This blog is open to any who wish to comment on Australian society, the state of the environment or political shenanigans at Federal, State and Local Government level.
What:
Rallies at Coffs Harbour and Pennant Hills Sydney outside the offices
of the Forestry Corporation.
When:
Monday, 13th January, 10am
Where:
Coffs Harbour, cnr of Park and Gordon Sts
Sydney:
Cnr Castle Hill Rd and Cumberland Forest Way, West Pennant Hills
Why:
Creating the Great Koala National Park has been an ALP promise since
2015. Almost 2 years after getting elected, the Minns government has
completed their assessment of the park and identified an industry
restructuring package but has still not announced their decision on
the park boundaries.
Since
they were elected, the rate of logging inside the park has increased
compared to under the Coalition. More than 60%. The logging is
continuing with new areas being opened up. How much longer will they
let the promised Park be logged?
Are
they going to allow the Forestry Corporation to log the heart out of
the promised park?
According
to their own data the Minns Government has already logged the homes
of 500 koalas and another 37 threatened species. This carnage has to
stop now. These forests also hold the soils together, sequester and
store carbon, act as natural water reservoirs and could provide
boundless opportunities for recreation, education and appreciation.
31
groups have signed on to a letter to the NSW Government demanding
they fulfil their promise to create a world class Great Koala
National Park NOW
The
statement, background and signatories can be found here.
There
is no reporting date listed for this particular Inquiry.
After
a 53 day submission period in which 78
submissions
were received, the Inquiry held 5 hearings commencing on 5 August
2024 and ending on 17 December 2024. Videos of all 6 hearings can be
found at:
Commencing
on 2 July 2024 the Inquiry received
40 documents
to assist in its deliberations.
In
August 2024 the Standing Committee on State Development visited
former mining sites in Lake Macquarie, Cessnock, Maitland and the
Upper Hunter and held two public hearings (Muswellbrook &
Singleton).
More
than 60,000 mines have been abandoned across Australia, according to
a report that raises concerns about how land rehabilitation is
managed as the mining boom ends.
Key
points:
Australia
Institute report finds lack of reliable data on Australia's mining
activity
Research
finds more than 60,000 abandoned mines across Australia
Only
a handful of mines have ever been fully rehabilitated
Report
raises concerns over how land rehabilitation is managed
The
Australia Institute research, obtained exclusively by Lateline, said
there were few reliable statistics on the state of Australia's mines
and there was evidence that only a handful had ever been fully
rehabilitated.
State
government agencies were only able to name one example of a mine that
had been fully rehabilitated and relinquished in the past 10 years —
the New Wallsend coal mine in New South Wales.
Some
of the abandoned mines date back to gold-rush days and the 60,000
figure includes thousands of mine "features", such as
tailings dams and old mine shafts.
The
Australia Institute said it was difficult to obtain basic statistics
on the number of operating mines across the country, putting the
figure between 460 and 2,944.
The
Institute said it was even harder to get data on mines that had
suspended operations or were undergoing rehabilitation.
"What
is certain is [mine abandonment] is not a practice limited to distant
history," the report said.
"As
the owners of the largest mines come under financial pressure, close
attention needs to be paid to the ongoing phenomenon of mine
abandonment in Australia.".....
In
New South Wales, approval has been granted for 45 massive coal pits,
or voids, to be left after mining finishes.[my
yellow highlighting]
Twelve
of those voids are around Muswellbrook in the Upper Hunter and the
biggest is at BHP Billiton's Mount Arthur mine.
It
is 4.5 kilometres long and 1.5 kilometres wide. BHP would not provide
details on its depth....
....ongoing
antimony contamination of water bodies and land protected by
Environmental Planning Instruments is not unknown from previous
mining ventures in northern NSW.
The
Macleay Argus 2 September 2011:
HIGHER
than average levels of heavy metals have been recorded in the Macleay
River at Bellbrook after a dam overflowed at a gold and antimony mine
near Armidale.
NSW
Health and Kempsey Shire Council said higher than normal levels of
metals including arsenic, zinc and copper had been detected in the
waters of the Macleay River.
