Over the next 20 years, the City will undergo moderate population growth and will see a continued decline in household sizes. As a consequence, there will be a need to plan for the additional 6,000 dwellings which are predicted for Glen Eira by 2021 as well as encouraging a more diverse housing stock (Department of Infrastructure, 1999, Victoria in Future). 

So sayeth Council in its latest spin document. When were these prognostications made? 1999? 2012? Your guess is as good as ours. But it certainly serves the objectives of the public relations department of Glen Eira. Clearly these figures are highly questionable. If the claim is that these projections represent the latest up-to-date data, then residents are being led up the garden path.

The Department of Planning’s latest version of Victoria in Future, 2012 makes the following predictions:

Currently the figures tell us that in 2011, private dwellings totalled 55,150. No figures are given for the numbers in 2013 although Profile.Id tell us that the figure is currently over 58,000. The projected figure needed for 2021 is claimed to be 59,908. Hardly an extra 6000 dwellings! (See: http://www.dpcd.vic.gov.au/home/publications-and-research/urban-and-regional-research/census-2011/victoria-in-future-2012/vif-2012-data-tables)

Profile.id.com in their predictions also come up far short of the cited 6000 dwellings.

dwelling forecastsWhat is most important is the need to take into account the development that has been rampant for the past decade. Council appears at VCAT and argues that population has already exceeded projections, so there should be some constraints on development. Yet their planning policies continue to invite massive scale developments without providing the needed strategic planning and investment in basic infrastructure such as drains, open space, etc.

Analysis of the Planning Activity Audit which is submitted by councils to the government on a regular basis reveals the extent of this development. Please note: we believe that these figures (as submitted by Council) are far from accurate given past history and if anything they underplay the scale of development. The duplication of some figures is also unexplained. The table below documents the number of applications submitted and the number of permits granted. The final column lists the number of permits for 2 or more dwellings.

Year

No of applications

Permits granted

2 or more dwellings

2003/4

1038

654

160

2004/5

950

586

143

2005/6

907

586

143

2006/7

919

522

192

2007/8

1188

1028

283

2008/9

998

946

209

2009/10

1121

910

317

2010/11

1237

1071

419

2011/12

1237

1071

337

Source: http://www.ppars.dpcd.vic.gov.au/Reports/04

At the very least the figures indicate that a MINIMUM of 7,000 dwellings have already gone into Glen Eira. The real figure  could be tenfold bigger since we’re only adding up the number of granted permits. These figures also do not reveal how successful the policy of creating DIVERSITY actually is. For example: of the thousands and thousands of units erected in the past decade, and looking ahead to the future, HOW MANY ARE 1 BEDROOM APARTMENTS? HOW MANY ARE 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS? HOW MANY ARE 3 BEDROOM?

Do councillors ever ask for such figures? Do they in fact even know what is really going on in their neighbourhoods? Or do they leave everything to be (secretly) shunted through by an administration hell bent on more and more development at the cost of social, economic and environmental amenity for the majority of residents?

PS: We neglected to include the most vital statistic of all – the 1500+ units that will comprise the C60 development. So much for the need for another 6000 dwellings!

Here is a very real scenario that has now descended onto residents as a result of Amendment C110. To illustrate our argument the picture below features the Bentleigh carving up of streets PRIOR to the current Amendment. Readers may well ask themselves:

  1. Why the jagged lines everywhere? Why should a property that is 11 houses from Centre Rd be included in Housing Diversity and the house that is 12th be designated as Minimal Change? What is the strategic justification for such demarcation?
  2. Why should one side of a street be designated as Housing Diversity and the other side of the same street as Minimal Change? Again, questions about the efficacy of strategic planning and justification come into it. See map below taken from the OLD VERSION of the planning scheme.

bentleigh

With the new Amendment c110 ALL AREAS ARE NOW DESIGNATED AS worthy of 4 STOREY DEVELOPMENT (IE BROWN)

bentleigh2

Almost by stealth, residents in these areas now face the real possibility of waking up to find that their residential streets have suddenly become fair game for 4 storey apartment blocks and heaven knows how many units. But that’s if you happen to live in the 11th house along Mahvo for example and on a certain side of the street. If you reside in the 12th house on that side of the street then you are technically in minimal change. However, you do face the prospect of having a 4 storey place smack bang next to you cutting out light, overlooking, and not a peep about traffic management plans anywhere within this amendment. There’s also the prospect of 8 or 10 or 12 storeys in the commercial centres just up the road, since this is open slather with no designated height limits, structure plans, or anything for the area.  Please remember that all of this has been achieved WITHOUT PUBLIC CONSULTATION AND WITHOUT ANY ADEQUATE  EXPLANATION TO RESIDENTS. It still remains to be seen how much of this amendment will stand up to the machinations of developers and the rulings of VCAT  – and last but not least – how well this council will actually enforce its own planning scheme. We are not very optimistic on this final point.

