Deadline: 19-May-23
The Ministry for the Environment is offering the Environmental Legal Assistance Fund to not-for-profit groups advocating for matters of environmental public interest.
Funding enables applicants to participate more effectively and efficiently matters or issues affecting the environment or processes regulating the environment.
Funding Information
- There is no minimum grant and the maximum grant is $50,000 (excluding GST) per group per application for any one case. The fund has a total annual budget of $600,000 (excluding GST).
What the fund covers?
- Funding is available to cover the time and expenses of legal representatives and/or expert witnesses used in preparing for, resolving and/or presenting cases before the Environment Court, higher courts, boards of inquiry and for first instance hearings (for example, before decision-making panels) where the right of appeal is likely to be restricted to points of law only.
- As part of your application you must include a short resume about your legal representatives and expert witnesses which outlines their relevant qualifications and experience, including the experience of your legal counsel in resource management or environmental matters. There is no guarantee any or all requested funding will be awarded. You must be eligible for funding and only reasonable costs will be considered for funding.
What the fund does not cover?
Funding is not available for:
- assistance at council-level hearings where there is a right of appeal that is not restricted to points of law only
- costs incurred before the funding application being lodged
- costs of members of applicant groups in any event
- sundry costs of non-incorporated groups
- costs of establishing the group as a legal entity
- ongoing costs of the group, such as capital costs and rent
- costs awarded by the court against a group or individuals of the group
- costs of preparing submissions to the Minister for the Environment for board of inquiry hearings under the call-in process. This is a prior stage to the board of inquiry hearing.
Eligibility Criteria
- The fund eligibility criteria must be met before an application for funding is submitted to the Ministry. Only complete and eligible applications will be forwarded to the advisory panel for assessment.
- Applicant must be a not-for-profit group. Eligible groups include:
- iwi and hapū groups
- incorporated societies
- community groups.
- It is generally expected that groups are incorporated or a trust. The fund is not available to individuals.
- The group must be party to a proceeding that is eligible for funding
- Before applying for funding the group must either:
- already be engaged in the proceedings by being a party to the case, eg, by having lodged a submission with the relevant authority, participated in court proceedings as initiator, respondent or as an interested party; or
- have demonstrated to a court that the group has standing to participate in the proceedings.
Assessment Criteria
- The Primary funding criteria recognise whether the application impacts the environment or involves processes regulating the environment that are of consequence to the public generally.
- The Secondary funding criteria provide other considerations which the Panel may take into account and therefore may also influence the level of funding if any is recommended.
- Primary funding criteria
- The panel will consider whether a group’s case is in the environmental public interest, including whether it:
- relates to or raises nationally or regionally important matters or issues affecting the environment or processes regulating the environment.
- relates to the relationship of Māori and their culture and traditions with their ancestral lands, water, sites, waahi tapu, and other taonga
- has the potential to create useful case law
- has the potential to improve the administration and efficiency of the relevant resource management Act/environmental legislation
- involves issues of national or regional importance that will not be addressed in full before a relevant court or a board of inquiry or hearing authority without the expert evidence provided by the group
- there is a degree of collaboration undertaken or proposed to be undertaken by the funding applicant with other parties in the case.
- The panel will consider whether a group’s case is in the environmental public interest, including whether it:
- Secondary funding criteria
- The panel may consider:
- when considering the commitment of the group:
- the funding applicant’s demonstrated ability to manage the case (including any previous experience in legal cases)
- its history with the issue
- the time it has invested in the issue or case
- its financial contribution to the issue or case (having regard to the position of the group and the resources it can offer)
- its efforts to raise funds and
- the pro bono contribution from lawyers and/or experts
- whether the case relates to Māori undertaking resource management/environmental duties and functions
- whether the group is open to mediation, and whether mediation is appropriate in the proceedings
- whether there is likely to be an imbalance between the quality of evidence and case management between the parties due to a lack of financial resources
- whether the case is vexatious or frivolous
- whether the case relates to a board of inquiry or a direct referral to the Environment Court or higher courts appeal
- whether the group and/or its members has a private interest in the outcome
- whether the case improves the efficiency and effectiveness of policy and planning instruments
- any other matters arising out of the application.
- when considering the commitment of the group:
- The panel may consider:
For more information, visit Ministry for the Environment.