Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

TE AWAMUTU COURIER. Printed on Monday’s, Wednesdays, and Fridays. MONDAY, 11th AUGUST, 1941. LAND SETTLEMENT.

LAND SETTLEMENT, as a major policy, has not figured prominently in the last few years. There are large estates, purchased for purposes of sub-division and settlement before the present Government took office, "which have not yet been made available. The explanation is that the Government prefers the establishment of State farms, with employees, or, on dairying country’, share-milkers, rather than individual ownership, especially where the occupier has a right to acquire the freehold. This trend is seen in the figures relating to holdings held under one of the most popular tenures the Dominion has known—occupation with right of purchase. In 1935-36 there were 2736 holdings in this group, with a total area of 763,000 acres. Last year the number of holdings had dropped to only 964, and the area to 257,000 acres. No doubt many occupiers completed their payments and obtained their titles, but it is certain that had other applicants for land been given the opportunity to acquire it on an occupation with right of purchase basis they would have taken it. Last year purchases under the Lands for Settlement Act aggregated 31,000 acres, or more than the total for the preceding five years. A number of blocks, with an area of over 14,000 acres, are situated in Te Awamutu and King Country 7 districts, and ten properties in Canterbury—in all 7268 acres—are to be developed as irrigation units. These areas, if sub-divided, will, it can be taken for granted, be offered under some leasehold tenure. They 7 may, like other properties, be worked as State farms. But it is interesting to note that the Government, although strongly opposed to the freehold, has not been able to banish the preference that men working the land show for that tenure. When the Government took office theie were 18,850,000 acres of Crown land held under various leases, and by 31st March last the total had fallen to 17,489,000 acres. Land settlement, like many other activities, must be adversely affected by* the war. Prospective settlers, young men with the strength and experience to develop land, have enlisted for service overseas. Many of them will be keen to acquire a holding on their return, and the best prospect that could be offered to them would be that of eventually making the property their own.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TAWC19410811.2.16

Bibliographic details

Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 63, Issue 4462, 11 August 1941, Page 4

Word Count
396

TE AWAMUTU COURIER. Printed on Monday’s, Wednesdays, and Fridays. MONDAY, 11th AUGUST, 1941. LAND SETTLEMENT. Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 63, Issue 4462, 11 August 1941, Page 4

TE AWAMUTU COURIER. Printed on Monday’s, Wednesdays, and Fridays. MONDAY, 11th AUGUST, 1941. LAND SETTLEMENT. Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 63, Issue 4462, 11 August 1941, Page 4