Showing posts with label coastal development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coastal development. Show all posts
Tuesday 10 July 2018
NSW Berejiklian Government 2018: How not to conduct a community consultation in the Clarence Valley, NSW
The Daily Examiner, Letter to the Editor, 10 July 2018,
p.13:
So Road and Maritime
Services intends to establish a temporary asphalt batching plant at Woombah with
a heavy truck access road crossing Iluka Road approximately 230 metres from the
Pacific Highway T-intersection.
One couldn’t choose a
site more unsafe for private vehicles and more disruptive to tourist traffic.
One that also is less than 500 metres from a waterway which empties into the
Clarence River Estuary.
One couldn’t find a more
inadequate approach to community consultation.
The Pillar Valley
community were given an RMS community information session scheduled to last one
and a half hours in May 2016 ahead of construction of a temporary batching
plant there.
In September 2016 the
Donnellyville community received a detailed 5-page information document at
least a month ahead of construction and this included an aerial map showing
infrastructure layout within the proposed temporary batching plant site. Up
front the community was allotted two drop-in information sessions.
Most of the residents
in Woombah and Iluka appear to have found out about the proposed
temporary plant planned for Woombah in July 2018, the same month
construction is due to start.
This plant will be in
use for the next two and a half years but only a few residents were given some
rudimentary information in a 3-page document and initially the community was not
even offered a drop-in information session.
Perhaps the NSW Minister
for Roads Maritime and Freight, Melinda Pavey, and Roads and Maritime Services
might like to explain the haphazard, belated approach taken to informing the
communities of Woombah and Iluka of the proposed plant.
The people of Woombah and
Iluka deserve better. They deserve a formal information night which canvasses
all the issues, with representatives from RMS and the Pacific Highway project
team prepared to address concerns and answer questions, as well as a
representative of the Minister for Roads, Maritime and Freight in attendance as
an observer.
They don’t deserve to be
fobbed off with a quick patch-up, comprising a drop-in information session and
one RMS representative deciding to attend a local community run meeting.
I’m sure that all
residents and business owners in both Woombah and Iluka would
appreciate a departmental re-think of this situation.
Judith Melville, Yamba
It is also beginning to look as though Roads and Maritime Services is only just getting around to meeting with Clarence Valley shire councillors as a group this week to brief them on the asphalt batching plant site.
Friday 6 July 2018
A CERTAIN RMS ASPHALT BATCHING PLANT: Open Letter to NSW Premier & Liberal MP for Willoughby, Gladys Berejiklian, as well as Minister for Roads Maritime and Freight & Nationals MP for Oxley, Melinda Pavey
Dear Premier Berejiklian and Minister Pavey,
Communities in the Clarence River estuary are concerned about an aspect of the NSW Government's current Pacific Highway construction planning.
Below are some of those concerns expressed to local newspaper The Daily Examiner with regard to a Roads and Maritime Services
(RMS) plan
to install a temporary asphalt batching plant at Woombah on the Clarence River
flood plain.
The build is
scheduled to start this month and the plant will operate for the next two and a
half years.
Please note
the attitude – local residents are not amused at the high-handed way in which
the NSW Government and RMS went about a cursory declaration of intent.
“What they’re not happy
about is an asphalt batching plant being built right near their houses, using
their only connecting road to the villages”
“We want the highway,
and we want the asphalt plant to be somewhere, but we want it to be away from
our communities where it won’t impact on our health and safety”
“The plant will add a
reported 500 truck moments and 100 car movements per day at peak, or one every
minute, and residents are concerned the additional traffic will create safety
problems, and a bottleneck at their intersection, which they already describe
as “tight” after it was temporarily re-routed. They also cite concerns over
possible health affects the dust may cause for nearby residents.”
We have a resident as
close as 450 metres from the plant who is suffering from lung cancer….Although
Pacific Complete have been made aware of this, since they were first told they
have failed to take action to acknowledge her.”
“We live within one
kilometre of the plant and we found out two weeks ago by letterbox drop”
“We found out last Wednesday
they didn’t tell anyone else. We’ve been around to other residents who are just
outside the area and they had no idea the plant was coming at all.”
I also draw your attention to the content of emails coming out of Iluka:
“Woombah
is surrounded by World Heritage National Park. Within the waterways affected by
run off from the proposed asphalt plant is the organic Solum Farm. Woombah
Coffee will also be affected. Not to mention the multiple organic gardners who sell
at the Yamba Markets and those who grow their own food.