Pages from Kingston-Your-City-KYC-August-2013-WEB

The infamous C110 is now available. We will be commenting on this amendment over the next few postings. This post concentrates on the Housing & Residential parameters as stated. All extracts are verbatim quotes from the document and uploaded here.

This amendment has been prepared by the Minister for Planning who is the planning authority for this amendment.The amendment has been made at the request of the Glen Eira City Council.

COMMENT: So much for the myth that Council did not know well and truly beforehand that community consultation would not be occurring. Nor does it excuse the fact that the date submitted to the department was well before the public questions on consultation were tabled at council meetings. The responses were thus untruthful and deceitful.

The amendment applies the NRZ to the Minimal Change areas, the RGZ to the Housing Diversity areas and the GRZ to the small areas around the periphery of the Housing Diversity areas and along transport routes.

COMMENT: Nothing could be clearer than that HOUSING DIVERSITY HAS EXPANDED! Yet Council, apart from admitting changes to the Alma Club site and one other, still maintain that nothing much has changed and that the amendment is simply a ‘translation’ of current zones.

Another objective of Council is to promote the integrated planning of the city. Integrated planning involves working with the community, residents, traders, service providers and other stakeholders to enhance the quality of Glen Eira’s suburbs and their environmental, economic and social sustainability. Integrated planning involves looking beyond traditional town planning solutions. It is important to encourage people to participate in the development of their city and to develop overall visions and plans for areas. It involves holistically looking at a wide range of issues in the local community including; infrastructure, social planning, economic development, recreation and capital works.

COMMENT: So much for the spin versus the reality! So much for ‘integrated planning’ that involves the community. To include such blatant propaganda in an official document that has no relationship to actual events is both insulting to residents and says much about the workings of council.

  • Facilitate high quality urban design and architecture that will enhance neighbourhood character.
  • Encourage the retention of existing vegetation, in particular vegetation and trees which contribute to the City’s tree canopy.
  • Encourage energy efficient housing design, landscape design, construction materials and techniques that will minimise environmental impacts in residential developments.
  • Encourage residents and developers to adopt more environmentally friendly practices such as reducing water usage, recycling and reducing energy use.
  • Encourage rainwater retention and usage in larger developments.
  • Ensure that the community is involved in decision making about their neighbourhood.
  • Ensure that the traffic impacts are adequately addressed when considering new residential development.
  • Ensure that where new development places an increased burden on infrastructure it contributes to the upgrading of infrastructure. 

COMMENT: All motherhood statements that have lacked and continue to lack strategies and policies to enforce these objectives. We have commented numerous times on council’s refusal to introduce Environmental Sustainable Design, water saving design, traffic management precinct plans into its planning scheme. These sentences merely continue the moratorium on action. They are intended to sound good, but are meaningless. How wonderful too that ‘infrastructure’ gets a mention when council REMOVED ITS DEVELOPMENT CONTRIBUTIONS LEVY. Ironically, they may now be forced to re-introduce it!

  • Using the Commercial Centres Policy to strengthen the core of strip shopping centres, identify declining centres and identify new opportunities for non-retail functions. 
  • Using the Monash Medical Centre Precinct Structure Using the Non Residential Uses in Residential Zones Policy to provide some certainty when planning to establish non residential uses in residential zones (eg medical centres, childcare centres).
  • Using the Heritage Policy to manage new development (including additions, alterations and demolition of all or parts of a heritage place) in all areas covered by the Heritage Overlay.

COMMENT: These sentences are possibly the most damning in the entire document since they exhibit for all to see the sheer incompetence of council’s and the minister’s planning department(s). It simply reveals that Glen Eira council either does not check its work carefully enough, or that it does not even know what is in its own planning scheme. PLEASE NOTE: Council does not have a ‘commercial centres policy’ – that was removed over a year ago as was the Monash Medical centre (and it was never a structure plan!). Childcare centres are lumped together with medical centres. It seems that Glen Eira planners don’t know that they introduced a separate ‘childcare’ policy and removed it from the ‘non residential uses’ quite recently. Sloppy, inept, and totally unprofessional!