But
both organisations said the concentration of the heavy metals was not
high enough to warrant concern to people.
As
a precaution NSW Health has contacted residents in the upper Macleay
to inform them not to drink water from the river unless it has been
processed through the Bellbrook water treatment plant.
Council
has undertaken further testing to determine whether the contamination
has spread beyond Bellbrook….
The
Office of Heritage and Environment (OHE) reported the breach occurred
on Tuesday when there was a release of material from a sediment
erosion control dam at the Hillgrove antimony and gold mine.
"The
mine is currently not operating but is in 'care and maintenance'
mode," a spokeswoman said.
"The
spill occurred after continued wet weather produced excess stormwater
which exceeded the amount of water that could be stored in the dam
resulting in the spill - when the mine is operating the stormwater
would normally have been used for mineral processing."
NSW
Office of Environment and Heritage Media Release 5 July 2010:
Straits
(Hillgrove) Gold Pty Limited has been fined $50,000 and ordered to
pay costs of $24,000 in the NSW Land and Environment Court today
after being found guilty of polluting waters.
Straits
pleaded guilty to the charge; pollution of water under the Protection
of the Environment Operations Act.
The
company 'Straits' conducts gold and antimony mining activities at the
Hillgrove Mine, near Armidale in NSW.
In
sentencing today, Justice Biscoe convicted and fined Straits $50,000
and ordered it to pay the prosecutor's legal costs of $24,000.
The
court heard that in April 2009 a protective bund at the premises had
been lowered to allow access for an electrical contractor. When a
screening device used in the mine became blocked and 'slimes'
discharged and spilled into the bunded area, it then overflowed the
bund and discharged into the local environment.
The
spill, of up to 3000 litres of 'slimes,' contained antimony, arsenic
and lead and is toxic to some aquatic life.
Department
of Environment, Climate Change and Water (DECCW), Director General,
Lisa Corbyn said the penalty provided a timely reminder to companies
that they must ensure measures are in place to contain pollution.
"This
case highlights the potential for serious damage to occur and
highlights the importance of companies having safeguards and
operating procedures in place to control pollution at all times.
Carelessness meant that simple containment structures which could
have prevented the spill from leaving the mine site were not in
place. Fortunately the environmental harm from this particular spill
was low.
"Importantly,
the company did report the spill to the DECCW Environment Line and
cooperated with the DECCW officers throughout the investigation."
Anyone
who sees pollution is urged to contact the Environment line on 131
555.
Bellingen
Shire Council State of the Environment Report 2009-2010:
Urunga
antimony processing site
A
seriously contaminated site has been identified at Urunga, Portions
138 & 169 Parish of Newry. Contamination also affects adjacent
Crown Land and a SEPP 14 wetland. The site was previously used for
antimony ore processing, since abandoned without rehabilitation of
the site. DECCW have undertaken an investigation of the site and
researched remediation options.
General
Council
maintains records of properties known to be affected by
contamination. Council must consider the requirements of the
Contaminated Land Management Act 1997 and State Environmental
Planning Policy 55 – Remediation of Land in assessing proposed
changes to the use of land.
Antimony
and arsenic dispersion in the Macleay River catchment, New South
Wales: a study of the environmental geochemical consequences,
February 2007:
A
baseline geochemical study of stream sediments and waters of the
Macleay River catchment in northeastern New South Wales indicates
that although most of the catchment is unaffected by anthropogenic or
natural inputs of heavy metals and metalloids, the Bakers Creek -
trunk Macleay-floodplain system has been strongly affected by
mining-derived Sb and As. The dispersion train from the Hillgrove Sb
- Au mining area to the Pacific Ocean is over 300 km in length. Ore
and mineralised altered rock from Hillgrove contains vein,
breccia-hosted and disseminated stibnite, arsenopyrite, pyrite and
traces of gold. Historic (pre-1970) mine-waste disposal practices
have resulted in high to extreme contamination of stream sediments
and waters by Sb and As for ∼50 km downstream, with high Au values
in the sediments…..
