2012 … DEVELOPERS BUY ACCESS TO MINISTER ROBERTS

 

2012 … THE LUNCHES  took place at State Parliament in the months before Mr Roberts released a discussion paper in July on the upcoming overhaul of the HOME BUILDING ACT.  Its main recommendation was the winding back of ‘warranty insurance’ which currently protects home owners from shoddy builders.

DEVELOPERS each bid $2000 for access to him.

 

Developers buy access to minister

A STATE Government minister, Anthony Roberts, hosted lunches at Parliament House with prominent western Sydney property developers who had each bid $2000 for access to him.

Property developers have been banned from making political donations in NSW since 2010.

The businessmen who wrote cheques at a Liberal Party fund-raiser in April include Vic Cavasinni, the multi-millionaire owner of Cavasinni Constructions and Beechwood Homes, David Masterton of Masterton Homes and Peter Fowler of Fowler Homes, based at Wetherill Park.

David Masterton of Masterton Homes with father Jim Masterton in the background.
David Masterton of Masterton Homes with father Jim Masterton in the background.

 

The Liberal Party insisted yesterday that the cheques paid had not been cashed after suspicion that laws around property developer donations would be breached.

Nevertheless, the party confirmed that the lunches with Mr Roberts, the Fair Trading Minister, had been auctioned at a fund-raiser, that cheques were accepted and the meetings went ahead.

Details of the lunches will be an embarrassment for the Premier, Barry O’Farrell, who has tried to distance his government from the era of commercial sleaze associated with Labor and the property developer fraternity.

It will also heap more pressure on Mr Roberts, who was recently rebuked by the Premier who said ”wannabe Joe Tripodis” had no place in his government.

 

Auction … the minister, Anthony Roberts.
Auction … the minister, Anthony Roberts.

 

Mr Roberts is also embroiled in claims he verbally assaulted a female staff member, causing her ”severe psychological trauma”.

*His lunches took place at State Parliament in the months before Mr Roberts released a discussion paper in July on the upcoming overhaul of the Home Building Act. Its main recommendation was the winding back of warranty insurance which currently protects home owners from shoddy builders. The reform is seen as a potential boon for the struggling home-construction sector and is supported by builders.

Mr Cavasinni, who attended a lunch at Parliament House with Mr Roberts in April, said he had bid on behalf of a friend who wanted to talk about concerns over hidden building costs and bushfire limitations. He told The Sun-Herald he had already had an impromptu meeting with Mr Roberts over coffee at the well-known Smithfield Italian restaurant Candelori’s.

”He walked into the restaurant with [Smithfield MP] Andrew Rohan and came over to where I was sitting. We had a coffee and I expressed some concerns I had with the Home Building Act. He agreed there were some anomalies,” Mr Cavasinni said. ”He seemed like a good bloke and was happy to hear about some of the trials and tribulations of completing homes in NSW.”

Peter Fowler, of Fowler Homes, confirmed he had bid $2085 for lunch with Mr Roberts but had yet to arrange a date. Mr Fowler said he believed the money had been drawn from his personal account by the Liberal Party. A Liberal Party spokeswoman said: ”From the information we’ve been provided from Smithfield, we understand no money has been accepted and that no laws have been breached.”

Mr O’Farrell’s office refused to comment but a spokesman for Mr Roberts said: ”The minister meets with a range of stakeholders as part of his duties. Community and industry consultation is a key part of the policy formulation process. At all times he has been compliant [with] the relevant legislation.” He declined to comment on what had been discussed at the lunch.

The affair began at Candelori’s on April 11 when Mr Roberts was the drawcard at a $850-a-table fund-raiser. According to the invite, money raised would go to the election fund of Mr Rohan, whose electorate office is just doors away from Candelori’s on the Horsley Drive, Smithfield. The lunch was arranged by Mr Rohan’s electorate officer, Zaya Toma, a Fairfield councillor seeking re-election.

Property developers cannot contribute a cent to political parties. Under a law passed in 2010, individuals or corporations that ”regularly make planning applications” are banned.

Mr Toma said about half the cheques taken on the day had been returned so far.

Tania Mihailuk, Labor’s spokeswoman for fair trading, said: ”It defies belief that the minister responsible for reviewing the state’s home builders legislation would take paid meetings with developers. There can be no excuse. It’s becoming clearer that developers are calling the shots in Barry O’Farrell’s government.”

Correction: The original version of this story said that Zaya Toma was Andrew Rohan’s chief of staff.

 

Heath Aston is the environment, energy and corporate correspondent for the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age

 

SOURCE:  https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/developers-buy-access-to-minister-20120901-2578v.html

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Complaints about PRIVATE CERTIFIERS rise ahead of proposed changes to system

 

GOOD!  Communities are finally bombarding Councils over PRIVATE CERTIFIERS … not too soon!

HOWEVER, why not get to the “nitty-gritty”, the core, where all this festered from?

And BOMBARD the PLANNING MINISTER’s OFFICE with your all too numerous complaints??

Private certification was introduced in 1998 enabled by the EP&A 1979 followed by a number of amendments, and then with the NSW LNP Government White Paper April 2013 to boost “economic growth” for developers hence this is what Sydneysiders have to contend with now!

The Berejiklian Government has merely proposed a different process for appointing certifiers.  For the community to choose one of three options:

-certifiers selected at random

-a list with the appointment of the “next off the rank” certifier

-a time limit for the certifier to work for the same developer (client)

WHEN really much of this new wave of development ought be pulled apart before completion!

As more projects are built, questions about how certifiers work are raised. Photo: James Alcock

Complaints about private certifiers rise ahead of proposed changes to system

Certifiers are rushing to approve developments ahead of swingeing new rules that could smash the cosy relationships between developers and the people who approve their buildings, say Sydney residents.

THE BISHOP’s RING: Catholic leader’s political influence alarms

PRIME MINISTERS sing his praises, property developers beat a path to his historic mansion and powerbrokers complain of “literally” having to kiss his ring.

Bishop Antoine-Charbel Tarabay, is the leader of Australia’s Catholic Maronites.

One parishioner referred to the Bishop as a cleric with a coterie of wealthy property developers.

A former politician referred to a very tangled web between property developers, political movers and shakers and the church.

Since the retirement of two Maronite MPs, and with the incarceration of Eddie Obeid the Bishop has been agitating for new Maronite representation at all levels of government.

The Bishop has Liberal party figures assisting with an affordable housing project

-he has nominated aged care as a top priority for his church

-with two Church projects  having received $10 million in construction grants from the federal government

READ more for who’s who in the Maronite property developer sector!

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Former state Liberal MP for Wagga Wagga Daryl Maguire, left, and Sydney developer Charlie Demian outside the Independent Commission Against Corruption.

 

 

Canterbury-Bankstown councillor George Zakhia, who sits on the board of a Maronite affordable housing project, attending Bishop Tarabay's Strathfield home.
Canterbury-Bankstown councillor George Zakhia, who sits on the board of a Maronite affordable housing project, attending Bishop Tarabay’s Strathfield home. CREDIT:WOLTER PEETERS

 

 

The bishop’s ring: Catholic leader’s political influence alarms

 

Prime ministers sing his praises, property developers beat a path to his historic mansion and powerbrokers complain of “literally” having to kiss his ring.

Meet Antoine-Charbel Tarabay, the controversial Catholic bishop whose pursuit of power and influence is raising concerns from the corridors of Macquarie Street to the pews of Punchbowl.

