We reproduce only part of the 4 page flyer here.
September 4, 2016
September 3, 2016
Greens, independents say council fight set to be fairer after how-to-vote cards scrapped
Megan Bailey, Cranbourne Leader
September 2, 2016 2:15pm
CHANGES to postal ballot packs could make council elections fairer by making it harder for hopefuls relying on dummy candidates to get votes. State politicians last week voted to ban how-to-vote cards in postal ballot packs.The move was sought by the Liberals and backed by the Nationals and Greens.
Labor voted to keep the cards in the packs earlier this year, saying removing them would increase informal voting.
The change will mean that election candidates who plan to use dummies will have to spend more money sending their preference information to voters or pay to mail out brochures for dummy candidates running on their behalf.
“This is a good move but we’re yet to hear whether the VEC have been told by the government that these will be the rules for the election,” Victorian Greens leader Greg Barber said.“We hope the government doesn’t do something dodgy to try and reinstate preferences and stooge candidates.”
Former Casey councillor Steve Beardon, who said he was now planning to run in October, said the decision was great news.“Independents have the greatest opportunity now more than ever to take control of council and return it to the people, to our communities,” he said.
Rex Flannery, who earlier in the year told Leader he felt he had no choice but to use dummy candidates in this election, said it would even the playing field for independents. “Four years ago when I ran in the Springfield Ward, I was subjected to eight candidates out of eleven placing myself at the bottom of the ballot paper,” he said. “This will make way for fewer dummy candidates running and give all independents a fairer chance of winning. “Only those candidates who want a chance to become a councillor will publish a brochure to send out to the residents and they will see who the real candidates are.”
Cr Gary Rowe, who will stand for election this year, said the decision may stop the manipulation of the election process.“There will still be “dummies” running in every ward but hopefully fewer of them,” he said. “They can be identified by lack of a genuine campaign, checking the flow of preferences and where they end up.“The ‘real’ candidate is the ultimate beneficiary of the preference flow.”
Monash councillor Geoff Lake said changes to how-to-vote cards were ‘overwhelmingly opposed’ by councils. “If the opposition consulted councils, like the government recently did on this very issue, they would be aware that the overwhelming majority of the local government sector opposed this change,” he said. “Voters who are used to receiving a how to vote card whenever they vote are now going to be on their own when voting at these elections — in some situations with more than 20 boxes to number.”
COMMENT
We welcome the absence of How-toVote cards in the election packs sent out to residents. This will not remove dummy candidates but it will ensure that it makes it that much more difficult for votes to be steered and manipulated in a specific direction.
The Leader article however is not 100% correct. Those councils undertaking attendance voting will still be permitted to hand out How-to-Vote cards in their election packs. Glen Eira has opted for postal voting.
Below we feature part of the ‘application’ process that candidates have to fill out. Question 4 is basically useless in that it asks candidates if they are ‘endorsed’ by any political party. Given that only the Greens officially ‘endorse’ candidates it reveals nothing about the candidates political leanings, nor does it reveal if they happen to be a member of either the Libs or Labor. When the flyers start arriving in letter boxes we urge all residents to carefully scrutinise candidates’ preferences.
September 2, 2016
ESAKOFF: began by asking Torres to explain the ‘differences in the recommendations’ for Bentleigh and Carnegie.
TORRES: said that the ‘centres are different’ in ‘physical characteristics’ – ie Bentleigh is ‘east-west running linear’ precinct and Carnegie is ‘north -south’ centre ‘that is concentrated in the middle’. This ‘leads to different considerations especially in terms of shadowing’ and in Carnegie ‘commercial properties shadow each other’ but in Bentleigh the shadowing is on homes. Plus ‘the scale of development’ is ‘different’ which ‘leads to this different treatment’.