Estimates
of sediment migration rates and amounts of Sb and As transported in
suspension and solution imply that the catchment contamination will
be long-term (centuries to millennia) such that environmental effects
need to be ascertained and management strategies implemented…
[Ashley,
P. M.; Graham, B. P.; Tighe, M. K.; Wolfenden, B. J in Australian
Journal of Earth Sciences, Volume 54, Number 1, February 2007 , pp.
83-103(21)]
North
Coast Voices,
"NSW
North Coast antimony contamination makes it onto national
television",
25 October 2011, excerpt:
The
Sydney Morning Herald also addressed the issue of historic and recent
contamination from the Hillgrove antimony mine:
A
PLUME of toxic pollution from an old antimony mine appears to have
killed fish for dozens of kilometres along the Macleay River in
northern NSW.....
a
study published by the CSIRO in 2009 described the waterways near the
mothballed mine as ''highly contaminated'' and estimated about 7000
tonnes of waste had accumulated along the bed of the Macleay River.
Water
tests have shown antimony levels at 250 times background levels, with
high levels detected along the river to the coast at Urunga, where
the mineral was once processed for export.
Coinciding
with the return of Donald Trump to the US presidency, Meta, the
parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp has announced it’s
abandoning the independent fact-checking processes set up in 2016 in
favour of a ‘community notes’ program, as used on Elon Musk’s X
platform, where the community decides which posts are misleading or
need more context.
Meta’s
press release quotes a 2019 speech by its CEO Mark Zuckerberg in
which he argued that free expression has been the driving force
behind progress in American society and around the world, and that
inhibiting speech, however well-intentioned the reasons for doing so,
reinforces existing institutions and power structures instead of
empowering people.
‘Some
people believe giving more people a voice is driving division rather
than bringing us together, said Mr Zuckerberg.
‘More
people across the spectrum believe that achieving the political
outcomes they think matter is more important than every person having
a voice. I think that’s dangerous.’
How
did that work out?
In
practice, Meta’s policies and role in fuelling misinformation led
to the earlier election of Donald Trump in the USA, Jair Bolsonaro in
Brazil, and the success of Brexit in the UK.
As
Meta sought to rebuild its credentials as a good corporate citizen
following the Cambridge Analytica scandal, in which Facebook data was
manipulated and exploited for political purposes in the UK and
elsewhere (without the permission of users), independent fact
checking was one of Meta’s responses.....
The
statement goes on to say, ‘We want to undo the mission creep that
has made our rules too restrictive and too prone to over-enforcement.
We’re getting rid of a number of restrictions on topics like
immigration, gender identity and gender that are the subject of
frequent political discourse and debate....
Anything
to avoid another Donald meltdown? Cloudcatcher Media.
Trumped
Meta’s
latest press release doesn’t mention Donald Trump anywhere, but his
influence is clearly apparent on the new direction of the company.
After
clashing with Mr Trump earlier, Mark Zuckerberg has grown
increasingly close to the incoming president in recent years, along
with his fellow billionaires, notably Jeff Bezos, with significant
implications for global media and information and eco-systems.
Donald
Trump praised Meta’s latest announcement. ‘I think they’ve come
a long way,’ he told a press conference yesterday. When a
journalist asked the President-elect if he thought Zuckerberg was
responding to threats he had made in the past, Trump responded with
one word: ‘Probably’.
While
the changes at Meta will only affect the United States initially,
they are expected to be rolled out globally in the near future,
including Australia.
The question that immediately springs to mind - 'Will Zuckerberg remove the fact-checking function from the Australian version of Facebook ahead of the 2025 federal general election?'.
Due to the 2024 electoral redistribution, more than half of the 150 federal electorates will be going to the polls with altered electorate boundaries and, it is not hard to imagine that all political parties as well as third party lobbyists will begin campaigning vigorously in those seats in particular when the timing of this year's election is announced.
Meta’s
surprise decision to scrap its fact-checking partnerships –
blindsiding journalists involved in the program and putting some out
of work – is part of a much bigger shift in media and politics.
The
very notion of fact-checking is under assault by a wide array of
fact-challenged politicians and interest groups. Particularly on the
right, “fact-check” has been turned into a dirty word, one that
presupposes the fact-checker is actually suppressing some
inconvenient truth.