Since his anointment by Pope Francis as the leader of Australia’s Catholic Maronites in 2013, some parishioners have become increasingly troubled by what they see as Bishop Tarabay’s preoccupation with matters material rather than spiritual.

Then prime minister Tony Abbott kissing a crucifix held out by Bishop Antoine-Charbel Tarabay at a Good Friday church service.
Then prime minister Tony Abbott kissing a crucifix held out by Bishop Antoine-Charbel Tarabay at a Good Friday church service. CREDIT:LOUISE KENNERLEY

 

“The bishop just loves people who splash the cash,” said one parishioner, referring to the cleric’s coterie of wealthy property developers. “The No.1 currency of the bishop is cash.”

“He does cosy up to developers and the big end of town, but so he should, because they will kick in to help build his church empire,” another said.

 

 

 

Sources associated with St Maroun’s College at Dulwich Hill have told the Herald they had raised concerns about financial irregularities dating back years.

They include allegations of cash payments made by the school to senior church figures, transfers of funds to Lebanon and hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees from international students that were paid in cash but not properly accounted for.

A St Maroun’s spokeswoman said “the college’s accounts are independently audited annually and have always returned an unqualified opinion” and that the school was co-operating fully with the current audit.

In the first part of a Herald investigation into the Maronite church, its leader Bishop Tarabay emerges as a political player keen on wielding influence and furthering the interests of wealthy figures within his Lebanese Maronite community.

Local politicians have told of their surprise when they turned up to lunches at the bishop’s imposing Strathfield residence, only to find their host had placed them next to property developers keen to discuss projects.

“It’s in Tarabay’s interest to play matchmaker,” said one former councillor who had attended the lunches.

“You’d go to a church event and Tarabay would lobby you on behalf of developers,” said another. “He’s power hungry and very pushy.”

Bishop Tarabay leads a procession at the Good Friday Mass of Our Lady of Lebanon Church, Harris Park, in 2014.
Bishop Tarabay leads a procession at the Good Friday Mass of Our Lady of Lebanon Church, Harris Park, in 2014. CREDIT:BEN RUSHTON

 

Bishop Tarabay said he did not accept characterisations of himself as a lobbyist or conduit for property developers.

As for the lunches, he said: “It is not uncommon in Australian society for politicians and business people to attend functions, and there is no reason why Australians of Lebanese heritage should be treated differently.”

A former Canterbury councillor recalled the bishop attending a council meeting several years ago and sitting near Charlie Demian, a property developer who is now embroiled in a corruption inquiry that is examining deals done at the same council.

The bishop just loves people who splash the cash.

Parishioner

When the Herald separately asked Mr Demian and the bishop as to why they were attending a council meeting together, the pair responded with different recollections of topics to be addressed.

Mr Demian, who had owned land next to the church in Punchbowl, recalled Bishop Tarabay attending a discussion about rezoning the future site of an aged-care centre.

The bishop, however, remembered attending because a “severe rodent plague” at Mr Demian’s property was troubling a Maronite school next door.

Mr Demian was later acting on the board of a Maronite aged-care project when his company won a $7 million contract to help build it.

Newspaper proprietor and developer Anwar Harb, a one-time business partner of disgraced former MP Eddie Obeid, confirmed that he had led a delegation of prominent Maronite businessmen to Lebanon, where they lobbied the church patriarch to secure Bishop Tarabay’s ascension to the top job.

Mr Harb, a close adviser to the bishop, dismissed talk of any preference for the wealthy.

“I am telling you, he has no preference between a poor person and a rich person. He loves everyone, he is a man of God.”

Bishop Tarabay with Pope Francis, who anointed him head of Australia's Maronite Catholic Church in 2013. 
Bishop Tarabay with Pope Francis, who anointed him head of Australia’s Maronite Catholic Church in 2013. CREDIT:FACEBOOK

 

George Ghossayn, the demolition and excavation magnate who gave Obeid a character reference at his sentencing, initially denied donating his black S500 Mercedes to the bishop. He later admitted the bishop had indeed inherited his Mercedes after he upgraded to a Bentley.

The bishop had a prime seat at the award ceremony when Sarkis Nassif was named by developers as property person of the year in 2017. The man of the cloth also featured in a celebratory video for Dyldam’s Joe Khattar when he won that gong the previous year.

Bishop Tarabay was a co-founder of Dyldam’s main charity vehicle, the GNK Foundation, which is now at risk of losing its registration over failing to submit financial records to the charity watchdog.

But while he is still listed as “lifetime patron” on the website, the bishop said he no longer played any role in the charity.

‘Stay out of politics’

Born in 1967 in the north Lebanon village of Tannourine, Bishop Tarabay chose the life of a monk, joining the Lebanese Maronite Order.

After serving as principal of St Charbel’s at Punchbowl, he received a dispensation to leave the order and become bishop. He won the post over a more favoured candidate after some international lobbying efforts by the likes of Mr Harb and Mr Khattar from Dyldam developments.

“It was like an airtrain,” a former politician said of the convoys of backers making the journey to Beirut.

*“There’s a very tangled web of relations between property developers, political movers and shakers and the church.”

Bishop Tarabay said he had “no direct knowledge” of who visited Lebanon to lobby for him and had not asked anyone to do so.

But he certainly has connections in high places. Cardinal George Pell wrote the foreword to his book on bioethics.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian recently dined at the bishop’s home.

Tony Abbott, as prime minister, knelt before him to kiss a proffered crucifix.

 

Bishop Antoine-Charbel Tarabay with Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who described him as "generous and kind-hearted". 
Bishop Antoine-Charbel Tarabay with Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who described him as “generous and kind-hearted”. CREDIT:FACEBOOK

 

And current Prime Minister Scott Morrison accompanied him to Lebanon to celebrate his ordination, meeting his parents and praising in Parliament the sacrifice of “this generous and kind-hearted Sydney bishop”.

*But since the retirement of two Maronite MPs and the departure of the now-incarcerated Eddie Obeid, Bishop Tarabay (who featured regularly in Obeid’s diaries) has been agitating for new Maronite representation at all levels of government.

“He’s very political, that’s his fixation, and he’s obsessed with getting his people into positions of power,” said one current state member.

Political operatives from both sides have spoken of the bishop demanding to be treated deferentially, viewing himself as a kingmaker.

“We definitely had to pay homage to him,” a former Labor heavyweight said. “It was literally like kissing the ring. It was like going to see the Godfather.”

The bishop’s recent protege was Gisele Doumet, who travelled to Lebanon in 2016 with senior Labor party figures including NSW Opposition Leader Luke Foley.  The tour was organised by Bishop Tarabay, the Herald has been told.

The bishop has touted Ms Doumet for several seats, most recently Parramatta, according to several sources. Mr Foley, when challenged on his enthusiastic support for Ms Doumet, has replied that she had the backing of the bishop.

“The Maronite Bishop of Australia has made clear to senior figures his support for ­Gisele Doumet,” Mr Foley told News Corp in May.

But he was ultimately overruled by head office, despite the suggestion that tens of thousands of Maronite votes would be lost if the bishop’s candidate was not preselected.

Ms Doumet said she was not running for preselection in any seat and was not aware of any previous efforts by the bishop to promote her.

One parishioner, who was annoyed over the bishop’s attempt to have Labor consider Ms Doumet for Parramatta, said he told the bishop recently: “your role is to nourish the flock – stay out of politics”.

