation

75 Afforestation by administering body
  • (1) Where—

    • (a) Any recreation reserve or local purpose reserve, or any part thereof, is not for the time being required for the purpose for which it is classified; or

    • (b) The administering body of a recreation reserve has decided under section 53(1)(a)(ii) of this Act that it is necessary or desirable to afforest the reserve or any part thereof in any development, improvement, or management programme,—

    the administering body may, with the prior consent of the Minister, afforest, or enter into a contract for the afforestation of, the reserve or that part thereof:

    Provided that before commencing to afforest or entering into a contract for the afforestation of the reserve or any part of the reserve, the administering body shall give public notice in accordance with section 119 of this Act specifying the afforestation intended to be carried out, and shall give full consideration in accordance with section 120 of this Act to all objections against and submissions in relation to the proposed afforestation received pursuant to the said section 120.

    (2) The Minister may decline to give his consent under this section if for any reason he considers it to be in the public interest, and he shall not give his consent unless he is satisfied that the administering body or, as the case may be, the contractor has the financial resources and managerial ability to carry out the afforestation, and has provided or will provide adequate safeguards to prevent the destruction of or damage to any natural, scenic, historic, cultural, archaeological, biological, geological, or other scientific features or indigenous flora and fauna.

Protected private land, and conservation covenants

76 Declaration of protected private land
  • (1) The owner of any private land or the lessee of any Crown land may at any time apply to the Minister for his land or any part thereof to be declared to be protected private land under and subject to the terms of any agreement entered into between the owner or lessee and the Minister.

    (2) The Minister, if satisfied that the land possesses such qualities of natural, scientific, scenic, historic, cultural, archaeological, geological, or other interest that its protection is desirable in the public interest, or that rare species of indigenous flora or fauna are on the land, and the preservation of such flora and fauna is in the public interest, and that the land is sufficiently fenced or is otherwise protected from damage by stock, may, by notice in the Gazette, declare the land to be protected private land for nature, scenic, historic, or scientific purposes, having regard to the provisions of sections 18 to 21 of this Act relating to the classification of historic, scenic, nature, and scientific reserves, and may in like manner revoke any such declaration.

    (3) While that declaration remains in force, sections 93 to 105 of this Act shall, as far as they are applicable, and with the necessary modifications, apply to the protected private land in all respects as if it were a nature, scenic, historic, or scientific reserve, as the case may be, notwithstanding that the land comprised therein or, as the case may be, the interest of the lessee or licensee may be sold or otherwise disposed of:

    Provided that in their application to any protected private land sections 93 to 105 of this Act shall be read subject to any agreement between the owner or lessee of the land and the Minister reserving to the owner or lessee or his successors in title the right to do any act or thing forbidden by this Act.

    (4) Unless the agreement between the Minister and the owner or lessee or licensee of the land specifically provides otherwise, the agreement shall, when the notice under subsection (2) of this section has been recorded against the title, be binding on the successors in title of that owner or lessee.

    (5) Where an agreement under this section applies to land comprising part of the land in a certificate or instrument of title, the District Land Registrar may require the deposit of a plan in accordance with section 167 of the Land Transfer Act 1952.

    (6) The District Land Registrar, on the application of the Commissioner, shall enter in the appropriate folium of the register relating to the land that is declared to be protected private land a notification thereof.

    (7) The Minister may, with the consent of the owner or lessee, as the case may be, from time to time take such steps as he thinks necessary or desirable for the management and preservation of any protected private land, and cause such steps to be taken as in the Minister's opinion are necessary to make it readily accessible, under proper conditions, to the public.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 58, 65, 68; 1966 No 26 s 3

77 Conservation covenants
  • (1) The Minister, any local authority, or any other body approved by the Minister, if satisfied that any private land or any Crown land held under Crown lease should be managed so as to preserve the natural environment, or landscape amenity, or wildlife or freshwater-life or marine-life habitat, or historical value, and that the particular purpose or purposes can be achieved without acquiring the ownership of the land, or, as the case may be, of the lessee's interest in the land, for a reserve, may treat and agree with the owner or lessee for a covenant to provide for the management of that land in a manner that will achieve the particular purpose or purposes of conservation:

    Provided that in the case of a Crown lease the consent of the Minister or the Minister of Conservation, as the case may be, shall be required, and that Minister may give consent subject to the inclusion of any condition in the covenant or conditions, and may agree to a reduction in rent if, having regard to the basis for fixing the rent, it appears fair and equitable to do so.