Meta
CEO Mark Zuckerberg played right into that assumption on Tuesday when
he insulted fact-checkers as “too politically biased” and said
they “have destroyed more trust than they’ve created, especially
in the U.S.”
Destroyed
trust among whom, exactly? Zuckerberg didn’t say. But
President-elect Donald Trump, who keeps fact-checkers busy and hates
being corrected by them, welcomed Meta’s changes. So did the wide
world of pro-Trump media. “Trump gets results,” Fox’s Laura
Ingraham said Tuesday night, touting Meta’s “major shakeup.”
As
CNN’s Donie O’Sullivan found through his interviews with Trump
rallygoers, MAGA loyalists bristled at the existence of fact-checks
on Facebook and objected to content moderation that they described as
censorship. They trusted Trump over any attempt to fact-check him.
But
for a wider audience, Meta’s support for outside fact-checking
outlets helped make the internet a little bit less polluted by lies
and propaganda.....
“Without
fact checking on Meta, disinfo spreaders will be partying like it’s
2016,” said Duke
[former CNN journalist Alan Duke, Lead
Stories]
.....
Both
Houses of the NSW Parliament effectively went into end of year recess
on 22 November 2024, with only five days of supplementary budget
estimates hearings remaining between 2 to 6 December 2025 before the chamber
doors closed until 11 February 2025 when both Houses begin the 2025
parliamentary calendar year.
The
NSW
Minns Labor Government waited
until Friday 20 December 2024 to announce on its Inside
State Government
website that it had formally established the Housing
Delivery Authority (HDA).
The
three-person
HDA decision makers
were revealed to be senior public servants the Secretary
of the Premier’s Department Simon
Draper, the Secretary
of the Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure
Kiersten Fishburn and the Chief
Executive Officer of Infrastructure NSW,
Tom Gellibrand. Although the HDA is nominally responsible to the
Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure, these decision
makers have been handed what appears to be almost unfettered power to
accede to property developers' board and shareholder desire for
corporate & personal enrichment commencing from today, Thursday 8
January 2025, when developers can begin to submitExpression
of Interest to the HDA for major housing developments above
approximately $60 million in Greater Sydney and $30 million in
regional NSW.
The
HDA intends to meet monthly to consider proposals against the EOI
criteria and make recommendations to the Minister for Planning and
Public Spaces on whether to declare these proposals as State
Significant Development.
The
HDA has been created to give property developers a way to bypass
local government councils & regional planning panels, as is
clearly stated in the state government's media
release:
Proponents
can still choose to follow the existing regionally significant
development pathway assessed by councils and determined by planning
panels, but the establishment of the HDA and the new SSD pathway will
give them another option for major residential developments.
On
20 December the Dept. of Planning also published the Housing
Delivery Authority SSD criteria,
which stated in part that the HDA will
apply flexibility in their evaluation of proposals against the
criteria with preference being given to projects which meet the
criteria and could commence construction quickly.
What
could possibly go wrong?
Local
Government NSW (LGNSW),
media
release,20
December 2024:
New
year, new rules: government sides with developers over local voices
Today's
confirmation of eligibility criteria for the State Government’s new
Housing Delivery Authority (HDA) has generously presented developers
with the freedom to exceed development standards by up to 20 per
cent, giving greater opportunities for profit-driven land banking,
and no mandated requirement to meaningfully provide affordable
housing.[my
yellow highlighting]
Local
Government NSW (LGNSW) – the peak body for NSW councils – says
the HDA will further weaken the role of community-led strategic
planning while doing nothing to address real barriers to housing
delivery such as land banking, skills and labour shortages and
soaring costs of materials and labour.
LGNSW
President Cr Darriea Turley AM said today's announcement would be
viewed by developers as an early Christmas present.
“Far
from the season of giving, these planning changes will leave local
communities empty-handed while big developers celebrate,” Cr Turley
said.
“Until
now, details of the HDA have been limited, but the NSW Government has
confirmed today that it's basically handing the keys to planning
rules over to developers, while local communities will be sidelined
in decisions about what happens in their towns and suburbs.