Bishop Tarabay rejected suggestions that he had been overly political.

“The only Maronite vote I have the ability to direct is my own. However, as an Australian and as a community leader, I consider it appropriate to make representations to political leaders on behalf of the community I lead on matters of social importance,” he said.

“I have provided encouragement to a number of political candidates from within my community who aspire to serve in political life.”

Meanwhile, Liberal Party figures are assisting the bishop with his dreams of an affordable housing project.

Controversial former Bankstown councillor Jim Daniel – found not guilty of a smear campaign against a Labor candidate involving paedophilia allegations – is one director of the church’s Kadishat Housing venture.

Also on the board are current Canterbury-Bankstown councillors George Zakhia and Charbel Ishac.

When asked about their appointments, the bishop said simply: “they offered their services”.

Canterbury-Bankstown councillor George Zakhia, who sits on the board of a Maronite affordable housing project, attending Bishop Tarabay's Strathfield home.
Canterbury-Bankstown councillor George Zakhia, who sits on the board of a Maronite affordable housing project, attending Bishop Tarabay’s Strathfield home. CREDIT:WOLTER PEETERS

*Aged-care ambitions

Bishop Tarabay has nominated aged care as a top priority for his church. However, two church projects, which have received $10 million in construction grants from the federal government, have brought together a series of names heard in recent hearings of the Independent Commission Against Corruption. (ICAC)

The current ICAC inquiry Operation Dasha has heard that Mr Demian, the property developer, was receiving help from the disgraced former Wagga Wagga MP Daryl Maguire, who promised to link him up with a “mega rich” Chinese funder.

Former state Liberal MP for Wagga Wagga Daryl Maguire, left, and Sydney developer Charlie Demian outside the Independent Commission Against Corruption.
Former state Liberal MP for Wagga Wagga Daryl Maguire, left, and Sydney developer Charlie Demian outside the Independent Commission Against Corruption. CREDIT:JANIE BARRETT

 

Mr Demian also stands accused of receiving favourable outcomes from the former Canterbury council.

Last June, he was appointed to the board of St Charbel’s Care Centre Ltd, the company that has received a $2.7 million grant to help build a Maronite church nursing home in Punchbowl.

The development site was one that Mr Demian knew well. He had sold it to the church for $2 million in 2010 (Bishop Tarabay’s was one of the signatures on a transfer document) and developed 87 villas on the surrounding property.

Not only was Mr Demian on the nursing home’s board of directors, but he also co-owned a company that then won a $7 million contract to help build it.

His co-owner in that venture was his lawyer Charbel Azzi, who is now busy defending Mr Demian against tax assessments of more than $35 million. Mr Azzi also has directorships on several Maronite charity boards and said his work on the aged-care construction was also entirely pro bono.

Mr Demian quit as a director of the aged-care project and the construction company in May, a month before public hearings at ICAC began.

Mr Demian said he left for personal reasons and that there had been no conflict of interest in his firm receiving a construction contract from a board he sat on.

“The works contract awarded was based on a stringent tender process to undertake the construction works on a free margin costs basis,” he said.

“I received no financial benefits, and all works done was on a voluntarily basis, hence no conflict of interest could arise.”

The design firm on the project – employing “traditional Lebanese housing typologies” – belonged to the brothers Marwan and Ziad Chanine, who are being investigated by ICAC over another development approval.

Council documents show the contact for the project was Barry Barakat, a banker and property investor who serves as a director of another Maronite nursing home project alongside the bishop.

Mr Barakat said all his work was provided pro bono, while the Chanine architecture firm had been chosen for its previous charitable work and “on the basis of their experience and culturally sensitive knowledge for the particular project brief”.

ICAC investigators have been looking into a potentially corrupt development decision relating to a project from which Mr Barakat and the Chanine family stood to benefit, as well as the Labor Party fixer Bechara Khouri.

Mr Khouri, who has appeared as a witness in three ICAC inquiries, received a retainer of up to $15,000 a month to lobby councillors on behalf of Mr Demian. He also represented the Chanines’ interests.

Not being a Maronite himself has not stopped Mr Khouri from making contacts at Maronite church functions.

It was at the Our Lady of Lebanon church in Harris Park that he first met Mr Demian, ICAC has heard.

The current ICAC inquiry continues and no findings have been found against any person named in this article.

Bishop Tarabay, when asked about the appointments of figures to the aged-care project, said “I had no responsibility for this project and was not consulted in relation to any decisions made about the matters raised”.

On Monday, part two of the Herald’s investigation into the Maronite church looks at a school under fire for financial irregularities and the rehabilitation centre that never got built.

 

DO YOU KNOW MORE?

 

Kate McClymont is an investigative journalist at The Sydney Morning Herald.

Patrick Begley is an investigative reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald.

 

SOURCE:  https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/the-bishop-s-ring-catholic-leader-s-political-influence-alarms-20181005-p5080m.html

 

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Left Hanging … How they’re killing the KOALAS OF WILTON

HOUSING AT ALL COSTS SEEMS TO BE THE DEPARTMENT OF PLANNING’S MOTTO 

KEY POINTS:

-relentless semi trailer and car traffic barrelling through core koala habitat

-koalas are now facing a 17,000-lot residential development to engulf this rural area

-court transcripts indicate the contractor understood the clearing was in anticipation of a future land rezoning – six years before the DPE’s exhibition period in 2017

Walker Corporation’s proposed corridor leads into the Nepean Conservation Area, whose sandstone soils do not support koala feed trees

-Council Environmental Officer on viewing the Wilton Southeast zoning on the DPE website discovered that the only documents listed were the developer’s submissions

QUESTIONS  raised for the DOPE …

HOW can this rezoning go through before the biocertification process is complete, and without being assessed under the biodiversity conservation act?

WHY were the Walker zones rammed though with so many unresolved issues?

… Obviously they are happy to pay the fines because in the grand scheme of things it’s a pittance.

AND MUCH MORE!

LEFT HANGING … HOW THEY’RE KILLING THE KOALAS OF WILTON

NEIGHBOURHOOD

Sunday, 30th September 2018

 

Text: Mick Daley

 

Stand on busy Picton road at the bridge over Allens Creek, near Wilton NSW and you’ll get a picture of what a koala has to deal with to get to its feed trees. The relentless semi-trailer and car traffic barreling through this core koala habitat has resulted in at least twelve koala deaths over the past two years. But that’s nothing compared to what they’re facing when an anticipated 17,000-lot residential development engulfs this rural area.

The Department of Planning and Environment (DPE) has designated this as the Wilton Priority Growth Area under its Western City District Plan. Just 80km south west of the Sydney CBD, it’s part of the NSW government’s vote-winning solution to the city’s congestion and housing problem. But it’s coming at a high cost.

The Department of Office Environment and Heritage (OEH), the Rural Fire Service (RFS), an independent scientist and the local Wollondilly Council have all weighed in against the existing proposal, saying it goes against long-standing scientific advice and ignores State planning laws. It also threatens the survival of the largest chlamydia-free koala population in NSW.

The DPE’s developer, the Sydney-based Walker Corporation has twice been successfully prosecuted for having illegally cleared areas of sensitive koala habitat, earning them the largest such fine in NSW history. That’s just one of a raft of irregularities that have plagued this controversial project.

Wollondilly Shire Council has lodged an appeal against the DPE in the Land and Environment Court, saying that the rezoning of land in the Wilton South East Precinct ignores scientific advice from the OEH.