FUTURE STRATEGIC WORK

  • For housing diversity areas, in conjunction with Melbourne Water, further investigating the capacity of drainage infrastructure to accommodate multi-unit development.
  • Developing local structure plans / urban design frameworks to guide development in the neighbourhood centres.
  • Investigating a vegetation management program which considers appropriate controlsand guidelines to ensure vegetation protection.
  • Developing environmental sustainability guidelines for residential development bydrawing together the best practice in this area to ensure that new residential development is more environmentally sustainable
  • Developing “suburb” plans for each suburb which integrate land use and developmentplanning, with planning for infrastructure, capital works, recreation, parks and gardens,street trees and business development.
  • Developing local area traffic management plans and parking precinct plans to control the effects of parking and traffic intrusion in residential areas.
  • Implementing local area traffic management changes in existing areas in consultation with communities to improve safety and amenity and discourage use by inappropriate traffic.
  • Investigating mechanisms which require developers to undertake street tree planting.

COMMENT: Promises, promises which we believe will never be introduced or undertaken given the record of this council over the past decade and its abject failure to make a move on most of these aspirations. The 2010 Planning Scheme Review, plus the 2011 Planisphere report recommended reviewing Heritage Areas. This hasn’t been touched since 1996! Readers also need to note that the accompanying ‘policies’ in this document go as far back as 1999. The promises of years and years ago remain the unfulfilled promises of today. This does not fill us with confidence that any of these ‘future’ plans will be acted upon – but they sure as hell sound good for any resident who might decide to actually read the amendment and/or the planning scheme.

Screen shot2 2013-08-19 at 3.15.20 PM

We take this opportunity to respond to the comments made by Cr Pilling featured above. It’s worth noting that this posting has now been removed!

GE Debates is labelled as ‘unfair’, ‘irrelevant’, consisting of ‘cowards’ and ‘untruths’ amongst other things.  It is also claimed that we do not ‘verify’ our data. All of these labels are symptomatic of a council and its councillors who believe that by attacking the messenger they can absolve themselves from having to deal with the countless issues we have raised over the past 3 years. On every vital aspect of governance this council has underperformed. Here is a list in case Cr Pilling has forgotten –

  • Meeting procedures that stand in stark contrast to every other council in the state
  • Consultation or lack thereof especially in relation to the residential zones, budgets and council plans
  • Lack of transparency re countless decision making processes – especially planning and role of the DPC
  • Acceptance of sub-standard reporting by officers
  • Lack of commitment and action on numerous issues – carbon reduction targets; tree register, vegie gardens, cctv cameras; car sharing; ESD policies; WSUD policies; Urban Design Frameworks – and the list goes on and on.
  • Repeated failures to provide comprehensive cost-benefit analysis within officer reports

For each of these issues we have taken the time and effort to contrast this council’s performance with that of its neighbours. We have supplied facts, figures, statistics, and we believe sound argument. Glen Eira Council, in contrast, has repeatedly come up short when it comes to these basic elements. Residents need to ask themselves just one thing – Why? Why is it that other councils can achieve all these things and Glen Eira is incapable, or even worse, unwilling? And, if we are so ‘irrelevant’ then why bother putting up such a post and why the repeated attempts in council meetings to answer our criticisms.

Pilling’s post is typical then of the modus operandi of this council. Ignore the issue and slay the messenger. If the issue just can’t be ignored then there is always spin or secrecy. The most self incriminating comment that Pilling can make and which exemplifies his own inadequacies is the sentence – In my view the authors of this blog are trapped in the bitterness and outdated practices of local government as conducted in the last century….. . It is certainly illuminating and sad, that a current councillor believes that the call for transparency, accountability, and sound financial management belongs in the last century! Our view is that times may have changed, but that Glen Eira Council remains marooned in a past where oligarchies ruled and their actions went unquestioned. In 2013 thanks to the internet and social media all is open to scrutiny. That is the foundation of good government – so sorely missing in Glen Eira thanks to the inability of its councillors to recognise and accept this simple fact.   As decision makers councillors should be called to account when their decisions so often fly in the face of community aspirations and their arguments lack all credibility and substance.

