Membership of the Committee - 39th Parliament
Members:
Senator
Alan Eggleston, Chair (LP, WA)
Senator Mark Bishop, Deputy Chair (ALP,
WA)
Senator Andrew Bartlett (AD, QLD)
Senator the Hon Nick Bolkus (ALP, SA)
Senator Marise Payne (LP, NSW)
Senator John Tierney (LP, NSW)
Participating Members:
Senator The Hon Eric Abetz (LP, TAS)
Senator
Lyn Allison (AD, VIC) appointed for communications issues as at 30/09/99.
Senator Ron Boswell (NP, QLD)
Senator Vicki Bourne (AD, NSW)
Senator Bob Brown (AG, TAS)
Senator the Hon David Brownhill (NPA, NSW)
Senator Paul H. Calvert (LP, TAS)
Senator George Campbell (ALP, NSW)
Senator Kim Carr (ALP, VIC)
Senator Hedley Grant P. Chapman (LP, SA)
Senator Helen Coonan (LP, NSW)
Senator Winston Crane (LP, WA)
Senator the Hon John Faulkner (ALP, NSW)
Senator Alan B. Ferguson (LP, SA)
Senator Jeannie Ferris (LP, SA)
Senator The Hon Brian F. Gibson, AM (LP, TAS)
Senator Brian Harradine (IND, TAS)
Senator Steve Hutchins (ALP, NSW)
Senator Susan C. Knowles (LP, WA)
Senator Meg Lees (AD, SA)
Senator Ross Lightfoot (LP, WA)
Senator Kate Lundy (ALP, ACT)
Senator Brett J. Mason (LP, QLD)
Senator Julian J.J. McGauran (NPA, VIC)
Senator The Hon Warwick R. Parer (LP, QLD)
Senator Aden D.Ridgeway (AD, NSW) appointed for arts
issues as at 30/09/99
Senator the Hon Chris Schacht (ALP, SA)
Senator Tsebin Tchen (LP VIC)
Senator John O. W. Watson
Committee Secretariat
Ms Roxane Le Guen, Secretary
Ms Stephanie Holden, Research Officer
Ms Angela Mututu, Executive Assistant
Environment, Communications,
Information Technology
and the Arts References
Committee
S1.57, Parliament House
Canberra ACT 2600
Tel: 02 6277 3526
Fax: 02 6277 5818
Email: erca.sen@aph.gov.au
Sydney Harbour Federation Trust Bill 1999
List of recommendations
Recommendation 1
The Committee recommends that the
Senate pass the Bill with amendments as follows:
Recommendation 2
That the Bill be
amended to specify that the sites to be managed by the Trust are at North Head,
Middle Head and Georges Heights, Woolwich and Cockatoo Island and any other sites which may come under the Trust.
Recommendation 3
That section 6 of the Bill should
specify that within ten years, all land on the harbour foreshores vacated by
the Department of Defence should be transferred to the Sydney Harbour National Park.
Recommendation 4
That section 7 (e) and section 59
of the Bill be amended to provide that the Commonwealth should make a
diminishing appropriation to the Trust for a number of years at the end of
which the Trust would become self-funding.
Recommendation 5
That the Department of Defence
should make a financial contribution towards the cost of decontamination and
rehabilitation of the lands that it is currently vacating.
Recommendation 6
That section 8 (2b) be amended so
that, while the Trust would retain the power to lease real and personal
properties, limits would be placed on its power to sell any real and personal
property of heritage value and national significance.
Recommendation 7
That section 30 (4) should be
amended to provide that an invitation to the public to comment on the
management plans should be published in a newspaper in the Sydney metropolitan
area as well as the Gazette and a local newspaper.
Recommendation 8
That sections 31 to 33 of the Bill be
amended so that the Federal Minister should consult with the relevant State
Minister before any decision is taken on the draft management plans developed
by the Trust.
Recommendation 9
That sections 50-56 of the Bill be
amended to ensure greater transparency of the Trust’s activities including
public notification of dates and times of the meetings of the Trust.
Recommendation 10
That section 57 of the Bill be
amended to specify that the Community Advisory Committees should include
representatives of the local area including local government representatives
with local knowledge and/or qualifications appropriate to membership of the
Advisory Committee.
