MLC maori land trusts tereo
mahi a ngā kaitiaki whenua, ko rātou anō ka utu i ngā pūtea moni i ngaro mai i ā rātou mahi hē.
Documents/Guides-Templates-Factsheets/MLC-maori-land-trusts-tereo.pdf (754 kb)
mahi a ngā kaitiaki whenua, ko rātou anō ka utu i ngā pūtea moni i ngaro mai i ā rātou mahi hē.
Documents/Guides-Templates-Factsheets/MLC-maori-land-trusts-tereo.pdf (754 kb)
Heoi, kei roto i taua rahi, ko ngā kaitiaki kua ngaro, kua mate, kua rihaina, ā, kāhore i whakakīa ngā tūnga, ā, kāhore anō kia whakaitihia ngā kaute e te Kooti.
Documents/Guides-Templates-Factsheets/MLC-maori-reservations-tereo.pdf (387 kb)
Engari me whakaae ngā mema katoa kia whakauru atu ā rātou nei hea ki taua trust. Mēnā kāre tētahi e whakaae, me kaua ā rātou rawa e whakauruhia engari me tuku tōtika ki a rātou.
Documents/Guides-Templates-Factsheets/MLC-succession-tereo.pdf (1.2 mb)
Steve is a seasoned public sector leader with experience across a broad range of operational, policy and service design responsibilities.
Some roles have ‘assessment centres’ instead of interviews. These include a group activity, an interview and a role play.
A further complication is that section 338(12) provides that the trustees of a Māori reservation may, with the consent of the Court, grant a lease or occupation licence of a reservation for a term not exceeding 14 years (including any term or terms of renewal).
Only a person affected by a decision can apply for a judicial review.
TIP: Any category with a red asterisk * requires a document to be uploaded.
How-do-I-user-guides/Submitting-an-application-v1-6.pdf (2.2 mb)
Historically, most succession applications were heard by a Māori Land Court judge. Now, if your succession application is assessed to be ‘simple and uncontested’, then it can be decided by a Māori Land Court registrar without a court sitting (unless you request to be heard by a judge in a court sitting).
Documents/Guides-Templates-Factsheets/Factsheet-Simple-and-uncontested-succession-applications-web-version.pdf (183 kb)
Disputes can delay whānau connecting to and using whenua. Parties in a dispute can work with a mediator and include tikanga as a way to resolve the dispute outside of the courtroom.