Millers Point

Thursday, 5 March 2015

National Trust fears Millers Point public housing sell-off will fail to protect heritage

Millers Point housing
        Photo: This Millers Point house dating back to the 1820s is earmarked for sale by Housing NSW (ABC: John Donegan
702 ABC Sydney By John Donegan
Posted

Map: Millers Point 2000
The National Trust of Australia has slammed Housing NSW for selling Millers Point properties with no heritage protections.
 
The Trust claims three of the properties sold by the NSW Government department have had illegal construction work carried out on them.

"Of the nine test sales, three of them have stop-work orders on them which indicates protections aren't working," Director of Advocacy at the National Trust Of Australia, Graham Quint, told 702 ABC Sydney.

"The City of Sydney has issued the owners of two properties in Millers Point with notices to stop unapproved building works," a City of Sydney spokesperson said.

"The properties, at 30 Argyle Place and 119 Kent Street, are state heritage listed and approval must be obtained before works can proceed."

Mr Quint wants the State Government to stop the sales and instead, to consider offering the properties on 99-year leases.


"We want the Government to release the properties on 99-year leases, the properties won't sell for quite as much, but that puts extra protections in place," he said.

"Because they are selling them outright, there aren't those protections in place, but if you're not selling them outright you can put compliance bonds in place."

The City of Sydney (council) later confirmed only two properties had stop-work orders.
Mr Quint said the city council was effectively powerless to stop development on the heritage-registered properties — some dating back to the early 1800s.

"Even though they are on the state heritage register, if the current development control plan and zoning allows for fairly major increases in height it is very difficult for Sydney city council to object," he said.

Mr Quint is concerned not just for the individual properties, but believes the whole heritage precinct of Millers Point is under threat with 284 more properties in the suburb to be sold by the NSW Government.

"Effectively under the current zoning they can have a fairly major height addition on quite a few of the properties," he said.

An 1834 four-storey terrace at 29 Lower Fort St, Millers Point sold for $2.56 million in August 2014.
The Colonial Regency style property was offered for the first time in more than 100 years and was offered for sale with little heritage protection.

A 99-year lease on a similar property was offered by the government in 2008 and fetched $1.5 million.

The then housing minister David Borger said the property and 15 others were leased with strict maintenance provisions in the contract.

"A conservation management plan has been completed for all 16 properties for lease and it's actually a condition of the lease that the properties are restored and maintained to appropriate standard," he told 702 ABC Sydney at the time.

Hundreds of properties earmarked for sale

The 293 properties earmarked for sale are in Millers Point, Gloucester Street and The Rocks, including the Sirius building near the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

More than 400 public housing tenants have been given two years to move.

"This is a two-year process that will begin with a meeting with each household to discuss their housing needs and where they might like to go," Planning Minister Pru Goward said.

Millers Point is arguably one of Australia's most remarkable historic urban places and, for Sydney, a unique jewel.
Housing NSW

Ms Goward has said the money raised from the sale of the properties will go into other public housing projects.

Housing NSW's document entitled Millers Point Conservation Management Guidelines (CMG) said the heritage significance of the area and its conservation was the result of government ownership.

"Millers Point is arguably one of Australia's most remarkable historic urban places and, for Sydney, a unique jewel," the document states.

"Furthermore, a major contributor to the conservation of its heritage significance has been that, for most of the twentieth century, it was a government-owned precinct with a stable tenant population.
"This has not only contributed to conserving the historic fabric but endowed it with a community with strong bonds with the place."

The CMG document ranked Millers Point as a priceless asset.

"As such, it is intended to guide ... a common vision and objective of maintaining this unique place and its residential community as a priceless asset of the people of New South Wales and Australia," the document states.

The NSW Heritage Council had asked the city council to review the area's planning controls.

"The proposed changes to the controls will provide consistency and certainty for future homeowners in Millers Point, while further protecting the area's irreplaceable heritage," a City of Sydney spokesperson said.

"They are designed to protect these buildings as they move into private ownership."

The changes were supported by the Central Sydney Planning Committee — a joint City of Sydney and NSW Government planning body.

 

Tuesday, 3 March 2015

Fight for Millers Point


Image from story: The location of Miller Point makes it incredibly appealing to developers.
VIDEO: http://tenplay.com.au/channel-ten/the-project/extra/season-6/the-fight-for-millers-point?autoStart=true

The residents of the public housing on Millers Point in Sydney know their homes are valuable. For those who have lived there for most of their lives, the value lies in the community they have built and the memories they have created.

But for the New South Wales government and property developers, the value lies in the million dollar views and unrivaled location close to the centre of Sydney.

Plans are afoot to sell 293 public housing properties in the area. The money raised will be put back into housing in other parts of New South Wales – and because of the land value in Millers Point, that could mean a significant overall increase in the amount of housing available.

With 57,000 families on the waiting list for accommodation in NSW, and for Gabrielle Upton, the Minister for Family and Community services in the Baird government, that’s surely a good thing.

“It’s housing, the sale of which can release value that will mean that we can build more and better housing for people … across the state.”

But for residents like Myra Demetriou, who has lived in the area for half her life, moving out presents enormous challenges.

“I’m getting to that point with my eyesight … I’m frightened to go anywhere. … and I can’t see where things are.”

She is worried about how she would cope in a new area

“I’m familiar with everything around here and if I moved anywhere else I’d be completely lost.”

A new resident to Millers Point, John Dunn thinks there is room for compromise that would help residents like Myra
“I think the government could be the hero here to step in and say … we can keep the small, modest houses … where they’ve lived all their lives, for 70, 80, 90 years.”

He wants to preserve the unique community that has developed around the social housing, telling the Sydney Morning Herald;

“It’s really nice to live in a mixed neighbourhood … where you have all sorts of people, rather than one sort of group from society. We do want to conserve our community; it’s really being torn in two.”

So far, nine properties have already been sold, raising enough money to build 22 new properties. And while some residents have been happy to move to new buildings that are easier and cheaper to maintain, it’s not without personal cost, as life-long resident Flo Seckold knows only too well.