    (2) Any covenant under this section may be in perpetuity or for any specific term.

    (3) While any conservation covenant under this section remains in force, sections 93 to 105 of this Act, as far as they are applicable and with the necessary modifications, shall apply to the land affected thereby in all respects as if it were a reserve, notwithstanding that the land or the interest of the lessee may be sold or otherwise disposed of:

    Provided that in their application to any such land or interest sections 93 to 105 of this Act shall be read subject to the terms and conditions set out in the conservation covenant.

    (4) Notwithstanding any rule of law or equity to the contrary, every conservation covenant shall run with and bind the land which is subject to the burden of the covenant, and shall be deemed an interest in the land for the purposes of the Land Transfer Act 1952. The District Land Registrar, on the application of the Commissioner in the case of an agreement to which the Minister is a party and of the local authority in the case of an agreement to which a local authority is a party, shall enter in the appropriate folium of the register relating to the land that is subject to the burden of the covenant a notification thereof.

    (5) Where the burden of a covenant under this section applies to land comprising part of the land in a certificate or instrument of title, a District Land Registrar shall not enter in any register a notification of the covenant unless—

    • (a) The land to which the covenant relates is defined on an existing plan approved under the Land Transfer Act 1952 or a new plan approved under that Act; or

    • (b) The document incorporating the covenant is accompanied by a certificate given by the Surveyor-General, or the Chief Surveyor of the land district in which the land is situated, to the effect that the covenant is adequately described and properly defined—

      • (i) For the nature of the covenant; and

      • (ii) In relation to existing surveys made in accordance with regulations for the time being in force for the purpose; and

      • (iii) In accordance with standards agreed from time to time by the Director-General and either the Surveyor-General or Chief Surveyor, as the case may be.

    (6) Subject to sections 78, 82, 83, 84, 89, 90, 95, 105, and 110 of this Act, the purchase price of any conservation covenant to which the Minister is a party shall be paid out of money appropriated by Parliament.

    (7) The purchase price of any conservation covenant to which a local authority is a party may be paid by the local authority out of its general fund or account or out of a separate account kept for the purchase of land to be held as public reserves, or may be apportioned by the local authority between that fund or account and that separate account.

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 1 January 1980, by section 22 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63) by inserting the words , or historical value,.

    The proviso to subsection (1) was substituted, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65). The word Conservation has been substituted for the word Lands without specific authority.

    Subsection (5) was substituted, as from 25 November 1994, by section 5 Reserves Amendment Act 1994 (1994 No 110).

77A Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata
  • (1) Notwithstanding any enactment or rule of law,—

    • (a) If satisfied that any Maori land or Crown land held under a Crown lease by Maori should be managed so as to preserve and protect—

      • (i) The natural environment, landscape amenity, wildlife or freshwater-life or marine-life habitat, or historical value of the land; or

      • (ii) The spiritual and cultural values which Maori associate with the land,—

      the Minister may, subject to subsection (2) of this section, treat and agree with the owner or the lessee for a Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata to provide for the management of the land in a manner that will achieve those purposes:

    • (b) A Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata under this section may be in perpetuity or for any specific term or may be in perpetuity subject to a condition that at agreed intervals of not less than 25 years the parties to the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata shall review the objectives, conditions, and continuance of the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata; and on such review the parties may mutually agree that the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata shall be terminated, or the owner or lessee may terminate the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata on giving such notice (being not less than 6 months) as may be agreed. The Crown shall have regard to the manawhenua of the owner or lessee in any such review:

    • (c) While any Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata under this section remains in force, sections 93 to 105 of this Act, as far as they are applicable and with the necessary modifications, but subject to the terms of the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata, shall apply to the land affected thereby in all respects as if it were a reserve, notwithstanding that the land or the interest of the lessee may be sold or otherwise disposed of:

    • (d) Every such Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata shall run with and bind the land that is subject to the burden of the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata, and shall be deemed to be an interest in land for the purposes of the Land Transfer Act 1952:

    • (e) Where a Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata is entered into under this section, the District Land Registrar of the land registration district affected, on the application of the Commissioner, shall, without fee, enter in the appropriate folio of the register relating to the land that is subject to the burden of the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata a notification thereof:

    • (f) Subject to sections 78, 82, 83, 84, 89, 90, 95, 105, and 110 of this Act, any money payable as consideration for a Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata shall be paid out of money appropriated by Parliament; and references in those provisions to a conservation covenant shall be read as references to a Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata.

