Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Ministers invited to assess habitat destruction alongside Bass River

 

We have invited two Victorian Government Ministers to inspect the damage allowed by Bass Coast Shire on a block of land adjoining our farm, owned by Barro Group prior to the start of sand extraction.Planning Minister Sonya Killkenny and Environment Minister Ingrid Stitt have been invited after Bass Coast Shire President, Michael Whelan and his deputy, Rochelle Halstead, failed to keep appointments.We asked them to take whatever action they can to uphold the integrity of the planning permit process. Bass Coast Shire claims it has no power to enforce conditions on permit 92-28 issued to Barro Group on the land as the application for sand extraction was approved by VCAT. The Shire has further obfuscated the issue by claiming that vegetation removal on the property was for ‘fire control’ and was therefore exempt from permit restrictions. Extensive research in the region, including the Shapiro report on Westernport in the 1970’s, the Regional Sand Extraction Strategy Lang Lang to Grantville and Baseline Studies of Bass River for the Natural Heritage Trust in the 1990’s, demonstrates the natural values here. Bass Coast Shire supports the clearing and subsequent contamination of the Bass River and adjoining land. Its Planning Department claims “The Native vegetation removal by Barro Group was exempt from the need of a planning permit. It was undertaken for fire prevention purposes and an exemption under the Planning Scheme is afforded to them to have undertaken these works.” However, the Shire has failed to specify what the fire control measures were supposed to protect and why clearing on the river was not referred to Melbourne Water as required by legislation.The clearing contravened a specific permit condition that works must not affect the quality or quantity of water in a drainage line on the property which flowed through our adjoining land and on to the Bass River. The importance of the vegetation as a wildlife corridor was identified in the Regional Sand Extraction Strategy, Lang Lang to Grantille. This defined a clear biolink – all the Shire needed to do was implement (and enforce)the Sand Extraction Strategy from 1995.The work to identify the the vegetation and wildlife corridor was Led by consultants AGC Woodward Clyde and included Biosis Research, Andrew Paget of Ausbotany Marcus Marsden and Nicolas Day as well as countless hours put in by members of Friends of Bass Valley Bush Landcare Group. During the visit we may see displaced koalas and wombats as well as some of the bird species which call the bushland home.


3 comments:

Anonymous said...

They won’t turn up because they are taking bribes from barro group only care about money and not the wildlife home been destroyed by greedy selfish people .there homes should be knocked down and see how they feel

freeranger said...

You may be right, but we need to try to get them here. If they see for themselves, there's a chance they may do the right thing!

freeranger said...

There is now a planning panel reviewing landscape values in the Bass Coast Planning Scheme. That may help but closed minds will probably prevail.