Recommendation 11
The Committee recommends also
that the term of each member appointed to a Community Advisory Committee should
not exceed 3 years.
Recommendation 12
That section 71 of the Bill should
be amended so that the Trust and Trust property should be subject to State
planning and environmental laws.
Senator Alan Eggleston
Chair
Introduction
The Sydney Harbour Federation Trust Bill 1999 was referred
to the Senate Environment, Communications, Information Technology and the Arts
Legislation Committee on 8 December 1999 by the Selection of Bills Committee
(Report No 21 of 1999). The Committee was required to report to the Senate by 7 March 2000. The tabling date was subsequently extended to 3 April 2000.
The Bill
The purpose of the Sydney Harbour Federation Trust Bill 1999
is to establish the Sydney Harbour Federation Trust as a transitional body
formed to ensure that the Commonwealth of Australia fulfils its duty of
rehabilitating current defence sites before returning them to the people of Australia
“in good order and with a sustainable base for their ongoing management.” The
Trust is the mechanism chosen by the Commonwealth Government to fulfil its 1998
election commitment to manage and preserve for future generations those sites
on the Sydney Harbour Foreshore currently occupied by the Commonwealth
Department of Defence and about to be vacated by the Defence department.
The Committee notes that the objects of the Trust as stated
in section 6 of the Bill are:
- to
ensure that management of Trust land contributes to preserving the amenity of
the Sydney Harbour region;
- to conserve the environmental and heritage values
of Trust land;
- to maximise public access to Trust land;
- to
establish and manage suitable land as a park on behalf of the Commonwealth as
the national government;
- to
cooperate with New South Wales and local government bodies in furthering the
objects of the Trust.
The sites in question are listed in the explanatory
memorandum as being at North Head, Georges Heights, Middle Head, Woolwich and Cockatoo
Island.[1]
The Trust will consist of a Chair and five Members,
appointed by the Minister for the Environment and Heritage. Two of the members
may be nominees of the government of New South Wales.
The Bill requires that the Trust develop management plans
for the sites with full community participation. The plans are subject to
approval by the Minister for the Environment and Heritage.
An important aspect of the Bill is that it provides for the
establishment by the Trust, of a community advisory committee in respect of
each management plan area, for the purpose of providing advice to the Trust on
issues relevant to the management plan area. The Trust must consider the advice
or recommendation of the community advisory committees.
The Bill also provides for the actions undertaken by
Commonwealth in relation to a management plan, on behalf of the interim Trust
(established by the Commonwealth in March 1999), to be considered as having
been performed by the Trust.
The Committee’s Inquiry
The Senate Environment, Communications, Information
Technology and the Arts Committee advertised its inquiry in The Sydney
Morning Herald, The Australian and The Australian
Financial Review and contacted a number of organisations with an interest
in the conservation of lands around Sydney harbour inviting them to make
submissions. The Committee received 25 submissions. A list of the submissions
is at Appendix 1.
Issues raised in Submissions
All 25 submissions expressed similar concerns about the Bill
as it now stands, with a few submissions, such as the ones from the Friends of
Cockatoo Island, the Foreshore 2000 Woolwich and from the various local
councils, raising in addition concerns specific to their own areas.
The individuals and groups who made submissions to the
inquiry expressed themselves very eloquently and were united in seeking a
number of major amendments to the Bill. The Committee will not reproduce all
the arguments here but instead, refers readers to the submissions themselves
which are available from the Committee Secretariat. The major concerns common
to submissions included:
- that the Bill does not list the land which will be vested in the
Trust;
- that Trust lands should be managed in such a way that
“establishes a sustainable financial base in furthering the objects, and
performing other functions of the Trust (section 7 (e)) and consequently;
- that no Commonwealth funds are allocated to the Trust for its
operations;
- that the Trust can dispose of real and personal property (section
8 (2b));
- that the federal Minister for the Environment is given “far too
much power” in the bill[2];
- that the bill does not make specific provision for a member of
the local community be appointed to the Trust;
- that the bill exempts the Trust, Trust lands and the actions of
the Trust from State laws;
- that the Trust is set up parallel to (and in competition to) the
Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority and the NSW National Parks and Wildlife
Service, a situation that might lead to duplication and confusion.
