Movement at last on Brooms Head plan
By Tim Howard
The vexed question of what to do with the Brooms Head reserve might have an answer following the latest Clarence Valley Council meeting.
Exasperated at the lack of action in coming up with a plan to manage the site to the satisfaction residents and stake holders of the park, Cr Peter Johnstone brought a question with notice to the meeting seeking to get things moving.
His questions were: Following the recent Councillor facility tour to Brooms Head Holiday Park, the questions were: 1. What progress has been made since the April 2024 resolution of Council regarding the Brooms Head Plan of Management?
And, 2. What options are available to council in the preparation of an updated Plan of Management?
In response to the questions, council staff prepared a report with four options for councillors.
Cr Johnstone dismissed options 1, 3 and 4 but decided to move a variation of Option 2 as the best solution to the issue.
He moved that:
1. Council endorse the Draft Brooms Head Reserve Plan of Management for Crown reserve R65975, to be referred to the Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure, Crown Lands and Public Spaces, to seek approval to publicly exhibit the Plan of Management.
2. To prepare a detailed site plan for the Brooms Head Reserve, while the Plan of Management is being reviewed by the Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure, Crown Lands and Public Spaces.
3. invite the Yaegl Traditional Owners Aboriginal Corporation to provide advice to council for inclusion of the site plan and or plan of management on the components, details and other matters that are important to the corporation.
4. Present the response to the Draft Program of Management to the Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure, Crown Lands and Public Spaces once received the advice and the Yaegl traditional owners, the public to a council workshop that will review the site plan and draft program of management.
5. Once approval has been obtained from the Department of Housing planning, housing infrastructure, crown lands and public spaces, exhibit the draft Brooms Head Reserve Plan of Management, Site Plan concurrently for 42 days over which time council will accept public submissions.
6. Report any submissions received in the draft Brooms Head, Plan of Management Site Plan back to council after submission period disclosed consideration of its adoption or re exhibition, as per the requirement of Section 40 of the Local Government Act 1993.
Cr Alison Whaites seconded the motion.
Speaking to his motion, Cr Johnstone said that for two long inaction had characterised council’s
Handling of the Brooms Head issue.
“At the start of the last term of council in 2022 were briefed about the caravan site and challenges getting consensus from the five-plus distinct groups of opinions to how the site should be managed,” he said. “Now here, 13 months later, we are no further forward.”
Cr Peter Johnstone could have taken a decisive first step to getting some action on development of plan of management for the Brooms Head reserve.
Cr Johnstone said the council had found seeking a consensus from the five competing groups impossible.
“To be fair, the last council did make an effort,” Cr Johnstone said.
“A consultant was engaged to prepare a new plan of management, we listened to the views of many people at a well attended meeting in Brooms Head last January.
However, that brought into sharp focus the differing views of the five main groups I can identify.”
He characterised the groups as the caravaners, the day users such as surfers and fishers, the long term residents of the park, those who live in Brooms Head as neighbours of the park and the Yaegl traditional owners.
“Each of those groups have strongly held beliefs and understandable desires for the future of Brooms Head Reserve,” he said.
“Some of those groups agree on some aspects while strongly disagree on others.
“A failure to compromise has resulted in deadlock and a failure of consensus on the direction to move forward.”
He noted the inaction was not limited to recent times, pointing out the last PoM had been agreed on nearly 30 years ago.
Not all councillors agreed.
Cr Debrah Novak foreshadowed Option 1 as her preferred option, pointing out it had the support of the Yaegl traditional owners.
Cr Greg Clancy was another to back Option 1, pointing out that many of the arguments for option 2 also worked for option 1.
Cr Karen Toms spoke at length in support of Cr Johnstone’s motion, arguing the community should not be spooked by the proposal.
“This is not going to turn it into a Big 4, with water slides, etc, but it is something we need to move forward on and stop kidding ourselves that we’re going to get consensus,” she said.
“Sometimes you just have to make the tough decision.”
In his right of reply Cr Johnstone said at the council needed to stop wasting time trying to get a consensus from groups who would never agree.
“The problem we have, though, is if we do what one of those five groups, does this group, that group, the other group, will say, we haven’t listened to them,” Cr Johnstone said.
“If we do what this group says, then this group, this group and this group will say, we haven’t listened to what they said.
“There’s a difference between listening and agreeing.”
But he said this was just the beginning.
“To quote Lao Tzu, a journey of 1000 miles begins with the a single step,” he said.
“Sending this first draft to Crown Lands is just that first step, a little step with many more steps to come, I ask councillors that you help start that journey.
“I need just four more of you to be able to step out.
“It would be much nicer if all nine councillors, start that journey together.”
Cr Johnstone did not achieve unanimity, but enough councillors were prepared to set out with him.
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