It’s D Day for St Kilda

The Council will make its decision on Thursday the 7th February 2008

From Unchain St Kilda –

5pm – Gather at The Palais
Lower Esplanade, St Kilda
We will walk to the Council meeting at St Kilda Town Hall. Feel free to get creative, bring banners and wear St Kilda colours – let’s make this march colourful and make ourselves heard. You can also download the postcard and poster to print or to email to friends.

See their web site for more details.

Why is it only consumers who are on water restrictions?

There is an interesting article in todays Age which points out how much water is being used/wasted by a number of institutions.

The main questions I have are –

  • Why are consumers on water restrictions when industry and government aren’t?
  • Why, when farmers have restrictions on how much water they can pull out of a river, a factory can still do whatever it likes?
  • Why is the price for water going up for consumers, but industry can still buy water very cheaply?

If anybody has a sensible answer to these questions, post it below!

Bridge Rd Richmond: A 10 story apartment block proposed!

Yarra is yet again is faced with another inappropriate development, with a planning application before council for a 10+ story development on Bridge rd between Lennox st and Church street (on the North Side).

The council is having an information meeting on Tuesday 11th December, 6pm at the Richmond Town Hall.

For more information, and discussion, got to www.yarra.org (my Yarra community web site).

From the Council planning application (PL07/0876 ) – 243-247 Bridge Rd Richmond VIC 3121, Demolition of existing building and associated structures and construction of a ten-storey mixed- use development (plus three basement levels) comprising 4,255sqm of retail floor space, 117 dwellings and an ancillary gymnasium including a reduction in the car parking.

We simply do not want, or need, these sized developments in our strip shopping centers!

Expect to hear more about this development, as many residents have contacted me already – and bridge road is my local shopping strip!
Ian Quick

Local Governement Minister sacks councillors

Local Government Minister Richard Wynne has sacked 3 councillors from the Colac Otway Shire, because they walked out of a council meeting.

This will be of interest to many SOS members, who have asked me why certain councillors aren’t sacked, given the issues – including the possibility of corruption – they have with them.

I believe we should be very careful about sacking an elected representative, otherwise the majority can act against the minority – who may be the ones effectively representing local residents.

But if the Minister IS going to sack council members, it should

  • be on the basis of a open and transparent policy
  • be consistently applied
  • be subject to appeal by the councillor
  • be independent of the political party the councillor is a member of.

Therefor, the email I have just sent Richard Wynne is

Dear Mr Wynne

Given your recent sacking of three councillors from the Colac Otway Shire, could you please tell me

  1. what is your policy on sacking councillors – ie how are you going to decide which ones to sack? Exactly what is the criteria?
  2. what appeal process are you going to put in place, if any, that councillors can access?
  3. are you prepared to sack ALP councillors?

I will post the response up on this web site.

Ian Quick

The media release

Media contact: Fiona Macrae 0412 693 182 or 9651 5799 www.vic.gov.au
Media release From the Minister for Local Government
Friday, 7 December, 2007
THREE COUNCILLORS REMOVED FROM COLAC OTWAY SHIRE
COUNCIL
Local Government Minister Richard Wynne has acted to remove three councillors from the Colac
Otway Shire Council due to their failure to comply with the Local Government Act 1989 and
attend a full “Call of the Council” meeting.
Mr Wynne said the decision was made following a series of actions relating to the councillors’
attendance at meetings of Colac Otway Shire Council in late October.
He said all three councillors had walked out of a special meeting convened as a ‘Call of the
Council’ – a procedure specified by the Act which requires all councillors to attend.
“The three councillors attended the meeting initially, but left the meeting before its conclusion,”
Mr Wynne said.
“Whist I understand that councillors can feel passionate about matters that arise in council
business, the most basic duty of a councillor is to govern and to vote on matters. Unfortunately
the councillors involved did not fulfil that duty and have left me with no alternative but to remove
them.
“If councillors fail to remain at a “Call of the Council” meeting, the council’s Chief Executive
Officer is required by the Act to write to the Minister for Local Government, which was done.
“In response, as also required by the Act, I wrote to each of the three councillors involved and
asked them to show cause why I should not make an order that they are incapable of remaining
a councillor.
“After considering each response, I have decided that their reasons for walking out of the
meeting were not satisfactory and therefore I have made orders under the Local Government
Act 1989 that they are incapable of remaining councillors of the Colac Otway Shire.”
The three councillors are Councillors Stuart Hart, Brian Crook and Geoffrey Higgins.
Mr Wynne said the orders, under Section 85(6) of the Local Government Act 1989, come into
effect on Friday 7 December 2007.
“As these three councillors were elected using proportional representation, the vacancies will be
filled using a count-back process. The vacant positions will be offered to the next remaining
candidates from the last election who will be automatically elected.
“In the event that one of the eligible candidates chooses not to accept election, a by-election
would be required within 100 days.
“Once the councillors have been replaced, the council will resume normal duties.”