“The
new three-person HDA will be receiving EOIs from large developers and
recommending these bypass councils and instead progress through state
assessment and Ministerial determination."
Cr
Turley said that while councils across the state supported efforts to
accelerate housing delivery, they opposed the move to establish this
new planning body and state-assessed planning pathway.
“This
is not only because of the concern about bypassing local councils,
but fundamentally, but also because it opens the planning system to
more ad hoc proposals, disregarding local strategic plans and risks
adding more uncertainty to the planning system,” Cr Turley said.
“The
NSW Government is continually shifting the planning goalposts for
communities and developers. Developers now know that if they continue
to delay construction on already approved sites, they only have to
wait for the next rule change when they’ll be able to generate even
greater profits.
“Councils
acknowledge the need for new and more diverse housing in well-located
areas across NSW, but maintaining strategic, evidence-based planning
and doing this in a collaborative way, is critical.
“Unfortunately
for the NSW community, there is no requirement that developers who
receive approval under this pathway must actually deliver the
promised dwellings – just that they must demonstrate a capability
to do so.
“There
is nothing in the planning system to compel them to build. This
toothless aspiration opens the planning system to more land banking
by developers in search of even greater profits.
“And
despite this new planning pathway allowing proposals to exceed
development standards by up to 20 per cent there is no clear mandate
for a meaningful contribution to affordable housing, nor that any
affordable housing will remain in perpetuity.
“Rather
than the vague requirement for a ‘positive commitment to affordable
housing’, the requirements should clearly mandate what is required
at the outset, to allow developers to factor this into their EOI for
this pathway."
Cr
Turley called for Minister Scully to consider targeted collaboration,
rather than blanket policy that bypasses councils.
“When
first announced last month, councils resolved to condemn this new
spot-rezoning and State approval pathway, which will deliver windfall
gains for developers while removing safeguards that protect
communities from inappropriate overdevelopment,” Cr Turley said.
“Rather
than layering another blanket, statewide policy on the planning
system, efforts to improve approval pathways for housing would be
more effective if they focused attention and support where it is
needed to overcome specific issues and to reach jointly agreed
planning outcomes with councils for their communities.
“Any
accelerated process must not compromise infrastructure provision,
build quality, environmental considerations, public safety,
liveability and other planning outcomes.”
Cr
Turley is an elected member of Broken Hill City Council which, at its
November meeting, resolved to resign from LGNSW – the peak body for
local government across the state.
Despite
being democratically elected by members as President in December 2021
and again in November 2023, Cr Turley is no longer eligible to hold
office as her council no longer forms part of the membership of the
peak body.
In
accordance with the Rules for LGNSW, the remaining 11 months of her
term will now be served by the current Vice-President
(Rural/Regional) , who is Mayor Phyllis Miller from Forbes Shire
Council. Mayor Miller will serve until the next scheduled general
election due to take place at the LGNSW Annual Conference in November
2025.
Worldwide,
there are about 400 species of sharks. Of these, around 180 species
occur in Australian waters, of which about 70 are thought to be
endemic. Sharks occur in all habitats around the Australian coast
line, however most are found on the continental slope or shelf,
primarily on the bottom. However, many sharks are also found in
coastal waters and a small number are even found in freshwater
systems, such as rivers and estuaries....
Several
species of shark are known to be dangerous to humans: the white
shark, tiger shark, bull shark (Carcharhinus leucas) and other whaler
sharks (Carcharhinus sp.). No shark is thought to target humans as
prey, rather the majority of shark attacks can be attributed to the
shark confusing us with its normal prey.
Five shark species found in Australia are now considered either Vulnerable, Endangered or Critically Endangered, due to declining numbers - the Grey Nurse, Whale, White, Northern River and Speartooth sharks. These sharks are protected species under the C'wealth EPBC Act, along with the migratory shark species - the long and short fin Mako shark and the Porbeagle shark which are specifically prohibited from being fished commercially in Australian waters.
As
the sad news of a surfer taken by what is thought to be a white shark, while riding the big waves
on a remote part of the Australian coastline is filling print and
online media column inches at the moment, like night follows day
there will be some discussion of shark numbers, the safety or
otherwise of ocean waters and possible methods of reducing those
numbers.