    (2) In the case of a Crown lease other than a lease administered by the Department of Conservation, the consent of the Minister of Lands shall be required before a Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata is entered into, and that Minister may give consent subject to the inclusion of any condition in the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata or conditions, and may agree to a reduction in rent if, having regard to the basis for fixing the rent, it appears fair and equitable to do so.

    (3) In the case of a Crown lease administered by the Department of Conservation, the Minister may agree to a reduction in rent if, having regard to the basis for fixing the rent, it appears fair and equitable to do so.

    (4) Where the burden of a Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata under this section applies to land comprising part of the land in a certificate or instrument of title, a District Land Registrar shall not enter in any register a notification of the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata unless—

    • (a) The land to which the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata relates is defined on an existing plan approved under the Land Transfer Act 1952 or a new plan approved under that Act; or

    • (b) The document incorporating the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata is accompanied by a certificate given by the Surveyor-General, or the Chief Surveyor of the land district in which the land is situated, to the effect that the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata is adequately described and properly defined—

      • (i) For the nature of the Nga Whenua Rahui kawenata; and

      • (ii) In relation to existing surveys made in accordance with regulations for the time being in force for the purpose; and

      • (iii) In accordance with standards agreed from time to time by the Director-General and either the Surveyor-General or Chief Surveyor, as the case may be.

    This section was inserted, as from 24 March 1993, by section 3 Reserves Amendment Act 1993 (1993 No 8).

    Subsection (4) was substituted, as from 25 November 1994, by section 6 Reserves Amendment Act 1994 (1994 No 110).

Part 4
Financial provisions

78 Application of revenue from reserves
  • (1) All money received by way of rent, royalty, or otherwise in respect of any dealing with any reserve pursuant to section 42, section 45, section 48, section 53, section 54, section 55, section 56, section 57, section 58, section 58A, section 59, section 59A, section 61, section 61A, section 71, section 72, section 73, section 74, or section 75 of this Act shall—

    • (a) Where the reserve is vested in an administering body or an administering body has been appointed to control and manage the reserve, be held by the administering body and applied for the purposes of this Act:

    • (b) Where the reserve is vested in the Crown and no administering body has been appointed to manage or control the reserve, be paid in accordance with the Public Finance Act 1989 into the Crown Bank Account, the Department's Departmental Bank Account, or a Trust Bank Account and applied, as directed by the Minister, in purchasing, taking on lease, managing, administering, maintaining, protecting, improving, or developing reserves of any classification, or as consideration for a conservation covenant.

    (2) Notwithstanding anything in subsection (1) of this section,—

    • (a) In the case of a reserve which a Minister of the Crown other than the Minister of Conservation has been appointed to control and manage pursuant to section 22 or section 36 of this Act, the money referred to in subsection (1) of this section shall be paid in accordance with the Public Finance Act 1989 into the Crown Bank Account, a Departmental Bank Account, or a Trust Bank Account, and applied in managing, administering, or improving reserves in accordance with this Act, or, shall be paid into the Crown Bank Account, as directed by that first-mentioned Minister:

    • (b) In the case of a reserve of which the New Zealand Historic Places Trust is the administering body, the money referred to in subsection (1) of this section shall be applied by that Trust for the purposes of the Historic Places Act 1993.

    (3) All money received by way of gift or legacy or contributed by any local authority out of its general funds in respect of any reserve that is not for the time being under the control and management of an administering body or a Minister of the Crown other than the Minister of Conservation shall be paid into a Trust Bank Account established under section 67 of the Public Finance Act 1989 and applied, as directed by the Minister, in purchasing, taking on lease, managing, administering, maintaining, protecting, improving, or developing reserves of any classification, or as consideration for conservation covenants or as the Minister may direct pursuant to section 84 of this Act, or otherwise in carrying out in respect of that reserve the objects of this Act.

    (4) Where before the commencement of this Act money paid to the credit of the Trust Account pursuant to section 31(a) or section 62, or held by an administering body pursuant to section 31(b), of the Reserves and Domains Act 1953 remains unexpended, subsection (1) of this section shall apply with respect to that unexpended money as if it had been received pursuant to this Act.

    Subsection (1) (that part before paragraph (a)) was amended, as from 1 January 1980, by sections 19(3) and 20(3) Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63) by inserting the expressions section 58A, and section 59A,.

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 30 July 1988, by section 2(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1988 (1988 No 137) by inserting the expression section 61A.