Important new parlimentary committee – “STANDING COMMITTEE ON FINANCE AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION “

The non-labour parties in the Victorian upper house have combined to set up a permanent committee to examine ANY finance and public administration issues.

We’ve yet to see how wide the scope of the Committee’s investigations will be, but it appears likely to include local Council administration (particularly planning departments!), overall planning processes (including VCAT), and the role of the State Government in decision making on urban planning issues – including the actions of the planning Minister.

We certainly hope it will!

So get your submissions ready, the committee will get started early in the new year!

See the Age article

From Hansard, these are the Committee’s terms of reference (we have added the amendments, and renumbered):

STANDING COMMITTEE ON FINANCE AND PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION

(1) A Standing Committee on Finance and Public Administration of seven members is appointed to inquire into any proposal, matter or thing concerned with public administration or public sector finances.

(2) The committee will consist of two members from the government party nominated by the Leader of the Government, two members from the Opposition nominated by the Leader of the Opposition, one member from The Nationals nominated by the Leader of The Nationals, one member from the Australian Greens nominated by the Australian Greens Whip and Mr Peter Kavanagh, MLC, from the Democratic Labor Party.

(3) The members will be appointed by lodgement of the names with the President by the persons referred to in paragraph (2) no later than 4.00 p.m. on Monday, 31 December 2007.

(4) a member of the committee may be substituted by another member of the same party by notice from the member to the clerk of the committee.

(5) the substitute member is a member of the committee for all purposes.

(6) The first meeting of the committee must be held no later than 4.00 p.m. on Monday, 7 April 2008.

(7) The committee may proceed to the dispatch of business notwithstanding that all members have not been appointed and notwithstanding any vacancy.

(8) Four members of the committee will constitute a quorum of the committee.

(9) The chair of the committee will be a non-government member and the deputy chair will be a government member.

(10) The committee may inquire into any proposal, matter or thing that is relevant to its functions which is —

(a) referred to it by resolution of the Council; or

(b) determined by the committee.

(11) Within seven days of deciding to inquire into any proposal, matter or thing, the committee will inform the Council of the terms of reference.

(12) The committee will advertise the terms of reference for an inquiry and call for submissions and all such submissions received by the committee will be treated as public documents unless the committee otherwise orders.

(13) The committee may commission persons to investigate and report to the committee on any aspects of its inquiry.

(14 ) The committee may appoint a subcommittee of at least four members, of whom one is appointed by the committee as chair of the subcommittee.

(15) The quorum of a subcommittee is the majority of the members appointed to it.

(16 ) Business may only be transacted at a meeting of a subcommittee if a quorum is present.

(17) A question arising at a meeting of a subcommittee must be determined by a majority of votes of members present and voting on that question.

(18) Each member of a subcommittee has a deliberative vote.

(19 ) In the event of an equality of votes on any question, the chair of the subcommittee has a casting vote in addition to a deliberative vote.

(20 ) The committee may empower a specified member or members of the subcommittee to send for persons, documents and other things and to take evidence with respect to any proposal, matter or thing which is referred to the subcommittee for consideration and report if the committee unanimously agrees so to empower the member or members.

(21 ) When taking evidence under the preceding subparagraph, a member of a subcommittee has all the privileges, immunities and powers of the committee.

(22) A subcommittee, in relation to any proposal, matter or thing referred to it by the committee for consideration and report has all the privileges, immunities and powers (except the powers specified in subparagraph (10)) of the committee.

(23 ) A subcommittee must report to the committee which may adopt a report of the subcommittee or reject its report or adopt its report with variations.