Judith Hannan, the Wollondilly Shire Mayor, says Council is not against the development at Wilton. “We’re asking for the reversal of the rezoning, until we get a solid conservation plan sorted out. We feel like there’s a tidal wave coming at us and the koalas are sitting in the path of it.”

Hannan says that long term planning has been inadequate for such a large-scale development and there are insufficient jobs and infrastructure to support it. “There is no reliable public transport to the area, no provision for employment, no integrated health service. How many other things would you like? It’s a nightmare and we don’t have much ability to stop it.”

She says that the koala road-kill problem is at crisis-point. “Even during the last council meeting, someone sent us a live photo of a koala in Appin in the service station and that evening that koala was dead on the road. It was horrendous.”

Councillor Matthew Deeth goes a step further.

“It beggars belief how the planning department makes these decisions. There’s no transparency at all and there’s no response to any of the concerns that council has raised,” he says. “I can’t point to any letters or anything to show they’ve even considered any of our concerns.”

Council’s environmental education officer, Damion Stirling has been at the coal-face of this issue.

“What triggered this for us was the southeast Wilton rezoning (from rural to residential),” he says. “We weren’t informed (by DPE) when that rezoning dropped, we found out through social media. They’ve (DPE) made reference that council had been consulted, but any submissions made were not adopted.

“They even reference measures to minimizing the impact on koalas, but they’re words on the page and we haven’t seen that detail.”

Stirling showed me the roadkill hotspot at Allen’s Creek, in the southeast tip of the proposed development. He says the creek constitutes part of an east-west running corridor that is vital to the survival of these koalas.

This was identified as far back as 2005 as a likely primary koala corridor by Professor Rob Close of the University of Western Sydney, with sightings going back into the Nineties.

The Wilton area was officially recognised as a primary koala corridor in 2007, by the Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water (DECCW), the precursor of the OEH.

 

An OEH spokesperson has confirmed that core koala habitat and primary movement corridors have been identified within this region.

In mid-2016 a pilot study between Appin and Wilton found eight koalas in a week. That was enough information for OEH to fund the Wilton Koala Conservation Project, granted $200,000 from the Saving Our Species fund – the second highest funded project in the state. It’s tracked koalas through the area, specifically along Allen’s Creek, which features a good selection of koala feed trees.

Cate Ryan, a long-time WIRES carer, knows the inevitability of koalas seeking food or mates in the vicinity of Picton Road.

“They’re trying to disperse to other areas and they’re becoming roadkill. The issue with all the koalas is if they become landlocked they’ve got no escape. There’s no feed for them, so they’re coming out onto the roads and they’re getting killed. If they’ve got no underpasses or overpasses they can’t get to other breeding stock, so they become genetically compromised, because they start inbreeding. We’ve already noticed some conditions – smaller koalas, smaller eyes and irregular eye shapes.

“There’s no food out there and what’s up here is dying because of the drought. It’s horrible. I’d hate to be a koala.”

Ryan says the biggest fear is that chlamydia-infected koalas from colonies to the south may move towards Wilton for the same reasons, compromising the health of the local koalas.

“Because these guys here are disease free, they could be used in breeding programs as stock to repopulate areas where they’ve been decimated by disease. There’s a whole lot of things we can look at for the future with these guys, but unless they’re protected, there’s nothing.”

Underneath the highway bridge at Allen’s Creek, Stirling points out a huge culvert that would provide safe access for wandering males and breeding females with back-young, searching for the increasingly rare food trees they need to survive.

“It’s one thing to protect koalas from road kill, but we need to be feeding them into quality habitat corridors that will enable their dispersal,” he said.

“This creek line corridor links all the way down to the Nepean on the other side of Douglas Park. At the northern end of it is the St Mary’s Towers biobank site. There’s breeding females with back-young on there as we speak, identified by OE&H.”

Stirling observes how easily this infrastructure could be adapted to a koala corridor. “Down here you can see the scats and footprints of kangaroos and stuff, so it’s already being used by fauna.

“From Roads and Maritime Services’s point of view, this is an easy win. Even that concrete barrier on the bridge up there is enough to stop a koala trying to cross the road.”

 

But the development planned by DPE favours a corridor bisecting 23 hectares of land, illegally cleared by the Walker Corporation in 2005. According to Land and Environment Court transcripts they were fined $200,000 for that transgression, at that time one of the largest fines for illegal clearing of vegetation in NSW.

In 2011 Walker were fined an additional $80,000 for illegal clearing at Appin, where their current rezoning proposal is.

Court transcripts indicate that DPE used the same land clearing contractor for both jobs and that the contractor understood the clearing was in anticipation of a future land rezoning – six years before the DPE’s exhibition period in 2017.

Councillor Deeth points out that Walker Corporation’s proposed corridor leads into the Nepean Conservation Area, whose sandstone soils do not support koala feed trees. He says Council is privy to the process followed by OEH, who warned against the DPE proposal.

“They gave advice to the DPE that the Allen’s Creek corridor was the best option for the koalas. The DPE has ignored their advice and instead hired an outside team of consultants to give them another result, an act which I believe is unprecedented in this field.

The OEH is supposed to provide the environmental data and advice to the DPE, to be incorporated into the overall planning. But the OEH has been reduced from a department in its own right to an office advising the DPE and even this status appears to have been sidelined.”

The DPE not only ignored their own environmental office’s advice, but appear to be flouting State Environmental Planning Proposal 44 (SEPP 44). Under that law the DPE is obliged to do a site-specific koala plan and the rezoning of the land should not have happened until a biocertification and vegetation mapping process had been completed.

The reason this has not been completed involves a Kafka-esque bureaucratic turn that belongs in the realm of fiction.

When the state government’s new Biodiversity Act came into force on 24 August last year, Wollondilly Council received a phone call from DPE, telling them its growth area was exempt from the Act for a further 12 months – until the biocertification process was completed.

“We were told the biocertification process would be completed by Feb 2018, then it was June, but it still hasn’t been completed,” said Stirling. “We’ve now been told that the Act won’t come into force until November, 18 months later.”

While the DPE’s rezoning ignores SEPP 44, it also sidelines advice from the Rural Fire Service that the bushland southeast of the proposed development is a major fire risk and would require an exit road bisecting the DPE’s proposed koala corridor.

If the reader were to fancy that the DPE has not been taking this process seriously, they should consider that in January 2018, Wollondilly Council received a draft Development Control Plan (DCP) from DPE. Rather than sending a new document, specifically designed to reflect the area’s ecological sensitivities, they instead sent a tracked changes version of Blacktown Growth Area’s DCP. On the last page was a single picture and two sentences about koalas.

Apart from this slapdash approach, Stirling claims DPE’s process ignores four key recommendations of the NSW chief scientist’s 2016 report – a crucial direction being that the proponents of development must act on evidence.

Indeed, Stirling observes that when he recently looked for submissions over the Wilton Southeast zoning on the DPE website, he discovered that the only documents listed were the developer’s submissions.

“So Council are now GIPAA-ing (Government Information Public Access Act) for those reports and all other submissions around koala habitat that were part of this rezoning.”

Stirling says that even the week before the rezoning, he’d been at a round table meeting called by the DPE to discuss conserving koalas in the region.

“There was no mention that the land around Allen’s Creek was going to be rezoned the following week.”

Stirling has a lot of unanswered questions for the DPE.