    Subsection (1)(b) was amended, as from 1 July 1989, by section 86(1) Public Finance Act 1989 (1989 No 44) by substituting the words in accordance with ... a Trust Bank Account for the words into the Public Account to the credit of the Trust Account.

    Subsection (2)(a) was amended, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65) by substituting the word Conservation for the word Lands.

    Subsection (2)(a) was amended, as from 1 July 1989, by section 86(1) Public Finance Act 1989 (1989 No 44) by substituting the words in accordance with ... a Trust Bank Account for the words into the Public Account to the credit of the Trust Account, and the words Crown Bank Account for the words Consolidated Account.

    In subsection (2)(b) the reference to the Historic Places Act 1993 has been substituted for a reference to the Historic Places Act 1954 which was consolidated by the Historic Places Act 1980. That act was consolidated, as from 1 July 1993, by section 118(1) Historic Places Act 1993 (1993 No 38).

    Subsection (3) was amended, as from 1 April 1987, by section 65(1) Conservation Act 1987 (1987 No 65) by substituting the word Conservation for the word Lands.

    Subsection (3) was amended, as from 1 July 1989, by section 86(1) Public Finance Act 1989 (1989 No 44) by substituting the words a Trust Bank Account established under section 67 of the Public Finance Act 1989 for the words the Public Account to the credit of the Trust Account.

79 Funds of administering bodies
  • (1) The funds of any administering body shall consist of all money received by it under or by virtue of this Act or in any other manner whatever in respect of the reserve or reserves or other land under its control as such.

    (2) Except as provided in section 68(1) of this Act all such money shall, within 7 days after receipt thereof by the Treasurer or other proper officer of the administering body, be paid into such bank as the administering body from time to time appoints to an account to be called The [Name of administering body] Account:

    Provided that where a local authority is the administering body for more than one reserve, it shall not be necessary to establish a separate bank account in respect of each reserve, but the local authority may, if it thinks fit, establish a bank account to be called The Reserves Account into which all money received in respect of all the reserves administered by it shall be paid:

    Provided also that where the administering body is a local authority to which regulations made pursuant to section 223 of the Local Government Act 1974 apply, the administering body shall comply with the provisions of those regulations relating to the banking of money.

    (3) No money shall be withdrawn from the bank except by authority of the administering body, and any cheque or other withdrawal notice shall be signed by the Treasurer or other officer of the administering body appointed for the purpose and countersigned by either a member or an officer of the administering body authorised by the administering body from time to time to do so.

    (4) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsections (2) and (3) of this section, where a local authority is an administering body appointed under section 28 of this Act, the local authority as that administering body may pay all such money into the general bank account of the local authority and any such money may be withdrawn from the bank account in such manner as the local authority may lawfully authorise.

    (5) Subject to the terms of any trust, any money of an administering body which is not immediately required for expenditure by the administering body may be invested in any manner in which trustees are for the time being authorised to invest trust funds or on deposit with the National Provident Fund.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 70, 71; 1963 No 112 s 3

    Subsection (2) was amended, as from 17 December 1985, by section 2(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1985 (1985 No 188) by inserting the words Except as provided in section 68(1) of this Act.

    Section 223 Local Government Act 1974 referred to in subsection (2) was repealed, as from 1 July 1990, by section 22(1)(h) Local Government Amendment Act (No 2) 1989 (1989 No 29).

80 Expenditure of funds
  • (1) The funds of an administering body received under this Act shall, save as otherwise authorised or required by this Act or any other Act, be applied in purchasing, taking on lease, managing, administering, maintaining, protecting, improving, and developing the reserves under its control, and for no other purpose.

    (2) Where pursuant to section 37 or section 38 of this Act an administering body is appointed to control and manage more than one reserve or a reserve and other land, then—

    • (a) Money received from the separate areas may be used for the improvement and benefit of all those areas or any of them:

    • (b) The administering body shall not be required to keep separate books of account in respect of the separate areas under its control, but it may keep combined accounts and a statement regarding those combined accounts, but showing receipts and payments for each area, shall be sufficient for the purposes of section 88 of this Act.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 ss 72, 73

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 17 December 1985, by section 3 Reserves Amendment Act 1985 (1985 No 188) by inserting the words or required.

81 Unauthorised expenditure
  • An administering body (not being a local authority) may in any financial year expend for purposes not authorised by this Act or by any other Act or law for the time being in force any sum or sums not exceeding $500 in the aggregate.

    Section 81 was amended, as from 17 May 2005, by section 4 Reserves Amendment Act 2005 (2005 No 68) by substituting the expression $500 for the expression $100.

