Oliver Shone was having so much fun.
He was an adventurer, a wannabe pirate, an animal lover.
The Wellington boy spent the day of January 25 playing and cycling with friends and spending precious time with a loved family member. They鈥檇 wound up at the beach.
Like many other 11-year-olds he wanted to run around and climb on the logs on the shore. It shouldn鈥檛 have cost him his life.
Oliver鈥檚 maternal grandfather was cooking dinner when he got an urgent phone call from his son.
He told him to pack everything up as Oliver had suffered an accident and they needed to go up to Gisborne from Wellington.
Multiple family members drove in convoy north on State Highway 1, rushing to get to Oliver鈥檚 side. But they hadn鈥檛 made it out of the region when another phone call came.
鈥淚t was then we heard the tragic news that Oliver had died in hospital about that time, after CPR efforts failed,鈥 says his grandfather, who does not want to be named.
聽鈥淭hat was an awful moment for all, as you can imagine.鈥
础听聽has raised nearly $13,000.
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It鈥檚 not yet known exactly what happened as Oliver played on the beach.
One moment he was climbing on a log, the next he had fallen and suffered a fatal injury. A brief moment in a fun afternoon with incomprehensible consequences.
Oliver鈥檚 grandfather says he had some time over the following days to look into the state of Waikanae Beach in Gisborne, and was 鈥渁ppalled鈥 at what he saw.
Photos from the beach show the shore littered with logs and branches, wood slash washed down from forestry sites that had been left covered in debris from harvesting.
Waikanae Beach, Gisborne was contaminated with forestry slash the day Oliver Shone (pictured) died. Photo / Supplied
鈥淏oth myself and my children are quite familiar with Waikanae Beach as much time was spent there . . . driftwood was generally present but not noticeable and certainly not a safety hazard as far as I was concerned,鈥 the grandfather says.
The picture is now significantly different and has left locals and family questioning how such hazardous material can be allowed to contaminate the beaches.
Oliver鈥檚 uncle, who also does not want to be named, questions how the forestry industry could be allowed to 鈥済et away with creating such pollution鈥.
鈥淚 think if it was any other industry creating such pollution it simply wouldn鈥檛 be allowed.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 disgusting and somebody needs to be held to account.鈥
Oliver鈥檚 paternal grandparents have spoken to a family member who was at the scene when Oliver was injured.
鈥淪he was as devastated, as we were; she said it was instantaneous,鈥 grandfather Norman Gracie says.
鈥淗e had been there, jumping about the logs.
鈥淟ots of people have been affected by that slash. Sadly, Oliver lost his life, just playing about.鈥
Gracie says he asked police whether the beach had been cordoned off prior to the accident, and was told it didn鈥檛 appear that it was. He says children aren鈥檛 going to read warning signs and there needs to be more done to prevent harm.
鈥淵oung boys don鈥檛 think.鈥
He also says people should just clean the beach up, rather than worry about whose responsibility it was.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not about politics, it鈥檚 just common sense . . . just do it.鈥
The problem with forestry slash
Two weeks before Oliver鈥檚 death, multiple rivers and streams in Tair膩whiti were overwhelmed by forestry waste products following Cyclone Hale.
It鈥檚 a particular issue in the district as much of Gisborne鈥檚 land is used for plantation forestry. There are 15 forestry companies operating in the area.
The waste product includes debris such as logs, branches and sticks which, when not disposed of, can be swept down rivers and streams during heavy rain - exacerbating flooding and in this case, clogging up Gisborne鈥檚 beaches with thick layers of wood. The waste can also end up being swept away due to landslides.
Slash made headlines in 2018 when Tolaga Bay and the Gisborne District was swamped with a million tonnes of the waste material following major rainfall, prompting a clean-up that cost tens of millions of dollars.
Gisborne mayor Rehette Stoltz won鈥檛 say whether the council knew which forestry company鈥檚 slash was at the beach the day Oliver died, only noting that the matter has been referred to the coroner.
Woody debris from last month鈥檚 cyclone was being analysed and if companies are in breach of environmental rules, the council will prosecute.
Council began increasing its monitoring, enforcement and resourcing around forestry slash from 2018, Stoltz says, as well as strengthening consent requirements and has successfully prosecuted five forestry companies.
She says Oliver鈥檚 death is 鈥渁n unimaginable loss for his family鈥, and the council鈥檚 thoughts will always be with them.