The small community of
Woombah and its neighbour Iluka are places that welcome tourists for the
natural and clean beauty of the environment. An asphalt plant WILL threaten
that.
In addition, the Esk
River at Woombah is fed by many of the creeks and waterways in the bushland
where the asphalt plant is proposed. They will be adversely affected, which
will flow into the Esk which will flow into the Clarence which will affect the
fishing, oyster and prawn industries, on which many make their living. Not to
mention the tourist industry that survives because our area offers a clean
environment with unpolluted air and water.
This proposal is an
outrage. Teven said NO. Woombah says NO as well.”
“What about our kids on
school buses with no seatbelts and the increase in traffic particularly trucks”
“Iluka Naturally, turn
off at the asphalt plant, how ironic.”
For my own part I would add to these expressions of concern the fact that the 80ha, NPWS-managed Mororo Creek Nature Reserve is only est. 98 metres from the western end of the southern boundary of the proposed asphalt batching site.
This protected land parcel is one of the reserves which form part of a forested corridor linking Bundjalung National Park to the east and the protected areas of the Richmond Range to the west. It lies within the boundaries of the Yaegl Local Aboriginal Land Council area, the Clarence Valley Local Government Area and the Northern Rivers Catchment Management Authority.
The Mororo Creek Reserve conserves areas of endangered swamp sclerophyll forest, coastal saltmarsh, subtropical coastal floodplain forest and swamp oak floodplain forest.
For my own part I would add to these expressions of concern the fact that the 80ha, NPWS-managed Mororo Creek Nature Reserve is only est. 98 metres from the western end of the southern boundary of the proposed asphalt batching site.
This protected land parcel is one of the reserves which form part of a forested corridor linking Bundjalung National Park to the east and the protected areas of the Richmond Range to the west. It lies within the boundaries of the Yaegl Local Aboriginal Land Council area, the Clarence Valley Local Government Area and the Northern Rivers Catchment Management Authority.
The Mororo Creek Reserve conserves areas of endangered swamp sclerophyll forest, coastal saltmarsh, subtropical coastal floodplain forest and swamp oak floodplain forest.
Most importantly, Mororo Creek and several of its tributaries which run through this reserve empty into the Clarence River Estuary less than est. 2km from the proposed asphalt batching site.
Now I have no
idea why the NSW Government decided that a brief three-page information sheet
and invitation to comment published online at http://www.rms.nsw.gov.au/documents/projects/northern-nsw/woolgoolga-to-ballina/w2b-woombah-batch-plant-notification-2018-06.pdf
was to be the limit
of its community consultation effort or why a similar document was sent at
short notice to such a small number of Woombah residents.
I don’t
pretend to understand why the information sheet contained just one small image
of a section of a Pillar Valley temporary asphalt batching plant with no description
of typical batching plant infrastructure and no Woombah site layout plan at
all, much less one to scale.
There was not
a hint in the information sheet of the range of known issues which can arise during site
construction, plant operation and site rehabilitation.
Those
residents who were originally invited to comment were supplied with less than
rudimentary information on which to assess the desirability of a batching plant
on the designated site.
Given that
the proposed Woombah asphalt batching plant site is est. 2 to 2.5kms as the crow
flies from Clarence River estuary waters
which:
(1) are
covered by Yaegl Native Title;
(2) at certain points are covered by international treaties, including JAMBA, CAMBA,
ROKAMBA;
(3) contain
the second largest area of seagrass (83 ha), the largest area of mangroves (765
ha) and the third largest area of saltmarsh (290ha) in the northern rivers
region [Williams et al 2006 in Northern Rivers
Regional Biodiversity Management Plan 2010];
(4) are part
of the largest combined river-ocean fishery in NSW containing high fisheries value
marine species; and
(5) are a
vital component of regional tourism,
perhaps Premier
Berejiklian and Minister Pavey can answer two vital questions.
1. Is the Woombah asphalt batching plant
site above the 100 year flood level for the lower Clarence Valley flood plain?
