Description: Queen Elizabeth II National Trust is an independent statutory organisation and a registered charity. It was set up in 1977 to 'encourage and promote, for the benefit of New Zealand, the provision, protection, preservation and enhancement of open space'.Open Space (as described in the Queen Elizabeth II National Trust Act 1977) means any area of land or body of water that serves to preserve or to facilitate the preservation of any landscape of aesthetic, cultural, recreational, scenic, scientific or social interest or value.QEII National Trust's core objective is to secure long-term protection of natural and cultural features on private land with covenants. The Trust actsas the perpetual trustee to ensure the covenant remains protected forever.This dataset shows the extent of digitised registered and formalised QEII National Trust Covenants thoughout New Zealand. Each year, approximately 200 new covenants are approved by the QEII Board, but each may take, on average, two years to complete the process to registration. At current rates of funding and processing, QEII is able to register about 40-50 new covenants each quarter. In addition, there are a number of changes to existing covenants as a result of sub-divisions, changes of ownership, variations and so on.The quality of the data has been assessed by comparing the registered area of each covenant (in hectares) with the geometric area as calculated in the GIS. Where polygons are within +/- 10% of the registered area QualCode = 1. Covenant polygons with a QualCode > 1 need to be verified and either require re-digitising or some further amendment. We are working our way through processing these to improve the quality. Please note that the quality code described above is no reflection of the positional accuracy.
Copyright Text: The digital layer of QEII National Trust covenant boundaries has been compiled from various sources around the country, including regional and district councils, DOC conservancies, surveyors and LandOnline. Funding from TFBIS in 2005 enabled QEII to sub-contract the digital capture of covenant boundaries from survey plans for the remaining parts of the country. Since 2005, new covenant boundaries are supplied directly to QEII by the surveyors who produce the survey plans or are downloaded from LandOnline.