Forestry slash on Jeremy Murphy's Tologa Bay sheep and beef farm after ex-tropical Cyclone Hale. Photo / Jeremy Murphy
The Natural and Built Environment Bill before Parliament would increase fines for environmental offences by companies from $600,000 to $10 million.
The powers of environmental enforcement agencies, such as regional councils, would also increase, as would the scope of orders courts could make against such offenders. There would be additional fines of up to $10,000 for each day or part-day that offending continued.
Environment Minister David Parker, who is behind the bill, says the debris situation is concerning.
鈥淭he source and content of the woody debris is being assessed. That said, forestry companies and landowners who plant and harvest wood products must comply with established rules around those activities and the relevant council is responsible for monitoring and enforcing the rules.
鈥淭he Government has implemented policies... and regulations designed to reduce the risk to the environment and the livelihoods of those in areas vulnerable to the outcomes of such weather events.鈥
Forestry Minister Stuart Nash sent his condolences to Oliver鈥檚 family but says he can鈥檛 comment because the matter is before the coroner.
础听, started by organiser Hera Ngata-Gibson before Oliver鈥檚 death, calls to 鈥渟top the ongoing environmental disaster in Tair膩whiti鈥 and has gained at least 9642 signatures.
鈥淎 review of acceptable land use in Tair膩whiti is seriously overdue, and we can鈥檛 afford to wait for the ten-year process currently proposed by Gisborne District Council,鈥 the petition sates. 鈥淭he region, the regulator and central government need encouragement to take stronger action faster.鈥
Philip Hope, chief executive of the Eastland Wood Council, which speaks collectively for the forestry industry in the Eastland region, says their hearts go out to Oliver鈥檚 family 鈥渁s we cannot imagine what they are going through鈥.
Their primary concern is the safety of their teams and the public in impacted areas.
Oliver Shone dressed as a firefighter for one trip to preschool. Photo / Supplied
鈥淲hile beach clean-ups are mostly completed in Tair膩whiti now after ex-tropical Cyclone Hale, we would urge the public to stay away from other impact areas where clean-ups are still ongoing,鈥 he says.
He says that following the 2018 issues, the industry changed its practices to mitigate the risks 鈥渋ncluding real efforts to improve resilience inside the forest gate鈥.
鈥淲e also reduced harvest residues left on sites, increased focus on improving the quality and robustness of the in-forest road infrastructure that has significantly reduced the risk of failure, increased streamside buffers and re-vegetation with native species to protect waterways. We also want to keep having conversations with central and local government about what more we can do in the future.鈥
Hope says they understand the community鈥檚 frustration, but everyone needs to recognise woody debris comes from a variety of sources.
鈥淎s an industry, we are committed to do better to restore the trust of the public. We are looking forward to being part of any discussions about our future in the community we call home. We want to be part of the solution, and for us that means a broad and rational discussion about future land use of Tair膩whiti that considers all land users and is based on science.鈥
Of the 163,000 hectares of production forestry in Tairawhiti, approximately 130,000 hectares are represented by 11 forestry companies that are members of the Eastland Wood Council.
There are 819,000 hectares in the Tairawhiti region and forestry represents just 20 per cent of land area, Hope says.
鈥淔or every hectare in production forestry, there is 1.5 hectares in native vegetation.鈥
A complex situation
Stoltz says the issue of forestry slash is a 鈥渃omplex situation鈥 needing support from Tair膩whiti as well as central government to make 鈥渢he kind of transformational change that鈥檚 needed.
鈥淲e support the community鈥檚 call for an independent inquiry... and have been in conversations with our community, ministers, Eastland Wood Council, mana whenua and Mana Taiao Tair膩whiti.鈥
鈥淐ouncil is committed to protecting our environment for the future of our iwi, hapu, whanau, tamariki, manuhiri and all our communities.
鈥淭he consequences and effects on our community from these extreme events are heartbreaking and we need to ensure that we are doing everything possible to mitigate this.
鈥淲e need to work alongside each other to leave a better legacy for our children and the community of Tair膩whiti.鈥
She says forestry companies have been cleaning up the city beaches and Tolaga Bay.
Since 2022, the council has been working on managing woody debris after being hit by six severe weather events in 18 months.
It will support any government initiatives to introduce preventative measures to stop forestry industry practices that negatively impacted the environment.
The council also made submissions on the National Environmental Standards for Plantation Forestry and will do so again this year.
鈥楬e had so much life鈥
Oliver loved running around on the beach.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what we did when we were kids,鈥 Gracie says.