So
here is some basic information. Taken from the Australian Shark-Incident Database (ASID)-whichcontains
collected and collated historical & current records of human and
shark encounters - and read alongside Australia's population growth
over the last 223 years for additional context.
Australia's
resident population in the 108 years between between
1791 and 1899
rose from an estimate in
excess of 303,194 to 950,000 individuals to an estimated 4 million by
1899. The exact numbers are unknown as, although colonial authorities
kept muster books for convicts, guards and free persons, First
Nations peoples were rarely recorded accurately if or when they were
recorded at all for the next 180 years.
In
that first listed 108 year period there were 123 recorded adverse human
encounters with sharks in Australian waters - 44 of these
encounters resulted in the death of a person and 79 resulted in
no injury or an injury, usually described as minor or major
lacerations sometimes accompanied by teeth marks.
The
majority of the these 123 adverse human encounters with sharks are
recorded as involving unprovoked shark attacks, however a total of 23
of these attacks are recorded as provoked by the human victim and
frequently described as "enticing the shark" or
"intentionally" coming into close physical contact
with the shark.
Bottom
line: 0.0011% of the then total national population died by shark attack.
Between
1900 and 1999 the Australian population grew by millions to reach
est. 18.81 million men, women and children.
During
this period there were 609 recorded adverse human and shark
encounters - 159 of these encounters resulted in the death of
a person and 450 resulted in no injury or an injury, usually
described as minor or major lacerations sometimes accompanied by
teeth marks.
Again
the majority of the 609 adverse human encounters with sharks are
recorded as involving unprovoked shark attacks, however over 200 of
these attacks are recorded as provoked by the human victim and
frequently described as either "enticing the shark",
"intentionally" coming into close physical contact
with the shark, in "physical contact" or during
"capture of the shark".
Bottom
line: 0.0008% of the then total national population died by shark attack.
Over
the next 25 years between 2000 and 2024 the Australian population
had reached 27,204,809 men, women and children - and with est. 85
per cent of this population living in coastal regions, whether strong
swimmers, weak swimmers or non-swimmers, 50 per cent will frequent ocean, coastal river or estuary waters and enter the water a combined total of up to 11.7 million times in a year [Surf Lifesaving Australia, National Coastal Safety Report 2024].
During
this 25 year period there were 501 recorded adverse human and
shark encounters - 52 of these encounters resulted in the
death of a person and 449 resulted in no injury or an injury,
usually described as minor or major lacerations sometimes accompanied
by teeth marks.
Again
the majority of the 501 adverse human encounters with sharks are
recorded as involving unprovoked shark attacks, however over 100 of
these attacks are recorded as provoked by the human victim and
frequently described as either "enticing the shark",
"intentionally" coming into close physical contact
with the shark, in "physical contact" or in the case
of one unlucky board rider "jumped on shark" by
mistake and was bitten. There appears to be some connection between
provoked shark attacks and the recreational activities of fishing,
diving, scuba diving and spear fishing.
Bottom
line: 0.0001% of the current total national population died by shark
attack.
BACKGROUND
The
Australian Shark-Incident Database (ASID), formerly known as the Australian
Shark Attack File (ASAF), quantifies temporal and spatial patterns of
shark-human interactions in Australia.
The
Australian Shark-Incident Database is a joint partnership with
Taronga Conservation Society Australia, along with Flinders
University, and the New South Wales Department of Primary Industries.
Maintained
as an uninterrupted record by a few committed Taronga team members
since 1984, the File currently comprises > 1000 individual
investigations from 1791 to today, making it the most comprehensive
database of its kind available.
It
is said that during the Christmas
holiday period
the little New South Wales coastal town of Yamba
(2023 est. resident population 6,467) easily doubles its population
and this year, 2024, appeared to be no different.
December
visitor numbers are still manageable, but thankfully for the rest of
summer and other holiday periods thoughout the year visitor numbers
are a little lower.
Something
I suspect one Time
Out
magazine editor discovered when she visited.
