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Kiama Council bureaucracy - Colin
Kiama Council bureaucracy - Colin

11 October 2023, 11:30 PM

Kiama council bureaucracy - what would Winsome think?It is true as reported in The Bugle September 23, 2023 that Winston Barker was the inspiration for the Roses in Peace Park. Winsome contacted me around 2003 and I agreed that the Illawarra Rose Society, of which I was then president, would supply the roses for the Park.The innovative Buy a Brick scheme was Winsome‘s idea of the proceeds going to much of the early work of developing the park. This no longer happens as Kiama Council for the past few years has retained all the funds generated from the sale of the bricks. The park receives nothing.A small group of volunteers from the Illawarra Rose society and Kiama Garden Club maintain the park.As it has been predicted to be a very hot summer the roses in the park will need watering at least twice a week.We recently received a small community grant through the Federal member for Gilmour for equipment. Currently we bring our own equipment including a hose to the park each week. We had planned to use part of the Grant to have a small storage facility similar to what the softball players have at Chapman Point where we could leave tools and things such as a hose fertiliser and sprays. This would be at no cost to Council. So many conditions were placed by Council that it is impossible for us to proceed. Indeed we are considering our future involvement with the park. The final Indignity was if we met all the conditions and had the storage facility we would have to pay a lease of $520 each year to council. This just to store our equipment to improve a council facility.To say we were amazed at this bureaucratic response is an understatement. Just as Winsome was outraged when I told her about Council holding onto all the money from the sale of the bricks earlier this year. I know she would share the surprise of the volunteers who give their time and equipment each week to enhance our local attraction.Colin Hollis

LETTER TO THE EDITOR - Salvation Army
LETTER TO THE EDITOR - Salvation Army

23 September 2023, 1:00 AM

The Voice will make a difference The Salvation Army is one of the biggest providers of social services in Australia. We are a  pragmatic movement, not really into empty gestures or performative virtue signalling. I don’t think  in our 140-year history in Australia that we have ever been called “elites”.  But we do support the Voice.  We support the Voice, simply, because we believe it will make a difference.  For 140 years, the Salvos have rolled up their sleeves and helped where we can. We started small  by assisting discharged prisoners at the prison gates in Melbourne and now we provide over 2,000  services across every state and territory in Australia. We support people experiencing  homelessness, family and domestic violence, financial hardship, unemployment, substance use  disorders, social isolation and loneliness, and help them recover from natural disasters. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are over-represented in almost every service we  deliver – and that’s why we support a Voice.  There is no escaping the fact that what we are doing right now, as a nation, is not working.  The Salvos will always do what we can on the ground, but the issues we see are deeper; they are  structural and systemic. We believe the only way to practically address the hardship experienced  by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples is to change how the government makes and  carries out policy. We believe the best way to do that is to actually listen to the people affected – to  give them a voice.  Not everyone agrees with us on this and that’s okay. We just ask that people respectfully consider,  before they decide on October 14: “Will the Voice make a difference for people who really need  help?” We think the answer is a resounding yes.  Captain Stuart Glover The Salvation Army Australia For more information or to arrange an interview, contact The Salvation Army’s Media Relations  Department on 02 9466 3143. 

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