82 Application of proceeds of land where reservation revoked
  • (1) Where upon the revocation of the reservation of any reserve the land comprised therein becomes Crown land and the land is subsequently alienated by the Crown, the proceeds of the alienation shall be paid into the Public Account and credited to the Trust Account, and the following provisions shall thereupon apply:

    • (a) Where the land is sold for cash, an amount equal to the proceeds of the sale may, if the Minister so directs, be paid from the Public Account and debited to the Trust Account and applied in the purchasing or taking on lease, managing, administering, maintaining, protecting, improving, and developing of reserves of any classification or as consideration for a conservation covenant:

    • (b) Where the land is sold on deferred-payment licence or is granted on Crown lease, there may, if the Minister so directs, be paid from the Public Account and debited to the Trust Account, and applied in the purchasing or taking on lease, managing, administering, maintaining, protecting, improving, and developing of reserves of any classification or as consideration for a conservation covenant—

      • (i) Subject to any direction given by the Minister of Finance under subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph, an amount equal to the purchase price payable under the deferred-payment licence, or, as the case may be, the rental value of the lease; or

      • (ii) If the Minister of Finance so directs, an amount equal to the instalments (including interest) paid under the deferred-payment licence, or as the case may be, the rent paid under the lease.

    (2) Notwithstanding anything in any other Act, all money held in the Works and Trading Account immediately before the commencement of this Act representing the proceeds of the alienation of land the reservation of which had been revoked shall at the commencement of this Act be deemed to have been transferred to the Trust Account, and subsection (1) of this section shall apply with respect to the money so transferred as if it were the proceeds of the alienation after the commencement of this Act of land the reservation of which had been revoked under the provisions of this Act.

    (3) Where before the commencement of this Act the land comprised in a reserve became Crown land on the revocation of the reservation thereof under the provisions of any former enactment, then, notwithstanding anything in any other Act, subsection (1) of this section shall apply with respect to the proceeds of any alienation of the land received after the commencement of this Act as if the reservation had been revoked under the provisions of this Act.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 78; 1956 No 35 s 17; 1960 No 87 s 3; 1966 No 26 s 6

    Subsection (1) was amended, as from 1 April 1978, by section 3(1) Reserves Amendment Act 1978 (1978 No 121) by substituting the words the proceeds ... shall thereupon apply for the words the following provisions shall apply.

    Subsection (2) was substituted, and subsection (3) was inserted, as from 1 April 1978, by section 3(2) Reserves Amendment Act 1978 (1978 No 121).

83 Application of proceeds from exchange
  • Where any money is payable to the Crown pursuant to an exchange under section 15 of this Act, the money shall be paid into the Public Account and credited to the Trust Account and applied in the purchasing or taking on lease, managing, administering, maintaining, protecting, improving, and developing of reserves of any classification, or as consideration for a conservation covenant, as directed by the Minister.

84 Minister may authorise diversion of money
  • Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Part of this Act, the Minister may, with the written consent of the administering body—

    • (a) Direct that any money received, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, in respect of that reserve be applied in managing, administering, maintaining, protecting, improving, and developing any other specified reserve or for the acquisition or taking on lease of land for the purpose of a reserve, whether as an addition to that reserve or not, or as consideration for a conservation covenant; or

    • (b) Direct that any money received after the commencement of this Act in respect of any reserve shall be applied as aforesaid for any specified period for the purposes of any other reserve or for the acquisition or leasing of other land as aforesaid or as consideration for any conservation covenant:

    Provided that where money is received in respect of a reserve which is not under the control and management of an administering body, the Minister may direct that the money be applied for such purposes specified in the foregoing provisions of this section as the Minister in his sole discretion directs.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 5; 1964 No 108 s 3

85 Minister may authorise expenditure of money on land that is not a reserve
  • (1) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Part of this Act, the administering body of any reserve may, with the prior consent of the Minister, determine, or, where there is no administering body of a reserve, the Minister may direct, that any money received, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, in respect of that reserve or any money appropriated by Parliament for the purpose shall be applied in managing, administering, maintaining, improving, protecting, and developing any land that is not a reserve (including any Maori reservation), if the owner, trustee, or controlling authority of that land—

    • (a) Consents to the application of that money for those purposes; and

    • (b) Agrees either—

      • (i) To permit the land to be used for any of the purposes defined in the classification of reserves in section 16 of this Act on such terms and conditions as have been agreed on between himself and the administering body or, as the case may be, the Minister; or

      • (ii) To co-operate in a scheme for the preservation or restoration of the character or amenity of a district or an environment.