ESAKOFF: said she wouldn’t repeat what councillors had already said about ‘mandatory’ versus ‘discretionary’. Went over the consultation meetings for the Planning Scheme Review and highlighted – ‘amenity’, ‘traffic’, ‘visual bulk’, ‘congestion’, etc. Because ‘it will take some time to go through’ with structure planning, that’s why council is ‘asking for’ the interim controls. The zones ‘are currently being reviewed by the State Government’ so ‘until we are informed of that outcome’ they need to work ‘accordingly and that’s why we’re starting here’ even though she thinks that ‘it is the impact on those residential zones which is the most concern’. Repeated that for outside the major roads, ‘we need to see what the government does in those’ areas. ‘As I understand it’ council will be ‘looking at schedules to preserve those’ areas ‘better’ and ‘some further work at transitioning from zone to zone’. The interim controls ‘will give us some time to work through in greater detail’. Other councils ‘sometimes failing in their bid’ to have mandatory heights such as in Mentone who wanted 4 storey mandatory but the Minister made this discretionary, ‘they have already started receiving applications for 6 storeys’ and ‘that seems to be what we will have to expect’. Boroondara did have mandatory but ‘those have actually been overturned’ in the main activity centres. Said she was ‘hopeful’ and ultimately ‘moving along to other areas of Glen Eira that do need to be addressed’.
LIPSHUTZ: stated that ‘every councillor’ has ‘had concerns about height limits throughout our municipality’. Years ago 3 storey buildings ‘were too high’ but now it’s 6, 7 and 8 and ‘because we don’t have height limits’ and ‘the interpretation by VCAT has changed’ and they are ‘allowing buildings to go up which do not accord with what we and residents want’. ‘Politics is the art of the possible’ so ‘it’s not what’s right, what’s best’ but ‘what is actually attainable’. Said he would ‘love’ to see limits ‘across the board but realistically that’s not going to happen’. Said he saw an email from a resident who had written that if councillors ‘really cared’ they would ‘go for mandatory’ height limits. ‘We do care’ and we’re doing ‘this because (all mandatory) is not obtainable’. ‘It’s a huge risk’. The Minister could agree with mandatory ‘but realistically I don’t think that’s going to happen’. The Minister could also say ‘I”m rejecting it all; go back to the drawing board and start all over again’ or all discretionary. ‘We have to turn our mind to what we see as important’ and ‘we have a better chance of getting this’ than getting ‘nothing’. This is ‘interim’ so he hopes that ‘in two years time’ they will have done their ‘reasonable’ structure plans and this will enable them to ‘go to the Minister’ and say ‘some of the discretionary height limits should now be mandatory because of our research’. ‘I would rather see something than nothing’ and this ‘plan is likely to be accepted’. ‘If we go the other way which is certainly the popular way to go’ then councillors would be ‘popular’ but it ‘isn’t the attainable way to go’. As councillors ‘we have to ensure that we do the best for the city’ and ‘residents’.
LOBO: ‘we have rattled our residents with all the zones’. The forums let councillors hear ‘loud and clear’ how they are ‘destroyed’ and how their homes ‘have been taken by these residential zones’. There’s also the ‘ripple effect’ from the State Government’s ‘directives on parking’ and there’s the infrastructure ‘which will obviously have to be replaced’ and end up as ‘increasing rates’. One resident was so angry ‘he kept me for 2 hours in his house’ and told him ‘this is not the way to insult our intelligence’. ‘If we want to settle the anxiety of the residents’ then there shouldn’t be discretionary height limits. With discretionary then ‘vcat can do the opposite’. ‘This is not a solution’.
PILLING: thought that ‘we’re all on the same page here wanting the best possible protection’ but council needs to put the ‘strongest case forward’ and the ‘most likely’ to get approved and ‘then work towards getting even stronger controls’. According to the ‘best advice’ the option is to go for a ‘targetted approach’ which ‘gives full justification for the mandatory areas’ instead of doing a ‘blanket approach’. The north sides of both Carnegie and Bentleigh ‘do have car parks’ so their impact on residential zones is limited. Council is ‘calling for what residents have been asking for’. Thought that ‘we are addressing’ resident concerns and ‘doing it in a measured way’. As for what Lobo has said, he attended many of the forums and council is addressing what residents wanted especially about the southern sides of Neerim and Centre Roads. ‘We are listening to the community’.