Finally it is worth pointing out that over 461,000 hits must be a sure sign of ‘irrelevance’!!!!!!

pzcctv

trustees

Below are the ‘responses’ to last week’s public questions. We ask readers to consider:

  • How much credibility do any of these ‘responses’ deserve?
  • How much faith should residents place in the imputation that the zones are largely the handiwork of the Minister and that little ‘ol Glen Eira Council was not the instigator and/or responsible for the outcomes?
  • Why would a Minister bother with such a small site as the Alma Club when he hasn’t intervened in the C60 or other major developments such as the Clover Estate, etc? In our view, the rezoning of the Alma Club and other sites has to be placed fairly and squarely at the feet of Council and not the Minister.
  • Who wrote the schedules? Surely not the Minister?
  • Please note how many sections of these questions are totally ignored
  • Once again, not all public questions were read out or their existence even acknowledged.
  • And the most important question was – why the secrecy?

QUESTION 1

1. On what precise date was Amendment C110 (Residential zones) submitted to the Minister and/or DPCD?

2. Why hasn’t the full Amendment and its schedules been made public by council prior to its being gazetted – especially since it has now been announced?

“Council does not have Amendment C110. It is, of course, not possible for Council to publish a document that is not in our possession.

When the Minister announced the creation of three new residential zones in March 2013, he said that he would translate Councils’ planning schemes into the new zones by Ministerial Amendment. A Ministerial Amendment is different to the process you are familiar with which involves Exhibition, an Independent Panel and Adoption.

After the Minister announced his openness to Ministerial Amendments, this Council sought differential zones and mandatory maximum height limits, which the Glen Eira community and Council have sought for many years, based on the established Minimal Change and Housing Diversity policies. On 5 August, the Minister announced that he had approved a translation into the new residential zones and issued a Media Release to that effect.

Ministerial Amendment C110 also includes some elements which Council did not raise such as the rezoning of the site of the former Alma Club in Caulfield North to the General Residential Zone and the rezoning of the ABC’s studios in Gordon St, Elsternwick to the Residential Growth Zone.

It follows that there was no precise date on which Amendment C110 was submitted to the Minister in the way that most planning scheme amendments which have been prepared and adopted by a Council.

Amendment C110 is scheduled to be Gazetted on 23 August 2013. The mandatory maximum height limits and other benefits will apply to applications lodged on and after that date.”

QUESTION 2

New Residential Zones were announced last week which show 1 Wilks St site allocated General Residential Zone Schedule 1 with minimal setbacks to the abutting Neighbourhood Residential Zone Schedule 1. This fails to meet the Transition Buffers as elucidated to in “5.9 Transition Buffers” of the Guide to the New Residential Zones; buffers which apply to all other abutting transitions. 

Question 1. Please provide IN DETAIL ALL the reasons why the zoning for 1 Wilks St site was not retained as Neighbourhood Residential Zone, the equivalent of the old Minimal Change Area, particularly as it completely contravenes all the reasons given by Council for unanimously rejecting the Planning Application GE/PP25557/2013? 

Question 2. Please provide IN DETAIL ALL the reasons why the zoning was made General Residential Schedule 1 not General Residential Schedule 2, particularly as 1 Wilks St is abutted on over 3 sides by Neighbourhood Residential Zone Schedule 1?  

Question 3. Who (officer, department, council or government person or the like) made these aberrant recommendations and who authorised these aberrant decisions?

Question 4. Under whose or what authority were these decisions made?

Question 5. Further to my question on zoning of 1 Wilks St, what action is Council now taking, or intends to take to rectify the error in Transition Buffers for all properties abutting the 1 Wilks St site? 

The Minister for Planning applied the new zones by Ministerial Amendment, taking into account and largely adopting requests from Council. However, Council did not canvass any change for the site of the former Alma Club at 1 Wilks Street, Caulfield North. Council assumed a direct translation from Minimal Change to the Neighbourhood Residential Zone.

Council was advised on 5 August that the former Alma Club had been included in the General Residential Zone. Council’s understanding is that the site will have its own Schedule which will be consistent with the setbacks set out in the officer report on the planning application considered by Council on 2 July 2013. Details should be clear by the time of Gazettal which is scheduled for 23 August.

The planning application for the site is before VCAT. That appeal would be determined in accordance with the rules which applied at the time the application was lodged, including the Minimal Change policy

QUESTION 3

Given that the

1. Glen Eira Planning Scheme was last reviewed in 2010 and scheduled for the 4 yearly review in 2014 and

2. Council had 12 months to implement the new residential zones Could Council please provide its reasons for electing not to consult with the community on the introduction of the new residential zones? 

