Mauao closed for next three nights

Tauranga City Council and Mauao Trust have condemned people illegally letting off fireworks on Mauao. Photo / NZME

Tauranga City Council says a full overnight closure will be in place on Mauao over the next three nights after fireworks were let off on the maunga on multiple nights this week.

The council said it was preparing to file a police complaint.

A Tauranga City Council spokesperson told the Bay of Plenty Times the council was in the process of filing a police report after fireworks were lit on Mauao on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights.

“We will be providing all relevant information, including images of individuals who may have been involved. As this will soon be a police matter, we’re unable to answer questions about the investigation.”

The council said in a statement this afternoon Mauao would be fully closed from 7pm to 5am, from today until Monday morning, to protect the maunga and ensure public safety. Fencing and signage would be in place at all closure points.

Council said four Māori wardens were on-site from 7pm to 11pm last night. 

“Despite their presence, fireworks were again let off on Mauao. Unfortunately, due to the number of people spread across the maunga, it was not possible to contain the activity.”

Council said the approximate time fireworks were let off last night and on Wednesday was between 8pm and 8.30pm.

“On Guy Fawkes night, they were set off at the summit, and last night they were lit at various elevated locations across the maunga.”

Council said suspects of the November 5 fireworks incident were identified after footage captured by the council’s Tauranga Transport Operation Centre was reviewed.

A permanent fire ban has been announced for Pāpāmoa and Mount Maunganui to prevent fires like this one on Mauao several years ago. Photo / Supplied.

In an earlier joint statement, the Mauao Trust and the council said using fireworks on Mauao was “illegal, dangerous and completely unacceptable”. 

There is a permanent fire ban on Mauao, including on cigarette-smoking, using lighters, fireworks and lighting recreational fires.

A fire on Mauao in January 2016 destroyed about 4000sq m of vegetation.

A Mauao Trust representative earlier said the trust was “outraged and deeply concerned”.

“The 2016 fire caused devastating damage, and we cannot risk that happening again.” 

Parliament’s petitions select committee heard evidence yesterday regarding three petitions calling for a total ban on the public sales of fireworks.

Supporters of the ban include the SPCA, NZ Veterinary Association, Veterinarians for Animal Welfare Aotearoa, Fire and Emergency New Zealand and Animates.

Also backing the ban are Chris Rugaas from Oropi and Donna Matheson from Pāpāmoa Hills, whose horses had to be put down after being severely injured in November last year.

Matheson’s mare Remi bolted through a wire fence on November 6, 2024, and Rugaas’ breeding stallion Rockafella had to be put down in similar circumstances two days later.

On January 1, Matheson, with Tauranga friends Nadeen Mitchell and Louise Prastiti, launched an online nationwide Fireworks Impact Database for people to log harm to people, animals, property and the environment.

Mitchell said the database had nearly 300 responses as of November 6.

NZ First leader Winston Peters has introduced a member’s bill to ban the public sale and use of fireworks.

Sandra Conchie is a senior journalist at the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post who has been a journalist for 25 years. She mainly covers police, court and other justice stories, as well as general news. She has been a Canon Media Awards regional/community reporter of the year.

4 comments

You are joking right?..

Posted on 07-11-2025 22:05 | By groutby

...."to protect the maunga and ensure public safety"...??...from what exactly??...if there is no current threat then surely it can be assumed that TCC have gone yet again into 'child mode' and decided to punish ALL for the misdemeanours of a few...
By all means follow up if you think necessary, but to close the Mount access is plain childish, so who exactly authorised the closure that affects locals and welcomed tourists?...we won't know eh..
As far as the banning of fireworks as supported clearly by the comments from writer of the article, the decision is a government one...and doubtless many comments in support of fireworks could be found if looked for...it was the quietest Nov 5th I can remember of many generations...we won't need to ban it, it is fizzing out by itself.....


Idiot's

Posted on 08-11-2025 12:27 | By Justin T.

That one word sums up the reason to have fireworks for professional displays only.
Professional = timing; we know when the flash and bang will occur.
Professional = Approval of location; no scrub fires.
Professional = Safety & community respect; we are able to cater for the small window of activity.
Unfortunately the numbers of immature, undeveloped brains of the socially inept, socially irresponsible, selfish bunch of idiots are growing. They know they are doing wrong as they scrapper at any signs of being held accountable for their recklessness.
Let's not have another year to decide. Ban it now!


How does Guy Fawkes affect NZ?

Posted on 09-11-2025 11:22 | By morepork

People who have no interest in history (which is a fascinating subject that attempts to explain how we got where we are) ask this question when they are seeking to get it banned. The arguments for banning it are not historical; they are current and pragmatic.
The Gunpowder Plot was formed by a bunch of Roman Catholics living in a Protestant England and seeking to restore a Catholic monarch to the throne.
The protestant King James was not particularly suppressive, but the conspirators felt God required them to restore the "true faith". Guy Fawkes was merely the engineer, who knew how to deal with explosives, not the leader. Tasman's exploration was 37 years later and would have been minimally affected, but Cook's extensive exploration was just 164 years later and would probably not have happened if Fawkes had succeeded.
We would probably have become a Dutch colony...


@Groutby

Posted on 09-11-2025 11:36 | By morepork

I was in favour of keeping Guy Fawkes, but over the years I have changed my position. Even so, you make some fair points.
The problem really is that we DO have irresponsible people who cause serious damage and disruption. As is sadly so often the case, the majority are penalized for the stupidity of a small minority.
New Zealand is a young country and it is right that we should move on from our colonial origins. We have an opportunity to create a modern, diverse society, with equality and justice under the Law for all the ethnicities. Each different culture respected and preserved, but a single overall "citizenship"; New Zealanders.
We could be a model for the world in how to get the best from different cultures living side-by-side and committed to ONE future.
Sometimes, a particular aspect of a particular culture can/should be moved on from.


Leave a Comment


You must be logged in to make a comment.