1.1.041
Statement of claim (SOC)
Amended statement of claim on behalf of Wai 2764, 26 Jun 24 (filed by K Dixon / T Talamaivao) (Also recorded as Wai 2764, #1.1.1(b))
The Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry
07 Apr 2025
Rahinga: 461KB
Wai 3400 Stg2 PP
Report
The Waitangi Tribunal has released a report on the Takutai Moana Financial Assistance Scheme
The Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry
On 6 June 2025, the Waitangi Tribunal released The Takutai Moana Act 2011 Urgent Inquiry Stage 2 Report in pre-publication format. This is the second report released for the Marine and Coastal (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry (Wai 3400). The report considered claimant allegations that the Crown had breached Treaty principles through the mismanagement of the Takutai Moana Financial Assistance Scheme, which supports applicants who seek to have their customary interests in the foreshore and seabed recognised under the Marine and Coastal (Takutai Moana) Act 2011.
The claimants alleged that the Crown failed to engage adequately with Māori in their process to review and amend the scheme for the 2024–25 financial year. The claimants argued that the current scheme settings have meant that the funding available for applicants is inadequate. Other issues raised included delayed payments, the removal of funding for interested parties, and funding caps that create a one-size-fits-all model for funding allocation, regardless of the complexities of individual cases. The claimants say that they have been unable to progress applications under the Act due to current scheme settings.
While the Crown accepted that the July 2024 changes to the funding scheme were challenging for the claimants, it did not concede that there had been any breach of Treaty principles. It argued that its amendments to the scheme addressed significant cost pressures that had arisen in the previous financial year and it maintained that its process in amending the scheme was reasonable in the circumstances and that it is not obliged under the Treaty to provide full funding to applicant groups.
The Tribunal found that elements of the Crown’s process in reviewing and amending the funding scheme were flawed. The Crown should have been cognisant earlier of the likely increase on financial pressures on the scheme, and there were significant problems with the modelling used to calculate the annual appropriation required to fund the scheme. The Tribunal found that, in its process to review and amend the scheme, the Crown failed to meet its Treaty obligations to act reasonably and in good faith and to actively protect Māori interests. This was in breach of Treaty principles.
The Tribunal further found that aspects of the current funding scheme settings were in breach of Treaty principles. By declining the additional funding required to cover the forecast costs of the 2024–25 financial year without considering the impact of this on Māori applicants, Cabinet had not conducted a Treaty-compliant balancing exercise, in breach of the principles of partnership, good government, and active protection.
Several measures were introduced to deal with the shortfall in funding, including budgeted workplans, changing the funding available for lawyers, and introducing a funding cap for each application. The Tribunal commented that the way in which the budgeted work-plan requirement was introduced created significant confusion and disruption but did not find the requirement for a workplan to be inherently inconsistent with Treaty principles. However, the Tribunal found that the Crown did not undertake a proper balancing exercise when making changes to rates of funding for lawyers, in breach of its Treaty obligation to actively protect Māori interests. The Tribunal was concerned by the ‘rudimentary’ approach taken to funding caps, noting that the caps themselves were caused by Cabinet’s decision to decline the additional funding needed.
The Tribunal found that significant prejudice had arisen due to the Crown’s Treaty breaches. The funding changes were introduced quickly, without consultation, impacting applications on the verge of hearing. Applications were delayed while budgeted workplans were awaiting approval. Research for applications was delayed, and reduced funding for research undermined the strength of applications. Funding changes also limited applicants’ access to legal representation.
To prevent similar prejudice being felt by applicants in the next financial year, the Tribunal recommended that the Crown engage meaningfully with Māori before decisions on funding are made. When making these decisions, the Crown must properly consider Māori interests and potential impacts on Māori in the wider context of the Act’s regime. In making decisions, the Crown must keep Māori informed and provide its reasoning. The Tribunal reiterated its recommendation in an earlier report that the statutory deadline for applications be removed from the Act, as this has put financial pressure on the scheme.
06 Jun 2025
Rahinga: 1.22MB
3.2.007
Hearing - Party Submission/Memo
B Lyall / M Sreen / H Swedlund, Joint memorandum of claimant counsel concerning joint chronology and seeking a judicial conference to resolve a dispute concerning Crown discovery, 12 Dec 24
The Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry
24 Dec 2024
Rahinga: 1.93MB
3.2.008
Hearing - Party Submission/Memo
B Lyall / M Sreen / H Swedlund / T Stephens KC / D Hunt / Z McCoy, Joint memorandum of counsel filing joint draft statement of issues, 13 Dec 24
The Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry
24 Dec 2024
Rahinga: 1.83MB
3.2.012
Hearing - Party Submission/Memo
B Lyall / M Sreen / H Swedlund / Z McCoy / T Stephens KC / D Hunt, Joint memorandum of counsel seeking an extension to file chronology, 29 Jan 25
The Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry
04 Feb 2025
Rahinga: 861KB
3.2.083
Hearing - Party Submission/Memo
S-M Downs / H Jamieson / M Cherrington (Wai 1464/1546, Wai 2577, Wai 49/682, Wai 2579, Wai 2796, Wai 2831 & Wai 3404), Memorandum of counsel filing joint opening submissions and cross-examination bundle, 7 Apr 25
The Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry
08 Apr 2025
Rahinga: 448KB
3.2.081
Hearing - Party Submission/Memo
J Mason (Wai 120, Wai 377, Wai 1018, Wai 2147, Wai 1673, Wai 1307, Wai 1524, Wai 1846, Wai 1681, Wai 1541, Wai 2661, Wai 1941, Wai 1940, Wai 3406, Wai 3399 & Wai 3401), Memorandum of counsel filing opening submissions, 4 Apr 25
The Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry
08 Apr 2025
Rahinga: 407KB
3.3.059
Opening - Party Submission/Memo
Opening submissions on behalf of Wai 3383, 7 Apr 25 (filed by T Bennion / E Whiley / Kudrat)
The Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry
08 Apr 2025
Rahinga: 565KB
3.2.088
Hearing - Party Submission/Memo
T Talamaivao / H Morrow (Wai 2764), Memorandum of counsel filing supplementary affidavit of Justine Inns, 16 Apr 25
The Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry
28 Apr 2025
Rahinga: 444KB
2.6.007(a)
Hearing - Trib Memo/Direction/Decision
Appendix A: Tribunal questions in writing following the stage two hearing of the Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry, 24 Apr 25
The Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act Coalition Changes Urgent Inquiry
28 Apr 2025
Rahinga: 429KB