Because if it
is not, then the NSW Government’s cavalier attitude to flood risk management
would potentially see toxic waste from asphalt batching flow into the Clarence
River estuary during a flood event – including solid waste and any organic
solvents/hydrocarbons captured in holding ponds for the life of the plant –
along with any nearby excavated plant/road construction materials. After all, extreme flood event
height predictions for that general area are 3.5 to 4.5 mAHD.
2. Why on earth was a decision made to
site the asphalt batching plant and access road at a point along the Pacific
Highway where it would cause the maximum damage to Iluka’s clean, green destination
image and vital tourism trade?
When the NSW Government
first mooted the Pacific Highway upgrade on the North Coast one of the
advantages it canvassed was an increase in tourism numbers due to better road
conditions.
In the 2015-16
financial year annual visitor
numbers to the Clarence Valley were approximately 986,000 persons and their
estimated spending was in the vicinity of $383.3 million. By
the end of the 2016 calendar year the tourism
visitor count for that year had reached over 1 million.
Most of these
visitors holidayed along the Clarence Coast and Iluka is a strong component of that
coastal tourism.
If the NSW Government seriously believes that leaving Woombah-Iluka with only one safe, unimpeded access point
for day, weekend and long-stay visitors, the Yamba to Iluka foot passenger
only ferry, will
not significantly affect tourism numbers over the course of two and a half
years, one has to wonder if it bothered to investigate the issue at all before signing off on the proposed plant site.
The effect of
siting the asphalt batching plant and access road on the designated site will
in all likelihood have the effect of diminishing not growing tourism traffic to
Iluka for a period beyond the years it actually takes to complete the Maclean
to Devil’s Pulpit section of the highway upgrade, as visitor perception of a holiday area can change when industrial level activity becomes visually prominent.
When it comes to commitment to the community consultation process, the NSW Government obviously hasn’t insisted that Roads and Maritime Services live up to its undertaking to engage
with communities to understand their needs and consider these when making
decisions.
In fact,
looking at satellite images of the site one cannot escape the suspicion that pre-construction
ground preparation had already commenced before any information was sent out to
selected Woombah residents.
Since news of the asphalt batching plan site reached the Lower Clarence and residents began to approach their local state member, there appears to have been a promise made to hold a "drop-in information session" at an unspecified date.
Having experienced NSW departmental drop-in information sessions, I am well aware that they are of limited value as purveyors of anything other that the meagre degree of information found in the aforementioned three page RMS document and, ineffectual as vehicles for genuine community consultation.
The people of Woombah and Iluka deserve better. They deserve a formal information night which canvasses all the issues, with representatives from RMS and the Pacific Highway project team prepared to address concerns and answer questions, as well as representatives of both the Premier and Minister for Roads, Maritime and Freight in attendance as observers.
Since news of the asphalt batching plan site reached the Lower Clarence and residents began to approach their local state member, there appears to have been a promise made to hold a "drop-in information session" at an unspecified date.
Having experienced NSW departmental drop-in information sessions, I am well aware that they are of limited value as purveyors of anything other that the meagre degree of information found in the aforementioned three page RMS document and, ineffectual as vehicles for genuine community consultation.
The people of Woombah and Iluka deserve better. They deserve a formal information night which canvasses all the issues, with representatives from RMS and the Pacific Highway project team prepared to address concerns and answer questions, as well as representatives of both the Premier and Minister for Roads, Maritime and Freight in attendance as observers.
I’m sure that
all residents and business owners in both Woombah and Iluka would appreciate
both Premier and Minster taking the time to consider these questions and ensure government genuinely consults with both village communities before considering proceeding with any Roads and Maritime Servces site proposal.
Sincerely,
Clarence Girl
Monday 11 June 2018
Teven Valley residents to meet concerning community objections to unwanted petrochemical plant in midst rural properties
Echo NetDaily, 6 June 2018:
Community meeting will be at Tintenbar Hall on Saturday, 16 June 2018 from 3.30pm until 5.30pm.
Labels:
asphalt,
coastal development,
mining,
Northern Rivers,
pollution
Tuesday 8 May 2018
Gladstone Qld inherits serial fantacist
Still trying to sell 'the dream", former truck driver Des Euan has moved on from Port Of Yamba NSW to Gladstone in Queensland....
The Observer, 16 March 2018:
North Coast Voices readers may recall that he was touting both the Yamba 'mega port' and the Gladstone mega logistics hub to the Dept. of Infrastructure and Development in August last year.
