In 2009, the school was involved in
Sustaining our Streams, a council-funded project to restore streams in the area. Because of the work that by students and staff did in removing weeds from the forest on the school property, they were nominated for the 2010 Weedbusters Award. The commitment of Konini School to restore their streamside area and control the weeds on the school supported an application to become an Enviroschool. The Mayor of Auckland Len Brown, opened the Enviro Maze art trail at the school on 11 March 2013. This trail resulted from a six-month collaboration with Auckland Council to enhance the environment and tied in with the re-design of the front of the school. The art-based nature trail was coordinated by a local artist, Mandy Patmore. Patmore noted that when the Auckland Council hired her to teach kids about the environment using art, she wasn't yet an environmental artist, but realised you "can raise all the awareness you want, but if there’s no action, then it’s pointless". Konini School received a grant of $2306 from the Mazda Foundation in 2016, with the money designated for purchasing 386 native plants to restore the block of bush at the back of the school. The planting of the natives became a part of the school's programme of monitoring local streams and a teacher at the school was acknowledged for her role in developing a group to teach how to propagate native plants, learn more about the inhabitants of the streams and opening up the space as an "educational resource for learning about native fauna and flora". A group of students called
Stream Rangers Konini School established a blog to share what was being done to take care of the local streams. In 2016, the group posted suggestions for art that could be displayed on classroom walls to draw attention to the issues. The post also explained that the removal of dangerous weeds such as
Deadly Knightshade and
Wandering Jew was an essential part of the programme. When the school notified Auckland Council that they had discovered contamination of a stream near by the school in 2015, students were banned from using the surrounding four-hectare native bush block for almost six months. When the Council did the testing, the information was not provided to the school, despite a request for it. The school's
board of trustees chairwoman Hannah Sperber said she felt the students were being blocked from using this resource. All the school wanted was reassurance that the area was safe to use and that future contamination would be prevented. The Chair of Waitakere Ranges Local Board, Greg Presland, noted in his Report of October 2017, that while Konini School had Enviroschool status, it was still underfunded to fully maintain the bush on the grounds which was close to the Waitakere Ranges Heritage Area. The principal, Andrew Ducat said that he was doing what he could with limited resources and ensuring that learning about sustainability and the "protection and enhancement of the bush was a priority for the school". Presland said that the Local Board aimed to offer some small grants and advice to schools such as Konini for restoration projects, and while through the "power of community and the passion of the staff and the pupils really good things can be achieved...[there were concerns]...that the Enviroschool's budget is one of the budgets that has been cut through Council cost-saving and the local board is being asked to fill in the gap...[for]...work [that] is far too important not to be funded". The school community was notified that some of the bush areas would be closed for a few days in May 2020 so that
arborists could remove introduced trees to make room for the planting of
native species. Andrew Ducat explained that the school had a long-term plan to remove trees such as
Wattle and
Pine because they cause "collateral damage of the native undergrowth...[and it is necessary to]...remove the culprits behind the constant re-seeding of the new noxious trees....[so]...native species can then thrive in their natural habitat". Konini was accredited as a
Green-Gold Enviroschool in November 2020 for their efforts in developing
composting systems, taking care of the local bush, raising chickens and "growing
kumara to make soup to celebrate
Matariki with their community". ==Concerns==