
A golf course burn-off that sparked public complaints has prompted a reminder to check open burning rules.
Reports of smoke in Rotorua鈥檚 Springfield, Pomare and surrounding areas yesterday morning were traced back to a burn-off at Springfield Golf Course.
Residents posted on social media complaining of irritated eyes, coughing and a bad smell.
The smoke also prompted complaints to the Bay of Plenty Regional Council and Fire Emergency New Zealand.
A regional council spokesperson said they were aware of a 鈥済reen waste fire鈥 in the Springfield area on Monday morning.

A planned burn-off at the Springfield Golf Course on Monday.
They said the fire fell outside the remit for open burning under the council鈥檚 Regional Natural Resources Plan.
鈥淭hese rules state that any outdoor fire must not cause noxious or dangerous, offensive or objectionable smoke beyond the boundary of the property where the fire is located.鈥
The regional council was not made aware of the planned fire in advance, the spokesperson said.
It had since discussed the issue with the golf club and informed it of its 鈥渞esponsibilities going forwards鈥.
Rotorua's Bay of Plenty Regional Council building. Photo / Laura Smith
The council reminded residents planning on lighting an outdoor fire this summer to check the regional council website and ensure they were aware of the rules.
Fire and Emergency Northern Communications shift manager Ryan Geen confirmed it received a call about a vegetation fire at the golf course.
鈥淭his was then confirmed to be a controlled burn-off,鈥 Geen said. No further action was required.
A Springfield Golf Club employee said the controlled fire was extinguished yesterday morning.
They said the burn-off consisted of green waste, including several recently felled dead trees.
Despite suggestions online, they said there was no rubber burned.

Springfield Golf Course, Rotorua. Photo / Felix Desmarais
鈥淚t was just vegetation.鈥
They said the regional council was made aware of the burn-off in advance, along with Fire and Emergency.
鈥淲e鈥檝e done everything correctly and how we鈥檙e supposed to do it.鈥
Children at the nearby BestStart daycare complained of a 鈥渇unny smell鈥, according to centre manager Neroli Lemon, but did not seem overly impacted by the smoke.
Resident Ryan Gray suggested the golf course should look at alternative means of waste disposal after witnessing children 鈥渃overing their mouths鈥 and 鈥渃oughing鈥 on the school run.
鈥淚t was a bit alarming and just pretty crappy to deal with because you are unsure what it is.鈥
Rules and recommendations for outdoor burning listed on the regional council鈥檚 website included not lighting a fire within 100m of a neighbouring dwelling, not burning household rubbish, plastics, or treated timber, ensuring garden waste is dry before burning and checking wind, weather, and local rules.
The council also advised letting neighbours know and keeping fires away from roads and highways, with airflow for efficient burning, and never during smoke inversion conditions.
Mathew Nash is a Local Democracy Reporting journalist based at the Rotorua Daily Post. He has previously written for SunLive, been a regular contributor to RNZ and was a football reporter in the UK for eight years.
- LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.
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