“We’re questioning how can this rezoning go through before the biocertification process is complete, and without being assessed under the biodiversity conservation act?

“Why have the DPE proceeded in rezoning this land before that work is finished, on such a significant project?

“Why was that project not profiled in the NSW Koala Strategy, considering it was one of the largest koala funded projects in the state?”

“We’re saying the DPE plan is not appropriate,” he concludes. “It doesn’t even consider that koalas move through the canopies of trees. How are they going to fence the middle of that bushland there to stop the koalas?

“We have to work out what the transition is between protected koala habitat and urban areas. We’ve already got a number of threats – eight koalas killed in eight weeks on Appin Rd, last year 14 koalas killed in two months, so that’s the major threat at the moment. The next threat is development wiping out habitat, then dog attack, fires, weed invasion, so we’re trying to get ahead of the game and say, ok we know where the habitat is, let’s protect it now. We have the knowledge to do best practice, let’s do it, let’s find a balance between conservation and development for housing.”

Councillor Deeth, too, has searching questions.

“I understand that OEH scientists were being pressured from above to tone down their reports to the DPE,” he said.

“Council had an extraordinary meeting a couple of months ago. Our resolution was to GIPAA the government to get the exact communications, exactly what advice was given and what was the response from the DPE around that issue. My understanding was there was real pressure coming from much higher up the chain and we want to understand how their decisions were made.

“Housing at all costs seems to be the department of planning’s motto at the moment. We don’t even know what sort of density we’re looking at within these zones. All we’re suggesting is we want a pause to get this right. There’s nothing wrong with taking a bit more time to actually get it right. You can see from every provision there’s a heap of unresolved issues.

“We have no idea why the Walker zones were rammed though with so many unresolved issues. They’re happy to pay the fines because in the grand scheme of things it’s a pittance.

“We have very little say in this whatsoever. The only thing we’ve got left is advocacy and letting people know what we’re not happy about.”

SOURCE:  https://neighbourhoodpaper.com/placement/featured/left-hanging-killing-the-koalas-of-wilton/

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CATHOLIC CHURCH LEADS LAND GRAB IN WILTON WITH $17 MILLION DEAL

KEY POINTS:

-the Catholic Diocese of Wollongong paid $17.34M for 44 hectare Wilton site

-the Wilton property has seen capital growth of $15.44 million in 11 years

-the church bought the property as a strategic acquisition; an investment for future growth

the site is still zoned for rural use;  tipped to be rezoned after critical infrastructure is delivered

-the median house price in Wilton is $808,400

 

Which company paid $7.4M for a major Wilton deal in June 2017?

HAS the Catholic Church been an Insider at the “Planning Round Table”?  In a strategic move to top up Church coffers after onselling rezoned “Residential Land” at Wilton?

 

CATHOLIC CHURCH LEADS LAND GRAB IN WILTON WITH $17 MILLION DEAL

December 7, 2017

The Wilton property has seen capital growth of $15.44 million in 11 years.

The Catholic Diocese of Wollongong has paid $17.34 million for a “strategic” 44-hectare site in the Macarthur region, 80 kilometres south west of Sydney, crushing the suburb record in the process.

The property at 570 Picton Road, Wilton, which has a five-bedroom house, last sold for $1.9 million in 2006, according to Domain Group data.

That same year, the previous price record in Wilton was set by the $8.9-million sale of 15 Janderra Lane to the Walker Corporation, which will be developing the south-east precinct of the Wilton Priority Growth Area.

The land occupies more than 44 hectares. Photo: SuppliedThe land occupies more than 44 hectares. Photo: Supplied

Selling agent Tim Knapp, of Knapp and Associates, said the buyer, who was seeking similar properties within the area, bought the property as an “investment for future growth”.

“The purchasers acquire property within areas that they feel will enhance the community,” he said.

“In time the purchasers will build on the site but it is undetermined what they will build at this point.”

A map of the Wilton Priority Growth Area plans. Source: NSW PlanningA map of the Wilton Priority Growth Area plans. Source: NSW Department of Planning and Environment

Although the area has been earmarked as a future growth precinct, the site is still zoned for rural use; the area is tipped to be rezoned after critical infrastructure is delivered.

“What this was acquired for was not really residential development, but more a strategic acquisition for the purchaser.”

More than 16,000 homes, two primary schools and four childcare centres are part of the building plans in Wilton New Town, which is expected to be the size of Port Macquarie after a 30-year development project.

More than 16,000 new homes will be built in the Wilton New Town development. Image: SuppliedMore than 16,000 new homes will be built in the Wilton New Town development. Image: Supplied

Wilton New Town is expected to rival Port Macquarie after development completes. Image: SuppliedWilton New Town is expected to rival Port Macquarie after development completes. Image: Supplied

“This is a very exciting time and Sydney needs to implement plans to sustain the population growth in the coming years,” Mr Knapp said.

The sale is among multiple recent major deals in Wilton, including a $7.4-million land sale in June 2017, as the small town’s big plans lure investors.

“There’s a lot of activity in Wilton and a lot of developers looking around,” Mr Knapp said.

“Wilton is such a strong growth area at the moment, similar to Bringelly (and) Leppington.”

The locally based agent added that because of housing shortage in metropolitan Sydney, Wilton was not the only suburb in the region that was growing.

“Within the past five years, the government has released large tracts of land for housing in suburbs in the Macarthur region such as Gregory Hills and Oran Park.

“These areas in the last few years have developed into vibrant communities.”

The median house price in Wilton is $808,400, Domain Group data shows.

 

SOURCE:  https://www.commercialrealestate.com.au/news/catholic-church-leads-land-grab-in-wilton-with-17-million-deal/

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FROM FARMER TO LAND BARON, thanks to planning racket

THE GAME OF MATES is all about developers buying access to politicians to have land sites especially farmlands upzoned for residential. The only reason why the Troutbeck family’s land is worth so much is because the government has rezoned it residential.

THE sell-off (FIRB Reg.) of Australian property to wealthy foreign buyers, and with foreign developers competing for Australian land sites this has disadvantaged discriminating against a whole Cohort of Australian first home buyers.  Another consequence being the exhaustion of land sites!

Country Garden's future Windermere estate will provide 7500 homes.

From farmer to land baron, thanks to planning racket

By Leith van Onselen

Back in November, The AFRreported that first-home buyers (FHBs) were desperately fighting for land in Melbourne as the city’s population soars.

Then in December, The AFR reported that the median price for a housing lot in Melbourne had hit $318,500 – up 31.5% over past 12 months – driven by the influx of new arrivals into Melbourne.

And in June, The AFRreported that Chinese developers have taken a “virtual stranglehold” of Melbourne’s land supply pipeline, “acquiring more than two-thirds of all big greenfield land parcels offered for sale in the past 18 months”, thereby driving-up prices.

Now we have a textbook example

The 25 hectare farm is about to be swallowed by Melbourne. Picture: Alex Coppel

of why capital city lot values have become so expensive, with three Victorian brothers to pocket $50 million by selling the family farm to a developer in the Melbourne suburb of Mickleham:

Back in 1935, the Troutbecks forked out 500 pounds for a 25 hectare patch of land in the Melbourne suburb of Mickleham, a 45 minute drive from the CBD…

But now their modest weatherboard home and sprawling dairy farm is up for sale and with a number of developers already eyeing off the property, the Troutbeck brothers are expecting a $50 million payday.

Speaking to 7 News, Keith Troutbeck said his dad knew long ago the property was a good investment.

