Amanda Brien – Clarence Valley meet your candidates
By Tim Howard
The Clarence Valley Council has gone into caretaker mode ahead of the September 14 election.
It’s given 17 community members, including six current councillors to stand for election.
The Northern Rivers Times has given all 17 a chance to introduce themselves to the electorate.
Sixteen of them have grabbed the opportunity. Phillip Provest did not reply to the invitation.
Amanda Brien
Amanda Brien has returned to the Clarence Valley and is looking to join Clarence Valley Council to improve the region.
I am standing for election to Clarence Valley Council for a connected and supported community, a strong local economy, and a focus on mitigating natural disasters.
My values? Connect. Support. Protect.
Last year, my husband Andrew and I returned home to the Clarence Valley to reconnect our six children, grandchildren and extended family.
It has been a warming experience to re-establish friendships made through Roches Family Hotel, see the students I taught at McAuley with families of their own, see Andrew’s passion reignite in local business, meet new people, and be welcomed as the newest member of Grafton Midday Rotary.
Our experience being disconnected from community and services during Covid has given me a new appreciation of the impact local government has on people’s everyday lives.
The decisions council makes, change our community and the place we live.
I believe in decisions that support stronger partnerships between us, council, community groups and state government: a focus on reducing social isolation to support a safe, well and healthy community and housing that meets community needs.
Our community needs leadership that considers the long-term costs of its decisions. Leadership with a strategic mindset: I can provide this for us.
I bring experience working in state government. I have coordinated committees and working groups, developed and simplified government policies, and influenced government executives and ministers to make decisions in the public interest.
I understand how government works and can reflect on whether our local needs and interests are being met.
I have post-graduate degrees in educational leadership and law and a degree in natural resource management.
I have committed my life to the service of youth and families through education.
I will use my experience to make balanced decisions that guide council on how our local services are provided, funded and prioritised.
A vote for me is a vote for decisions that benefit the future of the Clarence Valley.
Say hello when you see me out and about in the Valley. I’d love to hear your story and your needs.
Watch my video on Facebook or connect on Instagram at Amanda Brien Clarence Valley.
Questions
Ahead of the September 14 local government election we have asked all 17 candidates a series of questions testing their response to some of the major concerns of the community. Rates and what the council does with the money is a perennial issue.
Rates
- Can you guarantee voters that you will not support a special rate variation (SRV) above the annual rate pegging limit in the next term of council?
- If council can’t increase income via a rate rise, what can it do to balance its books?
- How can councils help ratepayers with the cost of living issues facing communities?
Answer 1 and 2: I understand that special rate variations are about funding our future community needs.
I would first ask our community what their future needs are, look at how this is reflected in council’s long-term financial plan, and look at what this would mean for council’s ability to fund our needs.
If it was identified that future needs couldn’t be funded within current means, I would look at all other possible alternatives to an additional cost to rate payers.
I would ask council to look at opportunities for managing expenses differently:
- Where could council’s service delivery models be made more efficient without losing jobs?
- What improvements could be made to waste management services to reduce this cost charged to rate payers?
- What other new and developing materials and techniques for providing infrastructure and services exist, that are sustainable and less costly to maintain long-term? What would it look like to have a strategy for replacing old infrastructure with new sustainable materials/methods?
- What have other council’s done to address similar challenges?
- Is there an opportunity to share resources/run initiatives in partnership with neighbouring councils?
- Where would future housing development (which would spread the total costs between more people) be most appropriate to make efficient use of existing infrastructure?
- What government grants exist?
If there was no other option to an additional cost, I would present all the information to our community, provide the alternative cost options including temporary time-limited options, and ask our community to advise me on the option they choose.
Answer 3:
Council could explore lots of ways to help our community with costs of living, including:
- working with community groups and businesses to provide and support low-cost or free events
- considering additional and alternative community uses for appropriate council owned buildings/spaces that have been vacant long-term or have had limited public use – to maximise opportunities for people to participate without extra cost
- encouraging people to use existing infrastructure in free open spaces in different ways
- promoting tourism and sequencing the timing of events to bring money into our community and spread revenue across the valley
- looking at the potential to enhance current rebate/incentive structures
- looking at development/infrastructure that supports employment options for our community.
I would like to see council prioritise community wellbeing by encouraging support for ongoing community-led initiatives for mental health and wellbeing, approaching planning decisions to facilitate access to services, and advocating to government for support for services we are lacking.
I would like to work with our community to come up with creative solutions together.
Read about all the councillors in this weeks edition of The Northern Rivers Times. For more 2024 Local Elections News, click here.