Yamba
has been named one of the 10 best Australian destinations” Time Out
magazine’s editors travelled to in 2024. Image: Rodney Stevens
The
accolades keep coming for the paradise we know is Yamba – much to
the dismay of some long-term locals – after the town was announced
in “The 10 best Australian destinations” Time Out magazine’s
editors travelled in 2024.
This
is the most recent recognition in a growing list of acknowledgements
for Yamba, following the September 2024 announcement Yamba was the
fifth most searched hidden gem in Australia in a study by worldwide
luggage storage app Bounce.
In
2009, Yamba was named Best Town in Australia by a panel of tourism
and travel experts in a survey conducted by Australian Traveller
magazine.
And
in the 2023 NSW Top Town awards, Yamba was a finalist in the Top
Tourism Town greater than 5000 residents’ category.
While
some locals dislike the idea of promoting Yamba as beautiful
destination we know and love, the economy and businesses of the town,
and to a degree, the entire Clarence Valley is reliant on tourism.
Time
Out’s Sydney Lifestyle writer, Winnie Stubbs visited Yamba and fell
in love with the town, penning this review.
“The
NSW coast has no shortage of magical beach towns, but there’s
something special about Yamba,” Stubbs wrote.
“Sitting
with an unpretentious air on the southern edge of the Northern
Rivers, the laid-back beach town is home to just the right amount of
everything.
“There
are surfing spots for every ability, hidden coves and rockpools for
dreamy summer days, a charming old-school cinema for rainy evenings,
and a delightfully unintimidating range of must-try eateries and
drinking spots.
“A
pod of dolphins has made its home below the southern headland,
punctuating the sparkling coastline beyond the ocean pool on quiet,
sunny mornings, and during whale watching season you’ll see
migrating humpbacks stopping to scratch off their barnacles at a
rocky outcrop beyond the beaches.
“Now
home to two super-luxe hotels, Yamba is on the up – get there
before the crowds do.”
For
the purposes of compiling regional crime statistics NSW Police report
results according to three area groups, Northern Region, Southern
Region & Western Region.
The
Northern Region
runs from the Central Coast up to the NSW-Qld border and inland as
far as the Moree Plains, Narrabri District & Liverpool Plains.
Over
the festive holiday period NSW Police conducted Operation
Christmas/New Year 2024
which commenced at 12.01am Friday (20 December 2024) and concluded at
11.59pm yesterday (Wednesday 1 January 2025).
During
that 12-day period
state police on duty in the Northern
Region
recorded the following:
Restraint
Infringements – 89
Mobile
phone infringements – 117
Speed
infringements – 2,527
Breath
Tests – 66,421
PCA
charges – 203
Drug-driving
detections – 367
Fatal
Crashes – 4
Lives
Lost – 4
Reported
major crashes – 226
People
injured – 104
One
of the incidents included in the 2,527 speeding infringements
recorded and mentioned in Operation Christmas/New Year 2024 media
release was:
About
5pm Monday 30 December 2024, officers attached to Brisbane Water
Traffic and Highway Patrol were patrolling Peats Ridge Road,
Somersby, when they detected a motorcycle allegedly speeding. Police
followed the motorcyclist which they allege was being ridden at
177km/h in a 110km/h zone. After a short time, the rider - an
off-duty police officer attached to Northern Region - stopped in
Tuggerah and police issued him a traffic infringement notice for
exceed speed over 45km/h. The man’s licence was also suspended. An
internal review will be conducted.
Sadly
during this 12-day period 12 people died on New South Wales roads -
four more than during the same police operation last year.
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The Universal Declaration of Human Rights Article 19
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
[Adopted and proclaimed by United Nations General Assembly resolution 217 A (III) of 10 December 1948]
Hi! My name is Boy. I'm a male bi-coloured tabby cat. Ever since I discovered that Malcolm Turnbull's dogs were allowed to blog, I have been pestering Clarencegirl to allow me a small space on North Coast Voices.