“Dad said, ‘One day, one day you’ll come into a fortune but don’t sell it before you do,” Keith said. “It’s taken a long time to get there hasn’t it?”…

The three elderly farmers, aged between 70 and 82, have worked on the dairy farm their whole lives but are due to close up shop and become multi-millionaires instead…

The sale, which will close next month, is expected to fetch the brother at least $15 million each, a figure Edward initially thought was a “joke”.

“Forty five years I’ve been playing Tatts Lotto and never hit the jackpot,” he said…

When sold, developers are expected to divide the land up into hundreds of residential plots for first homebuyers.

The only reason why the Troutbeck family’s land is worth so much is because the government has rezoned it residential. Therefore, it makes policy sense for the government (taxpayer) to capture some of this value uplift.

Dr Cameron Murray explains how this could be done in his book, Game of Mates.

Essentially, the government would capture 75% of the value gain, payable upon approval of the development application (i.e. approval is conditional upon payment).

So in this case, if the property was worth, say, $5 million as agriculture and $50 million as a housing estate, to get approval for the housing estate the developer would have to pay 0.75 x ($50m – $5m) = $33.75 million. They would account for this and subtract it from their payment for the site, so in the case the Troutbeck family would only get $50m – $33.75m = $16.25 million – still a handsome payday for effectively doing nothing. However, $33.75 million dollars that is pure windfall would now flow to the public.

As an ancillary reform, Melbourne’s urban growth boundary (UGB) should also be removed. This would raise competition and contestability in the land market, and prevent landholders like the Troutbeck family from charging monopoly-style rents. A developer would be free to obtain a cheaper site further afield (i.e. across the old UGB), thus ensuring cheaper land values (and lower cost fringe homes).

Whatever your perspective, the existing setup is clearly not working effectively, resulting in rapid land cost escalation that is ultimately borne by home buyers and the younger generation, all for the benefit of a few lucky landholders effectively handed monopoly-style rents courtesy of the state government.

unconventionaleconomist@hotmail.com

SOURCE:  https://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2018/09/farmer-land-baron-thanks-planning-racket/

COLONEL PICKERING’s (Ex Ryde LNP Mayor) pre-planned retirement scheme questioned

PLANNING MINISTER Roberts launched the Parramatta office of Bill Pickering’s lobbying firm Hugo Halliday after it vacated its Gazcorp-subsidised Gladesville office. Among “the mates” are the Gazals!

GAZCORP, one of Australia’s major multi-sector real estate investment firms.

View related article on CAAN Website:

MAY 2014: ICAC: Gazals entertained NSW MPs on luxury yacht but deny paying bribes

OBVIOUSLY the “affordable housing” concept is being rorted by developers hungry to squeeze extra Floor to Space Ratio (FSR) … extra developer space … storey upon storey!

 

Anthony Roberts launching the Parramatta office of his mate Bill PIckering’s lobbying firm Hugo Halliday after it vacated its Gazcorp-subsidised Gladesville officeCOLONEL PICKERING’s pre-planned retirement scheme questioned

 

By The Weekly Times Special Team of Investigative Reporters (TWT STIR Team)

The Colonel, retiring, Ryde mayor Bill Pickering has used the Ryde mayoralty and cited a major development deal hidden from public scrutiny to establish and promote a new housing association he’ll lead as “consulting chief executive”.

Pickering resigned from the Liberal Party, along with sidekick, fellow Ryde councillor, Jane Stott, after the pair’s humiliating defeat in a Liberal Party preselection contest.

They spat the dummy and are now contesting this Saturday’s Ryde Council’s election central ward as Independents. The Colonel must have seen the  writing on the wall, establishing the Housing Supply Association as a “not for profit” company along with its website in late June, but claims the start-up industry body “already has government support”.

Pickering’s longtime mate, NSW Planning Minister Anthony Roberts has given the HSA legitimacy, delivering a keynote address at its launch before 400 guests in Doltone House in late July, hinting the HSA’s members would have preferential access and a say in planning policy.

“We now have for the first time ever a purpose-lead organisation representing industry leaders that are working hand in hand with those seeking affordable housing in government to holistically address the issue of housing supply and affordability,” Roberts told guests.

“I look forward to working closely with the HSA and I would say that if you want a good voice, if you really want to participate in the policy make up, the HSA is a great opportunity for you to do that.”

Company and registration records show the new body was only established in late June this year and there is no record of any contact with Roberts about the HSA in quarterly ministerial diary disclosures since he became NSW Planning Minister early this year.

The irony of recent comments announcing new legislation stripping councils of powers to approve developments between $6m and $30m in value, must have been lost on Roberts, who declared an “end the dodgy and dirty backroom deals” in local councils.

“To the lurk merchants and spivs who inhabit the dark corridors of Council Chambers across Sydney, your trade is done,” Roberts said on his Facebook page.

“Get another job. The NSW Government is done with your corrupt and dodgy behaviour.”

But in the case of his mate Pickering, who has voted numerous times as a Ryde Councillor on matters involving undisclosed interests, Roberts has assisted with more than just a job.

Pickering’s lobbying and public relations firm, Hugo Halliday PR & Marketing Pty Ltd, in Parramatta, from where the HSA will be run, will also become its marketing arm and offer its services to members.

Numerous articles on its website touting for developer business, including one headed: “Developer? Need assistance with your DA approval or opposing community groups?” have recently been removed.

Roberts at the Housing Supply Association launch, telling guests the new body would be able to influence decisions and policy

Pickering told launch guests the catalyst for establishing the HSA was a secret voluntary planning agreement (VPA) with developer Holdmark Property Group he claimed provided up to 70 dwellings for key workers.

Also at the HSA launch was MP Greg Pearce, who was in 2013 sacked as Finance Minister in the O’Farrell government over a conflict of interest and Tony Abboud, the Ryde real estate agent at the centre of the Civic Centre redevelopment controversy.

Pickering said the HSA, to be run from the offices of his lobbying firm, Hugo Halliday PR & Marketing Pty Ltd in Parramatta, “has taken this further” and that he “could influence the situation in Ryde but I wanted to go further”.

“What I’ve been able to do with some very like-minded people …. and I thank Holdmark for their participation previously, (is) to extend this noble and proven achievement that we have in Ryde to the state of NSW,” he said.

The VPA with Holdmark supposedly involves $146m worth of developer contributions including “affordable housing” at its site in Talavera Road, Macquarie Park, to build more than 1,300 units in a development of up to 52 storeys.

But details of the VPA, described by one councillor as “undercooked” have not been publicly released and council’s legal advisors have raised red flags over valuations of developer contributions, the absence of binding guarantees and scheduling of public benefit delivery.

“We negotiated an uplift in our floor space ratio which allowed us to build more space to offset the cost of providing the affordable housing,” Gavin Carrier of Holdmark told Seven News Sydney on the day of the launch.

Curiously, the Holdmark name did not appear on Seven’s report, which only showed the name “Gavin Carrier” and the title “Developer”.

Holdmark’s company name was missing in this Seven news report

Perhaps that was to avoid further antagonising suffering residents in overdeveloped Meadowbank, where Holdmark tried to reinvent its 10 storey development to a whopping 24 storeys, only to have it blocked in January by the Planning and Assessment commission.

