5 Acres Now!
5 Acres Now!

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Council takes action against this website

In the interests of informing the public and our members, this website previously provided links to the council's website, and to copies of documents necessary to fully understand the issues.

However in July 2004, several members of our group received a letter from solicitors acting on behalf of the council, demanding that council documents and links to the council's website be removed from this website.

Lacking the financial resources to defend any action brought by the council, 5 Acres Now had no choice but to comply.

This is an extraordinary misuse of both ratepayers' funds and copyright law, in a misguided attempt to stifle free and open discussion about an important issue.

Landowners left out of the loop

Secret Draft Rural Plan

A recent council report revealed that the council has already decided on the future of our area, but is keeping the details under wraps. The report, tabled at the council meeting of 24 July 2008, relates to the 2010 LEP, and includes the following statement:

“To date, draft zoning, minimum lot size, height of buildings, floor space ratio and heritage maps have been prepared for the rural areas.”

No further details are offered, and requests have been met with silence; however prior reports, such as the draft Local Strategy (see Newsletter 13 for more details) suggest that the plan makes no provision for incorporating the wishes of those affected for a reduction in the minimum lot size.

We call upon the council to put the details of this plan on the table now, so it can be openly debated, and amended to incorporate the wishes of affected landowners. Otherwise, there remains the risk that details will leak, perhaps benefiting some, while the most important “stakeholders”—current landowners—are once again excluded from the process.

 

Study seeks to stop growth

Councillors reject Rural Resource Lands Study

At their meeting of 16 May 2006, Baulkham Hills Council debated a motion regarding a new government-funded study titled “Rural Resources Lands Study”. The key strategy recommended in the study was to “Protect rural resource lands from urban development, subdivision, land speculation and other incompatible land uses”.

Thankfully, when it came to the vote, councillors firmly rejected the Study, recommending that it should not be considered by the Department of Planning when they develop policy for the rural lands. more>>
 

Draft plan shelved

State Government rejects Draft LEP & DCP

Sometime during December 2005 the State Government returned the draft Rural Plan to the council, without the necessary section 65 certificate that would have permitted it to be placed on public exhibition. In itself, this is a good outcome for landholders affected by the proposals in the draft Plan, however the government's intentions as revealed in the metropolitan strategy are not encouraging. more>>

 

PLAN fails to incorporate wishes of affected landowners

Draft LEP & DCP do not deliver

Following the loss of a rescission motion on 21 June 2005, the draft Rural Plan was submitted to the State Government for issuance of a "Section 65" certificate to enable it to be placed on public exhibition. The plan, hardly altered since it was rejected by the council on 16th September 2005, does not provide sufficient opportunity for growth in the district, and is not supported by residents. more>>

 

A new challenge to private property rights

Environmental Management Plan

Since 1997 the Baulkham Hills Council has been quietly working away on an "Environmental Management Plan". The intention is to produce a document which will become the foundation on which other plans, for example Local Environment Plans (LEPs), are based. With input coming almost exclusively from environmental advocates, this plan will further restrict landholders' choices if it is adopted. more>> 

DOWNLOAD (289K PDF): 5 Acres Now Submission

Overwhelming support for 5 acre subdivision

Almost 400 attend meeting

Rural residents, some of whom had to travel long distances to Castle Hill, came out in force on the evening of the 16th February 2005 to show their overwhelming support for subdivision of large lots to 5 acres, and absolute opposition to the imposition of any environmental zone over their properties. more>>

community meeting with review consultants

Liaison group to council - 5 Acres Now!

Part of the Rural Land Study review process included a "Community Liaison Group" meeting, held on 1 February 2005. About 40 were invited, representing a reasonable cross-section of the rural community. Conducted by the review consultants, Connell Wagner, the central message to come out of the meeting was that residents want 5 acre subdivision - now! full details>>

Review to focus on subdivision

Consultant to review latest Rural Land Study

At the extraordinary council meeting of 16th September 2004, Councillors resolved to appoint a consultant to review the latest Rural Land Study. Accordingly, on 23 November 2004 an advertisement appeared in the local media, seeking a "suitably qualified and experienced planning consultant to undertake this review". This time the objectives are firmly focussed on the key issue overlooked in the Rural Land Study, that of rural residential subdivision. more>>

Unanimous vote against plan based upon rural land study

Councillors vote against draft Rural Plan

It seems that sense and reason are finally starting to prevail. On the 16th of September 2004, Councillors voted unanimously against adopting the council-officer-prepared draft Plan developed from the Rural Land Study. As well as providing virtually no opportunities for rural residential subdivision, the draft Plan astoundingly attempted to impose an environmental "protection" zone over 54% of the Shire, without the consent of landholders, and without offering any form of compensation for the loss of value suffered by owners. more>>

With the public gallery overflowing, and many forced to sit on the floor, the attendance at the council's extraordinary meeting of 16th September 2004 was one of the biggest ever–over 300! Most were wearing the pink and white ribbons handed out by 5 Acres Now committee members to identify supporters, and many addressed the meeting. more>>

a green belt of low density housing

5 Acres Nowa balanced approach

The Rural Land Study, and the ensuing draft Rural Plan prepared by council officers, both lacked one vital ingredient–vision. Instead of providing hope for a prosperous future, the draft Plan gave the community nothing more than a future locked away among the trees and the bush and the rabbits. That is not what the community is calling for. What everyone wants is a balanced approach–a Plan that delivers moderate growth, retains desirable natural characteristics of the area, acknowledges the demands due to increasing population and the need for choice, and above all, delivers hope. Our call for 5 acre subdivision achieves all those goals, and more:

Download now (570K pdf): A Balanced Approach to Growth

On the 28th of November 2004, 5 Acres Now held a general meeting for members. All 3 north ward councillors attended; all voiced strong support for a restoration of growth to the area through relaxing the restrictions against rural residential subdivision. more>>

private property rights ignored in push to satisfy green lobby

Environmental Zoneunwanted & unnecessary

Perhaps the most outrageous proposal in the draft Rural Plan tabled at the council meeting of 17 August 2004 was the proposal to impose an environmental zone with a 100 acre minimum lot size over most of the remaining non-urban land in the Shire. Not only is this completely undemocratic, as almost none of the affected owners agree or were even consulted, it also undermines a key foundation of our society–private property rights. If it goes ahead, it will set a dangerous precedent, which will almost certainly be used to justify other reductions in the rights of private property owners.  more>>

5 acres – a reasonable minimum lot size for Sydney's outer northwest.  25 acres – ridiculous!