(24) The provisions of the standing orders relating to select committees apply to the committee as if it were a select committee.

(25) The foregoing provisions of this resolution, so far as they are inconsistent with the standing orders and sessional orders or practices of the Council will have effect notwithstanding anything contained in the standing or sessional orders or practices of the Council.

SOS Submission to M2030 Audit – Sept. 2007

SOS Submission Melbourne 2030 Audit Committee September 24, 2007 CONTENTS 1 Summary of key issues and themes P 2 2 Population projections and Sustainable Development P 3 3 Strengthening Rescode P 4 4 Activity centres P 5 5 Reform of VCAT (P&E List) P 6 6 Is new development reflecting M2030 policy? P 6 7 Recommendations of M2030 Implementation Reference Group P 7 8 Other Related Issues P 8 9 Conclusion – Moratorium on M2030 P 10

1 Summary

All the critical points made in the SOS submission on M2030 in 2003 remain valid. SOS continues to support the concept of a plan like Melbourne 2030 that can address fundamental issues of demographic change and the provision of adequate infrastructure to guide the sustainable development of Melbourne and its environs over the next few decades. However, our support for such a planning strategy was and still is conditional on the adoption of the following relevant SOS policies: • A detailed public analysis of strategies to accommodate sustainable population growth throughout the state, first directing population growth into Victorian regional centres where feasible and then prioritising provision for increased population densities across the metro area • A more prescriptive approach to RESCODE and local planning policies to provide greater certainty for all stakeholders, maintain basic residential amenity standards, protect against intrusion of inappropriate development into non targeted residential zones and prevent creep of activity centre development • A transparent review of selection techniques for determining the most appropriate areas for higher density development and activity centres, and for their prioritisation. • Immediate development of a plan for the upgrading and implementation of a greatly expanded rail network to service Melbourne’s outer suburbs • Establishment of an independent statutory mass transit authority to drive the implementation of the expanded mass transit network • VicRoads to be brought under the control of the Department of Planning and Community Development and relegated to road construction rather than having responsibility for decisions concerning new roads and freeways (the WA model) • Reform the Planning and Environment List of VCAT to remove its ability to ignore properly constituted local policy and require it instead to provide a Council oversight function to guide improvement in municipal performance. Until these interrelated issues have been transparently and adequately addressed, a moratorium on M2030 should be imposed. Local councils in consultation with their communities must be given adequate resources and time to decide the location and form of new development in their municipalities. The WA model of community consultation on planning issues could also be adopted.

2 Population projections and Sustainable Development

The Melbourne 2030 strategy is based on one future scenario only, i.e. the need to absorb 600,000 new dwellings within 30 years. Instead, a comprehensive transparent strategy should be developed with public consultation that also addresses the wider issues of sustainable development, including water and energy conservation, provision of infrastructure, food production and distribution, and private and public transport. A range of scenarios should be considered along with a corresponding range of guidelines. A timely monitoring program should also be included for any ongoing planning regime. Consequential outcomes must be addressed prior to stimulation of further development e.g. the imminent exhaustion of water reserves and insufficient provision of adequate infrastructure with continued additional housing. SOS believes that a far more detailed analysis of the prioritisation of population growth areas needs to be undertaken. Languishing rural and regional centres should have first allocation of growth kick-started by co-location of government departments, incentives for small business & sunrise industries, employment programs, etc. The market should not be allowed to drive development purely for short-term financial gain, when this may be diametrically opposite to the needs of orderly forward planning. The lack of controlled planning – ie market driven development – has got Melbourne into the position it is in today. The slide can be arrested with direct government (local and state) intervention, such as releasing permits for new housing in the five designated zones in the same way that new land releases are managed. This would ensure that new development doesn’t flood into one zone leaving potentially lower return areas till last. There is a desperate need for more mandatory mechanisms to give planning policies and guidelines more direction and teeth (eg, Rescode, local overlays, Clause 12 of each planning scheme that describes desired planning outcomes, etc). Greenfield sites should be the priority locations for high density housing because • The prospective residents know what they are getting • It makes no sense to visualise how activity centres can be transformed if new developments are not prescribed in this form (eg, “making car-based centres work” M2030 page 32). • Integrated higher density housing with high quality public transport and local work opportunities ought to be prerequisites for new suburbs.

