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NZSports13 days ago

Major Island Bay sewage spill caused by pieces of timber, Wellington Water says

A major sewage spill occurred in Island Bay, Wellington, when two pieces of timber blocked the sewage network, leading to raw sewage flowing down the street and backing up in some properties. A local daycare center was forced to close due to health concerns. Wellington Water officials stated that the blockage was caused by the timber, which was not flushed down toilets but somehow entered the system. Residents attended a public meeting to discuss the incident and recovery efforts following a previous storm.

8 Jun 2026

Fleck said Wellington Water workers were working late into the night after Friday's spill.

Two pieces of timber is being cited as the cause of a recent major sewage spill in Wellington, in which streams of poo and waste flowed down a main street.

Raw sewage streamed down Island Bay parade on Friday, and backed up in some properties, in what residents described as " feral and disgusting ".

A local daycare centre was forced to close due to health concerns.

In a packed public meeting in the suburb on Saturday, Wellington Water's Chris Fleck said two pieces of timber had blocked the network.

"The main cause of the restriction in the network yesterday [on Friday] was two pieces of timber ... so timber doesn't get flushed down the toilets, someone has inadvertently put it in the network.

"Don't know how that would have got there, but that's what caused the blockage."

Island Bay residents packed out a community meeting at the weekend to discuss recovery after April's storm, and Friday's sewage spill.

Fleck said the timber had caused wastewater to back-up in the network, causing the sewage to "back-flow" into a number of properties and spill out of manholes along the parade.

Island Bay business-owner Fran de Gregorio said despite what had been reported, the sewage had not been unblocked in her mother's property sewer sump on Saturday.

Wellington Water has confirmed pieces of timber got stuck in the sewage system, triggering Friday's sewage spill.

"I can assure you, there were 11 Wellington Water men on her section last night, at 11 o'clock at night, and they could not clear the sewage system."

She also said in a separate incident for the stormwater system, contractors had pulled pieces of wood up from the drain outside her shop in 2024, following major works on the parade.

"Long things - they were pulling out of the drains because they had left them in there and it was about to flood my shop."

Fleck said Wellington Water workers were working late into the night after Friday's spill.

Tempers flared about that spill, and maintenances of drains in general, at the community meeting which had been called to discuss flood recovery after April's storm.

Fleck said the city's stormwater networks were there to collect and safely dispose of rainfall run-off, but were not designed for extreme events.

He said the one in one hundred year flood in April inundated parts of the network.

Some of the stormwater pipes dated back to the late 1800s and early 1900s, most were between 60 and 90 years old, he said.

"The key point I want to make today, and I appreciate it's an emotive subject after the events of yesterday [Friday] is that the wastewater networks, and the stormwater networks, are not connected."

But his comment that Wellington Water regularly checked stormwater intakes was met with yells of "not true" and "don't lie".

Mayor Andrew Little interjected.

"Ok, no, there will be time for questions and comments afterwards ... please just let the presentation be completed."

Fleck repeated staff checked the intakes.

A Wellington Water spokesperson said the pieces of wood - about 300- 400mm long - were found blocking a sewage pipe outside 335 The Parade.

"We can't be certain how the material entered the network."

The timber may have ended up in a stream that washed into the system, he said.

He said if people see anybody dumping materials into streams, waterways or pipe networks, they should report that immediately to Wellington City Council.

"Foreign materials have been found previously - such as bricks and other debris. On one occasion a road cone caused a significant blockage."

The blockage on Friday morning resulted in sewage overflowing through the gully traps on 5 properties nearby, the spokesperson said, and crews cleaned and disinfected the affected properties.

He said a second blockage occurred later in the day outside 124 The Parade, due to the roots of a Pōhutukawa tree.

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Read the full article at RNZ (Radio New Zealand)
Source document: Wellington Water's Chris Fleck

2 reports

NZ HeraldParty-alignedCenter13 days ago
Timber blamed for sewage spill that sent waste down Island Bay street

A sewage spill occurred in Island Bay, sending waste down the street, with timber being identified as the cause.

Bias read (Center): The subject matter is not politically charged. The article reports on an environmental incident without taking a stance or showing bias in framing.

RNZ (Radio New Zealand)State / PublicCenter13 days ago
Major Island Bay sewage spill caused by pieces of timber, Wellington Water says

A major sewage spill occurred in Island Bay, Wellington, when two pieces of timber blocked the sewage network, leading to raw sewage flowing down the street and backing up in some properties. A local daycare center was forced to close due to health concerns. Wellington Water officials stated that the blockage was caused by the timber, which was not flushed down toilets but somehow entered the system. Residents attended a public meeting to discuss the incident and recovery efforts following a previous storm.

Bias read (Center): The article reports on a technical infrastructure issue without taking a stance on political matters. It provides factual information about the cause of the sewage spill and includes quotes from officials and residents without apparent bias.

Official sources cited

  • organisation Wellington Water's Chris Fleck
  • court Fran de Gregorio

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • organisationWellington Water's Chris Fleck
  • courtFran de Gregorio