MOTION PUT AND CARRIED
VOTING FOR: PILLING, LIPSHUTZ, HYAMS, ESAKOFF, HO, DELAHUNTY, SOUNNESS
VOTING AGAINST: MAGEE, LOBO.
COMMENTS
September 1, 2016
August 31, 2016
Pilling moved motion to accept recommendations as printed. Sounness seconded.
PILLING: started off by going through the various height limits proposed in both amendments. Then said that this ‘came about’ because of the ‘extended consultation’ and how council ‘adopted’ residents views at last council meeting. Plus the motion to apply to the Minister. Claimed that the current motion ‘sets out’ what council ‘hopes to achieve’ via the interim height controls ‘while we do the work of the workplan‘. Called it a ‘targetted approach‘ and that council would ‘advocate strongly’ that the areas abutting residential zones ‘need more protection’. ‘We need to have more controls’ in those areas because they are the ‘most vulnerable’. The Minister has said that ‘mandatory’ height limits in commercial zones ‘will only be given in exceptional circumstances’ and council believes that ‘what we are doing tonight’ has ‘exceptional circumstances’. Said that ‘it is important that we do the work’ and in ‘putting in our reasons to the Minister which are quite reasonable’ and this ‘allows us in the interim to do the work’. Thought that ‘this addresses’ community concerns about ‘what will happen in the next couple of years’ and that this is a ‘good balance’ between ‘putting in some real protection’ and not putting in something that ‘will be rejected’.
SOUNNESS: stated that this ‘is a contentious issue’ for people and that they want ‘more security’. Council can ask for measures and then the Department and the Minister will make their responses. Fearful that the two areas (Bentleigh/Carnegie) amendments will be rejected because ‘not founded with sufficient cause‘. Other councils have applied and they ‘haven’t been successful’. He thinks that ‘having a relatively simple application’ over ‘part of Glen Eira’s development areas and not all of it’ will be ‘more sympathetically received by the Minister’. If ‘we were asking for something more’ then the chances of rejections are greater. Said ‘we don’t know until we apply’ but it’s better to aim for ‘what we can get’ and what ‘the community wants’. ‘There does need to be some development taking place in Glen Eira’ and council wants to be ‘able to control that’ but like with the Level Crossings Removal Authority, they do what they want and ‘council doesn’t have oversight over everything’. Saw this as a ‘fairly good attempt at getting a positive outcome’.
MAGEE: said that councillors had ‘sat around this table’ for 8 years and others 4 and there are two words that he has ‘come to dislike’ – ‘discretionary’ and ‘plan’. Said he’s ‘never seen’ either come ‘back in our favour’ from VCAT. When the VCAT member sees the word ‘discretionary’ then he says ‘great, leave it up to me’ and the same for plan, since ‘this isn’t law – it’s just a guide’. Council can only control things by ‘implementing mandatory height limits’ as they did with the new zones. ‘I’m more than happy with the 5 storey area’ but he is ‘unhappy with anything that is discretionary’ and gave the example of the 13 storeys around the Ormond Station where the ‘government has already made the determination that 13 storeys is acceptable’. With discretionary ‘we are leaving ourselves open to getting something we just don’t want’. These are interim while they do the structure planning and he’s not a ‘great fan of structure plans’ although they do ‘show where controls can be brought in’ and it’s just ‘what you think should be there going into the future’. For the Carnegie amendment ‘I don’t mind the 7 storeys’ but ‘again it’s got that word discretionary’. ‘There’s no win, there’s no gain for us having discretionary height limits’. They need mandatory especially when in ‘2 years time we’ve seen what the structure plan looks like’. The Minister has ‘asked us’ to do this not because ‘he thinks we are doing a bad job but because we actually wrote to him, asking could we do it’. Claimed council has got the ‘support’ of Staikos, the department and the Minister. Although there are car parks behind some of the discretionary 5 storeys in Bentleigh, who’s to say that this doesn’t become ‘6 or 8 storeys’ when applications come in. He again ‘cites what’s happening at Ormond’ where the government has ‘said that 13 storeys is acceptable’. So if it’s ‘acceptable there’ then Centre Road is ‘only a couple of hundred metres away’. He is worried that during the 2 years taken to do the structure plans ‘we’ve already got the sevens and eight’ storeys and ‘that becomes the pre-requisite’. They’ve got 2 years to do the structure plans which will ‘point us in the right direction’ for the next 10 or 20 years and ‘council has always done this’ since they were ‘one of the first to actually have different zones’ and that’s ‘why it was so easy to transfer over’ to the new zones. ‘Mandatory is the protection we need’ and ‘I believe we have the will of the Minister’ and ‘we’ve got a lot of people on our side’. Said he is a ‘firm believer in seize the moment. If the opportunity arises, grab it’.