Following in his previous footsteps Euan has created a shell company, set up a website and is apparently well into his patter.
Both Resources and Northern Australia Minister and Liberal Senator for Queensland Matt Canavan and local state Labor MP for Gladstone Glen Butcher reportedly support Euan's scheme.
Perhaps the people Gladstone should ponder on the reasons why that ancient Roman maxim caveat emptor has lasted down the ages.
* Hat tip to Clarrie Rivers for supplying link the newspaper article.
Labels:
coastal development,
Gladstone,
pipe dreams
Sunday 1 April 2018
UNITED LAND COUNCILS IN THE NEWS AGAIN: Nicholas Petroulias appears before NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption and represents himself at hearings
*This post will be updated whenever additional information becomes available*
The NSW Independent Commission Against
Corruption (ICAC) began a public inquiry on 27 March 2018.
ICAC’s
media
release of 7 March 2018 stated in part:
“….as part of an
investigation it is conducting into allegations concerning the Awabakal Local
Aboriginal Land Council (LALC) (Operation Skyline).
The Commission is investigating whether any public official, being a Awabakal LALC Board director, acted dishonestly and/or in breach of their duty as a Board member in relation to a scheme involving proposals from 2014 to 2016 for the sale and development of properties (“the Sale and Development Scheme”) owned by the land council.
The Commission is also investigating whether any Awabakal LALC Board director acted dishonestly and/or in breach of their duty as a Board member in purporting to retain, or retaining, Knightsbridge North Lawyers or anyone else to act for the land council in respect of the Sale and Development Scheme.
Further, the ICAC is investigating whether any Awabakal LALC Board director: acted dishonestly and/or in breach of their duty as a Board member by participating in, or aiding or assisting any person in relation to, the Sale and Development Scheme including dealings with Sunshine Property Investment Group Pty Ltd, Sunshine Warners Pty Ltd, Solstice Property Corporation Pty Ltd and Advantage Property Experts Syndications Pty Ltd and/or Advantage Property Syndications Ltd; and whether they received any financial or other benefits as a reward or payment for their involvement in, or for their assistance or services rendered in relation to, the Sale and Development Scheme or any connected matter.
The Commission is also examining whether any person or persons encouraged or induced any Awabakal LALC Board director to dishonestly or partially exercise any of their official functions in respect of the Sale and Development Scheme and any other land council property, or otherwise engaged in conduct connected with corrupt conduct within the meaning of the Independent Commission Against Corruption Act 1988.
The public inquiry will start at 10:00 am and will be held in the Commission's hearing room on Level 7, 255 Elizabeth Street, Sydney. Chief Commissioner the Hon Peter Hall QC will preside at the public inquiry, and Counsel Assisting the Commission will be Dr Nicholas Chen SC and Ms Juliet Curtin.
The inquiry is set down for approximately three weeks. A witness list for at least the first week of the proceedings will be published on the ICAC website prior to the commencement of the public inquiry.”
The Commission is investigating whether any public official, being a Awabakal LALC Board director, acted dishonestly and/or in breach of their duty as a Board member in relation to a scheme involving proposals from 2014 to 2016 for the sale and development of properties (“the Sale and Development Scheme”) owned by the land council.
The Commission is also investigating whether any Awabakal LALC Board director acted dishonestly and/or in breach of their duty as a Board member in purporting to retain, or retaining, Knightsbridge North Lawyers or anyone else to act for the land council in respect of the Sale and Development Scheme.
Further, the ICAC is investigating whether any Awabakal LALC Board director: acted dishonestly and/or in breach of their duty as a Board member by participating in, or aiding or assisting any person in relation to, the Sale and Development Scheme including dealings with Sunshine Property Investment Group Pty Ltd, Sunshine Warners Pty Ltd, Solstice Property Corporation Pty Ltd and Advantage Property Experts Syndications Pty Ltd and/or Advantage Property Syndications Ltd; and whether they received any financial or other benefits as a reward or payment for their involvement in, or for their assistance or services rendered in relation to, the Sale and Development Scheme or any connected matter.
The Commission is also examining whether any person or persons encouraged or induced any Awabakal LALC Board director to dishonestly or partially exercise any of their official functions in respect of the Sale and Development Scheme and any other land council property, or otherwise engaged in conduct connected with corrupt conduct within the meaning of the Independent Commission Against Corruption Act 1988.
