- Media Alert
Media Alert: Huntingfield and Kingborough Public Meeting Reminder
Media Enquiries
Sophie Underwood
PMAT State Director
sophie_underwood@hotmail.com
0407 501 999
Please share:
Media Alert – 25 July 2019 - Public Meeting Reminder
Public Meeting: what future do you want for Huntingfield and Kingborough?
Thursday 25 July 2019
7 pm – 8.30 pm (doors open 6.30 pm)
Kingborough Community Hub, 7 Goshawk Way, Kingston (former Kingston High School site)
Over 300 people have registered an interest at PMAT’s Facebook public meeting event, which also received over 12K views.
Map: Location of proposed new zonings at Huntingfield to allow for one of the biggest and most dense subdivisions ever proposed in Tasmania, but it will bypass the normal planning process.
The main aim of the meeting, if agreed by attendees, will be that the meeting calls on the Tasmanian Parliament to reject the proposed Housing Supply Order – 1287 Channel Highway, Huntingfield and have the proposed development and any required zoning considered through the normal Land Use Planning and Approvals Act 1993 process to ensure proper community consultation and strategic and infrastructure planning. Almost every rezone in Tasmania in the last 25 years has gone through this process.
Speakers
Welcome to Country
Anne Harrison (MC) – State President, PMAT
Evan Boardman – e3 Development Consulting (expert planner)
Dean Winter – Mayor, Kingborough Council
Matt Jones – Huntingfield Resident
Greg Whitten – Farmer and business owner
Rachel Downie – Council Chair, Tarremah Steiner School
**The event will also be live streamed via the Planning Matters Alliance Tasmania’s Facebook page**
See PMAT Facebook public meeting event here.
See the local Facebook Group Residents of Huntingfield and Beyond here.
A fast track rezone process has begun in Kingborough – the Draft Huntingfield Housing Land Supply Order – which will allow for one of the largest and most dense subdivisions ever proposed in Tasmania. While affordable housing is welcome, the proposal has not been advertised for public comment and there is no guarantee any of the houses will be affordable.
There’s no requirement under the Huntingfield land release order for any percentage of social and affordable housing.
This new fast track re-zone process has never been used in Kingborough before, and was created by the Tasmanian Government in 2018. The government is the proponent, they chose who they consulted with and will assess the proposal.
What will such as massive proposal mean for residents, adjoining schools, increased traffic, strategic planning and pressure on existing services and infrastructure in Kingborough?
Public scrutiny is completely lacking and Council and the Planning Commission have been sidelined. Does this sound like a transparent process?
There has been four Housing Supply Orders in Tasmania to date** (1.5 hectares, 1 hectare, 2.8 hectares and 2.4 hectares) but this proposal is a totally different magnitude and
proposition. The Huntingfield rezone will cover around 69 hectares – with around 30 hectares of housing.
There have only been four Land Supply Orders in Tasmania to date:
http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/ha/tpapers/2019/p2019/HATP1_28_5_2019.pdf
http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/ha/tpapers/2018/p2018/HATP11_20_11_2018.pdf
http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/ha/tpapers/2018/p2018/HATP12_20_11_2018.pdf
http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/ha/tpapers/2018/p2018/HATP13_20_11_2018.pdf
For More Information & Comment
Sophie Underwood 0407 501 999
Anne Harrison 0419 585 291
Related News & Media
Mercury Opinion Piece: Minister’s planning reforms a thinly veiled attempt to centralise power and bypass local councils
Tasmania cannot risk development at any cost, writes Brendan Blomeley.
Pulse Opinion Piece:‘Self-interest’ accusations fly as greater Hobart mayors oppose new planning powers
“The mayors of greater Hobart have been accused of acting in their own “self-interest” after coming out against plans that could see them stripped of
Mercury Opinion Piece: Lessons to learn blurring lines of private and public
Felix Ellis’s Bill to remove individual planning decisions from local [Tasmanian] government is a real worry, writes Peter Boyer.
ABC Interview: Tasmanian government’s development plan changes labelled ‘cataclysmic’ by critics, as minister says it is to side-step NIMBYs
Listen to PMAT’s State Director Sophie Underwood, and Clarence Mayor Brendan Blomeley on ABC Mornings speaking about why Development Assessment Panels (DAPs) are terrible for
Support Us
Receive News & Updates from PMAT
Stay informed on what’s happening locally and statewide within Tasmania, and join our community in advocating to protect Tasmania’s future.