x__32__fill__social media twitter voice record__64__outline__user profile avatar contact person volume sound users member human speaker record voice recorder speach speak apartment__64__fill__building home house hotel apartment property flat residence

Let’s sort it: Waste in the Far North

The Far North District Council is asking our communities to help guide the future of waste management in the Far North. Waste affects us all — whether it’s putting out rubbish and recycling at home, composting food scraps, or finding ways to reduce what we send to landfill.

Now is your chance to have a say on two key plans that will influence how we reduce, manage, and minimise waste in our district.

Here’s what we are proposing / Anei tā mātou e whakatakoto nei

In 2023, we asked our community to imagine how waste could be managed by the year 2050. Your feedback informed a new vision for how we manage and minimise waste in our district – and helped develop a long-term Solid Waste Strategy to compliment a Waste Management and Minimisation Plan.

  • Solid Waste Strategy (SWS): This is our long-term roadmap, setting the direction and goals for managing waste over the next 25 years. This strategy guides responsible decision-making and will support a more sustainable, low-waste future.
  • Waste Management and Minimisation Plan (WMMP): While the SWS looks to the future, the WMMP focuses on actions we take now. Updated every six years, this plan outlines actions the council will take in the short to medium-term to reduce waste and meet the goals of the SWS. The WMMP is required by law and helps unlock government funding for local waste initiatives.

We want to hear what you think about these two plans and how they could affect our district now and for generations to come. 

Check out the Statement of Proposal or browse the Frequently Asked Questions below to learn more about what’s being proposed.

Have your say / Kōrerotia mai ōu whakaaro

Tell us what you think.

  • Online submissions: Click here to have your say
  • Email us: submissions@fndc.govt.nz
  • In person: Drop off a submission form at any FNDC service centre or library. (Our friendly customer service team can also print it for you.)
  • By mail: Far North District Council, Private Bag 752, Kaikohe 0440
Alternatively, you can request to share your feedback verbally by emailing us at submissions@fndc.govt.nz or by phone on 0800 920 029.


Submissions are open until Sunday 6 July 2025 – we’d love to hear from you!

Frequently asked questions

The Solid Waste Strategy sets out a 25-year vision to build a low-waste future for the Far North. We’re taking a staged approach. The current WMMP focuses on building a strong foundation for the next six years – including research, planning, and early improvements. Future plans will use this as a benchmark to bring in bigger infrastructure and innovation as we move through the next stages.

This is more than just another waste plan - it’s a fresh start. For years, our existing plan has been limited in what it could achieve. The new draft WMMP plan unlocks more opportunities to find smart, local solutions to waste.

The WMMP sets out the district’s priorities, goals, and targets for managing and reducing waste over the next six years. It’s a practical action plan that helps guide council decisions and deliver better outcomes for our communities.

The draft WMMP was shaped by feedback from communities and responds to challenges such as:

  • Illegal dumping
  • Reducing waste to landfill
  • Improving access to waste services and facilities
  • Strengthening waste infrastructure
  • Lowering greenhouse gas emissions

It supports the shift toward a circular economy, helps council plan the right infrastructure, and guides long-term investment. Funding and grant opportunities - such as a planned contestable fund – may also become available for individuals, businesses, and community groups working on local waste reduction or recycling initiatives.

Real, lasting change takes more than a short-term fix. That’s why council decided to develop a long-term vision of a SWS to sit alongside the updated WMMP:

  • A Solid Waste Strategy (SWS) that sets a clear direction for the next 25 years
  • A new WMMP to guide short- to medium-term actions

To stay responsive to change, the SWS will be reviewed every six years, meaning it will be updated four times over the 25-year period. This helps us adapt to new technologies, changing community needs, and national priorities.

Kerbside rubbish and recycling services in the Far North are currently provided independently by private waste management companies. These are not funded or contracted by the council.

You can find more information here.

Far North District Council plays a key role in shaping and delivering waste services across the district. Our responsibilities include:

  • Strategic planning – setting a long-term vision that aligns with national goals and encourages waste minimisation and resource recovery
  • Service delivery – overseeing kerbside collections, transfer stations, and recycling facilities
  • Education and community engagement – running workshops and working with schools, businesses, and community groups
  • Monitoring and enforcement – applying bylaws and national legislation to prevent illegal dumping and ensure responsible waste management

We don’t work alone. We collaborate with iwi, hapū, community groups, council contractors, and neighbouring councils to support and enable local waste solutions.

The draft WMMP was developed through the Solid Waste Rōpū Mahi (Working Group), which included:

  • Local iwi and hapū representatives
  • Community members
  • Industry experts
  • Health professionals
  • Legal advisors
  • FNDC staff with subject expertise

This collaborative process ensures the plan:

  • Reflects Te Ao Māori values
  • Acknowledges local priorities
  • Integrates expert knowledge
  • Aligns with the draft SWS and Far North 2100
  • Provides a clear and practical work programme

It also builds on community feedback from 2023, when we asked:
“Imagine your community in the year 2050—how do you think waste should be managed?”

These plans lay the groundwork for a more effective, community-focused waste system. Key benefits include:

  • Investigating smarter, more affordable ways to manage waste
  • Reducing waste to landfill and recovering valuable resources
  • Enabling contestable funding for community-led waste initiatives
  • Supporting new infrastructure and better access to services
  • Empowering communities through waste education and behaviour change
  • Embedding circular economy principles that reduce environmental impact and build resilience

We’ll take a staged approach over the next 25 years to turn these goals into action.

Like many councils across Aotearoa, we face increasing pressure from growing waste volumes, outdated infrastructure, rising costs, and new government expectations.

Community concerns about illegal dumping, limited access to services, and environmental impacts have also highlighted the need for change.

Our current WMMP is very basic and limits our ability to explore innovative solutions. The updated WMMP and Solid Waste Strategy aim to fix this - creating a flexible, phased framework that supports real progress.

Education is key to changing how we think about and deal with waste.  The council plans to:

  • Run workshops in schools, marae, and community centres
  • Provide information through local events, social media, and our website
  • Partner with iwi, hapū, and local organisations to deliver waste minimisation programmes tailored to different communities

Education and awareness-building will grow in importance as we move through the staged implementation of the strategy.

Note: Anyone is invited to submit feedback on this consultation, whether as an individual or on behalf of an organisation, however, any submissions that are out of scope, offensive, inappropriate, or late may not be accepted by the council. You will be notified if your decision is not accepted and, where appropriate, invited to resubmit.Any submissions that are made will become part of the public consultation process. The collection and use of personal information by the Far North District Council is regulated by the Privacy Act 2020.

Please note that your submission or a summary of your submission will be treated as public information and may be published on the council's website and made available to elected members and members of the public as part of the consultation process. Your name and contact details (address, phone number, email) will only be used for administrative purposes - such as the council contacting you to update you on the outcome of this consultation and letting you know about future consultations

Find the documents you're looking for with our search bar.