The public inquiry will start at 10:00 am and will be held in the Commission's hearing room on Level 7, 255 Elizabeth Street, Sydney. Chief Commissioner the Hon Peter Hall QC will preside at the public inquiry, and Counsel Assisting the Commission will be Dr Nicholas Chen SC and Ms Juliet Curtin.
The inquiry is set down for approximately three weeks. A witness list for at least the first week of the proceedings will be published on the ICAC website prior to the commencement of the public inquiry.”
Transcripts of Operation Skyline public hearings can be found here.
Note: PURSUANT TO SECTION 112
OF THE ICAC ACT, A SUPPRESSION ORDER IS MADE PROTECTING AGAINST ANY
DISSEMINATION OF ANY PRIVATE EMAIL ADDRESSES, PRIVATE ADDRESSES OR PHONE
NUMBERS CONTAINED IN EACH OF THE EXHIBITS TO BE UPLOADED ONTO AND PUBLISHED ON
THE COMMISSION’S WEBSITE. I MAKE THAT ORDER SUBJECT TO ANY FURTHER ORDER OF THE
COMMISSION.
WEEK 1 WITNESS LIST
Tuesday 27 March
Terrence Henry Lawler - government appointed Administrator of the Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council.
Terrence Henry Lawler - government appointed Administrator of the Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council.
Wednesday 28 March
Terrence Henry Lawler - government appointed Administrator of the Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council.
Omar Bin Abdullah - building design consultant & sole director/shareholder Alamco Pty Ltd (currently under external administration)
Steven Mark Slee - former CEO Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council, former director
Awabakal Cooperative and Yarnteen College
Cyril Philemon Gabey - one of three directors at The Indigenous Business Union Pty Ltd (IBU) (deregistered 15/01/2017)
Thursday 29 MarchTerrence Henry Lawler - government appointed Administrator of the Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council.
Omar Bin Abdullah - building design consultant & sole director/shareholder Alamco Pty Ltd (currently under external administration)
Steven Mark Slee - former CEO Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council, former director
Awabakal Cooperative and Yarnteen College
Cyril Philemon Gabey - one of three directors at The Indigenous Business Union Pty Ltd (IBU) (deregistered 15/01/2017)
John Terry Hancock - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council Eleanor Swan - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council
WEEK 2 WITNESS LIST
Tuesday 3 April
Eleanor W Swan - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council
Deborah June Swan - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council
Larry Warren Slee - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council, father of Steven Mark SleeWednesday 4 April
Matthew Fisk - employee of Tony Zong first at Sunshine Property Investment Group and later at Luxeland Group
Tony Zong (Shuxin Zong) - sole director and shareholder of Sunshine Property Investment Group Pty Limited, a commercial fitout & building company
Diane "Dan Dan" Ren - property developer, co-director and co-shareholder of Luxeland Group Pty Ltd with Tony Zong *not questioned on the day*
Thursday 5 April
Tony Zong (Shuxin Zong) - sole director and shareholder of Sunshine Property Investment Group Pty Limited, a commercial fitout & building company
Nicole Steadman - former interim chair of Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council *not questioned on the day*
Friday 6 April
Tony Zong (Shuxin Zong) - sole director and shareholder of Sunshine Property Investment Group Pty Limited, a commercial fitout & building company
Larry Warren Slee - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council, father of Steven Mark Slee
Ronald Wayne Jordan - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council, employed by family business
Candy Towers - member Awabakal community, former employee Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council *not questioned on the day*
WEEK 3 WITNESS LIST
Monday 9 April
Larry Warren Slee - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council, father of Steven Mark Slee
Leonard James Quinlan - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council
Dr. Raymond Kelly - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council
Tuesday 10 April
Dr. Raymond Kelly - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council
Ronald Wayne Jordan - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council, employed by family business
WEEK 3 WITNESS LIST
Monday 9 April
Larry Warren Slee - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council, father of Steven Mark Slee
Leonard James Quinlan
Dr. Raymond Kelly - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council
Tuesday 10 April
Dr. Raymond Kelly - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council
Ronald Wayne Jordan - former board member Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council, employed by family business
Ian Sheriff - solicitor *not questioned on the day*
Wednesday 11 April
Keith Kang Rhee - co-director and one of two shareholders in of Keeju Pty Ltd a family sushi business
Sammy Sayed aka Sam Say - said to be in real estate/properties
Thursday 12 April
Sammy Sayed aka Sam Say - said to be in real estate/properties
Ian Sheriff - solicitor
Diane "Dan Dan" Ren - property developer, co-director and co-shareholder of Luxeland Group Pty Ltd with Tony Zong
Friday 13 April
Nicole Steadman - former interim chair of Awabakal Local Aboriginal
Land Council
Candy Towers - member Awabakal community, former employee Awabakal
Local Aboriginal Land Council
The
Sydney Morning Herald report
on Day One of the hearings, 27 March 2018:
Disgraced former
assistant tax commissioner Nick Petroulias has resurfaced at the centre of a
corruption probe into a series of deals to sell off up to $30 million worth of
Aboriginal land in the NSW Hunter region.