A false flag musing: I have noticed one particular voice on Facebook which is Pollyanna-positive on the subject of the Port of Yamba becoming a designated cruise ship destination. What this gentleman doesn’t disclose is that, as a principal of Middle Star Pty Ltd, he could be thought to have a potential pecuniary interest due to the fact that this corporation (which has had an office in Grafton since 2012) provides consultancy services and tourismbusiness development services.
A religion & local government musing: On 11 October 2017 Clarence Valley Council has the Church of Jesus Christ Development Fund Inc in Sutherland Local Court No. 6 for a small claims hearing. It would appear that there may be a little issue in rendering unto Caesar. On 19 September 2017 an ordained minister of a religion (which was named by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in relation to 40 instances of historical child sexual abuse on the NSW North Coast) read the Opening Prayer at Council’s ordinary monthly meeting. Earlier in the year an ordained minister (from a church network alleged to have supported an overseas orphanage closed because of child abuse claims in 2013) read the Opening Prayer and an ordained minister (belonging to yet another church network accused of ignoring child sexual abuse in the US and racism in South Africa) read the Opening Prayer at yet another ordinary monthly meeting. Nice one councillors - you are covering yourselves with glory!
An investigative musing: Newcastle Herald, 12 August 2017: The state’s corruption watchdog has been asked to investigate the finances of the Awabakal Aboriginal Local Land Council, less than 12 months after the troubled organisation was placed into administration by the state government. The Newcastle Herald understands accounting firm PKF Lawler made the decision to refer the land council to the Independent Commission Against Corruption after discovering a number of irregularities during an audit of its financial statements.The results of the audit were recently presented to a meeting of Awabakal members. Administrator Terry Lawler did not respond when contacted by the Herald and a PKF Lawler spokesperson said it was unable to comment on the matter. Given the intricate web of company relationships that existed with at least one former board member it is not outside the realms of possibility that, if ICAC accepts this referral, then United Land Councils Limited (registered New Zealand) and United First Peoples Syndications Pty Ltd(registered Australia) might be interviewed. North Coast Voices readers will remember that on 15 August 2015 representatives of these two companied gave evidence before NSW Legislative Council General Purpose Standing Committee No. 6 INQUIRY INTO CROWN LAND. This evidence included advocating for a Yamba mega port.
A Nationals musing: Word around the traps is that NSW Nats MP for Clarence Chris Gulaptis has been talking up the notion of cruise ships visiting the Clarence River estuary. Fair dinkum! That man can be guaranteed to run with any bad idea put to him. I'm sure one or more cruise ships moored in the main navigation channel on a regular basis for one, two or three days is something other regular river users will really welcome. *pause for appreciation of irony* The draft of the smallest of the smaller cruise vessels is 3 metres and it would only stay safely afloat in that channel. Even the Yamba-Iluka ferry has been known to get momentarily stuck in silt/sand from time to time in Yamba Bay and even a very small cruise ship wouldn't be able to safely enter and exit Iluka Bay. You can bet your bottom dollar operators of cruise lines would soon be calling for dredging at the approach to the river mouth - and you know how well that goes down with the local residents.
A local councils musing: Which Northern Rivers council is on a low-key NSW Office of Local Government watch list courtesy of feet dragging by a past general manager?
A serial pest musing: I'm sure the Clarence Valley was thrilled to find that a well-known fantasist is active once again in the wee small hours of the morning treading a well-worn path of accusations involving police, local business owners and others.
An investigative musing: Which NSW North Coast council is batting to have the longest running code of conduct complaint investigation on record?
A which bank? musing: Despite a net profit last year of $9,227 million the Commonwealth Bank still insists on paying below Centrelink deeming rates interest on money held in Pensioner Security Accounts. One local wag says he’s waiting for the first bill from the bank charging him for the privilege of keeping his pension dollars at that bank.
A Daily Examiner musing: Just when you thought this newspaper could sink no lower under News Corp management, it continues to give column space to Andrew Bolt.
A thought to ponder musing: In case of bushfire or flood - do you have an emergency evacuation plan for the family pet?
An adoption musing: Every week on the NSW North Coast a number of cats and dogs find themselves without a home. If you want to do your bit and give one bundle of joy a new family, contact Happy Paws on 0419 404 766 or your local council pound.
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