“This one lady moved and she said to me it’s a lovely place I’ve got … but she said it’s not Millers Point … and once I get in and close the door I’m alone. And that’s how I’d be. And I don’t want to be like that.”

RESOURCED: http://tenplay.com.au/channel-ten/the-project/top-stories-march-2015/fight-for-millers-point 

Hotel Auction - Palisade Hotel, Millers Point For Sale



 

 

 


Perched on Millers Point, at the gateway to Barangaroo Headland Park is the "Palisade Hotel", known as the "Jewel of the Point".

Recently refurbished to an impeccable standard this building, although a hotel with a full licence and entitlements, could also be an ideal location for that business, company or legal practice seeking prestige and locational edge.

A fantastic residence or maybe you are a restaurateur seeking a flagship location.

The views from every level of this building are stunning and from the upper levels breathtaking, a view of the Western Wall of the city seen from nowhere else, views to the Coat Hanger to Darling Harbour, the Entrance to the Parramatta River, Gladesville, and on a clear day to the Blue Mountains horizon. An unrepeated location.

- Ground floor bar opens to the walkway on the park side of the building title
- The basement, closed off office, cellar, food preparation storage etc, as well as the toilet amenities
- 3 floors of accommodation. 6 suites each with 2 bathrooms and rooms that can be keyed off
- Stunning views from each suite. The front suites have balconies overlooking the Harbour Bridge
- Upper two levels. Each have an outdoor area, lower level, a balcony, private dining space (seating approved for 18), bar, male and female bathrooms
- The upper of the 2 levels connected by a stairway is the restaurant, kitchen and outdoor space
- Both levels have stunning views and seating for approximately 100

Auction Date:
Thursday 26th March 2015






RESOURCED: https://www.businessforsale.com.au/australia/MQA2041787/Hotel-Auction-Palisade-Hotel-Millers-Point-For-Sale 

Monday, 2 March 2015

Sydney risks becoming a dumb, disposable city for the rich

Philip Thalis | 2 March 2015



GUEST OBSERVATION

The New South Wales government has announced plans to sell off the Ultimo site of the Powerhouse Museum, part of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, and use the money to fund a new museum in western Sydney. The last part is positive – the rest would be a mistake.

It is commendable that the government is proposing major cultural institutions in western Sydney, particularly in centres like Parramatta. As David Borger, Western Sydney director of the Sydney Business Chamber, has argued persuasively in The Sydney Morning Herald, there has been chronic underinvestment in the city’s populous west.

But to sell the Ultimo Powerhouse is wrong-headed – a mishmash of wedge politics and bad policy. Governments should understand that cities take decades and centuries to evolve, and that such rash decisions are at the expense of future generations.

A city of mistakes
As reported, the Ultimo site would go to developers for an optimistic A$200 million or so, most likely for apartments. However, the Powerhouse’s rare grandeur makes it manifestly unsuited to such a conversion. It’s ideal for its current purpose – as a major museum or other cultural institution.

To gut such a public asset would perpetuate recent blatant mistakes such as Darling Harbour and Barangaroo. In such characteristic parts of the city we need a balance of public and private. Yet increasingly government is missing in action, wantonly trading prized public places and forgoing the role civic elements play in intelligent city making.

Look at the smash-up at Darling Harbour. Why fashion a dumb, disposable city, where speculation is prioritised and where a slew of major public facilities are treated as discount commodities? As the best contemporary urban projects demonstrate, building a vibrant city balances economic decisions with thought-through cultural, social and environmental priorities.

For Sydney, Barangaroo represents the nadir. On 22 hectares of public land stretching along 1.2 kilometres of our city’s most available waterfront, the favoured developers have been gifted seemingly unfettered rights to build as they please. James Packer’s proposed tower, stuffed with a hotel, casino and units, poses as the pinnacle of greed.

It should not have been like that. In our international competition-winning design for the Barangaroo site in 2006, we proposed that the entire foreshore be inalienable public parkland, linked to the city by a network of generous public streets and new public transport. But this plan was soon sold out by dubious ministers and their inept agencies, bent on promoting development interests at the public’s expense.

Get the balance right

People are attracted to places that mix public and private spaces and activities, a theme explored in our book Public Sydney. Instead of the sterile concept of a CBD (central business district), the city centre is really our social heart, all the better for being a magnet for events and demonstrations, the centre of politics and religion, our most historic place and the epicentre of public transport. There’s plentiful research that supports culture’s role in making cities attractive places to be.
Too many government advisers dishearteningly lack public imagination – the ability to conceive and articulate engaging ideas to make a better life for all. Instead, a stymied agenda is held captive by cartels of self-interest that so dominate many aspects of life in Australia, be it the media, banks, airlines, supermarkets or infrastructure.
On urban issues, the real estate industry’s spivs and spruikers declaim that development drives all. But why let their spin profit at our expense? People make the city and it belongs to us – people involved in all modes of exchange, in living, walking, creating and visiting public places. Developers reap their benefits from places already teeming with life and enriched by public transport, institutions, spaces and natural beauty – that is, underpinned by public investment.

The Powerhouse Museum, part of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, belongs to a culture and science precinct in Ultimo.

Some suggest that the Museum’s Ultimo location is inconvenient. While Harris Street remains dominated by traffic, access is improving with the construction of the Goods Line pedestrian corridor and the extension of the nearby light rail line through the inner west.

There should be a great synergy of important institutions along Harris Street with the Powerhouse, the ABC, the University of Technology Sydney and the TAFE coming together to form a science, design, media and education precinct. Fantastic connections wait to be made between those institutions. Removing the museum would delete a crucial part of that grouping.

Couldn’t the museum be in both Parramatta and Ultimo? The Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences collection has well over 500,000 objects, with only a fraction on display. Surely there’s enough material for an expanded Powerhouse with two genuine bases, each with its particular focus. After all, many such major institutions around the world occupy multiple sites in inventive ways.

Sell, sell, sell – why this obsession?

The major political parties seem wedded to an ideologically driven obsession to privatise public spaces – including the Powerhouse Museum site in Ultimo, other harbour-front sites, Bridge Street’s magnificent array of sandstone heritage buildings, public housing at Miller’s Point. Such sales are peddled on the thinnest of short-term economic analyses, discounting the broader values of such assets over longer time frames.

