Traffic and Maritime Notices




4316 NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE No. 154


  1. The First Schedule of the Traffic (Marlborough District)
    Notice No. 1, 1992, signed on 3 August 1992 and published
    in the New Zealand Gazette, 6 August 2003, page 2699, is
    amended by revoking the words:

“No. 6 State Highway (Blenheim-Invercargill via Nelson
and Greymouth) 100 metres measured westerly,
generally, from Severne Street”,

and substituting the words:

“No. 6 State Highway (Blenheim-Invercargill via Nelson
and Greymouth) 240 metres measured westerly,
generally, from Severne Street”.

Schedule

Situated within Marlborough District at Riverlands:

Sheffield Street: From a point 20 metres measured
southerly, generally, from State Highway No. 1
(Awanui–Bluff) along the said Sheffield Street to its
termination.

Liverpool Street.
Vernon Street.
Bristol Street.
Manchester Street.

Signed at Wellington this 10th day of November 2003.

P. G. CROFT, Manager, Safer Roads.
(RT01/3/51 Marlborough District)

au7449


Maritime Safety Authority of

New Zealand

Maritime Transport Act 1994

Maritime Rules—Notice of Exemption From
Part 24A, Appendix 1.5

Pursuant to section 47 of the Maritime Transport Act 1994,
Kodak New Zealand Limited is exempt from the provisions
of Maritime Rule Part 24A, Appendix 1.5, in respect of:

(a) Chapter 7.2, Section 7.2.2.3 of the International
Maritime Dangerous Goods (IMDG) Code

(b) IMO MSC/Circ 1075, Granting Exemptions from
the provisions of the International Maritime
Dangerous Goods (IMDG) Code

Subject to the conditions stated below, IMDG Code Class 8
packaging group II or III materials that would otherwise
be required to be segregated from one another due to the
provisions pertaining to segregation groups as identified by
an entry in column 16 of the Dangerous Goods List
indicating “Away from” or “Separated from” acids or
“Away from” or “Separated from” alkalis may be packaged
or stowed together provided the shipper certifies in writing
that substances do not react dangerously with each other and
cause:

(a) combustion and/or evolution of considerable heat;
(b) evolution of flammable, toxic or asphyxiant gases;
(c) the formation of corrosive substances.

Conditions

  1. A copy of this exemption and the shipper’s certification
    required above must accompany each shipment made
    under the terms of this exemption.

  2. This exemption does not affect the need to obtain
    any other authorisations from other agencies of the
    New Zealand Government, or from competent
    authorities of countries of transit or destination.

  3. The dangerous goods document must include the
    following statement:

“Transport in accordance with Exemption DG
WJH/IMDG EXMP 1 dated 30 October 2003”.

  1. Failure to comply with the above conditions will result
    in the immediate suspension of the exemption.

  2. All persons involved in handling or transporting of
    dangerous goods by sea must have undergone training as
    stipulated in Maritime Rule Part 24A, appendix 2.

This exemption is valid until 30 October 2008, unless
withdrawn or superseded by a revised exemption, or an
amendment to the IMDG Code is published which
authorises the provisions of this exemption.

RUSSELL PAUL KILVINGTON, Director of Maritime
Safety.

au7426


Transit New Zealand

Transit New Zealand Act 1989

Transit New Zealand (Signs on State Highways)
Bylaw 2003/13: Bylaw Regulating Signs on
State Highways

Pursuant to section 61 (3) of the Transit New Zealand Act
1989, Transit New Zealand hereby makes the following
bylaw.

Bylaw

  1. Title and commencement—This bylaw may be cited as
    the Transit New Zealand (Signs on State Highways) Bylaw
    2003/13 and shall come into force 28 days after the date of
    its publication in the New Zealand Gazette.

  2. Interpretation—In this bylaw:

“Official road sign” means any sign erected in
accordance with the Traffic Regulations 1976, rules
made under the Land Transport Act 1998 or the
Manual of Traffic Signs and Markings (MOTSAM)
for the time being in force.

“Sign” means any name, figure, character, outline,
display, notice, placard, poster, banner of any kind,
advertising device or appliance, or any other thing of
a similar nature to attract attention that is on or over a
State highway including being on any bridge or other
structure that is over a State highway; and

(a) includes all materials composing the sign,
together with the frame, background, structure
and support or anchorage of the sign;

(b) includes any of the above listed things when fixed
or mounted on any vehicle that is parked on a
State highway for the purpose of displaying that
sign;

(c) includes signs used by roadside vendors licensed
under the Transit New Zealand (Roadside
Vendors) Bylaw 1993/2;

(d) includes temporary local banners; but

(e) does not include any official road sign or traffic
sign.

“State highway” means a State highway as defined in
section 2 of the Transit New Zealand Act 1989 (which
includes the carriageway, the road verge, associated
land, structures and fixtures), and includes a
motorway as defined in section 2 of that Act.



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 2003, No 154


Gazette.govt.nz PDF NZ Gazette 2003, No 154





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🚂 Traffic (Marlborough District) Notice 2003 (continued from previous page)

🚂 Transport & Communications
10 November 2003
Speed Restrictions, Marlborough District, Traffic Regulations
  • P. G. Croft, Manager, Safer Roads

🚂 Maritime Transport Act 1994 - Exemption from Part 24A, Appendix 1.5

🚂 Transport & Communications
30 October 2003
Maritime Safety, Dangerous Goods, Exemption, Kodak New Zealand Limited
  • Russell Paul Kilvington, Director of Maritime Safety

🚂 Transit New Zealand (Signs on State Highways) Bylaw 2003/13

🚂 Transport & Communications
Signs, State Highways, Bylaw, Transit New Zealand