SOURCE:  https://weeklytimes.com.au/colonel-pickerings-pre-planned-retirement-scheme-questioned/

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PRO DEVELOPER GROUP “HOUSING SUPPLY ASSOCIATION” LAUNCHED BY NSW PLANNING BOSS

The Housing Supply Association (HSA) features developers set to benefit from Priority Precincts … and it would seem the new Medium Density Housing Code … cough … cough

Mr Bayni who was approached to chair the organisation said that it was about ensuring more affordable housing … despite the GSC allocating a mere 5 – 10% for affordable housing on rezoned land.

The HSA has the ability to intervene on supply … is that because “the supply cannot meet the foreign demand” … hm?

The Minister is about ramping up supply .. hence the New Medium Density Housing Code.

View to find out how the lobby cooked up overdevelopment and the affordability crisis for Australian FHBs:

https://theaimn.com/will-foreigners-buy-next-answer-austra…/

 

PRO DEVELOPER GROUP LAUNCHED BY PLANNING BOSS

The Australian  January 17, 2018

ANDREW CLENNELL
NSW Political EditorSydney
@aclennell

At a time when the NSW government is under fire on the issue of “over­development”, NSW Planning Minister Anthony Roberts launched a new pro-developers group headed by his friend and former campaign manager Bill Pickering, featuring developers set to benefit from the government’s new “priority precincts”.

About six months ago, Mr Roberts launched the Housing Supply Association, whose interim chief executive is the head of PR firm Hugo Halliday, Bill Pickering, who was Ryde mayor at the time. Mr Pickering used to employ one of Mr Roberts’s staffers, Nathaniel Smith, son of former attorney-general Greg Smith, at his PR firm.

Also speaking at the launch was Mr Smith’s brother Jerome.

The head of the board of the “not for profit” HSA is Ghassy Bayni, a developer and former nightclub owner.

Mr Bayni was once described by businessman Rodney Adler as his “eyes and ears” until the pair fell out.

Mr Bayni said yesterday he was approached by his lawyers, Madison Marcus — who have two board members on the association — to chair the organisation and that it was about helping ensure there was more affordable housing in developments. He also pointed out that Malcolm Turnbull, in his former life as a merchant banker, could be described as having dealings with Mr Adler.

The vice-chairman of the HSA is Joseph Chiha, the head of Showground Corporation, responsible for a planned development causing controversy with local MPs David Elliott and Ray Williams in northwest Sydney.

Last month, a new plan was ­issued by the planning department for that site.

The creation of the association has raised eyebrows with some of Mr Roberts’s colleagues.

Mr Pickering defended it yesterday as an “altruistic” organisation that would not benefit developers.

He said he was not paid as interim CEO, although his firm received funds for marketing the association. “The problem we have out there is everyone looks at developers and they’re demonised to a certain extent.”

He said the organisation was about making sure there was enough apartments for first-home buyers and essential-­service workers in developments and ensuring government policy settings let that happen.

Mr Bayni later said in a statement: “I got involved as I recognised the difficulties young people and key workers have finding affordable housing. I became aware of the association being established through my lawyers.

“The HSA’s role is to review, assess and put forward policy ­options to government regarding affordable housing. Some comments have been made on government policy initiatives, but we are yet to present a policy paper. HSA does not lobby government on individual developments.”

At the launch of the organisation, Mr Roberts said he wanted to acknowledge “my dear friend Bill Pickering … and I see many, many friendly faces, people I’ve known for many years.”

“I welcome the HSA as a new and important voice at the table for housing affordability,” he said.

“The HSA have ability to have direct intervention on supply ­issues.

“The people in the room here are the ones building homes for families and first-home buyers. This government has a good record on supply and I’m looking to ramp that up.

“As a minister … I’m … committed to removing the red tape to ensure quality buildings get built faster across Sydney and NSW.”

A spokesman for Mr Roberts yesterday denied any conflict over his relationship with Mr Pickering.

“The minister has always been, and continues to be, compliant with his obligations as a minister and member of parliament.”

SOURCE:  https://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/state-politics/nsw-planning-minister-launched-prodeveloper-group-headed-by-his-friend/news-story/d2d11dc86ff7d63d8ef92382562df58f

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FORMER RYDE MAYOR COLONEL PICKERING DIDN’T DISCLOSE HIS LOBBYING ARRANGEMENTS

Pickering anticipating his ousting by the Liberal Party created a new lobbying entity, disguised as an industry body “The Housing Supply Association” was given legitimacy by his long-time buddy, NSW Planning Minister, Anthony Roberts at its launch.

At which Pickering told 400-odd guests:

“What I’ve been able to do with some very like-minded people….. and I thank Holdmark for their participation previously, (is) to extend this noble and proven achievement that we have in Ryde to the state of NSW.

The Housing Supply Association (HSA) features developers set to benefit …

RELATED ARTICLE:  Pro Developer Group “Housing Supply Association” Launched by NSW Planning Boss

 

COLONEL PICKERING DIDN’T DISCLOSE HIS LOBBYING ARRANGEMENTS

TWT STIR TEAM SPECIAL EXCLUSIVE REPORT

By The Weekly Times Special Team of Investigative Reporters (TWT STIR Team)

Companies controlled by two former employees of ex-Ryde mayor Colonel Bill Pickering’s lobbying firm were listed as official lobbyists for Holdmark Property Group, the developer behind two controversial large scale local developments. 

Michael Cooke and Greg Coli, both former lobbyists for Pickering’s Hugo Halliday PR and Marketing Pty Ltd, were listed as lobbyists for Holdmark through their companies while Pickering was still serving as a councillor and mayor at Ryde. 

Cromarty Communications Pty Ltd, Coli Holdings Pty Ltd and Hugo Halliday and their employees were all removed from Commonwealth and state lobbying registers in mid-2014.

Hugo Halliday’s listed lobbyists had included Pickering and Nathaniel Smith, the son of former Attorney General Greg Smith.

Pickering has never disclosed an interest during voting on matters relating to Holdmark and recently used a “mayoral minute” in an attempt to expedite a VPA with the developer.

Pickering, anticipating his ousting by his up-until-recently beloved Liberal Party, created a new arm’s length lobbying entity, disguised as an industry body, The Housing Supply Association, to be run from Hugo Halliday’s office in Parramatta, was given legitimacy by Pickering’s long-time buddy, NSW Planning Minister Anthony Roberts at its launch last month.

Pickering told 400-odd guests at the launch, lured by the offer of a free lunch at Doltone House in Pyrmont, that he “could influence the situation in Ryde but I wanted to go further”.

“What I’ve been able to do with some very like-minded people….. and I thank Holdmark for their participation previously, (is) to extend this noble and proven achievement that we have in Ryde to the state of NSW,” he said.

The VPA with Holdmark supposedly involves $145m worth of developer contributions including “affordable housing” at its site in Talavera Road, Macquarie Park, to build more than 1,400 units in a development of up to 52 storeys.

But details of the VPA, described by one councillor as “undercooked” have not been publicly released and council’s legal advisors have raised red flags over valuations of developer contributions, the absence of binding guarantees and scheduling of public benefit delivery.

“We negotiated an uplift in our floor space ratio which allowed us to build more space to offset the cost of providing the affordable housing,” Gavin Carrier of Holdmark told Seven News Sydney on the day of the launch.

Curiously, the Holdmark name did not appear on Seven’s report, which only showed the name “Gavin Carrier” and the title “Developer”.

Both Pickering and sidekick Jane Stott were dumped by the Liberals in a preselection contest shortly before last weekend’s elections.