Public assets are hard won and once sold, or leased, near-impossible to reclaim. Surely the well-documented unpopularity of asset sales is because the public intuitively understands that you don’t willingly flog your assets at bargain prices – rather, you patiently save for them. That attitude should prevail for unique treasures like the Ultimo Powerhouse.

Some in government seem to think that beautiful buildings on prime public land seem to be somehow wasted on us citizens, we who are the actual owners. But why vest the privileged parts of our city as playthings of the affluent, exclusive enclaves of high-priced consumption? We should instead proclaim our rights to the equitable, sustainable, democratic mix of the open city.

Philip Thalis is architecture faculty industry advisory group member at University of Newcastle.
This article was originally published on The Conversation.

resourced; http://www.propertyobserver.com.au/finding/location/nsw/40670-sydney-risks-becoming-a-dumb-disposable-city-for-the-rich.html
 

Saturday, 28 February 2015

GREENWICH SLAMS PLANS TO MOVE POWERHOUSE MUSEUM

Friday, February 27th, 2015

Alex Greenwich, The Independent Member for Sydney, has slammed plans to relocate the Powerhouse Museum from its base in Ultimo and sell off another inner city public asset.

Mr Greenwich said:

"This is clearly another sell-off of inner city assets to raise government funds at the expense of the community and city liveability, and without community discussion.
From Millers Point housing to sandstone heritage government office buildings, one-by-one the government is relocating inner city functions and services and selling assets for redevelopment without needed open space and community facilities.

The Powerhouse site is adjacent to Australia’s most densely populated suburb and the area doesn’t need more residential development. I fear the site’s open space will be seen as another “development opportunity” when it is needed now more than ever to provide space for recreation and community gatherings.

The Powerhouse must remain on its purpose-built site with improved connections to Darling Harbour and the CBD.

While I support expanding the Powerhouse collection and functions to Western Sydney, it belongs in Ultimo adjacent to the hubs of tourism, cultural institutions, Darling Harbour, higher education and Sydney’s tech start-ups, which link with its core purpose."

Mr Greenwich can be contacted on 0458042342 for further comment. 

RESOURCED: http://www.newsmaker.com.au/news/34362/greenwich-slams-plans-to-move-powerhouse-museum#.VPWUXc8cRMt 

Tuesday, 24 February 2015

Stoush over Barangaroo contamination bill

Nicole Hasham

February 24, 2015




The Barangaroo development site seen from King Street wharf
The Barangaroo development site seen from King Street wharf Photo: Fiona Morris
A state government plan to clean up toxic waste at Barangaroo by digging giant holes is a veiled attempt to excavate for future buildings and save money, the company assumed responsible for the contamination says.
 
It has also emerged that the firm, Jemena, has launched legal action over decontamination at Barangaroo South. The government agency running Barangaroo has refused to guarantee taxpayers will not foot part of the hefty bill for stripping deadly chemicals such as benzene and cyanide from the harbourfront land, despite previous assurances to the contrary.
The Millers Point gasworks operated at the Barangaroo site until the 1920s, leaving behind human carcinogens and substances toxic to aquatic life that are thought to be leaching into Darling Harbour.
The government has long believed legal responsibility for much of the clean-up lies with utility firm Jemena, which acquired the company that operated the gasworks.
The Barangaroo Delivery Authority wants to build residential, civic and commercial buildings and public space at Central Barangaroo.
It has sought planning permission to "remediate" more than 2 hectares  of contaminated land, which would involve excavating contaminated soil, trucking it away for treatment and dumping it in landfill.
However Jemena says the plan should be refused because the work goes far beyond what is needed, and the company should not be paying to help redevelop Barangaroo.
In a letter to the planning department, Jemena said the planned work matches the shape of proposed development, and future buildings at the site require deep excavations, such as for basement car parks.
Jemena also told Fairfax Media it was in the early stages of legal action over approval to decontaminate land at Barangaroo South, saying the assessment and approval process was "inadequate".
Company spokesman Ian Israelsohn said both the Barangaroo Delivery Authority and Lend Lease, which is developing the land, are parties to the challenge.
The decontamination bill at Barangaroo has previously been put at $112 million. The authority's website states this would come at "no cost to taxpayers". Money would be recovered "from the responsible parties" and developer payments from Barangaroo South would cover any state liability. However the government lost a legal dispute over developer contributions last year and is expected to receive far less from Lend Lease than originally forecast.
A Barangaroo Delivery Authority spokesman refused to say if the public would have to pay for part of the clean-up, citing the legal action.
The authority had been trialling an on-site chemical remediation which is considered cheaper than other methods, however its plans showed the trial was unsuccessful.
The Audit Office of NSW in 2011 warned remediation costs at Barangaroo could rise depending on the method used. It said any money not recovered from the site's previous owners would be funded by the authority, which could slow down construction.
Mr Israelsohn said Jemena would make a "fair and reasonable contribution" to remediation, which should take into account the site's long, complex history, including all previous uses. He called for independent mediation to resolve the issue.
A Barangaroo Delivery Authority spokesman said only preliminary on-site remediation trials have been conducted and full-scale trials will occur this year. He said the cost of remediation and discussions with Jemena were commercial-in-confidence. Neither he nor Lend Lease would comment on the legal action. 

Millers Point Three Years On

Millers Point Three Years On

In 2012 I wrote a story about Millers Point and mentioned the threats to the community from the surrounding developments and the government’s proposed sale of public housing. Last year it was made official, the houses would be sold and since then residents have been fighting to stay in their homes and keep their community together.

It’s almost three years since I wrote about Millers Point, and High Street has a very different atmosphere. It has changed from one of peaceful community to one of struggle. Banners are hung over balconies, spray painted onto sheets in stencil letters: Millers Point Not 4 Sale; Say No to the Total Sell Off of Public Assets. The street has a stripped feeling, some of the houses already empty, others clinging on.

