Fears of Grafton airport snub for $6m centre
By Tim Howard
Fears the NSW Government could snub Grafton Regional Airport for a $6 million emergency services co-ordination centre for the Northern Rivers has stung the Mayor into last-minute action.
At the final council meeting ahead of the September 14 Local Government election, Clarence Mayor Peter Johnstone rushed in a mayoral minute to lobby Emergency Services Minister Jihad Dib to “strongly consider” Grafton as the preferred site for the centre.
Cr Johnstone said in early 2023 the government announced an $8.5 million investment in the new Fire Control Centre and Emergency Operations Centre at the airport.
It would include a facility for co-location of emergency personnel from the RFS, SES Fire and Rescue at NSW and police to be able to respond to fires, floods, storms and a range of other emergencies, and was to include an operations and logistics centre, administration offices, training rooms, storage base and vehicle base.
He said the Reconstruction Authority has confirmed funds of $6 million have been secured to construct an Emergency Services Coordination Centre to service the Northern Rivers, and that a consultant would soon be engaged to undertake a site feasibility study.
Cr Johnson said discussions so far have favoured Lismore as the site for the proposed centre.
He said the evidence would suggest Grafton Regional Airport was an ideal site for the proposed centre.
“We are considered one of the very worst places, if not the worst place, for potential floods in the future,” he said.
But Grafton Regional Airport is a dry airport. We are on the main highway, Pacific Highway.
We have transport links in terms of railway.”
Cr Johnstone said that while the Clarence was at the top of flood risk areas in the State Disaster Mitigation Plan, its bushfire risk had been downplayed.
“I look at that chart and we’re right down there in terms of bushfire, and that, to me, makes no sense at all, when 60% of our local government area was burnt in the last in the last fires,” he said.
“And I consider that when they put us right down there in terms of the average annual loss, they put us down as having an average annual loss of $3 million It’s ignoring several bits that they should be considered.”
The mayor said the region had suffered heavily in the 2019-20 fires and was at risk from future fire.
“Farms and industries in areas are affected by bushfires will not only potentially lose infrastructure, which is all its report is considering, but also affect production for several years, I’m not convinced that that’s been put into these figures,” he said.
“And finally, habitat and species loss. The wilderness areas of the Clarence contain rare and uncommon habitats that date back to different climatic conditions in the Australian subcontinent, plants and wildlife that are rare and endangered, some may not even be known to science.”
Cr Debrah Novak backed the Mayor, pointing out that the proposed site for the centre in Lismore was at risk in emergencies.
“The Grafton Regional Airport is the no brainer for the Northern Rivers, simply because it was the only airport that didn’t go under,” she said.
“It’s a project that is ready to go, it doesn’t need a whole lot of funding to get it ready to be the Northern Rivers Emergency Management Centre, whereas, if Lismore is the airport chosen to be the central point for emergency management, there’s a lot of work that needs to be done there.
“There’s still planes sitting in their paddock up there that were destroyed on the back of the 2022 floods.”
There was unanimous support from councillors.
Cr Steve Pickering said the centre would be a boost for the area, providing jobs and infrastructure
The council could also use the presence of the centre to lobby the government to take control of the site and take the expense of running the airport away from the council, said Cr Greg Clancy.
Cr Karen Toms said it was crazy the government was thinking of replicating what was happening in Grafton in Lismore.
“It’s a huge efficiency savings and it just makes sense, so let’s hope we can get them to change their mind,” she said.
Councillors voted unanimously to support the mayor’s minute.
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