3 Strengthening Rescode

The market cannot be allowed to decide how state and local policy will be implemented. Whilst acknowledging the state’s role in establishing broad policy objectives, SOS believes that the detailed planning of local areas should be the responsibility of democratically elected local governments in consultation with their communities. There is an imperative to empower Councils through local variations and neighbourhood zones to give proper effect to the government’s repeated election commitments to protect and enhance residential amenity. Current local variation provisions do not adequately address the protection of neighbourhood character. Neighbourhood character needs to be strengthened to remove the elements of subjective judgement that by their very definition are open to inconsistent interpretation. Neighbourhood zones should ensure the diversity and attractiveness of our suburbs. The zones should incorporate prescribed controls covering building setbacks, scale, footprint, articulation of height lines and other mechanisms to give proper effect to neighbourhood character. For example, some zones may prescribe single storey development. Others may highlight the importance of trees which are now recognised as necessary not only for soil and water conservation but also to reduce air pollution and the heat island effect (preserving optimum micro-climates), as well as their considerable aesthetic and psychological benefits. Key M2030 issues in relation to Rescode that still need to be addressed include: • the interface of activity centres and established residential areas • the consequences of increasing residential density in activity centres – increased vehicle density can exacerbate already inadequate parking capacity • protection for existing residential areas to prevent overflow development These are issues that can best be resolved by strengthening Rescode with prescriptive measures to ensure that the government’s commitment of protecting and enhancing existing residential amenity is delivered. The strategy currently offers no concrete measures to enable protection outside activity centres. Reducing the amount of discretion exercisable in Planning Schemes (eg by making key amenity standards mandatory) will greatly reduce the legal load on the planning system by minimising ambit claims while simplifying development application assessments. This will meet the desires of all parties – developers, objectors and councils – for greater certainty while simultaneously minimising ambit claims, speculative development and appeals to VCAT. It will by definition reduce the operational complexity of planning schemes while providing the improved planning outcomes which should be the key focus of any democratic planning regime.

4 Activity centres

The techniques used to select activity centres best suited to higher density development are seriously deficient and seem to rely on pre-existing retail floor-space and trip generations as though they are capable of attracting even greater development when there is no evidence that they can absorb more. Instead, the key pre-requisite should be location at mass transit public transport nodes and the potential for integrated mixed use development which would facilitate existing and new economic and residential activity. The one size fits all approach is obviously inadequate and individual detailed assessments are essential for any area being considered for significantly increased development. Planning and development of activity centres should be prioritised in consultation with local communities. Our earlier criticisms of the inadequacies of the initial implementation of M2030 have been borne out only 5 years later and we can confidently predict that unless these basic issues are corrected, community dissatisfaction will continue to grow. Councils also require the flexibility to respond to the need for increased housing by directing new higher density development to the most appropriate strategic sites, which may not always be associated with activity centres. The City of Yarra, for example, has identified a number of major re-development sites outside activity centres and attempted to protect existing built form and heritage streetscapes in its activity centres from high-rise development. However, despite the fact that in Yarra these centres are close enough together to overlap, a government panel recently rejected this approach and the use of height controls in activity centres as inimical to the aims of M2030. But the aim of M2030 is to accommodate population increase, not to encourage high-rise development for its own sake. These sorts of predicaments and incompatibilities with the different policies of M2030 that seek to increase housing densities but also preserve neighbourhood character were highlighted in the Stewart Street case in Richmond where the status of M2030 was challenged (O’Connell Street Developments PL v Yarra CC, VCAT 448, 30 April 2003). At paragraph 64, that legal decision stated: “No particular aspect of the Strategy itself necessarily carries greater weight than another…In some situations there may be conflict or tension between the respective policies. In those circumstances it will require the tribunal to balance those conflicting interests” This illustrates one of the fundamental flaws of M2030 (and some other urban consolidation policies) – in most instances there is no way to balance conflicting policies without some detriment, so guidance on priorities is required. For example, heritage streetscapes are incompatible with most modern high-rise development. In such cases, if heritage protection is to have any real meaning, this should have priority over any proposed new development that would potentially conflict with existing built form.