The building site beneath High Street is busy as the Barangaroo project continues. The construction site makes a mechanical churning, digestive kind of noise, and I imagine this is the sound of it chewing up the past. Already the shape of the land below has been altered from the straight lines of the wharves. Now the curved shoreline is a neatly curated return to a past shape, based on an 1836 map. Blocks of sandstone, each labelled with a barcode for correct placement, have been assembled at the water’s edge. A larger sandstone block than the others has been unveiled on the point, renaming it Barangaroo Point.

Millers Point is facing disappearance. Some of the houses are now empty, their windows blank and curtainless, the residents moved elsewhere. Other residents are fighting, their houses hung with handmade signs: No One wanted to be here when I came here over 30 years ago, so now should I have to go? Some Millers Point residents have lived here for three or even five generations, and all speak with sadness and anger at the loss of their community. Many are elderly and have been fighting to stay in homes where they have lived for much of their life. Most recently, a petition for Mary Vo to stay in her home for the last few years of her life has been collecting signatures.

The state government says the houses must be sold for reinvestment in the public housing system, although how exactly the money will be invested hasn’t been revealed. The houses are being gradually auctioned anyway, and continual pressure is being put on those remaining in their homes to relocate. People fear that Wooloomooloo will be next, then Glebe, until all the city’s social housing has disappeared.

Last year, just after the announcement the houses would be sold, I went to Millers Point one afternoon and spoke to the industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett who was painting the High Street vista, her easel set up near the fence. I looked through her folder of previous work, paintings of industrial landscapes that have disappeared, most of them around the harbour. It was late afternoon and a soft, sunset light was cast over the street. I watched for a little while as she painted and we talked about the Harbour Control Tower at the end of the street, where she was an artist in residence for more than a decade. Now the tower is owned by the Barangaroo corporation and will be demolished.

MP Jane BennettThe scene Jane was painting that day, the houses in the lush afternoon light, has already changed. Construction seems to bear down upon it from all sides, Barangaroo down below, roadworks. Last June I went on the tour of the development. Like all the other visitors I was given a branded water bottle, cap and tote bag as I entered and then spent time trekking around the construction zone, asking the same questions everyone else seemed to be asking: what’s going to happen to the tower, and where had the fire been? The barcoded sandstone and reptile petting zoo was meant to distract me, but it didn’t, or at least not in the right way. My eyes drifted to the streets above, and the banners hung over the railing. I didn’t want the carefully arranged development, the park where I could go down to actually touch the harbour water, if I had to look at the rows of Millers Point houses glossed up and made into exclusive residences.

Millers Point Banners 2 Walking around Millers Point in 2015, I have a grim feeling. For as long as I have known it the suburb has been a gentle place in the city, small, old houses, with miscellaneous window decorations, and always people around, leaning over their front fences, chatting. It was out of step with the cut-throat city surrounding it, and that made it precious.

On Kent Street one house has on its front wall a carefully assembled collection of laminated A4 posters of heroes and villains: Cat memes next to Tony Abbott, Johnny Rotten next to Margaret Thatcher, Clover Moore next to John Howard, amid a storm of laminated monopoly money.
The protests continue. Follow their progress at the Millers Point Community, which has resident’s stories, history and links to other resources. There are also a number of facebook groups, including Save Our Homes.

#‎savemillerspoint‬ ‪#‎wheresgabby‬ ‪#‎nosurrender‬ ‪#‎MikeScared‬
‪#‎ausunions‬ ‪#‎nswpol‬ ‪#‎housing‬ ‪#‎socialhousing‬ ‪#‎community‬ ‪#‎publichousing‬ ‪#‎humanrights‬ ‪#‎auspol‬ ‪#‎tenancytribunal‬ ‪#‎Sydney

RESOURCED: https://mirrorsydney.wordpress.com/2015/02/26/millers-point-three-years-on/

Monday, 23 February 2015

NSW state election 2015: Taxes under Labor would send NSW backwards, says Premier Mike Baird

NSW Premier Mike Baird and Family and Community Services Minister Gabrielle Upton talk to  Rosemeadow resident Tom Puffett about  public housing issues on Monday.
NSW Premier Mike Baird and Family and Community Services Minister Gabrielle Upton talk to Rosemeadow resident Tom Puffett about public housing issues on Monday. Photo: Anna Warr

Nicole Hasham   State Politics Reporter                                

February 23, 2015

Raising taxes to pay for big-ticket projects such as a second harbour rail crossing would mean thousands fewer jobs and plunge NSW back into the economic doldrums, Premier Mike Baird says.

He was responding to a Galaxy poll published by News Limited on Monday which showed the government's lead over Labor was narrowing. It also showed more voters supported raising taxes to pay for $20 billion in infrastructure, rather than part-leasing the state's electricity distribution networks, known as the "poles and wires".

The less popular lease option is the central plank of the Baird government's re-election platform.
Mr Baird attempted to link the notion of higher taxes to the state opposition, saying such a policy was "in Labor's DNA".

"[Under Labor] taxes go up, debt goes up, but you need to understand those taxes going up … means less jobs. Thousands of less jobs," he said.

"If you want a state where debt is going up, we have thousands of less jobs and we go back to the bottom economically, well Labor is your team."

Labor last week released its infrastructure package, which would keep NSW electricity assets in public hands.

A "modest" $10 billion set of projects would be paid for in two ways: retaining for a decade a range of business taxes abolished in last year's state budget, and drawing on an "uncommitted" $4.9 billion already in the government's infrastructure fund, Restart NSW.

The opposition's treasury spokesman Michael Daley said Mr Baird was "looking really silly and rattled", and Labor's proposal to retain business taxes did not equate to raising taxes.

"Mike Baird knows not a single tax was raised, not a single cent of new debt was proposed [ by Labor] and Labor didn't have to blackmail people with asset sales," Mr Daley said.

"Instead, Labor found $10 billion of additional funding and Mike Baird is embarrassed because he said we wouldn't find any."

Mr Baird said the election on March 28 was always going to be a tough one, but voters had a "clear choice".
"We have an opposition that is promising more congestion, more crowded trains, more time in your car and on public transport getting home to your family," he said.

"This government ... has a very clear plan to take away congestion, to provide more trains and enable you to get home to your family quicker."

