Waikato pig farmer fined $128k

A court order has been made against a Waikato pig farmer which will limit his future involvement in the industry.

In July farmer Kenneth McIntyre and his employer, Kaimai Pork Limited, were convicted and fined a total of $128,750 – a record fine for environmental offending in the Waikato.


Waikato pig farmer Kenneth McIntyre and his employer, Kaimai Pork Limited, were convicted and fined $128,750 for piggery-related offences recently. Photo: File

In addition to the fine the Environment Court has now issued an enforcement order prohibiting McIntyre from certain farming roles.

It includes a ban on his involvement in management of animal effluent as well as restrictions around management of animal numbers and financial decisions.

The order follows what was McIntyre's fourth prosecution for piggery-related offences against the Resource Management Act.

Council investigations manager Patrick Lynch says McIntyre's history of environmental offending dates back to 2006.

Council records indicate he has received ten previous formal warnings, three infringement notices, five abatement notices as well as being the subject of three previous prosecutions.

'We had little choice but to put Mr McIntyre back in front of the court over the most recent offending,” says Patrick.

'Over the years the council has used every tool available to encourage positive behaviour change, but unfortunately this has not worked. This fine, and the court order, is a very clear message for Mr McIntyre to change his ways.”

The prosecutions against McIntyre and Kaimai Pork were brought by the Waikato Regional Council and related to the operation of a recently established commercial piggery near Te Aroha.

McIntyre was one of the company directors and responsible for management of the site, including effluent disposal.

The piggery began operating with excessive stock numbers without appropriate infrastructure in place, resulting in unlawful discharges of piggery effluent to the environment.

Despite being directed by the council to stop, the unlawful discharges continued.

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2 comments

Not an isolated incident!

Posted on 25-08-2015 08:13 | By monty1212

Just another farmer who thought he was above the law! I have about as much sympathy for him as he had for the environment.


Pattern

Posted on 25-08-2015 15:28 | By Reefer

Fourth conviction... bit of a pattern showing here. Shame for the good farmers out there. And there's plenty of them.


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