5 Reform of VCAT

The Planning and Environment List of VCAT has become a major determinant of planning outcomes in Melbourne, often overriding local Council policies and priorities. It is notorious for inconsistent decisions which are usually biased in favour of developers. VCAT should not be able to ignore or override incorporated local provisions in planning schemes by invoking state or metropolitan objectives. Otherwise there is no point in councils wasting scarce resources attempting to implement local controls and variations to democratically reflect local conditions, constraints and priorities. Permits should not be amended without going through the usual notification and advertising process, unless with the consent of all parties concerned. VCAT should be a body of review and not a decision maker not subject to review itself. The only grounds for appeal should be based on the failure of the Council to apply local or state policy in reaching its decision. An appeal to VCAT should not be seen as a chance for a second bite at the cherry. Permit applicants should not be able to benefit from ambit claims to VCAT. For this reason, amended plans should also not be allowed – development applications should be crafted to fully reflect state and local planning priorities and should stand or fall on their merits. Thus Councils must also be able to refuse to consider applications that are not in accord with their policies and objectives. Such decisions ought to be appellable but VCAT’s options should be limited to either upholding the decision or directing Council to accept the application. These last two reforms will remove ambit claims and speculative development from the system and allow Councils to focus on strategic planning issues and permit applications of merit.

6 Is new development reflecting M2030 policy?

The latest ABS figures reveal a surging fringe population more reliant than ever on private cars. M2030 was supposed to control urban sprawl and concentrate development around public transport and services in major centres. Central to the strategy was the upgrading and integration of public transport, which has simply not been budgeted for nor even planned. Instead, more than 50 per cent of recent metropolitan growth has been in fringe municipalities and the rate of car ownership is in line with population increase, showing that the growing outer suburbs are reaching a point of total car dependence because of the lack of adequate public transport. Although it is early days yet for a long-term policy, M2030 is clearly failing in its goals, because its implementation has been severely flawed so that it has not been a strong enough influence to counteract prevailing socio-economic and development pressures. Development in existing and particularly inner suburbs seems to have become more opportunistic judging from the number of ambit claims at VCAT. A number of cases submitted to the Activity Centres Thematic Working Group (see Point 7) as alleged “M2030 best practice” examples were also severely flawed. Some of these have been analysed by SOS, along with several dozen examples of local planning permit and enforcement cases from one municipality alone which exhibit flawed process that seems to derive mostly from the vagaries and pitfalls inherent in the exercise of discretion, which provides the opportunity for inconsistency and the exercise of undue influence. The imposition of M2030 simply adds to the complexity of assessments and exacerbates these already existing problems. In another policy failure, new Victorian homes have been found to be less sustainable than older houses because they use more power and produce more greenhouse emissions than before the five-star rules were introduced. This can only be addressed with further legislation, including updating the Planning & Environment Act.

7 Recommendations of M2030 Implementation Reference Group

The recommendations of the 3 IRG reports must be acted on – most have simply not been met and remain largely unaddressed (see IRG website http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/DSE/nrenpl.nsf/LinkView/A851C2CBB0D142CCCA256DDC007FE5154761677A5E8BBC52CA2572DB00128993). The IRG identified 12 priority issues critical to the successful implementation of M2030: 1 Ensuring there is whole of government and bipartisan support for M2030 2 Getting community and stakeholder buy-in to M2030 3 Resourcing local government and defining responsibilities 4 Managing outward growth and green wedges 5 Significant investment in public transport is required 6 Integrating and managing infrastructure provision 7 Facilitating investment and development in activity centres 8 Ensuring high quality residential development 9 Increasing supply of well-located affordable housing, ensuring housing affordability 10 Building more equitable, stronger, healthier and safer communities 11 Moving towards more environmentally sustainable design and development 12 Improving planning decision making processes In relation to activity centre policy, the IRG identified 11 key issues to be addressed in the short term if the policy is to be successfully implemented: 1. Community attitudes and expectations 2. Partnership and governance arrangements 3. Resources 4. Planning system 5. Infrastructure planning and provision 6. Access and public transport 7. Economic constraints and drivers 8. Land availability 9. Implementing sustainability principles 10. Incorporating housing into activity centres 11. Demonstration projects The most significant role for state government in implementing Melbourne 2030 is to provide sufficient funding for infrastructure. Relying to any significant extent on developer contributions detracts from the ability of government to direct development to preferred locations and also invites corruption. In relation to the Melbourne Transport Plan, the IRG noted that M2030 stated a vision for change that the MTP does not adequately convey – “no specific details, timing or funding commitments…The current disaggregated approach to transport and land use planning and implementation is not delivering the outcomes it should.” The IRG recommended provision of a substantial increase in the allocation of State Government funding for improvements to the public transport system to ensure targets can be met (e.g. 20% by 2020); and that the integrated transport plan (Metropolitan Transport Plan) must have guaranteed funding for implementation and delivery. Neither of these recommendations have been acted on to any significant degree – some rail network extensions have actually been cancelled or shelved. A subcommittee of the IRG, the Activity Centres Thematic Working Group, investigated a number of cases submitted mostly by industry bodies as “best practice” examples of M2030 in action. While some had considerable merit, others were severely flawed (eg, in terms of not meeting some requirements of local policy, neighbourhood character guidelines, preferred community outcomes and appropriate planning process). As mentioned, SOS was on this Working Group and analysed some of these cases and has presented its submission to the M2030 Audit Committee.

