The council is comprehensively reviewing its Cemeteries and Crematoria Bylaw – which is due for review – and associated policies and guidelines. These set out the council’s rules for and approach to cemeteries, burials, cremations and monuments within the district.
Submissions closed on Sunday 16 April, 2023.
Cemeteries are important spaces for the community. They’re places people go to find peace and quiet, to mourn and remember friends and family members. They can represent both how we respect and commemorate the past, and how we interact with and relate to it.
This bylaw and the associated rules ensure that human remains are laid to rest appropriately, and that land and structures in cemeteries are protected. It is an important tool in protecting the environmental health of the district, as well as making sure the community has a peaceful space they can hold funerals and respectfully mourn.
The proposal is now available to read, and submissions closed on Sunday 16 April, 2023. Anybody who wants to present their submission in person is welcome at the public hearing, which we expect to be in late April or early May.
Read the proposal here(PDF, 208KB)
How the proposal was developed
What this bylaw signifies is important to many groups from within the community, which is why an advisory panel was set up to support the review and an online survey was used to seek feedback from the general public.
The panel consisted of representatives from key community groups, including Tangata Whenua, the Hindu and Christian communities, the New Zealand Remembrance Army, natural burial advocates and funeral directors.
The advisory panel raised issues that were important to their respective communities. The panel decided on five areas to prioritise, which form the basis of the proposal. These are:
1. Environmental sustainability
2. Inclusivity and accessibility
3. Safety
4. General comfort and usability
5. Respecting and honouring our past.
In turn these categories had specific measures and actions identified. You can read more about these categories at the bottom of this page.
The current bylaw
Cemeteries are currently managed through the Cemeteries and Crematoria Bylaw 2016, the Cemetery Monument Policy 2016, the Natural Burials and Conditions 2013, and the Cultural Guidelines for the Burial of Koiwi/Human Remains at Aramoho Cemetery, Whanganui 2016.
The current Bylaw sets out regulations for the operation of public, council-owned and administered cemeteries and crematoria in the district. Its main purposes are to ensure that human remains are interred in an appropriate manner and that land and physical structures in cemeteries are protected.
The health and safety of the public, visitors and workers is an underlying concern, as is ensuring that processes and practices that take place in the cemeteries are safe for all.
Read the current bylaw
The council needs to revise this bylaw before it expires in August 2023. The Ministry of Health is conducting a comprehensive review of the Burials and Cremations Act 1964, which the current bylaw was created under, and the ministry expects the general policy approach to be publicly available soon. While we have limited guidance on what this will look like, we have drafted the bylaw in a way that will allow it to be enduring to any proposed legal changes.
Principles and Issues
The council took a ground-up approach for this review, looking not just at what was working and what could be improved from our existing controls, but also at what principles should guide the way we manage our cemeteries and our plaques and memorials in the district. The advisory group identified priority principles, and then identified issues underneath the priority principles.
In addition to the five principles, four priority issues were raised through this process as areas that required action.