Mr Petroulias was one of
the country's most senior public servants before his high-profile jailing in
2008 for corrupt conduct and unauthorised publication of Commonwealth documents.
The first day of public
inquiry by the Independent Commission against Corruption (ICAC) has heard that
Mr Petroulias played a "central role" in three deals - and one
attempted deal - to sell off land belonging to the Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
In one of the more
extraordinary allegations, Mr Petroulias was accused of signing a 2014 deal on
behalf of a company director who was already dead at the time he was appointed.
The deals took place
between 2014 and 2016, with the most lucrative worth $30 million, the inquiry
heard.
In his opening address,
counsel assisting Nicholas Chen SC alleged that Mr Petroulias used a "two
dollar company" he controlled - known as Gows Heat - to obtain purchase
rights over several parcels of Awabakal land.
"Mr Petroulias at
that time had recently been made a bankrupt," Mr Chen told the inquiry.
"Neither Gows Heat nor Mr Petroulias paid any money to the land council to
secure this 'right'."
It was alleged Mr
Petroulias on-sold the purchase rights to a new buyer and then attempted to
on-sell the rights again to another buyer, while both remained unaware of the
other's existence.
"Gows Heat and Mr
Petroulias secured a significant windfall: he sold this "right",
around six months later, and received around $1.1 million as a result," Mr
Chen said.
Whether Awabakal's board
was aware of these deals - and how the deals could go ahead without disclosure
to the board - will be investigated by the inquiry.
The inquiry will also
examine the actions of two former Awabakal board members involved in the
transactions - Richard Green and Debbie Dates - and a lawyer who executed the
deals on the land council's behalf.
That solicitor, Despina
Bakis, was the sole director of Sydney firm Knightsbridge North Lawyers. Mr
Chen noted that she had been in what could be described as an "on-again,
off-again" relationship with Mr Petroulias for about 20 years.
Mr Chen noted that
neither Ms Bakis or Mr Petroulias were Indigenous and Ms Bakis had "no
relevant experience" in undertaking the kind of work she was tasked to do
by the land council.
The inquiry heard Mr
Petroulias has adopted a string of aliases, including Nick or Nicholas Piers;
Nick or Nicholas Pearson and Nick or Nicholas Petersen.
A number of corporate
entities with links to Mr Petroulias had been created using the identities of
people that knew nothing of their involvement, Mr Chen alleged.
Mr Lawler has
reported the matters to police....
Mr Chen described Ms Bakis’ appointment as “more than a little curious”, given that the land council had been making use of a “highly experienced” commercial and property lawyer.
The
Newcastle Herald
reporting on Day One, 28 March 2018:
The land council's
administrator, Terry Lawler, took to the witness box on Tuesday afternoon,
testifying that he found no copies of any agreements to sell Awabakal land when
he was installed by the state government in 2016.
Mr Petroulias,
representing himself, grilled Mr Lawler over what he told Awabakal members
before they voted on one of the land deals.
"Did you mention
that I was a criminal to the membership of the meeting?," he asked.
Mr Lawler responded that
a solicitor acting for him may have, but added “fact’s facts”.
When he put the issue to
a vote, there was a "sea of hands" against the proposal, Mr
Lawler said.
“One of the members
actually said: ‘are you a comedian?’,” he recalled.
Mr Lawler told the
inquiry that when he was first made aware of the deal, involving a company
called Advantage Property Experts Syndications, he “didn’t have any
information” about whether it was a good or bad deal.
However he was stunned
at proposals relating to the post office.