8 Other Related Issues

M2030 Audit Committee Terms of Reference too narrow: To state that “fundamental change to the strategic direction within the first 5 years would be premature” is non-sensical. If M2030 is being seriously reviewed with the genuine intention of making it more effective, the government must be open to changing whatever is necessary about both the fine print and the overall approach if the evidence on the ground so warrants. Any faults should be detected and corrected as soon as possible before too much detriment occurs. This will be far more time and resource efficient in the long run than continual band-aiding of a flawed strategy, as has been occurring with ongoing changes to the Planning & Environment Act and to Planning Schemes (VPPs). “Cutting Red Tape in Planning Progress Report – July 2007” This document is an excellent illustration of the fact that a decade and a half after the dismantling of the previous planning regime, the present system is still in need of ongoing and extensive revision. It is a clear indication that the discretionary system is far too complex, lacks certainty and is not delivering optimum planning outcomes or even realizing Government policy on urban growth and sustainability. The planning regime in general must be operating efficiently before a major development strategy like M2030 can be superimposed. Flawed permit assessments As mentioned, many individual permit application and enforcement cases reveal some aspects of flawed or incompetent process, even without the added impost of M2030, which has exacerbated the lack of sufficient state or local controls to limit and direct development to appropriate locations. SOS has also noted inconsistencies and other evidence of possible corruption in planning matters in general in a number of municipalities, including issues associated with the granting and enforcement of planning permits and with contributions to the election campaigns of candidates for council elections. Consequently, SOS advocates an Independent Crime & Corruption Commission in Victoria that would have the power to investigate reported instances of alleged corruption, conflict of interest and chronic systematic flaws in municipal planning and development matters. The state Ombudsman’s office does not seem to have the ability to investigate such cases properly. Housing choices: Requires serious commitment by the state government in cooperation with local councils. This may require mandatory designation of a percentage of new developments to contain affordable housing to prevent dislocation and “ghetto-isation” of local communities. Public Transport: A detailed plan for a greatly extended and fully integrated PT service must be established as soon as possible to facilitate appropriate development in areas identified by state and local governments in consultation with local communities. Obviously this cannot all be achieved in the short-term so key areas need to be prioritised for immediate funding and implementation. Such a metro-wide plan driven by a new independent authority would allow both councils and developers to plan for ordered growth that can optimise benefits to local communities and build a more functional and sustainable city Local Government Act 1989 and Planning & Environment Act 1987 Both Acts need to be seriously updated or re-written, given the degree of change over the last two decades in communities, in the operation of local government and in the importance and perception of environmental issues. The Local Government Act admirably stresses community benefit and consultation (particularly the Best Value provisions) but without detailing sufficient specific mandatory provisions to actually give these clauses any teeth.

