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Auckland City Council may do U-turn on tagging potentially poisoned properties
Wednesday 24th of November 2004
The move follows a week of legal wrangling, mounting public anger and signs that real estate sales are hurting over a decision to record details about old horticultural sites on any Land Information Memorandum (LIM) reports the council issues on nearly 5000 properties.
Emotions ran high at two public meetings last week after the council decided to stand by its legal advice to tag the reports, despite Environment Minister Marian Hobbs advising it not to until there was proof of contamination or a risk to health or the environment.
Hundreds of residents said the council was devaluing property prices by recording information on the reports without proof.
This week, as wary buyers start pulling out of house contracts, the council is looking to reverse its controversial decision.
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Emotions ran high at two public meetings last week after the council decided to stand by its legal advice to tag the reports, despite Environment Minister Marian Hobbs advising it not to until there was proof of contamination or a risk to health or the environment.
Hundreds of residents said the council was devaluing property prices by recording information on the reports without proof.
This week, as wary buyers start pulling out of house contracts, the council is looking to reverse its controversial decision.
Read More - Opens in a new window
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