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Lismore News

Lismore Community Tackles Housing Crisis in First-Ever People’s Assembly

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Lismore People’s Assembly
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Lismore Community Tackles Housing Crisis in First-Ever People’s Assembly

 

On Saturday, 10 August, approximately fifty Lismore residents gathered at the Red Dove Cafe for the inaugural Lismore People’s Assembly, a participatory event designed to address the pressing housing crisis in the region. The diverse group, spanning ages from their twenties to seventies, came together to answer the question: “What can this community do to get everyone a home?” Despite the range of backgrounds, attendees shared a common willingness to listen, engage, and explore solutions collaboratively. Participants left with a stronger sense of community and a clear understanding of the actionable solutions within their reach.

Participatory Democracy in Action

The assembly embraced a deliberative democracy process, where participants actively listened, built upon each other’s ideas, and engaged creatively to generate solutions. The event’s legitimacy was rooted in its transparency and accessibility, welcoming everyone to participate.

After initial welcoming activities, the assembly heard from two speakers. Rose Walker from Goonellabah shared the struggles her community faces in managing housing through Many Rivers Aboriginal Regional Housing Management Service. Chels Hood Withey, founder of the Northern Rivers housing campaign House You, presented statistics on the housing crisis and shared solutions being implemented in neighbouring Byron Shire.

The heart of the assembly was the ‘break-out’ sessions, where smaller groups of around eight people discussed and deliberated for 45 minutes. A notetaker in each group captured the most popular ideas, which were then shared with the full assembly. The group voted on the top ideas, which were organised into three main areas of concern and possible solutions: the use of empty buyback houses for housing, regulatory solutions, and community-based cooperative models. Suggestions were categorised into short-term and long-term actions.

Outcomes

The assembly identified three key areas for action:

  1. Use of Empty Buyback Houses: Proposals for repurposing empty homes to address housing shortages.
  2. Regulatory Solutions: Ideas for policy changes to support affordable housing and prevent homelessness.
  3. Community-Based Cooperative Models: Initiatives to establish cooperative housing solutions that empower residents and ensure long-term housing security.

Quotes from the Event

  • Andrew George, Assembly Founding Member: “This assembly, although brief, demonstrated a joyous and community-building democracy process that bypasses vested interests and lobbyists and empowers us to come up with ideas together. Whoever is re-elected, we will keep bringing the community together in assemblies because our society faces too many challenges to expect the existing institutions to solve them. It’s up to us.”
  • Leboya, International Student at SCU: “Honestly, it started well and finished amazingly. I don’t know what more I could add except a helping hand if you ever need. Thank you, Lismore People’s Assembly.”
  • Rose Walker, Local Bundjalung Resident: “I found the assembly today absolutely wonderful. We need to fight for homes for each and every one of us. I feel joy, part of a family here today. Which is gonna give me strength to keep going and fighting the fight.”
  • Chels Hood Withey, House You: “Empty homes should be lived in. Housing should be a human right. It was really awesome to see everyone working together to collaborate on the solutions. I’m feeling good!”

What’s Next

The Lismore People’s Assembly plans to hold its next assembly in approximately six weeks, continuing to bring the community together to share, participate, and deliberate on pressing issues. The topic for the next assembly will be determined by ongoing outreach efforts. The organising group meets weekly on Thursdays at 2 PM and is actively seeking new members to join. Those interested can contact reclaimourrecovery@protonmail.com to get involved.

Background

Reclaim our Recovery (ROR) has been advocating for democratic community involvement in flood recovery since early 2022. The Lismore People’s Assembly represents a new chapter in their grassroots efforts, aiming to bring transparency and inclusivity to the forefront of local decision-making. Recent outreach has revealed widespread dissatisfaction with traditional political institutions, prompting ROR to champion a reinvention of democracy that starts from the ground up, right in Lismore.

 

For more local Lismore news, click here.

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Lismore Young women and Teen Showgirls announced

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Lismore Young women and Teen Showgirls announced

 

By Samantha Elley

For the first time since the 2022 floods the North Coast National Young Woman and Teen Showgirl titles were able to be held at home at Norma’s Kitchen in the Lismore Showgrounds.

And what an event it was, with seven young women vying for the two titles.

Maddy Dillon and Rose Mills both walked away with the title of Young Woman and Teen Showgirl respectively.

North Coast National President John Gibson said it was great to be home.

“It gives us a lot of confidence to promote our show,” he said.

“And we’ve had an increase in sponsors.”

Winners and runners up of the Young Women and Teen Showgirl competitions

Young Woman

For the Young Woman title, there were four ladies, from office worker, to disability support worker, to farmers, who shared their dreams and hopes for their community and the reasons why they entered the competition.

The girls were Charlie Murray, Lucinda Downs, Maddy Dillon and Eliza O’Toole.

“I had always seen the competition and wanted to give it a crack,” said Young Woman winner, Maddy Dillon.

As a young dairy farmer from Coraki she is up at 4am to milk and talk to the cows.

“In five years time I would like to have an investment property and a couple of kids,” she said.

She received $1,000 from the Far North Coast Law Society, a prize from the Jewellery Design Centre and a Mortgage Choice sponsored deportment course.

Runner up was Charlie Murray who works at the Casino Food Co-op and is very involved being with cattle.

“My dream is to go to Canada to see how beef is done there,” she said.

“I’d also like to go to the Calgary Stampede.”

Young Women winners

Teen Showgirl

The three competitors for the Teen Showgirl were Isabella Johnson, Shenae Flanagan and Rose Mills.

Winner, Rose Mills said she wants to study human rights law.