9 Conclusion: Moratorium on M2030 until implementation flaws rectified

SOS believes that the following steps are necessary to regain a balance in forward planning for Melbourne and to protect the residential amenity of the city: • Overhaul the outdated planning Act and stop “band-aiding” present planning controls which only increase the complexity and uncertainty of the planning assessment process • Introduce more prescriptive controls for amenity standards and overlays to simplify council assessment process and provide more certainty and better planning outcomes • Change the role of VCAT to restrict it to reviewing Council planning processes • Completely review M2030 to address its current failings, including (but not limited to) – • revise designated activity centres consistent with M2030 sustainability principles and guidelines, not on the basis of other factors such as retail floor area • allow councils significantly more time and resources to complete the development of Structure Plans with full community consultation and participation • transparently reassess population trends and adopt a range of strategies to accommodate population increases in rural centres as well as metro Melbourne • plan for and allocate funding for a comprehensive fully integrated public transport plan for metro-Melbourne, to be implemented by a specifically-appointed statutory authority Because of the above issues, there should be an immediate moratorium on Melbourne 2030 until it is transparently reviewed. Existing state and local planning controls are adequate to control and guide development until M2030 can be revised (as before M2030 was introduced) but immediate changes that are necessary include tightening Rescode amenity standards and local overlays by making compliance mandatory. It needs to be remembered that the great majority of development proposals already meet state and local guidelines – it is only those that seek to exploit loopholes and push the limits that would be hampered by the reforms suggested here. No developments will be stopped but those that are excessive or otherwise inappropriate will require scaling down or a re-design. Green Wedges and the Urban Growth boundary are protected to some extent by specific separate legislation (Amendments VC 23, VC16) which need to be further tightened, and the scope for the Minister of the day to vary boundaries and controls should be reduced (note that Ministerial Practice Direction No 10 was revoked in June 2003 after being in force for less than a year). The government should establish a timeline for Melbourne 2030 to become the default policy after the deficiencies outlined in this submission have been adequately addressed. The bottom line is that if the State Government is serious about shaping an appropriate sustainable future for Melbourne, it will have to take a much more proactive role in mandating planning mechanisms and providing infrastructure that can direct and attract development identified as desirable by both state and local government in consultation with the community.

Getting information about development applications from Council planning files

 "Improving Access to Council Planning File documents"

Cllick on this Planning Department Practice Note to see what planning application documents residents are entitled to see and get copies of (at cost).  Unfortunately some councils don't follow the Prac Note closely, but it does at least let you know what you're entitled to ask for.
If you have trouble getting copies of application documents and plans, or are being charged too much for them, let us know by phone or email – Click here to Contact SOS

Due to possible copyright issues with some documents incorporated in planning schemes (eg, reference documents like the ANZ Parking Standards), the Department of Planning and Community Development has temporarily withdrawn this Prac Note to make minor changes.
However, the Department says this won't effect access to the documents you'd normally need in a planning file. 

DPCD says that the Practice Note should be back on their website "later in 2012".

St Kilda triangle site to go to the Supreme Court

See the unChain St Kilda site

The ridiculous development proposed for the St Kilda triangle looks like it’s on the way to the Supreme Court. This looks like a slam dunk case for the residents (as nobody could call this development a ‘public purpose’) but as we find on many occasions, the law and logic often don’t have much in common…

We urge everyone to go to the unChain St Kilda site and lodge and objection!

Got a planning problem? Use our SOS Residents Guide for Objectors

For basic inquiries, download our Objectors' Guide for help in objecting to development applications at the council level and at VCAT. It explains how to determine your grounds of objection, how to deal with councils, making an appeal to VCAT, etc.

SOS also provides brief general planning advice as a service to our members and the public, through our Contact page and our FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) section. 

We don't have the resources to provide free detailed professional advice (such as a full analysis of plans or planning policies related to an individual development application), but if you contact us we can probably refer you to a planning professional or local community group for help.

Click on "Links" to find general planning information, the Planning Department, the Planning Tribunal (VCAT), community planning groups, politicians and the media.

Finally – don't be surprised to find out that councils don't always assess permit applications properly, and that state planning controls are full of loopholes.  This is unfortunately why groups like SOS exist, as a necessary response in a democracy to the weakening and deregulation of town planning controls that are supposed to be there for the benefit of the wider community, not the short-term interests of developers and politicians.

For more on the failings of the discretionary planning regime in Victoria, see the Project Melbourne series of articles in the Age in early 2010, and the Auditor General's May 2008 report into Planning in Victoria (especially part 6: "78% of planning permit decisions are flawed").