$200M GLASGOW GIFT
Dear Editor,
Our $200M Glasgow gift is deeply embarrassing.
That huge sum, paid by Victorians to run our own cancelled Commonwealth Games in Scotland, is a massive slap in the face amid a cost-of-living crisis.
Imagine how that $200M could have been spent in regional Victoria. It could have created 2,000 nursing jobs to help regional Victorians get better health care and stop ambulance ramping. It could have built 400 new homes for families in need. The list goes on and on.
Instead, that $200M is being shipped off overseas.
We knew the Allan Labor Government was out of touch with regional Victorians, but this really stings. We have forked out $600M on the cancelled games and $200M is being used to run them in another country. Labor can’t manage money and it’s regional Victorians who are paying the price.
Leader of The Nationals Peter Walsh
KIALLA’S GROWTH Kialla is on the cusp of a growth boom. Every day we see the evidence as residential housing expands the Kialla Lakes and Seven Creeks estates ever southward. Growth is a good thing – but only if we as a community match people with the services they need and desire.
Kialla’s growth is not based on a “best guess”. Last year’s independent report, Kialla Community Infrastructure Needs Assessment, details the growth we can expect over coming years. Commissioned by Greater Shepparton City Council, it confirms Kialla will see some of the highest housing growth across our region as we approach mid-century.
The report provides important insight into the infrastructure needs of Kialla as we experience this certainty. It makes very interesting reading.
The five key growth areas are Kialla North, Kialla West, Kialla South, Waterbird Creek and Kialla Central – potentially doubling our population in 10-or-so years. The report also makes clear the likelihood that the current airport site will eventually become housing.
Over the next few decades, Kialla will generate about 200 kindergarten places, will need up to five GPs, an additional primary school (maybe a high school) and a library.
The Shepparton and Mooroopna 2050 Regional Growth Plan provides a vision for the future development of Greater Shepparton and our city can expect to see a population of 78,000 by 2031. The plan refers to much community infrastructure – such as the Munarra Centre, La Trobe University redevelopment and the creation of an arts precinct, all good initiatives – but I cannot see in this plan the infrastructure planning to meet the needs of a much larger Kialla.
Kialla is as large or larger than some of our towns and should be treated as such when it comes to services. It is further away from the Shepparton town centre than Mooroopna, and yet does not even have a public toilet.
The independent assessment report notes: “Kialla does not have an extensive range of community infrastructure and most of the infrastructure it has, is located some distance from the… growth areas.”
Kialla is building its own proud community, contributes significant rates and requires the attention a growth area deserves.
One of the reasons I am standing for council in the October elections is because of the ward structure. Having Kialla Ward, and knowing the growth we will experience, provides an opportunity for services to keep pace with population.
I have lived in the Kialla area for 15 years and have reported on many local councils throughout my journalism and broadcasting career on local radio. I have volunteered on school councils, a health board and sporting clubs. Through the Fairley Leadership Program and an extensive network of friends and community leaders, I am ready to effectively represent Kialla Ward.
Terri Cowley, council candidate for Kialla Ward