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Collapse Issue 535:<br />10 Jan 2022<br />_____________Issue 535:
10 Jan 2022
_____________
Collapse  COVID COVID
Case numbers grow by almost 1000 in a week
'Stay calm' despite rising cases, says Crouch
Hospital offers new patients rapid antigen tests
Staff member tests positive at aged care home
Several aged care staff test positive
Aged care home creates email address for families
Positive test at Ettalong school
Festival postponed at last minute due to Omicron cases
Surf club postpones five events due to Covid uncertainty
Cycling group issues guidelines with high case numbers
Collapse  NEWS NEWS
Resident recognised as 'legendary community volunteer'
Umina CWA Christmas activities
Online guide to wildflowers upgraded for holidays
Tree lovers respond to tree rescue call
Woy Woy Bay wharf celebration
Produce swap
Toastmasters return to face-to-face
'Look around Pearl Beach' - GUST urges
Two wet months bring year's total close to average
Collapse  PLANNING PLANNING
No mention of Woy Woy in fast rail announcement
Two-storey dual occupancy proposed for Murray St
Pearl Beach talk about regenerative design
Raft of council plans on show ahead of rate rise move
Collapse  FORUM FORUM
Book brings to life disadvantage of Stolen Generations
Peninsula needs its own planning framework
Respect the real Australia
Farnell Rd lights will not help traffic flow
Government and council roadside advertising a waste
Collapse  HEALTH HEALTH
New chief executive at aged care home
Collapse  ARTS ARTS
The Bays Art Show to go ahead
Collapse  EDUCATION EDUCATION
Parents urged to buy stationery at January sales
Woy Woy uniform orders taken from January 19
Year 7 uniforms available from next Monday
Collapse  SPORT SPORT
Jaylen's achievement in Bradman Cup carnival
Large bridge field for New Year's Cup
Ride to Gosford and back
Interest sought in operating canteen
Southern Spirit to hold annual eight-a-side day
Southern and Ettalong seeks a gear manager
First interclub bridge competition in two years
Senior cricket resumes
Minor singles played at Umina
Triples final at Umina bowling club
Soccer club seeks authors of clubhouse graffiti
Athletes wanted for regional championships
Pre-season soccer training starts

Peninsula needs its own planning framework

There is, of course, no harm in having a planning workshop on the Peninsula ("Workshop likely on peninsula planning", PN 534), following on the similar workshop in West Gosford last month.

However, it would be naive to imagine that any ideas put forward at such a workshop would have any impact on the provisions of the 2041 Regional Plan which will be altered little, if at all, by any discussions now taking place.

At the moment, the references to the Peninsula in the draft plan are so vague as to be essentially meaningless, being largely repetitions of previous statements that have been obviously ineffective in the past, giving us no reason to suppose that the situation will be any different in the future.

What can any one make of a statement that "increased housing choices will be focused close to public transport and need to consider traffic impacts": perhaps, amongst the grammatical confusion, there is actually an idea buried in the verbiage, but I'm sure nobody could explain what it is.

It is obvious from the comments of Mr Farmer that his idea of consultations is not for Council to ascertain the wishes of the community but for the community to be persuaded of the superiority of the Council's ideas that have already been decided on and only require the changing of public attitude to be carried forward.

I do not discount the possibility that the Council's ideas are the best (although it isn't hard to understand widespread scepticism on this point, given the abysmal level of performance to date), but the persuasion will need to be far more convincing than the platitudinous blather we have heard so far.

Truly, if I read "lifestyle and vibrancy" one more time, I doubt I shall be able to prevent myself from throwing up.

It is, also, easy to say that the 2036 Plan didn't contribute to one positive result on the Peninsula and didn't ameliorate one negative result amongst all that we have suffered, so why should we bother with this process, and it would be hard to argue with the position. However, allowing the 2041 Plan to pass unchecked is only to invite more draconian intrusions in the 2046 Plan.

Futile as the effort might seem, the writers of these plans (assuming they aren't just churned out by random word generators) have to be challenged to justify their proposals, to produce evidence to substantiate their conclusions and to demonstrate that the implementation methods put forward have some slight chance of working.

There is no convincing support in the Plan for any of these conditions, so these are the grounds on which the Plan can be opposed.

However, it would be fatal to fall into the all-too-easy course of just piling up vague or picayune objections that can be dismissed as merely narrow-visioned parochialism, so any review of a plan for the Peninsula needs a logical framework of its own.

I hope that somebody will put together such a framework, before any February workshop: otherwise, the whole exercise will be a waste of time.





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