Glen Eira has had policies in the Planning Scheme for the last nine years which differentiate the municipality into Minimal Change Areas and Housing Diversity Areas. Those policies were incorporated into the Planning Scheme following extensive community consultation. The policies are well understood within our community. (Policies are, however, open to interpretation as is regularly seen at VCAT and greater certainty could only be achieved by the use of controls ie zones.)

Council undertook a Review of the Planning Scheme in 2010-11. Through the consultative mechanisms of the Review, the community made clear that it is seeking:

 mandatory maximum height limits binding on all parties, including VCAT;

 transition controls to step development more gradually between higher and lower density areas; and

 greater certainty for both existing residents and providers of additional residential housing.

The three new zones provide the opportunity to achieve these enhancements which are not possible under a policy framework.

Based on the outcomes of these consultative processes, Council sought a direct and neutral conversion to the new zones which achieved the outcomes sought by the community. If the process had not addressed the community’s expressed priorities, Council would have discontinued that process.

The translation which has been approved introduces greater protections for the benefit of existing residents as well as greater clarity for those wishing to proceed with residential development. The mix of zones, like the policies before them, provides for a clearer balance between retaining valued Neighbourhood Character and opportunities for higher density sustainable development at appropriate locations around public transport and shopping centres.

It is important to bear in mind that these zones were applied by Ministerial Amendment, taking into account, and largely adopting, Council requests. It is our firm belief that further consultation could not have resulted in a better outcome, and may well have had the opposite effect. Our concern, on this as in all matters, was to achieve the best possible result for the Community.”

Here are some questions for residents to consider:

  • Why are so many decisions in Glen Eira City Council made in secret?
  • Why is the community voice so often ignored?
  • Why are the principles of good governance in terms of open and transparent decision making repeatedly abused and perverted?
  • Why does this council consistently resort to spin, obfuscation instead of disseminating the truth in an open and honest fashion? Why are they so scared of the truth?
  • Why is this the only council in the state not to accord its councillors true democratic process via its meeting procedures?
  • Why do public questions so often go astray?
  • Why are there no community representatives on the vast majority of advisory committees?
  • Why is there no real ‘debate’ in council chambers but far too often the mere rubber stamping of officer recommendations?
  • Why do councillors accept sub-standard reporting from officers?
  • Why has Newton’s position never been advertised?
  • AND THE MOST IMPORTANT QUESTION – WHO STANDS TO GAIN THE MOST FROM ALL OF THE ABOVE AND THE CULTURE THAT IS NOW ENTRENCHED IN GLEN EIRA COUNCIL?

On Tuesday evening Glen Eira City Council basically washed its hands of nearly all responsibility for the introduction of the new residential zones. According to their version of events:

  • They had nothing to do with numerous areas in Glen Eira suddenly changing from Minimal Change to General Residential Zone. It was all the Minister’s fault!
  • In response to numerous public questions over the past few council meetings they had no idea about when and if public consultation would be held – it all depended if there was a ‘discrepancy’ between the old and the new zones. Well there are plenty of ‘discrepancies’ yet public consultation never eventuated!
  • Dates as to when amendments or proposals went into the department and/or minister just don’t exist.
  • They don’t even have a copy of the amendment when the Minister thanked officers for their ‘submission’. Semantics at its best! Council’s ‘submissions’ are surely available!
  • They claim not to know anything about the most relevant bits –ie the schedules. Yet, they were in constant ‘discussion’ and even quote from the upcoming schedules. These constitute the most important part of the amendment since it is councils which are able to determine standards etc.

Every single aspect of this entire saga is besmirched with dissembling, and untruths in our view. The fact that everything has been conducted in secret and without community input is indefensible. All of this goes to the heart of governance. Please note that:

  • Amendment C110 does not rate a mention in the Records of Assembly yet it was obviously ‘discussed’ but hidden under the rubric of ‘residential zones’.
  • Nothing was stated in any media release, much less the plot that was clearly being hatched
  • Where and when was the decision made not to engage the public? Clearly behind closed doors and not in accordance with the Local Government Act that stipulates that council decisions are made on the chamber floor and not in little tete a tetes behind locked doors.

The most damning indictment of this council and its operations comes from VCAT itself.  In a hearing that took place on a Minimal Change Application on June 27th (ie well before the various public questions were put): the member writes

Council is proposing to include the subject site in the Neighbourhood Residential Zone. Although this proposed change does not have any bearing on the decision making regarding the subject proposal, I note that the Neighbourhood Residential Zone allows for two storey high, dual occupancy developments.