Mr Baird was speaking at Rosemeadow in south-western Sydney, where he announced a new hardline stance against public housing trouble makers.

If the government is re-elected, it will crack down on anti-social and illegal behaviour and evict tenants who commit serious crimes.

Mr Baird said there were "hundreds and hundreds" of problem tenants who were "taking public housing for granted. They are disrupting, they are terrorising, they are making people's lives a misery on a regular basis".

Under the policy, a person convicted of a serious offence would be evicted. A tenant will also be evicted if they breach their tenancy agreement three times in a year.

NSW Council of Social Service chief executive Tracy Howe said while public tenants deserve to feel safe, the government's policy must acknowledge that "many people who live in social housing have complex needs".

"Government has a responsibility to ensure any social housing policy aims to break cycles of disadvantage, and responds sensibly and fairly to the many and varied experiences of people living in social housing," she said.

Mr Baird said evicted tenants could access other government services.

Community Services Minister Gabrielle Upton said the government would also provide $20 million worth of grants for projects to improve public housing communal spaces, such as creating a community garden or boosting security.

Meantime, Mr Baird said the government would soon release details of how it expects to spend the proceeds of the Millers Point public housing sell-off.

Public housing advocates have criticised the government for failing to produce a business plan for the sales, which are likely to raise more than $500 million.

The government says the proceeds will be redirected back into the social housing system, but has not detailed where or how they will be spent. Mr Baird said the government would release those details "shortly" but did not guarantee it would come before the election.


RESOURCED: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/nsw-state-election-2015/nsw-state-election-2015-taxes-under-labor-would-send-nsw-backwards-says-premier-mike-baird-20150223-13m805.html

Unions launch 'NSW Not For Sale' campaign

Saturday, February 21, 2015
By Jim McIlroy

Nurses protest against a public private partnership deal for a new hospital in Maitland, NSW, in August last year.
Unions NSW has launched a "NSW Not For Sale" campaign in the lead-up to the March 28 state elections. The campaign targets the state government's plans to privatise the power industry, as well as attacking private involvement in hospitals and TAFE.

The campaign involves TV advertisements, as well as a radio and digital blitz. It aims to mobilise union members and other volunteers for doorknocking and mass telephoning.


In addition, the NSW Nurses and Midwives Association (NMA) has announced a television ad campaign, opposing the "Americanisation" of public health, and saying that privatisation could leave people with tens of thousands of dollars in personal costs if they get sick.


NMA general secretary Brett Holmes said the ad was a response to state and federal health policy, as well as various trade deals being negotiated.


Premier Mike Baird has already been selling off public assets on a huge scale. In the past two years it sold $1 billion worth of property, ABC Online said.


"Office blocks, hospitals, schools and even an island are all up for grabs … In 2011-2012, the government sold state-owned assets worth $5 million.


"In late 2012, it established a new agency, Government Property NSW, to identify and manage the state's lucrative real estate portfolio. … Since April 2013, Government Property NSW has sold properties worth $1 billion.


"They have included seven office blocks worth $400 million, the Ausgrid building in Sydney's CBD for $151 million, and justice precinct buildings in Parramatta worth $170 million.


"It has also sold nine terrace houses in Millers Point for $22 million, and plans to sell another 293 of the historic properties," the ABC reported.


The government claimed it was selling properties that were not used to finance needed infrastructure. But Emeritus Professor of Economics at Sydney University Frank Stilwell said it was bad economic management for the government to sell increasingly valuable assets at a time when it could borrow the money so cheaply.


"As a citizen it makes me angry and as an economist it makes me very sad because there's no great economic logic at work here," Stilwell told the ABC.


"This is short-term interest being pursued against the long-term interest of the people and I think people are smart enough to see that this is not good economic strategy."


Stilwell said the government should be leasing underutilised buildings, rather than selling them.
"I think privatisation is inherently unpopular with the people, and certainly the recent election in Queensland shows that the sale of public assets was a major source of electoral damage for the incumbent government," he said.


"The problem in this case is that the sale of real estate assets tends to be done in dribs and drabs and isn't therefore quite as visible as the sale of electricity poles and wires, for example.


"So it tends to be done out of sight, but as soon as the people come to see what is happening, then I think one can expect that they will see it as bad economics, substituting short-term revenues for long-term economic management.”


Susan Price, Socialist Alliance candidate for the seat of Summer Hill in the March 28 elections, said on February 18: "This privatisation frenzy by the Baird state government is neoliberal insanity.
"They seem intent on flogging off anything that moves, belonging to the people. It is grand theft of the public purse, in the interests of big business.


"The Socialist Alliance demands a complete end to privatisation of public assets, of whatever kind. We stand for the defence and extension of the public sector, and the funding of essential new infrastructure, such as hospitals, schools and public transport facilities, by nationalising basic industries, and taxing the rich and big corporations.”


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SOURCED: https://www.greenleft.org.au/node/58335 














Monday, 16 February 2015

Voice your concerns stop the Baird Government Changing the suburb name of Millers Point to Barangaroo Point.

Voice your concerns stop the Baird Government Changing the suburb name of Millers Point to Barangaroo Point.

Support it or Object to it.



Voice your concerns stop the Baird Government Changing the suburb name of Millers Point to Barangaroo Point.
Support it or Object to it.
Naming proposal
Barangaroo Names
GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES ACT 1966
PURSUANT to the provisions of Section 8 of the Geographical Names Act, 1966, the Geographical Names Board hereby notifies that it proposes to assign the names:
Barangaroo Point for a point of land located in Sydney Harbour, south of Millers Point on the northern shoreline of Nawi Cove.
Barangaroo Point Reserve for a reserve in the northern extent of the suburb of Barangaroo, extending from Barangaroo Point to Millers Point.
Nawi Cove for a cove on the western shoreline of the suburb of Barangaroo, situated south of Barangaroo Point.
Watermans Cove for a cove on the western shoreline of the suburb of Barangaroo, adjacent to the intersection of Barangaroo Avenue and Watermans Quay.
Marrinawi Cove for a cove located at the northern extent of Barangaroo Point Reserve, adjacent to Moores Wharf.
Dukes Pier for a pier located within Nawi Cove.
Rowntrees Dock for a dock situated within Nawi Cove.
The position and extent for this feature is recorded and shown within the Geographical Names Register of New South Wales.
Any person wishing to make comment upon this proposal may within one (1) month of the date of this notice contact the Secretary of the Board with that comment.
In accordance with Section 9 of the Geographical Names Act 1966 all submissions lodged may be subject to a freedom of information application and may be viewed by a third party to assist the Board in considering this proposal.

Geographical Names Board
PO Box 143
BATHURST NSW 2795 Kevin Richards
Secretary

Would you like to comment on this proposal online?
‪#‎savemillerspoint‬ ‪#‎wheresgabby‬ ‪#‎nosurrender‬ ‪#‎MikeScared‬
‪#‎ausunions‬ ‪#‎nswpol‬ ‪#‎housing‬ ‪#‎socialhousing‬ ‪#‎community‬ ‪#‎publichousing‬‪#‎humanrights‬ ‪#‎auspol‬ ‪#‎tenancytribunal‬ ‪#‎Sydney‬ #ausunions #nswpol


http://www.gnb.nsw.gov.au/…/current_propos…/naming_proposal…

PURSUANT to the provisions of Section 8 of the Geographical Names Act, 1966, the Geographical Names Board hereby notifies that it proposes to assign the names:


Barangaroo Point for a point of land located in Sydney Harbour, south of Millers Point on the northern shoreline of Nawi Cove.


Barangaroo Point Reserve for a reserve in the northern extent of the suburb of Barangaroo, extending from Barangaroo Point to Millers Point.


Nawi Cove for a cove on the western shoreline of the suburb of Barangaroo, situated south of Barangaroo Point.


Watermans Cove for a cove on the western shoreline of the suburb of Barangaroo, adjacent to the intersection of Barangaroo Avenue and Watermans Quay.


Marrinawi Cove for a cove located at the northern extent of Barangaroo Point Reserve, adjacent to Moores Wharf.


Dukes Pier for a pier located within Nawi Cove.


Rowntrees Dock for a dock situated within Nawi Cove.


The position and extent for this feature is recorded and shown within the Geographical Names Register of New South Wales.


Any person wishing to make comment upon this proposal may within one (1) month of the date of this notice contact the Secretary of the Board with that comment.


In accordance with Section 9 of the Geographical Names Act 1966 all submissions lodged may be subject to a freedom of information application and may be viewed by a third party to assist the Board in considering this proposal.



Geographical Names Board
PO Box 143
BATHURST NSW 2795 Kevin Richards
Secretary

Would you like to comment on this proposal online?
‪#‎savemillerspoint‬ ‪#‎wheresgabby‬ ‪#‎nosurrender‬ ‪#‎MikeScared‬
‪#‎ausunions‬ ‪#‎nswpol‬ ‪#‎housing‬ ‪#‎socialhousing‬ ‪#‎community‬ ‪#‎publichousing‬‪#‎humanrights‬ ‪#‎auspol‬ ‪#‎tenancytribunal‬ ‪#‎Sydney‬ #ausunions #nswpol


http://www.gnb.nsw.gov.au/…/current_propos…/naming_proposal…

Wednesday, 11 February 2015

The capital city for big developers

Peter Mac   February 11, 2015
The insatiable greed of big developers is nowhere more blatantly evident now than in Sydney, and the Baird government backs them all the way. In conjunction with its support for private vehicles as the primary means of transport, and its plan for piecemeal replacement and privatisation of Sydney’s rail network, the government plans to dictate land use zoning and override objections from local councils.
Protest against WestConnex motorway in Sydney earlier this year. (Photo: John Appleya)
Last year the government announced that hundreds of homes in Haberfield, Petersham and St Peters, three historic inner Sydney suburbs, were to be compulsorily acquired and demolished to facilitate construction of the portals (entry and exit points) for the massive, highly controversial WestConnex motorway. 
The construction would require the complete demolition of beautiful streets of 19th and early 20th-century houses. It would also necessitate the partial or entire destruction of two 19th-century parks at Ashfield and Petersham (where Don Bradman made his first century in first class cricket), and an inroad into Sydney Park, created over the last 40 years at huge public expense.
 
The proposal was accompanied by a state government announcement that in other streets adjacent to the Petersham portal it would change the current zoning to allow for demolition of the old dwellings and construction of 10 to 25 storey apartment blocks. Similar proposals were made for other areas.
 
The government has also announced that under the advice of its redevelopment agency Urban Growth (predominantly staffed by former employees of development corporations) it would permit construction of an extra 60,000 apartments on Parramatta Road in the inner city, replacing the old hotels, shops and dwellings that currently line this section of the historic highway.
 
The proposed takeover of local government decision-making would mean that all heritage protection would vanish and home owners could find themselves living in an area zoned for heavy industry, or surrounded and overshadowed by apartment monoliths.
 
The tip of the iceberg
 
Following the electoral defeat of the Victorian Liberal government which had supported construction of a new motorway, the Baird government suddenly decided to alter the route and construction of the Westconnex Motorway so it would no longer pass through Petersham.
 
That relieved the immediate pressure on north Petersham as far as the motorway portal was concerned, but the government could change its mind again, and rezoning inner city suburbs to permit construction of high rise apartments is still government policy.
 
Meanwhile, Haberfield and St Peters residents still face the loss of their homes, and Ashfield Park and Sydney Park would still suffer massive encroachment.
 
But that’s just the tip of the iceberg because the government’s interlocked relationship with the developers threatens the entire city.
 
The government is evicting historic family groups from Millers Point in order to hasten the sale of their homes to the highest bidders, with no exemptions for the elderly.
 
It plans to sell off the historic Eveleigh railway workshops, which contain the last still-functioning major blacksmithing workshop in Australia.
 
Road construction and residential redevelopment is threatening thousands of beautiful heritage properties in Sydney’s North Shore suburbs and many other areas, and the government is planning vast redevelopment of the picturesque old maritime industrial areas west of the Harbour Bridge.
A nightmare vision
 
The government is arguing that half a million people will want to move to Sydney in the next 20 years, that inner city residents must make way for them and that resistance is both selfish and futile.
 
But there will always be a demand for accommodation in Sydney, and developer greed knows no time limits. Carrying the government’s argument to its logical conclusion, Sydney suburbs, particularly the inner city which has ready access to services, transport, work, recreation and of course the beautiful harbour and beaches, should be redeveloped not just for 20 years but beyond.
 
In this scenario the existing buildings would be pulled down and replaced with ever-taller structures, until, presumably, the limits of human engineering were reached, most of the inner city was covered with massive Dubai-style skyscrapers, and the city’s wonderful character was destroyed.
 
It’s an absurd, nightmare vision that should have no place in Australian town planning.
Other cities do the opposite. London, for example, places severe limits on redevelopment, takes vigorous and determined action to preserve its historic buildings, and severely restricts the number of private vehicles that can enter or even approach the inner city.
 
Its transport needs are largely met by trains and buses rather than private vehicles, and its growth is largely accommodated by redevelopment in former industrial sites and outlying low-density suburbs, and by the construction of new suburbs and towns.
 
Challenges and backdowns
Last week the federal government distanced itself from an outrageous report it had commissioned concerning sale and development of Sydney’s last undeveloped headland, between Malabar and Maroubra beaches.
 
The report said that selling the site would generate “a significant return for the government” and private investments of “up to $1 billion” during the construction phase.
 
It noted disdainfully that converting the land into a National Park would do “little to improve the economic capital of the site” and provide “little opportunity for the private sector to contribute”.
 
But Federal Minister for the Environment, Greg Hunt, frightened by plummeting opinion polls, global criticism of its environment policies, and the results of the Victorian elections, dumped the proposal. He gushed “I am passionate about ensuring this magnificent headland is retained in public hands forever”.
 
The Baird government’s intentions are also being challenged by local councils and dozens of community organisations.
 
In Newcastle the government’s hell-for-leather plan to discard the city’s rail line and open up the shoreline for development has been challenged in court by local residents.
 
Sydney City Council has announced it will oppose proposals for major extensions or alterations to the historic Miller Point houses by their new owners.
 
And Sydneysiders have watched with great interest the opposition of Melbourne residents to construction of another mammoth motorway, in a campaign which made a major contribution to defeat of the Liberal government.
 
The clear lesson from that struggle is that if you want to beat the greedy developers you have to dump the governments that serve their interests.
 

New South Wales Government sells $1 billion worth of public assets in past two years

 
Also for sale is Peat Island and adjacent foreshore land at Mooney Mooney















The New South Wales Government is selling public assets on a massive scale, offloading $1 billion worth of property in the past two years alone.

Office blocks, hospitals, schools and even an island are all up for grabs.

Some economists argue the state should hold onto its valuable real estate, but the Government insists the money would be better spent on new infrastructure and housing.

In 2011-2012, the Government sold state-owned assets worth $5 million.

In late 2012, it established a new agency, Government Property NSW, to identify and manage the state's lucrative real estate portfolio.

Agency CEO Brett Newman told the ABC the portfolio comprised 200,000 properties worth almost $130 billion.

"What we do is identify assets that don't need to be owned or are underutilised and we sell them so that the money can be reinvested in capital and improved services right across government," Mr Newman said.

Since April 2013, Government Property NSW has sold properties worth $1 billion.

They have included seven office blocks worth $400 million, the Ausgrid building in Sydney's CBD for $151 million, and justice precinct buildings in Parramatta worth $170 million.

It has also sold nine terrace houses in Millers Point for $22 million, and plans to sell another 293 of the historic properties.

The Government said the proceeds would fund new accomodation for the 58,000 people on public housing waiting lists.

The historic Bidura House and surrounding grounds at Glebe Point went under the hammer in December, selling for $33 million. Chinese developers hope to build up to 100 apartments on the site.

Also for sale is Peat Island and adjacent foreshore land at Mooney Mooney, on the Hawkesbury River, to make way for a housing estate, marina and retail hub.

Government Property NSW also wants to sell 99-year leases for two heritage-listed sandstone buildings near Circular Quay, earmarked for redevelopment as international hotels.

Part of plan to shift public servants out of CBD, says Treasurer
NSW Treasurer Andrew Constance told the ABC the big sell-off was part of a plan to shift public servants out of the CBD and reinvest the money into new housing and infrastructure projects.

"There's no point in us hanging onto the ivory towers which sit half empty when they're not being utilised in the interests of the community," Mr Constance said.

"We're not into a fire sale here, we're strategically managing our portfolio assets, based on the needs of in terms of the public sector."
Mr Constance said the Government was reinvesting the money in projects like a $300 million housing acceleration fund.

"It's designed to get the growth centres in this state moving with better local infrastructures. We're not going to tie up millions of dollars in taxpayers' money into property which could be better managed," he said.

"We have to utilise our assets more effectively in the interest of the taxpayer and as a result we've got a great strategy in terms of devolving decision making into the regions by shifting public servants out of the centre of town."

But Emeritus Professor of Economics at Sydney University, Frank Stilwell, said it was bad economic management for the Government to sell increasingly valuable assets at a time when it could borrow the money so cheaply.

"As a citizen it makes me angry and as an economist it makes me very sad because there's no great economic logic at work here," Professor Stilwell said.

"This is short-term interest being pursued against long-term interest of the people and I think people are smart enough to see that this is not a good economic strategy."

Professor Stilwell said the Government should be leasing underutilised buildings, rather than selling them.

"I think privatisation is inherently unpopular with the people and certainly the recent election in Queensland shows that the sale of public assets was a major source of electoral damage for the incumbent government," he said.

"The problem is in this case that the sale of real estate assets tends to be done in dribs and drabs and isn't therefore quite visible as the sale of electricity poles and wires for example.

"So it tends to be done rather out of sight, but as soon as the people come to see what is happening then I think one can expect that they will see it as bad economics, substituting short-run revenues for long-term economic management."

#‎savemillerspoint‬ ‪#‎wheresgabby‬ ‪#‎nosurrender‬ ‪#‎MikeScared‬
‪#‎ausunions‬ ‪#‎nswpol‬ ‪#‎housing‬ ‪#‎socialhousing‬ ‪#‎community‬ ‪#‎publichousing‬ ‪#‎humanrights‬ ‪#‎auspol‬ ‪#‎tenancytribunal‬ ‪#‎Sydney

Resourcedhttps://au.news.yahoo.com/nsw/a/26256745/new-south-wales-government-sells-1-billion-worth-of-public-assets-in-past-two-years/

Saturday, 7 February 2015

MEDIA RELEASE - SECRET AUCTIONS AT MILLERS POINT RAISE COMMUNITY CONCERN

 
SOPHIE COTSIS MLC
SHADOW MINISTER FOR HOUSING
 
EDWINA LLOYD
LABOR CANDIDATE FOR SYDNEY
 
MEDIA RELEASE
Thursday, 21 August 2014
 
SECRET AUCTIONS AT MILLERS POINT RAISE COMMUNITY CONCERN
 
The NSW Liberal Government’s secret auctions of public housing properties at Millers Point strikes at the heart of community confidence that this is nothing more than a fire sale of public assets and should be stopped.
 
“The revelations that public housing at Millers Point are going to be sold in secret is just more evidence that taxpayers can have no confidence in this process and that it needs to be stopped immediately,” Shadow Minister for Housing Sophie Cotsis said.
 
“These secret auctions show the government is more concerned with a quick cash grab, rather than the best interests of taxpayers and the current tenants of these properties.
 
“The Liberals claims they want to invest the revenue from the sales in new public housing but there is no evidence of that in the budget.
 
“Everyone knows that if you are selling your house at auction, you want to attract as many bidders as possible in order to get the best price.
 
“Instead of making these auctions open for everyone, the NSW Liberal Government is holding them in secret.
 
“These secret auctions are not transparent and they do not guarantee the best return for the sale of a public asset.
 
“The Liberals’ watered down heritage requirements mean that potential speculators can landbank these properties for future development.”
 
Labor candidate for Sydney Edwina Lloyd condemned the Liberals’ handling of housing at Millers Point.
 
“Labor opposes the forced eviction of public housing tenants from Millers Point,” Labor candidate for Sydney Edwina Lloyd said.
 
“The NSW Liberal Government has already been caught tampering with reports to downplay the impact that forced evictions will have on residents’ health - and they have watered down heritage rules for purchasers of these properties.
 
“These secret auctions show that the entire process is a sham and that the Liberals are determined to sell these properties, even if it means that taxpayers do not receive the best sale price at auction.
 
“I am calling on the NSW Liberal Government to halt this sale process, talk to the tenants they are evicting and develop a real plan to deliver affordable housing in the inner-city.”
 
MEDIA CONTACT: SOPHIE COTSIS 0407 945 914
 

MEDIA RELEASE - O’FARRELL SELLS MILLERS POINT HOUSING IN BLATANT CASH GRAB

LINDA BURNEY MP
SHADOW MINISTER FOR FAMILY AND COMMUNITY SERVICES
 
SOPHIE COTSIS MLC
SHADOW MINISTER FOR HOUSING
 
LINDA SCOTT
CITY OF SYDNEY COUNCILLOR
 
MEDIA RELEASE
 
O’FARRELL SELLS MILLERS POINT HOUSING IN BLATANT CASH GRAB
 
The NSW Opposition has condemned the Liberal Government’s decision to sell off 293 properties in Millers Point – accusing it of putting the big end of town before the lives of local residents.
 
Shadow Minister for Family and Community Services Linda Burney said today that the move was a blatant cash grab done with no consultation and Minister Pru Goward could not be trusted to reinvest any proceeds in public housing.
 
This is because over the past year alone, the Liberal Government has
 
·        Overseen an explosion in the public housing waiting list to 57,000 applicants - 2000 more than last year;
 
·        Cut $42 million from the budget for public housing maintenance;
 
·        Cut $22 million from the budget for building new housing stock;
 
·        Built 1,000 fewer new properties than in the previous year;
 
·       Sought to throw residents out of their properties by proposing a cruel new “bedroom tax” straight out of the UK Conservative playbook.
 
In addition, a report by the NSW Land and Housing Corporation shows that the O’Farrell Government has cut more than 1300 public housing properties from its books.
 
“This is an appalling decision by the O’Farrell Government - throwing people out of their properties just so it can grab another city tower,” Ms Burney said.
 
“Minister Pru Goward is selling more public housing than she is building – the reality is that she is not leaving anywhere for residents to go.
 
“This is a Minister who cannot be trusted to reinvest the proceeds of this sell off into public housing – not when she’s cut maintenance, cut new building stock and overseen an explosion in the waiting list.
 
“You’d want any such claim by Pru Goward written in triplicate.
 
“It’s probably best not to believe it at all.”
 
Shadow Minister for Housing Sophie Cotsis said: “Some of the residents of Millers Point have lived in this area all their lives and have a deep connection to the community. Many of them trace their ancestry to the pioneers of Sydney – the people who built this city. Has the Liberal Party given any thought to where they will be housed and where they will go?”
  
“The message of today is very clear – if you live in inner Sydney watch out.
 
“This Government has its eyes on your property – and it’s not building anywhere else for you to move either.
 
“Public housing residents face being banished from the inner city because Barry O’Farrell doesn’t consider them good enough to live here.”
 
City of Sydney Councillor Linda Scott said: My grandmother spent her formative years in Millers Point after leaving her family's country property to make a living in the City. The stories of this area are the stories of Sydney – and Mr O'Farrell's announcement today will be devastating not only for the residents, but for all who care about Sydney's heritage.” 
 
“On Monday night, I moved an amendment calling on the City of Sydney to categorically oppose the sale of public housing in Millers Point and Dawes Point. The Lord Mayor and her supporters joined with the Liberal Councillors to defeat this motion.
 
“Only Labor is standing with this community to fight the sale of all public housing in the inner city.”
 
MEDIA CONTACT: SOPHIE COTSIS 0407 945 914