Risks & Red Lines

What Must Be Protected

Balance • Responsibility • Protection • Stewardship • Future

Why This Page Exists

Every vision requires optimism. Every successful vision also requires realism.

While future opportunities may create employment, housing, tourism, improved infrastructure, and economic resilience, there are also risks.

This page identifies the boundaries, protections, and guiding principles that should never be forgotten when considering the future of Matakana.

The Greatest Risk

The greatest risk is not change.

The greatest risk is losing the very qualities that make Matakana unique.

Development without stewardship can damage identity. Preservation without action can create stagnation. The challenge is maintaining balance between the two.

Red Lines

Loss of Whenua

Development should not lead to unnecessary loss of long-held family or community land.

Environmental Damage

Harbour health, waterways, coastlines, wetlands, and ecosystems must remain protected.

Loss of Identity

Economic growth should never erase the history, culture, and character of the island.

Uncontrolled Growth

Growth should be deliberate, planned, and proportional to local capacity.

Exclusion of Whānau

Future opportunities should not leave descendants disconnected from their own whenua.

Short-Term Thinking

Decisions should be evaluated against impacts that may last generations.

Potential Risks

Overtourism

Visitor numbers exceeding the island’s ability to support them.

Infrastructure Pressure

Roads, transport, services, and facilities struggling to keep pace with growth.

Housing Affordability

Rising property values making it difficult for local families to remain or return.

Governance Failure

Poor communication, unclear authority, and ineffective decision-making structures.

Economic Dependence

Relying too heavily on a single industry or income source.

Loss of Knowledge

Cultural memory, local knowledge, and historical understanding fading over time.

What Must Be Preserved

The Harbour

Clean water, healthy fisheries, and protected marine environments.

The Land

Productive, sustainable, and connected to future generations.

The Stories

Whakapapa, oral histories, archives, and cultural memory.

The Community

Relationships, cooperation, belonging, and mutual support.

The Opportunity

Pathways for future generations to live, work, and contribute.

The Choice

Preserving the ability of future generations to determine their own direction.

The Stewardship Test

Before any major project, proposal, or initiative proceeds, a simple question should be asked:

“Will this leave Matakana stronger, weaker, or unchanged for the next generation?”

If the answer is unclear, more work is required. If the answer is weaker, the proposal should be reconsidered. If the answer is stronger, it may deserve further exploration.

2050–2075 Vision

The purpose of identifying risks is not to prevent progress.

The purpose is to ensure progress remains aligned with the values, identity, responsibilities, and aspirations of the people connected to the island.

Successful stewardship is not measured by what was built. It is measured by what remains worth inheriting.