Their resignation from the NSW Liberal Party came before its NSW executive could consider a possible ban after it emerged Pickering had accused NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian of fraud at a public rally.

Pickering and Stott contested this month’s council election as part of an unnamed group of four independents in Central Ward, Pickering standing aside for Stott to assume number one spot.

Stott, despite her unpopular group garnering less than 12 per cent of the vote in Central Ward, was amazingly still in the running for a council seat at the time TWT was going to press, thanks to a preference deal with the Christian Democratic Party.

An anomaly in the electoral laws allowed Pickering to tick a box in his candidate application that indicated: “I am not a close associate of a corporation that is a property developer”. Under the relevant legislation, “close associate” refers to having a financial stake in a developer.

SOURCE:  https://weeklytimes.com.au/colonel-pickering-didnt-disclose-his-lobbying-arrangements/

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NSW PLANNING MINISTER appoints New Co-ordinator General to enforce development of the GOSFORD CBD!

At the launch of John Singleton’s Bonython Tower Roberts said he was so committed to overhauling Gosford that “if it means breaking eggs and kicking heads” so be it.  Hence this appointment.

 

Ms Shearer said the ATO and new Finance buildings being built on the former Gosford Public School site were catalyst projects; that the ATO/Finance will bring jobs …  this is despite the ATO having made some 4700 Tax Professionals redundant …

 

New Central Coast Co-ordinator General Lee Shearer. Picture: Mark Scott
New Central Coast Co-ordinator General Lee Shearer. Picture: Mark Scott

New Co-ordinator General calls for action in the CBD

THE latest master and commander at the helm of revitalising Gosford said “this place has not changed much” since she worked the beat as a policewoman 30 years ago.

 

To be fair it is not a stinging indictment of the ailing fortunes of the Central Coast’s much maligned capital.

In fact, it is probably a small compliment given the city centre is arguably worse now than a few decades ago.

Lee Shearer faces a Titanic struggle to rejuvenate Gosford and breathe life into the sails of the Central Coast Regional Plan.

Artist impressions of the proposed Waterside development at Gosford

In her first interview since being appointed to the newly created position of Central Coast Co-ordinator General, Ms Shearer said the time for planning was over.

“There’s a lot of plans done and a lot of plans not implemented,” she said.

“It’s time really to stop the planning and get actions. I have never seen so many plans.”

When newly appointed NSW Planning Minister Anthony Roberts attended the recent launch of John Singleton’s Bonython Tower he said he was so committed to overhauling Gosford that

“if it means breaking eggs and kicking heads” so be it.

Enter Ms Shearer, Mr Robert’s hand-picked enforcer.

The former policewoman rose to the rank of Northern Region Assistant Commissioner, overseeing an area from north of the Hawksbury River all the way to the Queensland border.

Ms Shearer when she was NSW Police Assistant Commissioner and Northern Region Commander with former Brisbane Water Commander Geoff McKechnie.

In the super-politicised upper echelons of the NSW Police Force’s top brass it is not a position attained without a certain aptitude — and she was a woman.

After policing Ms Shearer joined NSW Planning as a regulator for the mining and extractive industries — essentially a government watchdog holding mining companies to account.

“I see one of the key roles is cracking through some of the barriers,” Ms Shearer said of her new role.

“It’s clear that something different needs to happen.”

Asked what key transferable skills she brings and the answer is as immediate as it is direct: “reform”.

“It’s the key skill set that I’ve taken across,” she said.

“Looking for better ways for government to do business.”

Other words to follow include “transparency”, “accountability” and “proportionate”.

Plans to redevelop Gosford waterfront and turn it into a marina have been on the drawing board since this artist impression from 1988.

Her first goal is to “get everyone around the table and holding people to account.

“There’s too many swords at 50 paces and I’m satisfied we’ve got the right people,” she said.

“It’s about accountability.”

Ms Shearer has already ticked her first box with a meeting on Tuesday with senior bureaucrats from Central Coast Council, Planning, Transport for NSW and other government agencies.

Another is planned in two weeks and following that monthly.

A 2002 artist’s impression of a proposed 22-storey Spurbest development, which was scuppered.

Ms Shearer admits the government has “no capacity, no legal capacity to get (developers) to start building” but it could secure the infrastructure and provide the incentive.

Like them or loathe them, Ms Shearer said the ATO and new Finance buildings being built on the former Gosford Public School site were catalyst projects.

“The ATO/Finance will bring jobs, these buildings are important in building confidence,” she said.

“They’re part of a piece of land that’s clearly key to the way forward to the waterfront development.”

Ms Shearer said their controversial location “doesn’t prevent” the waterfront from reaching its full potential.

“There’s a lot of DAs that will be developed when whoever owns them sees the economic benefit,” she said.

An artists impression of the ATO building for the old Gosford school site.

Ms Shearer points to the cranes over Gosford Hospital and its $348 million upgrade as symbolising the CBD was becoming a place were people could come for jobs and businesses could invest.

“I think we’re really now on the cusp, there has been a lot of talk, people want to see something happening,” she said.

“The whole waterfront needs to be put on the front page.”

An artist’s impression of the The Broadwater beneath Brian McGowan Bridge, which never really got past these drawings.

Gosford’s revitalisation has long been a sinking ship for consecutive state governments but the Central Coast’s latest master and commander said she was determined to see a way through.

“The plan is there, it’s been committed to and that’s what we’re doing,” she said.

“I’ve heard about the anti-development (lobby) and the pro-development (lobby). That’s the reality. And I know people are going to come out of the woodwork. Let’s have that fight.”

APPOINTMENT JOINS A LIST OF PEOPLE WHO HAVE COME BEFORE

LEE Shearer joins a number of past captains of industry tasked with revitalising Gosford.

Previous attempts, however well intentioned or impressive, have resulted in little with the CBD and waterfront inevitably becoming the rock on which their ships have sunk.

 

In 2003 the State Government paid town planner John McInerney $400,000 to oversee the CBD redevelopment and come up with a masterplan for the precinct.

He did just that and yet nothing transpired.

John McInerney, who was appointed by the State Government to oversee future development in Gosford. Picture: Gary Graham.

In 2008 Gosford Council hired consultant Bill Kerr to rejuvenate the CBD.

He was dubbed “Billion-dollar Bill” for his successful revamps of city centres at Coburg and Greensborough in Victoria, projects worth more than $1 billion.

Gosford Challenge lead consultant to Gosford Council, Bill Kerr.

Council transferred its environment and planning director Colleen Worthy-Jennings into a newly created role of “city centre development director” to oversee the project then called the “Gosford Challenge”.

Again it all proved too challenging and besides yet another makeover of Kibble Park and the acquisition of Gosford Marketplace the fruits of their efforts came to squat.

City Centre Renewal Director Colleen Worthy-Jennings at Gosford City Council.

In 2010 the State Government rebadged the Festival Development Corporation as the Central Coast Regional Development Corporation and tasked it with redeveloping Gosford under the Our City, Our Destiny Masterplan.

2GB’s radio stars Alan Jones and Ray Hadley broadcast live from Iguanas to highlight the Lend Lease involvement in the much touted Gosford Landing project.

The project crash landed less than two years later.

SOURCE:  https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/newslocal/central-coast/new-coordinator-general-calls-for-action-in-the-cbd/news-story/55fd57bb6a12490d64db15dc272cc1dc?nk=5de3ed54bc09d6b746f638ca953ffd7f-1535893010

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