HYAMS: wanted to go through some ‘history’ since people are asking ‘why’ council is only doing structure plans now and ‘not earlier’. Stated that they had Jeff Akehurst and he was the ‘doyen of town planning’ and he got the first ‘town planner of the year’. ‘So when Jeff said something about town planning, we listened’. Back then you ‘couldn’t get mandatory height limits’ but only discretionary and Akehurst told them that ‘discretionary height limits tended to be in those days’ ‘to act as a minimum’. That meant with 4 storey discretionary ‘they would start at 4 storeys and then go up’ and that council ‘had policies that would protect us from that sort of thing’. Claimed that ‘that worked well until recently’ when VCAT ‘changed its interpretation’ and ‘all of a sudden our policies didn’t work so well’. The policies of council hasn’t changed but ‘VCAT’s interpretation’ of them. Since many other councils have got height limits, and the other policies like ‘overshadowing and setbacks’ don’t count. Council then ‘found ourselves in a position where we had to play catchup’. Claimed that ‘about a year ago’ as a result of ‘various VCAT decision, I and others’ thought that council has to now do something about it and ‘that’s why we are where we are’. Thus even though ‘discretionary may not be so great’ it is still ‘better than the alternative’. Strcuture planning ‘takes a long time’ because ‘you need to provide justification’ for the plan. So there is these interim height limits but ‘anything we do as a council’ still needs government ‘approval’. And council has to ‘prove to the government that we have the capacity to cater for the population growth’. Council can’t say that there are other councils which can handle this and that ‘we’re not going to’. Said that ‘I would like to put mandatory protection over all these areas as well’ but that’s only allowed in ‘certain circumstances’. Read from the officer’s report about the ‘exceptional circumstances’. Spoke about Mentone’s mandatory heights and how they ‘were peeled back by the Minister’. Hoped that council ‘could get mandatory’ height limits for those commercial areas that backed onto Neighbourhood Residential zones. Went through what the amendments asked for. Said that Carnegie is ‘less linear, has more development’ is it is therefore ‘justified’ that they have 7 storeys. The amendments also include other things apart from height such as ‘streetscape’, ‘neighbourhood character and amenity and so on’. He would prefer mandatory but ‘there’s no point in asking for what we won’t get’. If they ask for everything to be mandatory ‘without discerning where we have a strong case and don’t ‘ then the Minister ‘is likely to come back and say I’ll give you the height limits but’ they will be ‘all discretionary’. Said ‘I firmly believe’ that council will get ‘a better outcome’ by putting the case that ‘this area is special’ so it should be mandatory and ‘this other area we can accept discretionary’. ‘If we ask for all mandatory we don’t have the opportunity to put that case’. Plus the minister ‘might throw it out all together’ because he might think ‘we are being unreasonable and tell us to do it all again’.