    (2) Any agreement under subsection (1) of this section may provide for the payment by the administering body or, as the case may be, the Crown, of all or part of the reasonable legal expenses incurred by the owner, trustee, or controlling authority in connection with the agreement, and for the payment of a reasonable sum, whether by way of annual fee or otherwise, for the use of the land in accordance with the agreement.

    Compare: 1953 No 69 s 75A; 1971 No 144 s 4

    Subsection (2) was substituted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 23 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

85A Minister may authorise certain administering bodies to spend proceeds from certain reserves for other purposes
  • Where the administering body of a recreation or local purpose reserve is also a territorial authority or regional council, that administering body may, if the Minister so authorises, apply the whole or part of the revenue derived from trees grown on that reserve for—

    • (a) Any purpose for which that territorial authority or regional council may lawfully apply its funds; or

    • (b) Such specific purpose as the Minister, with the consent of the Minister of Local Government, may direct.

    Section 85A was inserted, as from 1 January 1980, by section 24 Reserves Amendment Act 1979 (1979 No 63).

    Section 85A was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 262 Local Government Act 2002 (2002 No 84) by inserting the words or regional council after the words territorial authority in both places where they occur. See sections 273 to 314 of that Act as to the savings and transitional provisions.

86 Payment of rates on Maori reservations
  • Where—

    • (a) Pursuant to subsection (12) of section 439 of the Maori Affairs Act 1953 (as added by section 11(2) of the Maori Purposes Act 1972), the notice constituting a Maori reservation under the said section 439 specifies that the reservation shall be held for the common use and benefit of the people of New Zealand; and

    • (b) Pursuant to subsection (7) of that section, the Maori Land Court has vested the reservation in a body corporate or in trustees to hold and administer the reservation—

    the Minister may, by agreement with the body corporate or the trustees, contribute towards the payment, out of money appropriated by Parliament for the purpose, of the whole or part of any rates from time to time levied on the land.

87 Payment of rates on protected private land
  • Where an agreement under section 76 of this Act declares any land to be protected private land, and, in the Minister's opinion,—

    • (a) The agreement makes reasonable provision for the public to visit and inspect the protected private land; or

    • (b) The protected private land, if it were a reserve, would be classified as a nature reserve or scientific reserve and the agreement makes reasonable provision for persons with special relevant interest to visit and inspect the protected private land,—

    the Minister may, by agreement with the owner, contribute towards the payment, out of money appropriated by Parliament for the purpose, of the whole or part of any rates from time to time assessed on the land.

    Section 87 was amended, as from 1 July 2003, by section 137(1) Local Government (Rating) Act 2002 (2002 No 6) by substituting the words assessed for the words levied.

88 Annual statement and audit of accounts
  • (1) Subject to subsections (4) and (6) of this section, within 1 month after the close of each financial year ending with the 30th day of June, every administering body, not being a Board, shall cause to be prepared and submitted to the Audit Office for audit a statement of accounts (including a statement of assets and liabilities, a receipts and payments account, and such other statements as may be required by the Audit Office), and showing fully the financial position of the administering body at the close of the year.

    (2) The Public Audit Act 2001 applies with respect to the audit of the accounts of every such administering body, as if it were a public entity as defined in section 4 of that Act.

    (3) A copy of every such statement shall be submitted to the Commissioner for transmission to the Minister, accompanied by a report as to the operations of the administering body for the year.

    (4) If a local authority is the administering body of a reserve, it shall not be required to submit that statement and report to the Minister, unless the terms of vesting or control and management so require.

    (5) Where a local authority is the administering body, the statements required by this section shall be incorporated in the annual accounts of the local authority, and the time for preparation and submission of the accounts required by this section shall be deemed to have been amended accordingly.

    (6) For the purposes of this section, the period commencing on the 1st day of April 1992 and ending with the 30th day of June 1993 shall be deemed to be a financial year.

    The original section 88 was amended, as from 10 April 1992, by section 2 Reserves Amendment Act 1992 (1992 No 26) by substituting the expression 30th day of June for the expression 31st day of March.

    Section 88 was substituted, and section 88A inserted, as from 21 December 1992, by section 42 Public Finance Amendment Act 1992 (1992 No 142).

    Subsection (2) was substituted, as from 1 July 2001, by section 53 Public Audit Act 2001 (2001 No 10).

88A Crown entities
  • (1) Every Board is, for the purposes of subpart 2 of Part 5 of the