“The thing that did
really strike me, and I remember thinking ‘this bloke’s delusional’, is that he
said to me ‘part and parcel of this is we're going to do up the post
office and hand it back to the NSW state government so as they’ll provide us
with a strategic state development approval for the development of Hillsborough
Road,” Mr Lawler told the inquiry.
“I found that an
interesting statement, because that's just not the way things work.”
Mr Lawler also noticed a
number of typos within the agreement.
“To be frank some of the
agreements I found extremely difficult to read, understand, there
were differing parties … one party on the cover sheet another party in the
agreement, there were references to agreements even then that I hadn’t seen,”
he said.
Mr Lawler claimed he has
since been the target of abusive, defamatory and inaccurate letters
and a “slanderous” social media campaign.
He alleged a businessman
associated with Advantage and two other people stood outside a recent Awabakal
meeting, handing out flyers making similar allegations.
“My local residential
area was letter-boxed with those flyers that same evening and it’s clear from
the Facebook post from Advantage that I’m being stalked,” he said.
“There are quite a lot
of photos that are nothing other than me just going about my business.”
Mr Chen described Ms Bakis’ appointment as “more than a little curious”, given that the land council had been making use of a “highly experienced” commercial and property lawyer.
He further alleged that
Ms Bakis was appointed by Mr Green without the board’s authority until a motion
to ratify her appointment more than a year later.
It’s understood that Ms
Bakis will argue that she was always given to understand her appointment was
authorised.
Mr Lawler told the
hearing that when he was installed he did not find any records relating to
Ms Bakis’ appointment and when he asked for them, it triggered a “flow” of
abusive material.
“Abuse, complaints,
accusations and being told that she’s not my secretary and that I’m a thief, it
just goes on,” he said.
“I have never
experienced – let alone from a professional person – I’ve never
experienced the style in which Ms Bakis writes … clearly [she was] an
angry little ant.”
The
Newcastle Herald reporting
on Day Two, 28 March 2018:
A corruption
inquiry has been told board minutes of the Awabakal land council appear to have
been falsified to show it voted in favour of selling land to a company tied to
disgraced former assistant tax commissioner Nick Petroulias.
It came as a Sydney
developer told the Independent Commission against Corruption (ICAC) he did not
understand how a reference to the same company – Gows Heat Pty Ltd – ended up
in documentation he prepared on the development of the land….
Mr Petroulias was a
“common feature” in all of the deals and Gows Heat a shelf company he
controlled, it has been alleged.
In the witness box on
Wednesday was Omar Abdullah, a building designer and new home specialist based
in Sydney.
He made an overture to
the land council in late 2014, after he was informed by a business contact it
had property ripe for development.
Mr Abdullah told the
inquiry he was given an opportunity to meet with Awabakal’s board and present
it with discussion material on potential developments.
He felt the presentation
was met with a “positive reaction”, but Mr Abdullah did not pursue
a deal when he got “nothing formal back” from the board.
The inquiry previously
heard a “critical matter” will be an allegation from Mr Petroulias that the
presentation was made jointly with Gows Heat.
When asked if he had
ever heard of Gows, Mr Abdullah replied “absolutely not”.
Mr Abdullah was then
shown a document that appeared to be identical to the one he circulated during
the presentation, but included a reference to Gows Heat.
“I’ve never seen this
document,” he said.
The land council’s chief
executive at the time, Steven Slee, was questioned over his recollection
events.
Mr Slee told the inquiry
the board resolved to contact Mr Abdullah to pursue the land proposal, a
resolution reflected in typed and signed minutes and a “running list” of
resolutions kept at the land council’s offices.
Council assisting
Nicholas Chen SC tendered those documents as evidence, before presenting Mr
Slee with an additional book containing handwritten minutes.
Mr Slee agreed it
appeared someone had written extra words around the resolution.
He was unable to
decipher what they said, but observed they started with the letters
“Go”.
Mr Slee was then shown a
different resolution that appeared to have been stapled into the minute book,
recording a decision to push ahead with the sale of the land to Gows
Heat.
“Mr Slee, whilst you
were CEO was it the practice of the board to staple resolutions into minute
books?” Mr Chen asked.
“No,” Mr Slee responded,
agreeing it appeared someone had tampered with the minutes. He was unable to
pinpoint who it might be.