COMMENT
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we could have councillors who stood up and revealed the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth? That of course requires an admission that Council’s planning over the years has been abysmal, and represents a dereliction of duty. Further it would tell residents that the zones are all wrong and that council sat back and did nothing, even when it knew things were going belly-up for residents over the past decade.
Things to bear in mind:
Finally we wish to comment on something we have written on peviously. VCAT HAS NOT CHANGED ITS INTERPRETATION AS HYAMS WOULD HAVE US BELIEVE. We could literally pinpoint hundreds of VCAT decisions prior to 2013 and even as far back as 2005/6, where the decisions in favour of permits refused by council could have been written yesterday by the VCAT member. The reason is clear: permits granted have had absolutely nothing to do with VCAT changing its interpretations and EVERYTHING TO DO WITH COUNCIL’S OWN PLANNING SCHEME. Below are just two more examples of this – both from 2006 and both concerning developments in the so-called Urban Villages. We challenge anyone to indicate how these comments are any different to what VCAT members are saying today!
it was put to me that the proposal is an over-development of the site in being too high and/or out of character with the locality, or alternatively that the proposal will have unacceptable amenity impacts on neighbouring occupants. The critical issue in this opposition was clearly the acceptability of having a four level building compared to a three level one. I conducted a view of the site and locality after the hearing.
3 In summary, subject to a proviso listed below, I am satisfied that the proposed four storey building can comfortably sit on the site. I rely here on the strong policy support for the higher density residential use of the site, the context of other 2/3 storey existing buildings nearby, the quality of the design, and my view that any amenity impacts on the neighbours is within acceptable parameters. While I can see his arguments, I am not convinced that it would be a good planning outcome to shave one storey off the proposal as put to me by Mr Fleming.
It is clear to me that Elsternwick Village is one of a relatively few places in the Glen Eira municipality where the Planning Scheme is actively encouraging a bolder approach to new residential development. That is, in light of the reality that the Planning Scheme classifies much of Glen Eira as areas where minimal or possibly moderate residential change is encouraged, it is very significant that Elsternwick Village is one of relatively few locations where the Planning Scheme sends a very different message. It follows that if Glen Eira is to play a legitimate role in accommodating the population growth of Melbourne as per Melbourne 2030 in the face of these constraints on residential development in much of the Glen Eira “residential hinterland”, this arrangement only makes planning sense if urban village locations in the municipality such as Elsternwick make a major contribution to urban consolidation.
36 In this important overall policy context, I have highlighted above those sections of clause 22.05 (Urban Villages Policy) and the draft “Design Vision for Elsternwick” document which seem most applicable here. The key text from these documents send a clear message that higher density residential development is being encouraged in Elsternwick Village.
37 In summary, there is strong policy support for robust residential development in this part of Elsternwick Village, rather than an inappropriately timid approach. This policy situation reinforces the general “rule of thumb” that residents who live in or near an activity centre such as this cannot just expect the built form character in this locality to remain static, and also cannot expect the same levels of residential amenity as persons living in the “residential hinterland”. http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/vic/VCAT/2006/83.html (2006)
As indicated earlier, the Bentleigh shopping centre has been identified as the focal point of 1 of the 3 “urban villages” identified by the council. The MSS states that urban villages are based around the major shopping centres within the municipality. Further, the MSS states that the urban villages are the places where smaller scale office development and higher density housing is encouraged both within and around the commercial zoning.[12] The MSS specifically contemplates that the “Urban Villages Policy” will be used to “promote higher development densities”.
47 The “Urban Villages Policy” at clause 22.05 then goes on to say that these areas are the “preferred location for the municipality’s highest densities of residential development”.
Under the policy, the site is located within precinct 2 – “The Retail Hub”. Outcomes envisaged for this area include the strengthening of retail activity at ground level; offices and residential uses to be located on upper floors and buildings along Centre Road to increase in height. We acknowledge that “parameters” for increased height with respect to matters such as the impacts of shadows, building articulation and the provision of a transition with the surrounding residential area; however, the policy makes a clear statement that increases in building height are to be expected.
49 We acknowledge that the policies and strategies within the scheme call for built form outcomes that respond to the context and character of the area. However, in our view, there can be no escaping the fact that the thrust of the strategic approach advanced by Melbourne 2030 and supported by the council’s own policies is to encourage intense redevelopment and the highest densities in and around the Major Activity Centres and/or Urban Villages.
50 Increases in building height are an inevitable consequence if the intensity of development is to be increased in a particular area and this is acknowledged in the Urban Villages Policy.
We appreciate that the height of the proposed building represents a reasonably significant departure from 1 and 2 storey height buildings that have traditionally been found along Centre Road. However, we do not consider that the assessment of whether the height of the proposed building is acceptable or “fits in” can be solely based on a comparison with what now exists. To do so would present a somewhat confusing scenario whereby on the one hand, the scheme’s policies encourage higher densities, more intense development and therefore “change”; only for this to be stifled by the requirement that new development must “fit in” with what now exists
Part 2 will follow shortly!
PS – We thought it worthwhile to remind readers of the following resolution from the minutes of May 2015 – just a little over a year ago! Please note that the requested reports ‘in 12 months time’ did eventually come up and councillors again voted in their usual manner – let’s do nothing! Thus, when Hyams opens his mouth and starts telling the gallery that he and others were becoming ‘concerned’ about the zones and VCAT, about a ‘year ago’, it is even more remarkable that he could vote for a motion that mandates the ‘do nothing approach’ and how wonderful the existing planning policies are! The gulf between words and action are greater than the Grand Canyon!
August 30, 2016
A quick report on tonight’s marathon council meeting:
Full reports in the coming days.
August 30, 2016
August 28, 2016
In 2004 all councils throughout Victoria were given the option of introducing interim height limits for Neighbourhood Centres as well as interim structure plans for their major activity centres. Glen Eira Council voted against doing a single thing to help ameliorate the problems identified by residents as far back as 2003. The issues of 2016 are a mirror image of what was stated way back then and raises the fascinating questions of :
One must wonder why in 2005 Council rejected the offer from the State Government. Was it because they realised that structure plans and height limits would hamper development? Was it because they simply didn’t have the competence to do a decent job of providing the necessary strategic justification? Has anything really changed in the past 11 years?
Below is one page from the Community Plan of 13 years ago that identifies in black and white the same issues that are still with us – plus another snippet which shows that today’s scapegoating of VCAT is also nothing new – but Council still didn’t address these concerns over 11 years. All that has happened is that we got the atrocious zones and the scapegoating of VCAT has become more vociferous!
So here is what residents could have had. On the 7th February 2005 an officer report was tabled which recommended no action be taken by council. The following are all quotes from this report which we’ve also uploaded in full (HERE). Two councillors who voted for this dereliction of duty are Hyams and Esakoff. They are still there, joined by their fellow pro-development councillors and turncoats such as Pilling.
The recommendations read –
That Council notes that following the approval of former Amendment C25, it now has policy protection in the Glen Eira Planning Scheme for Minimal Change Areas (80% of the geographical area of the city) and Neighbourhood Centres.
C) That Council continue to monitor the performance of its local policies particularly at VCAT. Should it become evident that Council policy is not offering adequate protection for our centres and established residential areas,then use of these tools could be considered
At this stage there does not seem to be the need to embark upon what would be an extensive public consultation and amendment process when a level of protection through local planning policy already exists (introduced by Amendment C25).
Options / considerations –
Local Policy Protection
Glen Eira is in the fortunate position of having local policies in place which limit development in our established or minimal change areas as well as guide development in our activity centres. With the approval of Amendment C25, a number of objectives and policy statements in our local policies now deal with the height of buildings. We thus have protection in both our minimal change areas and neighbourhood centres through policy wording. At this stage this degree of protection is considered appropriate.
The additional tools introduced by the State Government are a welcome addition to the suite of tools available for Councils to use where appropriate to improve their planning schemes. At this stage, however, there is no need or urgency for Glen Eira to apply any of these options.
Our established residential areas have policy protection through former Amendment C25, and there does not seem to be any such areas under threat from buildings higher than 9 metres.
Similarly, in neighbourhood centres, building heights do not seem to be a major issue and Glen Eira’s neighbourhood centres currently enjoy a level of protection introduced by Amendment C25 through the performance based requirements of Council’s Housing Diversity Areas Policy.
With regard to Interim Structure Plans, this tool may be useful when the Urban Design Frameworks for Bentleigh, Carnegie and Elsternwick have been adopted by Council and a planning scheme amendment is commenced.
It is important however that Council continue to monitor the performance of its local policies particularly at VCAT. Should it become evident that Council policy is not offering adequate protection for our centres and established residential areas, then use of these tools could be considered.
COMMENTS
And it is worth keeping in mind the following:
Nothing can excuse this council’s refusal to act. And the same culprits, especially Hyams and Esakoff, who were there in 2005 have been joined by the likes of – Magee, Pilling, Lipshutz, Sounness, Delahunty, Lobo. Ho is new, but with his developer links and history, we do not hold out much hope that he would be any different if elected!
These documents truly reveal a dismal history of neglect, failure, and indifference to resident concerns.
August 26, 2016
Agenda Item 9.4: Interim Heights
Council’s agenda features Amendments C147 and C148 which will go to the Minister seeking ‘interim height limits’ for the Bentleigh and Carnegie activity centres. The proposed amendments are for areas zoned commercial and mixed use.
Whilst Council is to be applauded for getting the ball rolling, there are many features of these amendments that are far from satisfactory and which will achieve very little in terms of protecting neighbourhoods. We have uploaded the full report HERE.
The concerns we have are:
The most grating aspect of these amendments however is the failure to ask residents what they think are the appropriate heights in any of these areas. Now, with a resolution to go to the Minister under ‘fast track’, there will again be the exclusion of the public to provide a viewpoint. Nor is there one scrap of strategic justification provided as to why 7+ storeys is acceptable in Carnegie. Has council really done its necessary homework, or once again sat down at their computer desks and drawn lines on a map? And what of the requirements for setbacks? Why keep accepting ResCode when it has been such a dismal failure? We remind readers that when other councils introduce DDOs (Design and Development Overlays – even interim ones) these features are included. Not in Glen Eira! We suggest that once again this is lazy and poor planning and does not meet the community’s expectations.
Some aspects of these amendments are literally laughable.The Bentleigh one basically regurgitates what the current planning scheme contains – ie Buildings on the North side of Centre Road to be designed and articulated so that they do not overshadow onto the footpath on the southern side of Centre Road at the September equinox at noon. (amendment) and the current planning scheme has – Buildings on the north side of Centre Road are articulated, so shadow is not cast onto the footpath on the south side of Centre Road. We therefore wonder how on earth the potential for a 5 or 6 storey building on the North side of Centre Road will not cast a shadow!
FYI, we’ve summarised the proposals below:
PS: we wish to highlight some other anomalies in these proposed amendments. Here is the map of the zoning in Centre Road.

Please note:
The bottom line is that council will do nothing that involves changing one single aspect of its atrocious zoning.
August 25, 2016
Conclusion? Ask yourselves how much this individual has contributed to council wasting hundreds of thousands of ratepayer dollars on lawyers? Ask yourselves how well this councillor has served for the benefit of all residents – ie Frogmore? Ask yourselves how much this councillor has contributed to the erosion of transparent government in Glen Eira when he has voted time and again against Notice of Motion and recently turning the public questions protocols into a farce? Last but not least, we have the ‘guns in park’ fiasco and of course his temper tantrums and foul language.