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Library Te Aupouri Claims Settlement Act 2015 (No. 77 of 2015).

Te Aupouri Claims Settlement Act 2015 (No. 77 of 2015).

Te Aupouri Claims Settlement Act 2015 (No. 77 of 2015).

Resource information

Date of publication
September 2015
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
LEX-FAOC172670
License of the resource

The purpose of this Act, consisting of 207 sections, divided into four Parts and completed by six Schedules, is: to record the acknowledgements and apology offered by the Crown to Te Aupouri in the deed of settlement; and to give effect to certain provisions of the deed of settlement, which is a deed that settles the historical claims of Te Aupouri. Part 1 sets out a summary of the historical account, and records the text of the acknowledgements and apology offered by the Crown to Te Aupouri, as recorded in the deed of settlement; defines terms used in this Act, including key terms such as Te Aupouri and historical claims; provides that the settlement of the historical claims is final; provides for: the effect of the settlement of the historical claims on the jurisdiction of a court, tribunal, or other judicial body in respect of the historical claims; a consequential amendment to the Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975; the effect of the settlement on certain memorials; and the exclusion of the law against perpetuities; access to the deed of settlement.Part 2 provides for cultural redress, including: in subpart 1, cultural redress requiring vesting in the trustees of the fee simple estate in certain cultural redress properties; cultural redress that does not involve the vesting of land, namely: in subpart 2, provisions for the management of Te Oneroa-aTohe / Ninety Mile Beach in relation to the Te Oneroa-a-Tohe management area by the establishment of a Board, the appointment of hearing commissioners, and a requirement for a beach management plan; in subpart 3, the korowai redress under which the Crown and Te Hiku o Te Ika iwi enter into co-governance arrangements over conservation land in the korowai area.Part 3 provides for commercial redress, including: in subpart 1, the transfer of commercial redress properties and a commercial property (if any); in subpart 2, the licensed land redress; in subpart 3, the provision of access to protected sites; in subpart 4, the right of first refusal (RFR) redress. Part 4 sets out the transitional provisions required to enable Te Aupouri governance reorganisation. The 6 Schedules describe the following matters: cultural redress properties (I); Te Oneroa-a-Tohe redress (II); the korowai (III); statutory areas to which the statutory acknowledgement relates (IV); sets out provisions that apply to notices given in relation to RFR land (V); provides for the transfer of certain assets of Te Aupouri Maori Trust Board (VI).

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Parliamentary Counsel Office

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