The
Newcastle Herald reporting on Day Five, 5 April 2018:
As an experienced
property developer and qualified valuer based in Sydney, Matthew Fisk knew his
way around a land deal.
But as he bargained with
the Awabakal Local Aboriginal Land Council over land it owned at Warners Bay,
there were aspects of the negotiations that struck him as strange.
One of the more
“unusual” elements, Mr Fisk told an Independent Commission against Corruption
inquiry, was the role of disgraced former assistant tax commissioner Nick
Petroulias and an instance where Mr Petroulias allegedly “scribbled out” a
figure in a contract….
Mr Zong later took
– and dropped – legal action against the land council, claiming he
was not informed the deal did not have proper authorisation.
Mr Zong’s involvement
began in 2015, when he attended a meeting at Warners Bay McDonalds over a
potential land deal.
Mr Fisk told the inquiry
he accompanied Mr Zong to the meeting, also attended by Mr Green and Mr
Petroulias.
The parties
were allegedly brought together by a former inmate who served time
with Mr Petroulias at Silverwater jail – Sammy Say – who was
acquainted with a contact of Mr Zong.
Mr Fisk recalled one of
the third parties introducing Mr Petroulias as a lawyer acting for the
land council.
So he was
surprised – at the end of a tour – when he was informed that Mr
Petroulias had a “larger interest”.
“I believe it was Sammy
Say that had used words to the effect that Nick has already put the deal
together,” Mr Fisk recalled. “Then Nick proceeded with he already has an
option to acquire these five parcels of land and it would be, in fact, us
… acquiring Nick’s option moving forward.”
An option is where a
potential buyer pays a vendor for the right to purchase their property at
a fixed price at a later time. The vendor can not sell the property to a third
party in that period.
Council assisting
Nicholas Chen asked Mr Fisk if he thought it unusual that the land council’s
lawyer would have an option over its land.
“I thought it was quite
unusual, particularly that when I asked what the purchase price was I was told
that it was to be subject to valuation,” Mr Fisk said.
According to Mr Fisk,
another odd twist came as a contract was being signed with the amount
to be paid out to Gows Heat.
“After Mr Zong had
signed the document Mr Petroulias then lent over, scribbled out $250,000, wrote
$673,000 and then initialled it,” Mr Fisk said.
“Tony [Zong] said, look,
he said to Nick, ‘what are you doing?’ I don’t recall the response that was
given but I found it very unusual.”
Other media reports on Operation Skyline hearings:
North Coast Voices’ readers might recall that Nick Petroulias (using the name Nicholas Peterson) and Richard Green gave sworn evidence before the NSW Legislative Council General Purpose
Standing Committee No. 6 INQUIRY
INTO CROWN LAND, as
part of United Land Councils' lobbying for the potentially environmentally destructive Yamba Mega
Port proposal.
Before Operation Skyline’s public hearing began,
one of those named in the inquiry began short-lived and unsuccessful proceedings in Knightsbridge North Lawyers Pty Limited v Independent Commission Against Corruption.
The matter of
the proposed Awabakal land sales was also before the NSW Supreme Court in 2017….
The
Newcastle Herald,
21 October 2017:
The matter is the
subject of a Supreme Court legal battle that veteran lawyers have described as
one of the most extraordinary cases they have seen in their careers.
Labelled by a lawyer
familiar with the case as a real-life version of “Alice in Wonderland”, its
cast of characters includes an international fugitive known as Robbie Rocket, a
convicted drug dealer and a dead company director who somehow continued signing
agreements a year after he was cremated in a Sydney cemetery.
The existence of an
international money laundering syndicate and a karaoke junket intended as a
bribery attempt are among the other sensational allegations contained within
thousands of pages of evidence that have been tendered to the court.
Last year in an unrelated matter Mr. Petroulias was the defendant in Director
of Public Prosecutions (Cth) v Petroulias [2017] NSWSC 1290 (28 September 2017), excerpts:
When this matter came on
for hearing before me there was no appearance on behalf of the defendant. The
defendant now goes by the name Michael Felson. For abundant caution both of his
names were called outside court three times….
During the hearing I was
informed that the defendant is an undischarged bankrupt. He was declared
bankrupt by a sequestration order made by the Federal Circuit Court on 23
October 2014. His statement of affairs was filed on 10 March 2015. He will thus
be eligible to be discharged from bankruptcy on 10 March 2018.
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