However, what is confusing me is the option to add on "rural fire service levy insurance". I see from older posts that a number of people have signed up for this.
Scenario 2
You are in a wilderness area or the bush on your own, totally unaware of a fire which is being extinguished by the
Forestry Department or Fire Service. This fire is within a 5 mile radius of your location and you - along with other people
who are in the area - have been noted by the Forestry Department as being in this region at the time.
Under the Rural Fire Services Act, simply because you were within the region of the fire (not caused by you) you, along
with all the other people in the area at the time, will get charged with the cost of extinguishing that fire. If there are
10 people in the area, the cost is split 10 ways. If you are the only one in the area - the cost is all yours. This is not
covered by your motor vehicle policy or by any other policy available in the market.
It's not especially cheap: starting at $74.75 per year.
I wasn't convinced, so we went looking for the Rural Fire Services Act and found that no such thing exists. The nearest I could find was the Forest and Rural Fires Act 1977 and the Fire Service Act 1975. I spent a while looking through these, and I can't find anything about a 5 mile radius, nor anything about attributing liability to people in the area, even if they aren't responsible for starting the fire.
Additionally, I found a write-up about Tucker v New Zealand Fire Service Commission (High Court, Christchurch, 24 October 2002, William Young J), where a truckie was found to be not responsible for a fire that was ignited from a blown-out tyre, because he couldn't have expected that a fire might start from such and event. (Full write-up here: http://wynnwilliams.co.nz/pub_rj_03.htm).
So if truckie Tucker was eventually found not liable for the costs of fighting a fire ignited from the rim of the vehicle he was driving, how could anyone possibly be held liable for a fire simply by being in the area?
I'm not a lawyer, and reading Government legislation is pretty hard going, so can someone cast some light on this issue?