- that the Trust is only obliged to “consider” the representations
and recommendations of the Community Advisory Committees to be established
under the legislation;
- that the Management Plans to be developed for the sites should be
tabled in Parliament as Regulations;
In their submission, the Friends of Cockatoo Island put
forward a proposal for that site to be developed as a marine maintenance centre
for Sydney Harbour, servicing all types of boats. No other submissions made any
suggestions for commercial development and all have expressed concern about how
the Trust is to establish a financially sustainable base.
Public Hearing and Site visit
The Committee held a public hearing in Sydney on 29 March 2000 and heard from 23 witnesses. A list of the witnesses who appeared before the
Committee is at Appendix 2.
On that same afternoon (29 March 2000), members of the Committee went on a tour of the harbour sites including Cockatoo Island and
the dock at Woolwich. The Committee visited a number of buildings at various
sites and was able to assess at first hand which ones had been maintained or
were dilapidated and which were in need of major conservation work. Senators
were also able to assess the state of the bushland in many of the areas
visited. Throughout the visit, the Committee was able to appreciate the beauty
of Sydney Harbour and the heritage value of the areas under consideration. The
Committee wishes to thank Mr Geoff Bailey of the Interim Trust for his
assistance in making the site visit possible.
The Committee recognises the strong feeling of commitment to
maintaining public access to the foreshores of Sydney Harbour that motivated
the individuals, local Municipal Councils and resident groups who made
submissions and appeared as witnesses to this inquiry. The Committee accepts
the view put to it that this is not simply a local issue and that the sites
have immensely important heritage and cultural values for all Australians:
All of those things mean that it is an immensely important
historic site not only for New South Wales and Sydney Harbour but for Australia.
It must be preserved, in our view, because of this heritage value.[3]
In the early days of our group we did a survey at Clarkes Point
which is, as I said already a park. Every weekend for about six months we asked
visitors where they came from. Over that whole time, 88 per cent of all
visitors at Clarkes Point on the harbour foreshores came from outside the
Hunters Hill, Gladesville, Ryde area.[4]
There were repeated calls in submissions, including from Mr Tom
Uren[5]
for the Fraser-Wran Agreement of 1979 to be honoured. This agreement would have
seen all Commonwealth lands on the Sydney Harbour Foreshores transferred to the
Sydney Harbour National Park as the Department of Defence vacated them. The
Agreement was supposed to be ongoing over a period of ten years. In the
Committee’s view there is nothing in the Bill that prevents the fulfilment of
the spirit of that Agreement and the Committee notes that the Explanatory
Memorandum to the Bill states that:
The intention is that the Trust should complete its task within
ten years. After that time, the Commonwealth intends to transfer suitable lands
to the New South Wales government for inclusion in the Sydney Harbour National
Park. [6]
Working relationships with the Trust
In relation to the current proposal for a Trust to be
established to develop management plans for the lands prior to eventual
transfer to the New South Wales government, the Committee notes that there is
already a spirit of cooperation between the local Municipal Councils, resident
and community groups and the Interim Sydney Harbour Federation Trust:
Mayor Harvey: We do need the Trust. That is why Mosman Council
has made this submission suggesting just how it can be accomplished with this
present bill if we had those modifications...We have been meeting with them
regularly.[7]
We will be having an on-site meeting, and our local community
groups will be briefing the Trust on what happened at Woolwich and Cockatoo in
the next couple of weeks. So there is a good spirit of cooperation between the
Trust and the Councils already.[8]
In the Committee’s view it is important for all the groups
to continue to develop that spirit of cooperation in order to work towards the
conservation of the environmental and heritage values of the lands that will be
vested in the Trust.
Funding
The question of funding and the subsequent ability to put
good structures in place for the Trust to develop a financial base is crucial
to its ability to fulfil its charter as stated in the legislation.
