A very thoughtful article in the Age today “what will the new normal look like?”
What Will The New Norm Look Like?
A very thoughtful article in the Age today “what will the new normal look like?”
By Bill Kusznirczuk, highlights the opportunities that the Corona Pandemic presents for regional towns and cities. People have gotten used to working away from the office, many will seize the opportunity to make tree or sea changes. The planners with the local councils need to move fast to ensure that towns under their control are liveable and desirable destinations for this new breed of refugee.
Things like ensuring “Fibre to the home” Internet, good postal and courier services and the icing local businesses will attract new residents. The housing development opportunities need to be in place and planning processes streamlined.
Question is, can Baw Baw, South Gippsland and Latrobe Shire Councils rise to the challenge?
Graeme Wilson
Delburn resident.
Australian Unemployed Workers Union (AUWU) members and Raise the Rate campaigners are joining forces to campaign to permanently raise the rate of Jobseeker (previously Newstart)
The SGSC $2million Covid-19 Community Support Package v A Rate Reduction alternative.
Dear Editor
I am appreciating your publication, in particular the (mercifully short) excerpts from the last council meeting.
Also, the articles on the $30 million secret stash and the (beholden) position of other media with the increased advertising spend, of our money, from council were informative reading.
I also enjoyed the contribution from 18-year-old Amity from Fish Creek and her passion for environmental and social issues, and that she didn’t lecture or make demands on the rest of us. Her letter reminded me of my own commitment to such issues as a younger person and the quote attributed to Winston Churchill that “anyone who is not a communist (greenie) at the age of 20 has no heart ………”
Steve Finlay
Leongatha
The last South Gippsland Shire annual report showed cash deposits of $35.3 million, money that was accumulated on the backs of ratepayers over the last decade through unacceptably high council rates.
Just as Britain assumed Australia was Terra Nullius (nobody’s land) and proceeded to usurp the rights of the traditional owners, OSMI Australia Pty Ltd, assumes that they have a right to develop a wind farm at Delburn, ignoring the opinions and feelings of nearby residents. Their only motive is profit. There are three main beneficiaries from this project, The Developers; Stephen Buckle and Peter Marriott who each stand to make millions if their plans are approved and HVP who will receive over a million dollars per year in rental. HVP is American owned and profits go overseas. HVP claims on their website that they are “Good Neighbours” but have not consulted with locals on this project.
I am a welfare Officer here at the Fish Creek RSL . We are delivering food to people in need , Fish Creek School, and Meeniyan School , for people doing it tough , we supply food clothing and furniture also have helped several families that have lost everything in the fires , and still have received no financial help from all the moneys donated.
Let’s take a look at early statements by Julie Eisenbise (JE) (Ref the Star July 2, 2019) “I want to work with the community to get the best outcome for the entire shire.”
Last year l attended the SGWater roadshow to convince us a 9% rate increase was warranted. The community engagement did not indicate this once approachable organisation was headed down the corporate empire building path.
I read your interview with the CEO & my brain switches to Sir Humphry Appleby – talk about straight out of the ‘gobbledegook manual’!
Ever wondered why your rates in South Gippsland Shire are higher than many other comparable Councils?
Could the Shire Have Given a 3% rate Burden Reduction
Just 4 months after adopting the Budget in August 2019, the Council slashed $1.8m from the capital
works budget. This is not work deferred but work cut all together.
We are all in this together” – how often have we seen this or heard it said over the past 2 months.
Well it does not seem to have been applied at the local elite work force at the South Gippsland Shire Council.
This is a Council where workers who have had their place of work closed (i.e.. Caravan parks, coal creek, libraries) are still employed and paid for by ratepayers at SGSC Centrelink.
Unprecedented, cataclysmic, disastrous: the early figures suggest an economic decline deeper and more rapid than in the great depression. The great unknown is when will the pandemic end, what state will the economy be in, and how do we kick start it when it eventually ends?
Local businesses are suffering a huge downturn. Tourism, accommodation, and retail businesses are being hit hardest. Some hard-working South Gippslanders are losing jobs or shifts, and everyone knows someone who is directly impacted. Hopefully, no-one in our shire will lose their life to this unwelcome virus.
The SGSC resort to claiming that because the Auditors look at their reports that it is satisfactory not
to have transparency with the Council financials. If one looks at issues with Councils where fraud
has occurred it is not the auditors who discover these issues.
South Gippsland Action Group (SGAG) is encouraging the Council to talk to the community
about future items for the Council Plan due to be updated later in the year.
To whom it may concern. South Gippsland Shire Council, Communications Dept.
Unfortunately, this group of OUR employees has acquired the title of ‘The Propaganda Unit’ amongst those who follow council matters more closely than the average constituent.
The South Gippsland Action Group have just received a reply to questions which indicates that Council do not take any notice of Presentations until they are made at the Annual Budget and Council Plan sessions once a year and then with just short notice and time to have anything discussed.
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