- the act of formulating of a course of action, or of drawing up plans
Quiet streets close enough to the shops, with sunny aspects and lovely sea breeze
Just next door to it is this quaint place ...
but you can see in the background the mark of things to come ... with the high rise madness from Surfers spilling over into Southport now ...
the main street is now totally changed... with this cluster
and looking in the other direction you see more ...
and clearly this isn't enough, with this vacant block indicating that more is on the way...
already you can no longer see the Southport Guardian Angles church which I was lucky to come back to Australia in time to at least capture during the construction phase: (or should that be destruction?)that pit is where my primary school used to be ... and is now gone, and the church hemmed in on all sides looking less and less meaningful, and in fact no access for church goers (like my dad).
which brings me to my point: it seems that the values of the community are more and more being eroded and destroyed simply for short term profits and benefits of the few.
I say the few because having lived here since the 1960's I can personally vouch for there being precious few benefits in all this "development" but quite a few removals of my personal quality of life.
Gone are the quiet beaches, gone are great beautiful fishing areas, we did not benefit much from employment (most jobs are still in Brisbane). What we have instead is more traffic noise, more congestion, more pollution.
And it doesn't stop there. It was just a few short years ago that we very nearly ran totally out of water here on the Gold Coast. Unsurprisingly at that time the main criticism of the residents was "why are we allowing more people here when we don't have enough water for the existing population".
It seems that the answer to that problem is to do not much about providing more water, but to shove in some more people grab more bucks from the developers fees and pretend we've kept jobs up with temporary jobs in the construction industry.
Looking at Southport from the sky you can see (in the red) exactly which areas are going to get another high-rise in the near future.
the place with the arrow at the bottom is the pair of houses pictured above.
You can see by the shadows the highrise already there. When you add to this new construction to the already high population of the region it does not take a scientist to work out we've got growth problems.
Strangely there is very little planned development for infrastructure such as roads and nothing I'm aware of for water (except for the Desal in Tugun) and the existing dams and flood mitigation devices in Brisbane.
While the Coast may be "Famous for Fun" its more infamous for just being a showcase of exploitation and greed; pushing around the locals while fat cats make money.
Its like the old Vulcan logic:
transformed into "the greed of the few outweighs the needs of the many"
So, are we living in a democracy or in a self perpetuating autocracy in which the working classes ...


Scary stuff....
ReplyDeleteYou should see Section 53 of the town planning act of NSW: Frank Sartor basically sold out to the big developers such as Mirvac and Meriton and created a "Departmnent of Planning" that can get submissions from developers who have been refused the go ahead from local councils.
The Department can then over-ride any council's development decisions, without recourse to the Supreme Court or any other court to reverse the outcome.
Guess which way every single Dept of "Planning" decision has gone since it was formed?
And they call this a democracy?