He describes Oliver as a 鈥渢ypical 11-year-old boy鈥 and a 鈥渧ery loving kid鈥.
He was 鈥渋nquisitive, sensitive鈥 and loved animals, he says.
The last time he saw Oliver was in November. 鈥淥ur first impressions were that he had suddenly grown up. He was turning into a young man.鈥
Oliver was 鈥渁dvanced beyond his years鈥.
He loved the outdoors and 鈥渨as always out on his bike somewhere鈥. He had been planning on spending more time on the water after recently getting a kayak.
Oliver was unique and 鈥渉ad his own style鈥, a sentiment echoed by others who knew him.
He liked to collect jewellery, says Gracie, reminiscing on a day spent perusing the shops on the Wellington waterfront, looking at bracelets and pendants.
鈥淲e bought him a ring and a crystal pendant.鈥
Oliver was also enthusiastic about his gaming, fantasy books, and ships.
Norman Gracie (left) with grandson Oliver Shone and Oliver's father Blair Gracie in New Plymouth. Photo / Supplied
He was interested in learning how things worked and how to fix them, and Gracie thinks given the chance Oliver might have grown up to work in some type of trade.
鈥淗e touched a lot of people. People were taken with him because you could have a conversation with him about just about anything . . . he used to go on about Donald Trump something rotten.鈥
Gracie and his wife had been looking at photos and videos of Oliver, and says they are now 鈥渢reasured memories鈥.
He will miss Oliver鈥檚 company and conversation, saying he and his wife are handling his death 鈥渂adly鈥, but have good support around them.
The day he died, Oliver had been cycling with his friends and spent a great day with a relative.
鈥淗e was having so much fun.鈥
鈥淲e will remember him as he was. He just had so much life in him, and such a future. We could only have wished the best for him.鈥
Oliver: a pirate, Titanic enthusiast, and an adventurer
Oliver鈥檚 鈥渇irst best friend鈥, Bobby Chilton-Nixon has been asking his mother about reincarnation following his friend鈥檚 death.
The pair met at primary school at the age of 5 and have been best friends ever since, mum Jo Nixon says.
鈥淢y son is very attracted to the quirky kids and Oliver was a quirky kid. They took an instant liking to each other.鈥
The boys had not seen as much of each other since heading to different schools recently but had still been playing online games together over the summer.
She says they are doing 鈥渙kay鈥, and Bobby and his friends have been working together to make sure the things Oliver had built in Minecraft don鈥檛 get knocked down.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e talking about building a memorial for him [in the game].鈥
Oliver Shone (left) and Bobby Chilton-Nixon at the Wellington Botanical Gardens together. Photo / Supplied
She describes Oliver as a 鈥減irate鈥, saying he would often dress up as one, even coming to school in a pirate outfit.
鈥淗e would come to school dressed as a captain and just totally own it.鈥
Oliver was 鈥渧ery staunch on bullies鈥 and would not allow himself to be bullied, she says.
He had many interests, including a fascination with the Titanic, which he 鈥渒new all about鈥.
鈥淎t his birthday party it was 鈥榩in the steam thing on the Titanic鈥,鈥 she says.
鈥淗e was just an adventurer. He marched to the beat of his own drum and he lived life full-on.鈥
Oliver had 鈥渧ibrant, bright red hair鈥 to match his personality.
Nixon鈥檚 mother mentioned coming to school one day and seeing 5-year-old Oliver carrying a single sheet of paper to the art room. The teacher had told him to take a stack of artwork there and he had figured if he took the sheets one by one he could delay returning to class.
Oliver Shone (right) and best friend Bobby Chilton-Nixon at Oliver's sixth birthday party. Photo / Supplied
鈥淗e had this cheekiness about him . . . he was a really special little boy and I just know how much he meant to [his mother]. They were in it together,鈥 Nixon says.
She had visited Oliver鈥檚 mother this week and though she has friends who had lost loved ones before, 鈥渢his is a different level of devastation鈥.
Whatever changes that could come about with legislation, forestry operators will be under increasing pressure now Oliver鈥檚 death has become a symbol of the controversy around forestry slash.
The accident even has Oliver鈥檚 friend Bobby questioning policy - Nixon says he asked her 鈥渨hat is the government going to do about this?鈥
鈥淚 told him 鈥榶ou can write to the Prime Minister and tell him that your friend died, and ask what is he going to do about it?鈥欌
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