Te Tauihu Statutory Acknowledgements is an attachment to the operative Tasman Resource Management Plan and the operative Tasman Regional Policy Statement.
View Te Tauihu Statutory Acknowledgment maps(external link)
A statutory acknowledgment is legal recognition of the particular cultural, spiritual, historical and traditional association of an iwi with an identified statutory area. The eight iwi of Te Tauihu to which these statutory acknowledgements and areas relate are:
Statutory acknowledgements enhance the ability of iwi to participate in Resource Management Act 1991 processes.
A statutory area can have more than one statutory acknowledgment from more than one iwi associated with it, and the statutory acknowledgements of each of the eight iwi of Te Tauihu should be checked in relation to any statutory area.
The Crown provided the statutory acknowledgements as cultural redress instruments to iwi to settle their historical Treaty claims.
The location of these redress instruments aligns with the known customary and historical interests of the respective iwi.
This redress is not intended to signify, confer, or deny the Māori concept of mana whenua.
Mana whenua is a concept derived from tikanga Māori or customary values and practices. "Mana whenua" means "customary authority exercised by an iwi or hapū in an identified area" in the Resource Management Act 1991.
This message is consistent with what the Crown discussed with iwi throughout the overlapping claims process for Te Tauihu.
The Te Tauihu claims settlement legislation provided for a number of existing geographic names to change. The Tasman Resource Management Plan has been updated, to incorporate these changes.
These maps depict statutory areas or sites to which statutory acknowledgments apply.
The statutory acknowledgments place obligations on the local authorities which are explained in the statutory acknowledgements text document attached to Tasman’s Regional Policy Statement and Tasman Resource Management Plan.
These maps do not however indicate all sites of importance to iwi.
Other sites have been recognised through other redress instruments from the Crown such as land transfers in fee simple title or Overlay Classifications.
If you would like information about other sites of importance to the iwi or the other types of redress recognising these sites you can source the Deeds of Settlement entered by the eight individual iwi and the Crown on their website.
You can also refer to the settlement legislation on www.legislation.govt.nz. The settlement Acts are: