GE Planning


Ratepayers had better prepare themselves for humungous legal costs, on top of what has already been forked out, if our assumptions are correct.  Today’s agenda features the monthly ‘financial report’. Unlike previous versions, the notation about ‘mediation’ with Hansen Yuncken set down for 14th February is no longer present. Add to this the in camera  item about ‘legal advice’ and the GESAC construction contract, and we would bet our socks that mediation has failed and that we’re now all heading for a major court case. Lawyers are laughing their heads off at their windfall no doubt.

When this is seen in conjunction with the Duncan Mackinnon Maxstra contract and the mega bucks already spent on pursuing Penhalluriack, then real questions need to be asked about the way that this administration does business.

On wastage of public monies, it looks like there could be a repeat of the ‘try, try again’ farce that has occurred with the Caulfield Park conservatory. Readers will remember the three time attempt at public consultation over cafes in the park versus restoration. Now the Booran Road Reservoir is up for the same treatment judging by this little sentence buried in the Records of Assembly –

Former Glen Huntly Reservoir – Councillors asked that a second option involving passive and active use and not just passive use be prepared for public consultation

We simply ask: how much did the original ‘concept plans’ cost? How much did the ‘consultation cost’? And why can’t this council accept the over-riding public response that the vast majority of residents opted for PASSIVE space?

There’s also the tacit admission of a major planning stuff up due to the ungodly haste in ramming through as quickly as possible the Residential Zones. One application asks for a 4 storey development for a school – in other words coming under the ‘non-residential uses in residential areas’. The officer’s comments are illuminating –

A height of 13.9m is proposed with a 2.1m plant/lift overrun screening above. The school is located within the General Residential Zone Schedule 2 where a 10.5m height limit is imposed to residential buildings and dwellings only. As the proposal is non-residential, this height limit does not apply. Council recently agreed to review the Non-Residential Uses in Residential Zones Policy such that the height applicable to residential uses carries across to non-residential uses. This revised policy intention has no status at this time.

Last but not least, we have the full text of the Lipshutz Right of Reply. Such a pity that on other countless issues, the voices of residents remain muted, unacknowledged, and ignored!

Shortly prior to Christmas last year I saw a flyer from the Friends of Caulfield Park which described the Council contractors removing trees from Caulfield Park as “storm troopers”. I full well appreciate the passion some have in relation to Park and the issue of Council’s actions but the term “storm troopers” went beyond the pale.

Melbourne is the home to the largest number of Holocaust survivors per capita outside Israel and the vast majority of Jews in Melbourne are either Holocaust survivors or children and grandchildren of Holocaust survivors. Accordingly to equate Council’s actions with the actions of Storm troopers was highly offensive.

While the expression storm troopers has been used in the Star Wars movies I suggest that the FOCP were not using that analogy but clearly equating the actions of the Council with the actions of Nazi storm troopers.

I am former President of the Jewish Community Council of Victoria and  former Chairman of the Anti-Defamation Commission I have perhaps by that reason a fairly prominent profile in the Jewish Community. As such I received over 40 phone calls from people who effectively said that they were offended by what had been written. Many others approached me at Synagogue and other places making similar comment. When I returned home from overseas in January there were also voice messages making similar comment. One elderly lady asked me if FOCP really knew what storm troopers were and how they acted. She was a Holocaust survivor a person who had first hand experience.

I do not say for an instance that the authors of the flyer are anti-Semitic and I do not make any accusation as to racism; indeed knowing some of the people at FOCP I believe that the words used were rather an expression of their passion. Nevertheless the words used were insensitive given the connotation of storm troopers with Nazi Germany. The expression used was clearly over the top and indeed I believe was counter-productive.

Councillors unanimously agreed to proceed with the upgrade of Caulfield Park. We listened to representatives of FOCP and we questioned and queried Officers before proceeding. Council did nothing by stealth.

Those that oppose Council’s actions have every right in our democratic and free society to make their views known, however to describe Council contractors as storm troopers was excessive in the extreme.

In my experience in public life, going beyond my years on Council I have seen that most people who are able to present a reasoned, intelligent and unemotional argument bereft of abuse will be listened to. To exaggerate however and suggest that Councillors are stupid or are in the pocket It (sic) of Council officers doing their bidding as if puppets is not likely to endear themselves or win any argument. Similarly to describe Council contractors as storm troopers full well knowing the connotation that expression raises is either obtuse or thoughtless.

While no doubt there are some Jews who would not find that comment offensive there are many that have and it is therefore appropriate for the authors to apologise and retract that offensive innuendo.

Pages from 8_Urban_Analysis_and_Design_Response_ReportApart from the above over-the-top market hype, readers should take careful note of the so called ‘green spine’ that is to serve as public open space and a pedestrian ‘carriage way’ to public transport. No amount of pretty drawings and promises can hide the fact that:

  • No figures are given for overall AMOUNT OF PUBLIC OPEN SPACE within the precinct
  • Width of entrance via Kambrook Road is barely enough to swing a couple of cats through – 9.6 metres which will in effect be reduced once ‘plantings’ go in.
  • No mention is made of the ‘canyon effect’ and resulting potential for wind tunnels
  • Glossy pictures of tall new vegetation leave us unimpressed given that much of this ‘green spine’ will be in shadow for much of the day – see diagram below.

Pages from 8_Urban_Analysis_and_Design_Response_Report-2

c60

PS: Below is a map produced by Monash Uni of Melbourne’s ‘vulnerable’ areas to heat exposure. Readers will see that Carnegie, major parts of Bentleigh East, and the Caulfield North areas even before the 2046 dwellings arrive as part of the Caulfield Village, are given the highest danger ratings. And all this whilst Glen Eira Council still refuses to introduce a Significant Tree Register that actually has some bite and prevents moonscaping. This map also highlights how planning has directly contributed to this via the inequities of Minimal Change versus Housing Diversity. See: http://www.mappingvulnerabilityindex.com/home/melbournevi

vulnerability index

On the 28th April 2011, the select group of 4 councillors passed a resolution that a Section 173 Agreement be entered into with the MRC. It is our contention that:

  • This Agreement must be redrafted and renegotiated PRIOR to any approval of the Development Plan
  • The existing Agreement represents a financial windfall for the MRC and a burden on Glen Eira ratepayers.

Here is what the Agreement states:

  1. Certain infrastructure requirements are listed as ‘Required Infrastructure Projects’ and pertain almost exclusively to land within the boundaries of the Incorporated Plan – apart from traffic management at the corner of Koornang and Station Street and as listed in the works contained in Schedule 2.
  2. ‘Additional Infrastructure Projects’ is defined as being tied in with Part 3B of the Planning and Environment Act. Since this part of the legislation refers to Development Contributions, and Council has removed this section from its Planning Scheme, there is no way for council to exact payment from the MRC for anything ‘additional’ without the MRC’s agreement.

What the Agreement ensures is that approval for its Development Plan (even with conditions) comes first! Then there is the necessary argey bargey for ‘additional infrastructure’ works. In other words, Council is signing a blank cheque! Having approved the Development Plan, they would then need to go cap in hand and ask the MRC for ‘additional infrastructure works’. Nothing would compel the MRC to agree with any such request once they have got their Development Plan approved.

Here’s some extracts:

The development of the land within the parameters of the Incorporated Plan will generate a need for certain infrastructure to be provided. Some of that infrastructure is identifiable as at the date of this Agreement while the need for other infrastructure may only become apparent upon the approval of development plans under the Schedule to the Priority Development Zone.

Required Infrastructure Projects means infrastructure works not included in Schedule 2 that are fairly and reasonably required as a result of the development of the Subject Land under the Planning Scheme and which are included as a conditlon in the approval of a development plan or a planning permit pursuant to Schedule 2 of the Priority Development Zone.

We then get to Additional Infrastructure Projects with the wonderful ‘escape clause’ for the MRC –

the Additional Infrastructure Projects may benefit other land owners in the vicinity of the Subject Land and that it may be fair, just and equitable for contributions for the provision of this infrastructure to be provided by other persons in addition to the Owner.

if, at any time, Council introduces a development contributions plan, pursuant to Part 38 of the Act or otherwise, then any payment made by way of contribution for an Additional Infrastructure Project may be credited towards any payments required for works, services or facilities pursuant to the development contributions plan.

The Parties acknowledge and agree that:

7.1.1 the plans and specifications required for the Required Infrastructure Projects are intended to facilitate works to a standard required only by the development of the Subject Land within the parameters of the Incorporated Plan and not to a standard required to compensate for any inadequacy in the infrastructure that currently services existing developments or as a result of development on any other land.

7.1.3 the amount of contribution required for the Additional Infrastructure Projects will be determined as far as practicable having regard to the principles developed through relevant Victorian law which would apply to the assessment of a contribution pursuant to an approved development contributions plan under the Act.

COMMENTS

Approving any Development Plan without first analysing the overall potential impact on surrounding areas and demanding adequate compensation is sheer folly. It is simply not good enough that the Transport Plan only looks at a handful of adjoining streets and totally ignores the flow on effects of 2046 units and 13,500 square metres of retail/commercial space.

It is also not good enough that in catering for a possible 2046 units that the MRC be responsible for drainage and other service infrastructure ONLY within the bounds of the Precincts and expect residents to pay for the additional necessary upgrading of infrastructure that exists outside of the land’s borders.

Here we have a Section 173 that is not only reliant on the MRC agreeing to pay for anything that someone might struggle to define as ‘reasonable’ but is largely reliant on a Development Contributions Levy which does not exist and even if it did exist would not go anywhere in meeting the costs of the additional infrastructure that is undoubtedly required.

For this situation we can thank our brilliant ‘negotiating’ team of Newton, Pilling, Hyams, Esakoff and Lipshutz. Having stuffed up once before, it is imperative that this not happen again. Development Plan approval must come after a fully detailed and updated Agreement that itemises all necessary works throughout the entire 3 precincts and all the surrounding areas. Ratepayers should not be subsidising the profit making enterprises of any developer.

The extracts featured below, all come (verbatim) from the officer’s report tabled in the minutes of 12th August 2002 on Amendment C25 – ie. the brainchild for the Housing Diversity and Minimal Change carve up of the municipality. Admittedly, it can be argued that times are different and that things have changed. What CANNOT be argued is that this Amendment was sold to residents on the basis of promises that have never been kept. Now we are lumbered with the new Residential Zones that (without community consultation or even forewarning) were rushed through in secret on the basis of Amendment C25.

Please note: the 80/20 Minimal Change/Housing Diversity policy is not only a dud but iniquitous. Housing diversity has grown and grown. Yet this was supposed to be ‘sufficient’ to cater for some nebulous population figures. What we now have is rapid creep into Minimal Change Areas where streets that were predominantly single storey and single dwelling are being transformed into 2 double storey dwellings on various lot sizes. Remember that Council, unlike others, has not limited the size for subdivision! Instead they are working on another amendment to allow more dwellings on larger lot sizes regardless of the fact that these are in Minimal Change.

The ‘proof’ that the 80/20 split is a myth and not working is provided by council itself. Buried in very small print in the Quarterly Report from September 2013, there is this staggering admission – ” 56% of dwellings approved were in Housing Diversity Areas”. So much for 80/20! And it’s getting worse! The rush is on for infill and that means Minimal Change. Yet, residents were told and dare we say ‘promised’, the following in relation to Amendment c25 which set this all up – (we’ve omitted comments regarding open space and that old chestnut – a Significant Tree Register!)

A radical change in character is not envisaged in the residential areas of the housing diversity areas. The most intensive development is sought in the commercial areas where apartments and shop top housing is envisaged. In the residential areas of housing diversity areas, the policy is intended to allow for some multi-unit development to meet Glen Eira’s housing needs whilst ensuring that it does not:

  • Exceed prevailing building heights
  • Dominate the street scape
  • Adversely affect the amenity of neighbouring properties
  • Result in the loss of landscaped front yards (all in accordance with the standards of ResCode)

The Housing and Residential Development Strategy recommends that structure plans and urban design frameworks be developed to manage the specific issues of each housing diversity area. These would examine issues such as the type, form, scale and character of development and would be implemented through further Planning Scheme amendments and other actions. The development of the structure plans and urban design framework will require wide-ranging consultation with traders, developers, residents and the wider community.

Designating these areas as areas of housing diversity does not mean that council would entertain leniency beyond the provisions in ResCode ie any reduction in open space, cr parking standards, etc.

Traffic and parking

While critically important to the viability and functioning of any commercial centre and character of residential areas, traffic and parking issues largely sit outside the jurisdiction of the planning scheme local policy. The proposed policy, therefore, does not attempt to comprehensively address existing or anticipated traffic and parking issues…..ResCode provides parking standards for residential development The Housing and Residential Development Strategy acknowledges that parking and traffic are issues in the city and should be addressed through a number of measures outside the Planning Scheme. These include parking precinct plans in the commercial centres and the surrounding residential areas and the investigation of local traffic management plans in residential areas.

There’s much, much more in these papers, but readers will have got the overall gist by now. The take home message is absolutely clear:

  • Promises have never been kept much less delivered
  • The 80/20 carve up is failing and will only get worse – dwellings are NOT going into Housing Diversity, but increasingly into Minimal Change.
  • Traffic, parking, open space identified as major concerns over a decade ago has not been addressed.

ccr

letters

PRECINCT 1 (with more to come!)

442 dwellings comprising 5 buildings and 8 double storey townhouses that are either 3 or 2 bedroom.

BUILDING

HEIGHT

ONE BEDROOM

TWO BEDROOM

THREE BEDROOM

1A 6 storeys

29

27

1

1B 6 storeys

65

29

9

2A 5 storeys

36

24

0

2B 4 storeys

34

8

4

3A 5 storeys

88

66

14

TOTAL

252

154

28

THUS 58% OF PROPOSED NEW DWELLINGS ARE SINGLE BEDROOM! Only 28 dwellings (excluding the 8 townhouses) will be 3 bedroom apartments, equalling a paltry 6.45%!

How many of these little boxes will have direct sunlight is never clearly enunciated. Instead we have such qualifications as – Where possible, new dwellings have been orientated to achieve optimum solar access to balconies and internal living areas. We can only surmise that this means that most bedrooms will be devoid of natural light!

PS: For those with an eye for looking at plans, we’ve included a ‘snap shot’ from part of the Development Plan which is repeated throughout. Please note at the top right hand corner the size of apartment and the size of balcony – a miniscule 4.0 sq. metres. This should be read in light of the following Age article where the City of Melbourne is considering plans to ensure that apartments do not become chicken coops because of size and where London has enforced a 50sq.m minimum size for one bedroom places. See: http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/council-considers-minimum-floor-size-for-citys-shrinking-apartments-20130727-2qrhi.html

plan

This post features the ‘discussion’ on visitor car parking and Esakoff’s motion. Readers should focus on part (c)

Crs Esakoff/Okotel

That Council:

(a) Notes the report.

(b) Acknowledges that each multi-dwelling planning permit application contains a different set of circumstances. Therefore, the provision of onsite visitor car parking must be considered on the individual merits of the particular application being assessed.

(c) Request further investigation in to pathways, such as fast track assessment processes, that encourage and promote provision of adequate, accessible visitor car parking, especially in areas where parking demand is already high and in growth areas in general.

The MOTION was put and CARRIED unanimously.

ESAKOFF: said that by inserting the extra clause in the motion that she ‘hoped’ to ‘encourage’ an extra pathway for ‘adequate and accessible visitor car parking’ – in particular in those areas where there is already ‘high demand’ for parking. Thought this meant ‘predominantly’ Carnegie and to ‘a lesser extent’ Bentleigh. Stated that parking rates are ‘discretionary’ and she thought that this motion was a ‘tool’ or a ‘mechanism to reduce building costs’ .  Went on to say that if visitor car parking is provided at all then it ‘shouldn’t be in car stackers’ in basements, but ‘we’re seeing more and more of them’. Her aim was to ‘promote’ and ‘encourage applicants’ to work within the ‘pathway’ ‘similar to the way we offer the faster and more efficient’ fast tracks programs or ‘pre-certification process’ and this could be done ‘via a tick all the box system’ and these can then be ‘swiftly’ and ‘efficiently be processed through the planning department’. Would also cut ‘costs for developers’ such as ‘saving time’ and reducing ‘angst in neighbourhoods’ where these applications apply. In turn, this would ‘then prevent another delay at VCAT’. All of this would mean a ‘faster and more efficient process’ that would also have to adhere to other planning components. But she’ fear(ed)’ that ‘we are degrading our present liveable city’ into a ‘nightmare’ for people living near activity centres. Admitted that not all councillors would agree with her because they wanted to reduce cars in these areas and providing car parking doesn’t do this in their view. On this she said that this is likely to be ‘a very slow change’ and is something for future generations. So, ‘in the meantime we need to address the problem’. Activity centres have changed from ‘predominantly retail’ to now have many residential apartments, and restaurants and cafes that are ‘open to very late at night’  so ‘parking demands are long into the evening’. She thought that ‘they can only get worse and not better’. Her motion therefore was aimed at ‘attacking this from a planning perspective’ and to ‘provide adequate provision now’.

COMMENT

Please note how devoid of anything relating to residents is the above argument. How on earth the equivalent of a fast track system or similar will CHANGE the outcomes of more or less visitor parking remains a total mystery. Once again this council creates the illusion of concern for residents, but fails to attack the central problem – ie. not processes but making dramatic changes to the Planning Scheme, such as parking overlays, parking precinct plans, and creating sound schedules that become mandatory!  It’s also illuminating that all of Esakoff’s little speech basically focuses on benefits to developers. Please also note that Esakoff is in favour of a ‘tick the box’ approach, when this has consistently been condemned by Hyams, for one, and overall Glen Eira policy statements!

OKOTEL: claimed that Esakoff had ‘covered all the points’ on the issue. Thought that it was ‘essential that we investigate pathways’ for visitor car parking especially since ‘we see more and more applciations’ in activity centres for waivers.  ‘This is something that will continue to happen under our current policy’ so council needs to ‘pay attention now’ and if they don’t it will ‘possibly cause a lot of problems’ such as accidents from traffic and people ‘enjoying’ their ‘municipality’. 

COMMENT: Okotel has unwittingly undermined Esakoff with her statement ‘this is something that will continue to happen under our current policy’. Exactly! Implicit in this statement is the acknowledgement that the Planning Scheme is a dud and however much tinkering there is with ‘process’, unless the Scheme changes, then all will stay the same! 

SOUNNESS: started by saying that dwelling and ‘having a place to park’ cars are linked. Having somewhere to park is ‘common sense’. Said he recognised that there are ‘benefits’ and that it’s important to know whether there is an ‘excess’ of ‘demand over supply’. The advice that has come from Traffic Management to staff  know how things ‘operate’ in other municipalities so having ‘more information’ is good. 

PILLING: said that Esakoff was probably referring to someone like him when she spoke about opposite viewpoints. He thought that ‘by encouraging visitor car parking brings more cars’. Thought that having more cars in places like ‘Koornang Road’ and Murrumbeena Road only ‘exacerbates the problem’. Said that he would ‘vote in favour’ because ‘it’s always good to have more information’. 

HYAMS: thought that people would be driving cars and hoping ‘that they would find somewhere to park’. Believed that developers should provide car parking that ‘at the least is recommended by ResCode’ instead of ‘trying to shift’ this onto streets and wanted to see developers ‘abide’ by this.

ESAKOFF: thought that ‘demand for car parking’ is going to creep into ‘our Minimal Change’ areas. Said that driving around ‘there’s very few car parking spaces left on the street’. Didn’t know if this is a result of more teenagers with cars or people ‘not using their garages’. Streets ‘are full now’ and ‘we’re going to be in a great deal of trouble’ if the problem ‘isn’t addressed now’. Admitted that there are other councils who aren’t providing any visitor parking but ‘they are predominantly inner suburbs’ and ‘what goes on’ in these suburbs is ‘not clearly what Glen Eirians want’. Went on to say that mothers with prams need to be able to park close to ‘where they’re going’ and this also applies to ‘the elderly’ and ‘the disabled’. Stated that there are ‘many reasons’ why people use and need cars. Hoped that ‘we can do something with this new pathway’ and that ‘it is a success’. 

COMMENT 

1. On the one hand Esakoff talks as if this nebulous ‘pathway’ is already in existence. Sounness and Pilling want ‘more information’. Yet, there is absolutely nothing in the motion that directs when or how, any ‘investigation’ and its ensuing ‘information’ will be (a) reported back to councillors (b) reported back to Council and a vote taken! Nor is there any clear direction as to exactly what is to be investigated – are we talking ‘supply and demand’? Area versus number of residents? Street availability for parking to accompany each application? And then what?  

Conclusion? Another useless exercise in public relations reliant on vagueness and which still leaves plenty of room for backroom decision making. In the meantime, the central problem (ie Planning Scheme) remains untouched! Well done councillors!

This post concerns what happened at the final council meeting of last year (December 17th). In response to an earlier Request for a Report, the following motion was put and carried. We draw readers’ attention to the fact that Hyams, Esakoff and Lipshutz voted against the motion. We also highlight the fact that what purports to be the actual motion/resolution is NOT what Delahunty said. Two significant words have been omitted from 3 (a) and 3(b) thereby totally changing the outcomes and meaning of the resolution. The entire motion as presented in the now accepted and doctored minutes reads:

Crs Delahunty/Magee

That Council notes:

1. A further part of the process for the amendment of C60 is the consideration / approval of development plans which will involve further community consultation.

2. The first development plan has already been submitted to council and will be the subject of community consultation in early 2014.

3. The report sought to address the area surrounding the Caulfield Racecourse as a whole not just the area comprising C60 and as such further requests:

a. That the recent traffic study conducted on Queens Avenue, Caulfield East including the area around the Neerim Road intersection and the Sir John Monash Drive intersection,

b. That the recent traffic study conducted on Eskdale Road Caulfield East showing the impact, if any on the local street of the changed traffic conditions on nearby Kambrook Road; and

c. That any studies of pedestrian movement along Queens Avenue be examined for potential improvements to safety and accessibility.

4. That the Minutes of this Item incorporate the Resolution of 9 April 2013 in full and the Planning Conference held on 4 April 2011 in Attachment 2.

When Delahunty moved this motion she included in Clause 3 (a and b) the phrase “be provided”. In other words, Delahunty’s motion was asking that the traffic reports which have already been done be given to councillors, or possibly even be made public. By omitting these words from the minutes the entire resolution is exiled to some never-never land of inaction.  Yet, not one single councillor at last night’s meeting commented upon this omission. We have to wonder if Delahunty herself would have asked that the minutes be corrected.

The full significance of all this becomes obvious when one follows the ‘discussion’ that took place on the motion and the pathetic and duplicitous arguments proposed by Hyams, Esakoff and Lipshutz. Here’s what happened:

DELAHUNTY moved motion. Magee seconded.

DELAHUNTY: stated that some traffic studies had been done in the ‘Caulfield East area’ and that ‘a number of residents have contacted’ her about the traffic and she doesn’t want to be ‘dismissive’ of these people.  Said that she thought that residents need ‘actions now’ and that it’s ‘wise’ to understand ‘what might occur in the future’. Wanted this done in a more ‘informal discussion’ and ‘incorporated into community consultation’ and wanted the community consultation committee involved in this. For now, she just wanted that councillors ‘get more information about’ traffic studies on top of what was done in 2011.

MAGEE: Magee did not speak to the motion.

HYAMS: began by saying ‘it’s not so much the substance’ of the motion but the ‘timing’. Said that there would be lots of ‘changes’ to the area and that noone could say that they were ‘all right’ and that there were still going to be ‘a lot’ of changes in the next couple of years especially to the ‘road structure’ and that council had ‘put in’ a ‘lot of conditions’. Thought that all this ‘might be a bit premature’ and didn’t want to have ‘all this effort’ put into ‘producing reports’ when it could all be ‘out of date reasonably soon’. Conceded that it’s important to ‘keep an eye’ on things but wasn’t sure ‘whether this is really the time to do this’.

SOUNNESS: started off by saying that the C60 is ‘controversial’ and that residents were worried about what was ‘going to happen’ and how it was going to work. Said that the processes are ‘confusing to the community’ and therefore there was a ‘need for help to explain to the community’ what is happening. ‘It’s a process of being clear and transparent’ and that’s the role of council. Developers can work within their own area, but the changes and processes should be made clear. Thought that the motion was a ‘good way’ that ‘council does do its communication’ and that the community consultation committee would be ‘a very good place’ to explore all the options. Reiterated that this was ‘confusing’ and that there is ‘uncertainty, there is doubt’ and ‘Council has a role in trying to mitigate that fear’.

ESAKOFF: agreed with Hyams in that the motion is ‘too premature’.

LIPSHUTZ: agreed with Sounness that there was ‘angst’ in the community and although Delahunty’s motion is something that ‘should happen, but not right now’. Said that the ‘first step is to let the development plan come through’ so the community ‘can see’ what’s there. Only then should council ‘look at the whole precinct’. What’s happening now is that the motion proposes to look at roads without knowing what the whole precinct is going to look like. ‘When it does come in things may change’. Residents need ‘to know from an informed position’ and ‘doing it now is not an informed position’. ‘What we should be doing is allowing it to happen and then have consultation’ once the development plan is in so that then ‘everyone can become involved’.

PILLING: thought the motion had enough ‘merit’ for it to be passed.

DELAHUNTY: said that she had ‘changed what I originally wanted to ask’ as to whether there was an ‘additional work’ and there wasn’t because the traffic studies had already been done. Said that the motion isn’t asking for additional or any consultation but the methods of consultation are the focus. Wanted to ‘include the whole precinct’ and not just one area. Wanted to know how council or the consultation committee could ‘increase the scope’ of consultation. Wanted some ‘scope’ to ‘understand pedestrian movement’ along Queen’s Road because people had notified her about ‘safety’

MOTION PUT AND CARRIED – ESAKOFF, HYAMS, LIPSHUTZ VOTED AGAINST.

COMMENT

Residents should consider very carefully WHY Esakoff, Hyams and Lipshutz voted against a motion that requested information on traffic and parking. Their nonsense argument of ‘premature’ is an insult to the intelligence of residents. This is akin to saying ‘let’s wait til the tsunami hits and then see what our emergency plans are like’!!!! Utter rubbish! When the MRC proposes 2,046 units, with no provision for on site visitor parking, no real and plausible explanation of what is going to happen to the displaced MRC members’ car parks on race days, and when Monash is booted out of its current car parking arrangement at the racecourse and staff and students have nowhere to park, then residents have every right to ask that information is supplied BEFORE any of the disasters happen. Making matters worse, nothing in the MRC parking plan, and absolutely nothing from councillors, talks about the flow on effects of both parking displacements and the hordes of new residents congesting an already over-congested area.

Further, if council has actually done some traffic analysis of nearby streets then how can this be ‘premature’? The accompanying report states unequivocably that the Development plan was already in council’s hands. Hence, Lipshutz knows full well (if he bothered to read it) what the plan entailed. If by chance he wasn’t privy to it, then this is just another black mark against an administration that keeps its councillors (or some of them) completely in the dark until things are sufficiently ‘massaged’ and vital decisions are made on the basis of LACK OF RELEVANT INFORMATION.

Regardless of whether or not all councillors had clapped eyes on the Development plan by December 17th, any information that may shed further light on decision making must be available. Council will be deciding again in a piece meal fashion – development plan, by development plan. Who knows when the next Development plan for the second precinct will be forthcoming. But in the meantime, the MRC will already have ‘cemented’ the residential component of the project and the traffic mayhem will have been let loose on unsuspecting residents.

A truck could literally be driven through the gang’s arguments. Lipshutz wants to ‘wait’ for plans for the ‘whole precinct’. Somebody should tell him that the documents DO REVEAL the plans for the ‘whole precinct’ – however briefly! Also included in this first Development Plan are 3 documents relating to traffic management for the entire area. But, and this is a big BUT, the MRC have basically only looked at 4 streets and not Queens Ave, Sir John Monash Drive, Eskdale Road, etc. If council has done what the MRC ignored then this is crucial information that should be given not only to councillors, but provided to the public at large.

What Lipshutz, Esakoff and Hyams are in fact doing, in our view, is to push the MRC agenda. We have no idea when the subsequent development plans will be released. It could be years away, but in the meantime, the residential precinct will be underway and traffic chaos will ensue. And that’s what Lipshutz, Esakoff and Hyams are basically arguing for. Let’s wait and see they say. Our view is ‘forewarned is forearmed’. And once this particular development plan is rubber stamped by the gang, whatever follows will be too little, too late. The wheels will be set in motion and undoing what’s been done becomes an impossibility. You can’t undo something after the fact. Traffic analysis of all the area, especially those streets not included in the MRC development plans, are essential to decision making now. They are essential for the public to understand what will happen and will provide residents with the grounds for objections – that of course assumes that the council investigation is indeed ‘objective’ and honest. We have our doubts.

Governance overall continues to be a major problem. How many more times will minutes create fiction out of fact? How many more times will this councillor group allow inaccurate and distorted versions of what really occurred to enter into the formal record and thus aid and abet the continual rewriting of history?

But most important is the very fact that these three councillors are Trustees. This inevitably calls into question whether or not they really have the interests of residents at heart, or are basically MRC stooges. Remember, they and Newton are responsible for C60; they and Newton are responsible for setting up a Special Committee where 4 councillors (a minority!) decided the fate of thousands, and they are responsible for the failure to listen to the community. This latest incident is only further evidence of why their actions, their words, and their hidden agendas, require a full Royal Commission.

Both Lobo and Delahunty were apologies for tonight’s Council Meeting. Here are the lowlights:

  • Lipshutz played the race/religious card again in announcing that next council meeting he would be putting together a formal statement about the Friends of Caulfield Park’s newsletter which used the term “storm troopers” in response to Council dawn removal of 21 trees.
  • Visitor car parking item had Esakoff crying crocodile tears with her added clause to the motion that council investigate some tools to alleviate the worsening parking situation.
  • Car share trial got up – begging the question of course, as to why this couldn’t have been resolved one year ago
  • Public questions revealed that the Dover Street car park ‘redevelopment’ was to lose another tree but gain more yellow brick roads and concrete plinthing. The question called for details. The answer was ‘generalities’.
  • Apart from these items, this was a quick, self-congratulatory meeting where Glen Eira was ‘tracking well’ and compared to other councils, the best in the state according to some councillors!

Finally, and we will be making a major post on this tomorrow, the minutes were accepted without any correction. Needless to say, they are not an accurate or true reflection of a resolution that was passed on December 17th! Keep watching this space!

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