The Committee was interested to hear the evidence of Ms
Bergin of the Headland Preservation Group who suggested that there may be some
similarities between the role of the Sydney Harbour Trust and that of the
Presidio Trust in San Francisco.[9]
The Presidio Trust manages the buildings and lands of a former US military base
as an urban national park. According to Ms Bergin, the Presidio is funded
through US federal appropriations, “federal loans, large contributions from the
Army for infrastructure and decontamination, and leasing of buildings. Because
Congress is worried about endless costs, it requires the Presidio Trust to be
self-funding in 15 years.”[10]
The Committee recognises that the two situations are not
identical and that different countries have different approaches and different
needs. However, the Presidio example sets a precedent for a program of
cooperation between a Defence department and a body charged with managing lands
previously occupied by that department as well as providing a model for
diminishing appropriations from a Federal government until a conservation and
heritage trust becomes self funding.
Transparency of Trust’s activities
A number of submissions expressed concerns about the
legislative provisions governing the processes of the Trust and the development
of management plans.[11]
The Committee is fully supportive of greater transparency of Trust activities
and of a full community consultation process before the adoption of any
management plan for the lands administered by the Trust.
The Committee notes that section 58 of the Bill provides for
the appointment of Technical Advisory Committees. The importance of such a
Committee was emphasised by Councillor Colless of the Sydney Coastal Council
Group who told the Committee:
It would be one of our recommendations that the Trust be
supported by a technical committee composed of expert officers who could provide
that kind of detailed technical background for the work of the Trust.[12]
The Committee is persuaded that such a Committee would be of
great assistance in enabling the Trust to make an accurate evaluation of what
needs to be done for the proper management of each of the sites during the
development of the management plans. The Committee would support the
establishment of such a Committee as soon as possible after the legislation has
been passed.
Conclusion
The Committee supports the establishment of the Trust but it
believes that the Bill needs to be amended if the Trust is to be able to meet
its objectives of management and conservation in a spirit of cooperation with
the community. Accordingly,
Recommendation 1
The Committee recommends that the
Senate pass the Bill with amendments as follows:
Recommendation 2
That the Bill be amended to
specify that the sites to be managed by the Trust are at North Head, Middle
Head and Georges Heights, Woolwich and Cockatoo Island and any other sites
which may come under the Trust.
Recommendation 3
That section 6 of the Bill should
specify that within ten years, all land on the harbour foreshores vacated by
the Department of Defence should be transferred to the Sydney Harbour National
Park.
Recommendation 4
That section 7 (e) and section 59
of the Bill be amended to provide that the Commonwealth should make a
diminishing appropriation to the Trust for a number of years at the end of
which the Trust would become self-funding.
Recommendation 5
That the Department of Defence
should make a financial contribution towards the cost of decontamination and
rehabilitation of the lands that it is currently vacating.
Recommendation 6
That section 8 (2b) be amended so
that, while the Trust would retain the power to lease real and personal
properties, limits would be placed on its power to sell any real and personal
property of heritage value and national significance.
Recommendation 7
That section 30 (4) should be
amended to provide that an invitation to the public to comment on the
management plans should be published in a newspaper in the Sydney metropolitan
area as well as the Gazette and a local newspaper.
Recommendation 8
That sections 31 to 33 of the
Bill be amended so that the Federal Minister should consult with the relevant State
Minister before any decision is taken on the draft management plans developed
by the Trust.
Recommendation 9
That sections 50-56 of the Bill
be amended to ensure greater transparency of the Trust’s activities including
public notification of dates and times of the meetings of the Trust.
Recommendation 10
That section 57 of the Bill be
amended to specify that the Community Advisory Committees should include
representatives of the local area including local government representatives
with local knowledge and/or qualifications appropriate to membership of the
Advisory Committee.
Recommendation 11
The Committee recommends also
that the term of each member appointed to a Community Advisory Committee should
not exceed 3 years.
Recommendation 12
That section 71 of the Bill
should be amended so that the Trust and Trust property should be subject to
State planning and environmental laws.
Appendix 1 - List of submissions
- Mr
Stuart Read
- Sydney
Harbour Foreshore Authority
- Manly
Council
- Friends
of Cockatoo Island Inc.
