Gordon Whiting

Robert Gordon Whiting (16 March 1942 – 6 November 2018) was a judge of the Environment Court of New Zealand and on boards of inquiry that dealt with many important environmental issues.

Gordon Whiting
Judge of the Environment Court
In office
1997–2012
Personal details
Born
Robert Gordon Whiting

(1942-03-16)16 March 1942
Oamaru, New Zealand
Died6 November 2018(2018-11-06) (aged 76)
Auckland, New Zealand
Spouse(s)
Susan Barron
(
m. 1969)
Children4
Alma materUniversity of Otago
ProfessionBarrister and solicitor

Early life

Whiting, who was of Irish descent, was born in Oamaru in 1942 and attended St Kevins College in Oamaru.[1] He studied economics and law at the University of Otago, graduating BA LLB in 1967.[2] He was admitted as a barrister and solicitor in 1968, and practised in Whangarei, particularly in criminal law as both a prosecutor and defence counsel.[1][2]

Career

Whiting was deeply involved in important and complicated issues including power generation, infrastructure, landfills, Commercial and industrial development, subdivisions, coastal issues and sensitive landscape (especially the productions of guidelines for the landscape profession)[3] and the review of regional and district plans under the New Zealand Resource Management Act 1991.[1]

Some cases that he presided over for the Court, and later on boards of inquiry, included the Tongariro Power Development Flood Control Scheme reconnecting appeals, geothermal power station appeals, the Waikato Expressway Designation Hamilton Section Appeals; the King Salmon Board of Inquiry, the Basin Reserve Board of Inquiry, Canterbury water allocation cases for the Canterbury Regional Council, the Te Kuha Coal mine inquiry on the West Coast and the Rena wreck consents in the Bay of Plenty. Whiting also heard and determined a number of strategically important cases on policy instruments for infrastructure and natural resource use around Lake Taupo and the Waikato River.[1]

Death

Whiting died in Auckland on 6 November 2018.[2]

gollark: https://www.sbert.net/docs/
gollark: If you want to do text you could just use a normal text-only model.
gollark: They generally still require attribution.
gollark: Update update: unfortunately, I cannot achieve low enough validation error to make this actually usable. Probably it would work better if the OCR thing were more accurate (there are issues with spacing), and if I rated memes from a dataset as "good" or "bad" instead of having "good" and "bad" sets from separate places (but this would take too long). I might put the mostly nonfunctional thing on github or something.
gollark: Update on the automatic meme classification thing: after far too much time dealing with various dependencyish issues, my stuff is being run through CLIP and extremely janky OCR then a sentence embedding model. I will begin work on actually implementing a classifier once the script finishes running on everything.

References

  1. "A life defined by enduring principles". Dominion Post. 8 December 2018. p. C6. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  2. Adlam, Geoff. "Robert Gordon Whiting, 1942 – 2018". New Zealand Law Society. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  3. "Judge Gordon Whiting". New Zealand Institute of Landscape Architects. 9 November 2018. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
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