Contact should atone: resident
By Lynda van Kempen, on Wednesday 2 May 2012
Otago Daily Times
Beaumont resident Margaret Healy says she can finally "chuck away the snorkel" after living for years with the threat of the area being flooded if a hydro dam was built on the Clutha River nearby.
Contact Energy announced on Monday it was dropping its plans for further hydro development on the river, saying none of the options for dams at Beaumont, Tuapeka, Luggate and Queensberry were viable "in the foreseeable future".
Beaumont residents and former residents who opposed further hydro development on the Clutha welcomed the decision as "long-awaited and absolutely marvellous", said Mrs Healy, who is the secretary-treasurer of the Beaumont Residents Group.
It had been daunting to live for the past 20 years with the prospect of a dam that might flood the area "hanging over" them.
Contact owed Beaumont some compensation for the impact that uncertainty had had on the community, she said.
"The threat of the dam has changed the whole area and influenced a lot of things over the years, including the population in the area. The local shop closed as well as the school, and people stopped buying land here and took out orchards. We feel Contact owes us some compensation to make up for all that."
Compensation could take the form of the community being "gifted" the former shop building, which was owned by Contact, or the company could contribute to a new roof for the Beaumont Hall, Mrs Healy said.
Asked whether Contact would offer any "compensation" to Beaumont, Contact group communications manager Janet Carson said: "We're part of this community and contribute where we can.
"We have been working with locals about the shop for some time and will continue to see what's possible.
"We have also, just today, received a request for assistance with other [Beaumont] community-related matters, which we are also considering," she said.
Contact was involved in community projects throughout the region but the contributions it made should not be viewed as "compensation", she said.
Mrs Healy said Beaumont was a special place and she had received a steady stream of emails and phone calls yesterday from people saying they were "delighted" at the cancellation of the dam plans.
"Lots of them were people who used to live here.
"One even said, 'Hooray, I can still be buried in the Beaumont cemetery when I die'."
Under the proposal for a dam at Tuapeka Mouth, the cemetery would have been flooded, along with the Beaumont township.
Mrs Healy and her husband have lived on a 0.4ha block of land near the Beaumont bridge for the past 35 years.
Plans for a Tuapeka dam were first mooted in 1965 by Contact's predecessor, the Electricity Corporation of New Zealand, and the project has been reconsidered several times since then.
"It appears that threat of a dam has been virtually removed now that Contact is concentrating on other energy projects like geothermal projects," Mrs Healy said.
"We used to joke we'd be well under the water here and we'd need a 30m snorkel ... well, now I can chuck away the snorkel."
There would be nothing holding back progress in the area now that uncertainty was gone, she said.
People would be able to plan for the future and buy and sell land freely.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Contact Should Atone: Resident
Labels:
Beaumont,
Clutha dams,
Contact Energy,
Luggate,
Queensberry,
Tuapeka Mouth
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