- Nature
Conservtion Council of NSW Inc
- Defenders
of Sydney Harbour Foreshores
- & 7a Headland
Preservation Group Inc
- Hunters
Hill Trust
- The
Vaucluse Progress Association
- Sydney
Harbour and Foreshores Committee
- Mr
Tom Uren
- Mr
Keith Bennett
- Foreshore
2000 Woolwich
- Public
Interest Advocacy Centre
- National
Parks Association of NSW Inc
- North
Head Alliance
- Ryde
Hunters Hill Flora and Fauna Preservation Society
- National
Trust of Australia (NSW)
- Ms
Elizabeth Jean Alexander
- Mosman
Parks & Bushland Association Inc
- Mosman
Municipal Council
- Hunters
Hill Council
- Woollahra
History and Heritage Society Inc (WHHS)
- NSW
Government
- Sydney
Coastal Councils Group Inc
Appendix 2 - Individuals who appeared before the Committee at public hearings
Wednesday,
29 March 2000, Sydney
Defenders of Sydney Harbour
Foreshores
Mr Tom Uren
Mr Joseph Glascott OAM
Mr Philip Jenkyn
Headland Preservation Group
Ms Linda Bergin
Mr Donald H. Goodsir
Sydney Harbour and Foreshores
Committee
Mr Michael Rolfe
North Head Alliance
Mr Doug Sewell
Friends of Cockatoo Island
Mr John F.
Clark
Foreshore 2000 Woolwich
Mr Richard White
Ms Alysoun Ryves
National Parks Association of
NSW Inc
Mr Peter Caldwell
Public Interest Advocacy
Centre
Mr Gregory J. Kirk
Mr Jim Wellsmore
Woollahra History and
Heritage Society Inc
Mr Peter L. Poland
Hunters Hill Council
Ms Susan R. Hoopmann
(Mayor Hunters Hill)
Mr Barry R. Smith
Mosman Council
Mr John O.
Carmichael
Sydney Coastal Councils Group
Councillor Shirley
A. Colless
Mr Geoffrey M.
Withycombe
Councillor Patricia
J. Harvey (Mayor Mosman)
Manly Council
Ms Jennie Minifie
Mosman Council
Mr John O.
Carmichael
New South Wales Government
Dr Deborah J.
Dearing
Mr Philip Reed
Appendix 3 - Documents tabled and authorised to be published
Wednesday 29 March 2000 –
Sydney
- Mr
Tom Uren, The Draft Sydney Harbour Federation Trust Bill 1999.
- P.
Jenkyn, Sydney Harbour, Statement of Significance.
- P.
Jenkyn, Statement in support of Defenders of Sydney Harbour Foreshores
Submission.
- Headland
Preservation Group Inc. Statement
- Sydney
Harbour Foreshores Committee, Estimate of Costs
- Letters
from Cleaver Moore to Mr Poland, Woolahra History and Heritage Society
- Foreshores
2000 Woolwich, The proposed Extension of Sydney harbour National park at
Woolwich, A Place Called Moocooboola and Submission to Sydney harbour
Federation Trust, The Village of Woolwich
- Sydney
Coastal Councils Group Inc. Presentation notes
- Aerial
Photograph of Middle Head and Georges Heights
- Location Map, Tabled by
Hunters Hill Council, Presentation from Hunters Hill Council.
Correspondence Tabled:
From Environment Australia to the Committee, received 31
March 2000.
ALP Senators Minority Report
The Bill, as presented to the
committee, is fundamentally flawed. It should not be passed by the Parliament,
at least not without significant amendment.
The Bill fails to incorporate
the intent of either the 1979 Fraser-Wran agreement, or the election promises
made by the Prime Minister. The Prime Minister has misled the Australian
community and has failed to deliver on his stated intent on this issue.
In September 1998 Prime Minister
Howard announced that the Government would establish a Sydney Harbour
Federation Trust to assume responsibility for the
remediation and management of five foreshore sites being vacated by Defence,
with the intention of transferral of the sites for inclusion in the Sydney
Harbour National Park.
Evidence
presented to the Senate inquiry has raised a number of serious concerns about
the inadequacies of various aspects of the Bill.
Labor
members believe that the following issues must be addressed:
- The Bill does not identify
the key object of the act is to establish a Trust to facilitate the transfer of
ownership and management of the land to the Sydney Harbour National Park.
