Below is an update of the previous post (http://capitalcitycitizenscommittee.blogspot.com.au/2015/11/has-alp-done-deal-with-devil.html) which outlined what the CCCC has achieved in respect of the nine key issues.
1. The Bill does little or
nothing to improve the governance of the Capital City. Far from improving and
strengthening the City of Perth, the City of Perth Committee (Cl 12-15) would weaken it. The
proposed ‘City of Perth Committee’ would not be accountable to the Parliament,
the Perth City Council or the community.
This appears to have gone through to the keeper, with
Simpson stating that the Committee doesn't even have to keep minutes, never
mind making them public. The Opposition barely batted a collective eyelid when
Simpson said this.
It is worth
noting, however, that Local Government Minister, Tony Simpson, stated in
Parliament that the City of Perth Committee does not have to keep minutes, let
alone make them publicly-available (Clause 15 - 'Committee may regulate own
procedure').
This is a
surprising assertion, but was allowed to go unchallenged, as not to do so would
surely be in breach of the State Records Act, 2000, which applies to, inter
alia:
5. A Minister
of the Crown.
9. An
incorporated or unincorporated body established or continued for a public
purpose under a written law.
12. A local
government or regional local government under the Local
Government Act 1995 .
15. A commission, board,
committee or other body established by, or a person appointed by, the Governor
or the Government of the State or a Minister of the Crown to advise on, inquire
into or investigate any matter.
It would also
seem to be contrary to the accountability and reporting requirements of the Local Government Act, 1995, at least as
far as the participation of the City of Perth is concerned.
2. The proposal for City of Perth boundaries (Cl
17/18) runs counter to key criteria for assessment of boundary change or amalgamation
proposals, including: ‘community of interest’ and ‘natural barriers’ (‘physical
and topographic features’ and ‘transport and communications’).
3. Jurisdictional separation
of UWA and QEII from their surrounding communities (Cl 17/18) endangers the
partnerships built up over many years for joint projects with Subiaco and
Nedlands Councils.
4. Extending the CoP boundary
to the middle of the river (Cl 17/18) creates a precedent and uncertainty for
local government maintenance responsibilities and cost-shifting.
Debate on Clauses
17 and 18 was entirely about the boundary being in the middle of the Swan
River.
Explicit statement from Simpson in Parliament that this
does not affect river management (still with Parks and Wildlife) but is purely
to allow CoP to manage health and similar issues on structures over the river.
He stated more than once that the final responsibility for river management and
developments on/in river is Parks and Wildlife.
Residents of Subiaco didn’t even rate a mention before the
clauses were passed. This is a gross dereliction of duty by our elected representatives in the Legislative Assembly.
5. The City of Perth has
repeatedly said that it doesn’t want residential areas.
No mention – and don’t expect one now.
6. The Bill repeals (Cl
27) the City of Perth Restructuring Act, 1993, which established Vincent,
Victoria Park and Cambridge, with the effect of disestablishing those local
governments.
Explicit statement from Simpson in Parliament that this
does not disestablish City of Vincent, Town of Victoria Park or Town of
Cambridge.
7. The Bill creates
uncertainty about future changes to boundaries of the City of Perth, including
Burswood, by requiring the Local Government Advisory Board to take account of
‘capital city status’ without defining what it means (Cl 37).
The Opposition amendment (clause 15A) that any future changes to City of Perth boundaries require an Act of Parliament has been passed. This means that clause 37 has to be removed.
8. There are no benefits from
including Kings Park in the City of Perth (Cl 17/18). Doing so may create
pressure for inappropriate development in the Park, especially with the
additional powers given to the Executive Director of Public Health (Cl
29/30).
Explicit statement from Simpson in Parliament that this
does not give EDPH any more powers than he already has under the Health Act.
This is important, given that the wording in the City of Perth is different
from that in the Health Act.
9. Business/property owner
voting enrolment would not expire unless the enrolee notifies the City of Perth
(Cl 20/21), creating potential for rorting the system or simple inertia to
entrench business votes.
These clauses were
voted down without a formal division being required.
It looks to me that:
- 7 and 9 have been achieved;
- a reasonable amount has been achieved on 4, 6 and 8 (at least through clear statements that can be taken to be the intent of Parliament when passing the Act),
- 1, 2, 3, and 5 have been lost
Whilst this is not a bad achievement for a voluntary group of concerned citizens, this will be of small comfort to the residents of Subiaco who are now almost certain to find themselves involuntary and unwanted citizens of the City of Perth.
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