“I really like the concept that everybody is equal and we are all God’s creation,” she said.

When asked what change she would like to see, Rose wanted more opportunities for the younger generation.

“We are going to be the future,” she said.

“We need more jobs, places to go and things to do.”

She won $250 from Warren Innes Contracting.

Runner up Teen Showgirl was Shenae Flanagan who is studying beauty therapy and has a dream to work in the movies as a make-up artist.

The change she would like to see is less empty houses in the area and less homelessness.

“You can see many of our houses are empty and people living in caravans and pods,” she said.

“I would love to have the government get them back in their homes.”

Teen Showgirl winners

The judges Jeri Hall, Lyndall Gordon and Joe Martin.

Both Maddy and Rose will now go on to the zone level of the showgirl competition.

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Dwelling Entitlement Exemption: Facilitating House Relocations in Lismore

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Dwelling Entitlement Exemption: Facilitating House Relocations in Lismore
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Dwelling Entitlement Exemption: Facilitating House Relocations in Lismore

Lismore City Council has received an exemption from the Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure (DPHI) to assist with the relocation of homes purchased through the NSW Reconstruction Authority’s Resilient Homes program. This exemption allows the Council to consider relocating dwellings to rural allotments where no current dwelling entitlement exists, potentially opening up more sites for housing in the region.

Under the Lismore Local Environmental Plan (LEP), rural allotments typically need to meet a minimum lot size (40 hectares or 20 hectares in some areas) for a dwelling entitlement. While many smaller rural lots still have entitlements based on historical planning controls, others do not, often because they were once part of larger land holdings. A dwelling entitlement does not guarantee that a dwelling can be built or relocated but permits the Council to assess a Development Application (DA) to determine if the site is suitable.

Lismore City Council Mayor Steve Krieg emphasized the community’s interest in repurposing structurally sound homes from the buy-back program to provide housing for local families.
“Our community wants to use these abandoned but structurally sound homes across the Northern Rivers to house local families,” Mayor Krieg said. “We worked with the NSW Government to find a solution where more historic homes could be saved and relocated outside the flood plain.”

Graham Snow, Council’s Head of Planning and Environment, added,
“It doesn’t make sense to abandon homes that could be used to house people. This exemption offers a chance to relocate these houses to suitable rural sites, though finding the right locations remains a challenge.”

Key Points of the Exemption:

  • The exemption allows Lismore Council to consider rural sites without existing dwelling entitlements for potential house relocations.
  • Sites must meet certain criteria, such as considering buffers to agriculture, watercourses, vehicle access, biodiversity, and risks from bushfire and flooding. Sites within the flood planning area are not suitable.
  • The exemption applies for two years, until September 30, 2026.
  • No additional rural subdivisions below minimum lot sizes are allowed—the exemption only applies to existing lots.

The exemption is expected to benefit recipients of the buy-back program and increase opportunities to relocate historic timber homes, as development on some designated Resilient Lands sites may take years to complete.

More details and the full Fact Sheet about the exemption and re-siting dwellings are available on the Council’s Future Housing page under the Relocating Dwellings tab at www.lismore.nsw.gov.au.

 

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New Trial for Safe Disposal of Embedded Batteries, Including Vapes, Launches in Lismore

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The Lismore Community Recycling Centre is participating in a new NSW Government trial designed to help households safely dispose of embedded batteries
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New Trial for Safe Disposal of Embedded Batteries, Including Vapes, Launches in Lismore

The Lismore Community Recycling Centre is participating in a new NSW Government trial designed to help households safely dispose of embedded batteries commonly found in wireless products such as light-up toys, single-use vapes, and other electronics. The initiative, led by the NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) in collaboration with Lismore City Council, aims to reduce the number of these problematic products ending up in landfills and mitigate fire hazards caused by battery disposal in household bins.

As part of the trial, the Lismore Community Recycling Centre on Wyrallah Road is now accepting embedded battery products from households and small businesses free of charge. This new service will help the community safely dispose of products with built-in batteries that cannot be easily removed, such as:

  • Single-use vapes
  • Electric toothbrushes
  • E-bikes
  • Smart watches
  • Portable speakers
  • Vacuums

Embedded batteries, often made of lithium-ion, pose unique challenges for waste management due to their difficulty to recycle and their potential to cause fires. In 2023, the number of lithium-ion battery-related fires in NSW surged to 285, more than double the previous year.

Dedicated Bins Now Available

Lismore is one of 21 community recycling centres across NSW taking part in this EPA-led trial, which includes dedicated bins specifically for embedded battery products. E-waste items such as laptops, gaming controllers, and tablets should still be directed to Lismore Council’s e-waste collection service.

The trial is active and will run until September 2026. More information can be found on the NSW EPA website at: NSW EPA Embedded Batteries.

Community and Environmental Benefits

Janelle Saffin MP, Member for Lismore, praised the initiative, saying: “This trial is a much-needed initiative that will help protect our local community and environment by reducing the number of embedded-battery products that are mistakenly disposed of in yellow and red kerbside bins. We hope Lismore residents will learn more about these products, the risks they pose, and the importance of correct disposal.”

Penny Sharpe, Minister for the Environment, also highlighted the importance of the trial: “We want to make it easier for people to do the right thing with embedded batteries, to help prevent fires in bins, rubbish trucks, and waste facilities, while reducing what goes to landfill. The majority of embedded battery products, including disposable vapes, end up in rubbish bins where they pose significant risks. This trial will help mitigate those hazards and increase recycling efforts.”

The trial represents a significant step towards a safer and more sustainable approach to managing hazardous materials in NSW.

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