(See: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/vic/VCAT/2013/1382.html)

So here we have the ludicrous situation that VCAT is privileged to information that the community is denied! And us poor ratepayers are supposed to swallow the guff that emanates from this administration and its lackey councillors. Council knew, probably a year ago, what it was about to do and all these responses were designed to avoid the truth and hide the facts.

There’s much, much more however. In the carefully crafted spin that accompanies the agenda item and what’s up on Council’s website, we find the following paragraph:

VCAT has generally followed Glen Eiras Housing Diversity and Minimal Change policies. A reading of VCAT judgements over the years shows that VCAT commonly applies the Minimal Change policy, not because Council has a policy that says that higher density development is not appropriate on the subject site but because Council’s Planning Scheme has gone on to identify Housing Diversity Areas where such development is more appropriate.

We’ve done a tally of all objections to VCAT going back nearly 2 years that involved Minimal Change Areas, ignoring those developments that included student housing, or non-residential uses in residential areas. The table below includes the address of the property; the council decision as to whether or not to grant a permit, and the final VCAT decision on the permit.

The facts reveal that NOT ONLY VCAT but Council itself does not follow its own Minimal Change Policy. VCAT did not ‘generally follow’ this policy and it certainly did not ‘commonly apply’ it either.

Of the 33 VCAT decisions, Council agreed to 7 permits. All were then agreed to by VCAT and the original conditions imposed by council were either relaxed or withdrawn completely.

VCAT overturned 11 where council had refused. Hence more than HALF of the VCAT decisions relating to Minimal Change areas went the way of developers – either through council granting permits with conditions (and being watered down by VCAT) or overturning council’s decision OUTRIGHT. Why any of this should change is open to conjecture and will not only be revealed in the details of the schedules, but on the decision making of council planners. Will they continue on in their merry way ignoring many of the ‘standards’ and grant permits when only half of the criteria are met? That remains to be seen. Our view is that a leopard does not change its spots!

Finally, we need to point out that the table below only deals with those applications that end up at VCAT. What decisions are made by delegation are largely unknown – there are no locations given, no minutes, no planning officer reports. None of this ends up in the public domain. The abysmal record of secrecy and lack of transparency is most evident here. With the advent of C110 we do not hold out much hope that things will change given the history of this administration and the failure of councillors to insist on proper governance. When practically all control is handed over via delegations then councillors are not fulfilling their legal duties of oversight and representing the best interests of the community. When councillors accept shonky reports without question, they again are failing to exercise their legal mandates.

Address Council Decision (permit) VCAT decision (permit)
60 Neville Street, Carnegie No YES
10 – 12 Cromwell Street, Caulfield North No No
2A & 2B Huon Grove, Bentleigh East No Yes
41a Godfrey Street, Bentleigh No No
312  Glen Eira Road, Elsternwick No Yes
9 Brian Street, Bentleigh East Yes Yes
28 Griffith Street Caulfield South No No
24 Marara Road, Caulfield South No Yes
16 Miles Street, Bentleigh No No
280 Ormond Road, Ormond No Yes
2 Tovan Akas Avenue, Bentleigh. No No
11 Fallon Street, Caulfield No No
304 Glen Eira  Road, ELSTERNWICK, VIC, No No
3 Osborne Avenue, Bentleigh Yes Yes
7 Irving Avenue, Murrumbeena Yes Yes
5 Yendon Road, Carnegie No Yes
3/18 North Avenue, Bentleigh No No
37a Amelia Street, McKinnon No No
466 Kooyong Road Caulfield South Yes Yes
9 Brian Street, Bentleigh East No No
9 Latham Street, Bentleigh East No No
5 Pell Street, Bentleigh East No Yes
142 Booran Road Glen Huntly No No
688 Inkerman Road, Caulfield North No Yes
2 Mawby Street, Bentleigh East No No
19 McKittrick Street, Bentleigh Yes Yes
No. 5 Service Street, Caufield North YES Yes
6 David Street, St Kilda East No Yes
6 David Street, St Kilda East No No
2 Osborne Avenue, Bentleigh No Yes
113 Bambra Road
CAULFIELD
No Yes
29-31 Hawson Avenue, Glen Huntly No No
25 Tambet Street
BENTLEIGH EAST
Yes Yes