Otakiri

Otakiri or Ōtākiri is a rural community just outside Edgecumbe, in the Whakatane District and Bay of Plenty Region of New Zealand's North Island.

Otakiri
Rural community
Otakiri
Coordinates: 37.985475°S 176.764733°E / -37.985475; 176.764733
CountryNew Zealand
RegionBay of Plenty
Territorial authorityWhakatāne District

The New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage gives a translation of "place of loosening or freeing from tapu" for Ōtākiri.[1]

A dairy factory was established in the area in 1912.[2]

The settlement was known as Tarawera until 1928.[2]

In 2017, the Chinese company which owned rights to water from the Otakiri Springs sought planning and regulatory permission to expand its water bottling operation.[3] Permission was granted in June 2018.[4] Green Party cabinet minister Eugenie Sage's involvement in the decision led to a revolt within the party.[5]

A local crowd-funded environment group appealed the decision in 2019,[6] with support from local iwi Ngāti Awa.[7]

Education

Otakiri School is a co-educational state primary school for Year 0 to 8 students,[8][9] with a roll of 186 as of March 2020.[10]

The Otakiri School logo consists of Maori patterns and designs, and shows a Pukeko in front of a triangle, representing the nearby mountain of Putauaki (Mt Edgecumbe). The school's motto is "Learners Forever, Leading the Future".[8]

The school was founded in 1920. It now consists of a field, sports turf, computer suite, library, hard court and several playgrounds, and uses the neighbouring Otakiri District Hall for assemblies, fundraising and school events.[9]

The school hosts a Country Fair and a Calf-Club Day every spring and regular sports competitions. It alternates each year between a talent show and a school show.[8]

Currently, there are four school houses:

Previously, there were five school houses:

  • Te Kanawa/T.K. (Purple) - Named after New Zealand opera singer Dame Kiri Te Kanawa
  • Kendall (Black) - Named after Barbara Kendall, a former New Zealand boardsailor
  • Mahy (Orange) - Named after New Zealand author, Margaret Mahy
  • Hillary (Green) - Named after Sir Edmund Hillary, a New Zealand mountaineer and explorer
  • Blake (Red) - Named after yachtsman Sir Peter Blake[8]
gollark: To be fair, meetings should be short and it's good to encourage this.
gollark: I mean, yes, more independence, but you would also get that from entering work in some way probably.
gollark: I don't LIKE papers. They are like ESSAYS, but bigger and thus worse.
gollark: University: on the one hand you apparently earn a significant amount per year more, yes. But on the other hand, universities involve significant hassle, you're not in the workforce for a while, they may not actually be very effective at teaching massively useful stuff, they're wildly overpriced, and they seem to partly be wasteful "positional goods".
gollark: Is this a bot imitating andrew badly?

References

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