The Government should clearly
state in the Bill that the Trust is being established to transfer ownership of
the sites to NSW and provides a timetable and process for doing so. All
land should be transferred to the Sydney Harbour National Park and no land
retained in Commonwealth ownership.
- The land to which the
Bill applies is not clearly defined and nor is its tenure status.
Each site should be specified
and mapped, with ability to add additional sites by Regulation.
- Ownership transition
need not wait for 10 years
Once contamination has been
remediated, and disused buildings removed, there is no reason that a site could
not be immediately transferred to Sydney Harbour National Park. Transferral of
ownership to NSW should be undertaken as soon as remediation for each site is
complete. Legislation should provide for handover in a staged manner following
remediation.
- The legislation does not
identify that the function of the Trust is to remediate the land and prepare it
for handover to NSW (as indicated in the Prime Minister’s statement); nor does
it provide for transparency in its operation.
This function of the Trust
should be clearly stated in the legislation should allow for staged handover as
each area of land is remediated, and should provide for public notification and
participation.
- Under the draft bill, the
land is exempted from State planning and environmental protection legislation.
It is unacceptable for these
sites to be exempt from state environmental protection and planning
legislation. The commonwealth might wish to place additional requirements on
the management of this land, over and above the state regime, however, the
state planning framework should be followed as a minimum requirement.
Exemption from state
legislation is in direct conflict with Attachment 3 of the 1997 Heads of
Agreement on Commonwealth / State Roles and Responsibilities for the
Environment..
In addition, management plans
developed by the Trust should be consistent with SEPP 56, state regional
planning and Sydney Harbour National Park management practices to ensure a
smooth transition in ownership.
- The Minister for Environment
has sole discretion on the sale of land and is able to make commercial leasing
arrangements beyond the 10-year existence of the Trust.
Management plans for each
area of land should only be after consultation with the State Government and
should be subject to parliamentary approval. The fate of such significant areas
of Sydney Harbour foreshore should not be decided at the discretion of the
Minister with no opportunity for appeal. Sale of land should be for
non-commercial use only, be subject to parliamentary disallowance, and a
process of public notification.
- Trust membership is
weighted toward Commonwealth representation.
The Trust is responsible to
the Commonwealth Minister for Environment, and it is currently proposed that
four of the six members be appointed by the Minister. There is no requirement
for local government or community representation on the Trust. Labor supports
2 positions nominated by the Commonwealth Government, 2 by the NSW Government,
1 local government representative and 1 community representative.
- Management plans are not
required to be for the whole of site and the requirements of management plans
are limited in extent.
Legislation should require
management plans for the whole of each site and should stipulate timeframes and
costings within which the objectives of the management plan and the objects of
the Act are to be met.
- 10 year life span
can be extended under the Bill.
The legislation should have
an automatic sunset clause and allow for early termination should all sites be
transferred at an earlier date.
- Current Trust member
conflict of interests is too limited
Broader conflict of interest
provisions should be included in the legislation beyond paid employment
conflicting with duties.
- There was an expectation
that funds would be provided to the Trust from the Commonwealth.
This was a perception that
the Prime Minister was keen to encourage before the 1988 election. It is our
view that there should be such an allocation to the trust, the appropriate
level to be established through a process of consultation with all relevant
stakeholders, and that the Defence Department should be called upon to make a
financial contribution to decontamination and rehabilitation of its lands with
the subject areas.
- Current Trust
membership is not of a defined period.
This should be amended to
provide for 3 or 5 year terms.
- Composition of
Community Advisory Committee.
Such Committees are
inappropriately defined and should be amended to include representatives of the
local area.
The issues discussed above are
those considered of most significance. There are many other minor amendments
that should be considered and those recommended by Mosman Council and the NSW
Government should be seriously considered for implementation.
Labor Senators are particularly
concerned at the haste with which this legislation is to be progressed in the
Senate after the tabling of this report. It is our view that the bill's
consideration be deferred until sittings in May to allow adequate public consideration
of any amendments to be proposed to the legislation.
SENATOR NICK BOLKUS
SENATOR MARK BISHOP
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