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Ordinary Council Meeting Agenda – Tuesday 22 December 2020
Ordinary Council Meeting Agenda – Tuesday 22 December 2020 Committed to a sustainable future Notice is hereby given pursuant to Section 83 of the Local Government Act 1999 that the next Ordinary Meeting of Council is to be held at the Community and Civic Centre, 61 Eighteenth Street, Renmark on Tuesday 22 December 2020 commencing at 7:00 PM. Mr Tony Siviour Chief Executive Officer 16 December 2020 Agenda Ordinary Council Meeting - 22 December 2020 RENMARK PARINGA COUNCIL ORDINARY MEETING Tuesday 22 December 2020 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. OPENING BY THE MAYOR..............................................................................................5 2. PRESENT..........................................................................................................................5 3. APOLOGIES .....................................................................................................................5 4. MEMBER'S DECLARATION OF INTEREST....................................................................6 5. DEPUTATIONS.................................................................................................................7 6. QUESTIONS FROM THE GALLERY................................................................................7 6.1. Questions from the Gallery ......................................................................................7 7. MOTION OF CONDOLENCE............................................................................................7 8. MINUTES...........................................................................................................................7 -
Indigenous Design Issuesceduna Aboriginal Children and Family
INDIGENOUS DESIGN ISSUES: CEDUNA ABORIGINAL CHILDREN AND FAMILY CENTRE ___________________________________________________________________________________ 1 INDIGENOUS DESIGN ISSUES: CEDUNA ABORIGINAL CHILDREN AND FAMILY CENTRE ___________________________________________________________________________________ 2 INDIGENOUS DESIGN ISSUES: CEDUNA ABORIGINAL CHILDREN AND FAMILY CENTRE ___________________________________________________________________________________ TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE .................................................................................................................................... 5 ACKNOWELDGEMENTS............................................................................................................ 5 INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................................... 5 PART 1: PRECEDENTS AND “BEST PRACTICE„ DESIGN ....................................................10 The Design of Early Learning, Child-care and Children and Family Centres for Aboriginal People ..................................................................................................................................10 Conceptions of Quality ........................................................................................................ 10 Precedents: Pre-Schools, Kindergartens, Child and Family Centres ..................................12 Kulai Aboriginal Preschool ............................................................................................. -
Annual Report Lgfa
2 013 ANNUAL REPORT LGFA Your Local Government Finance Authority of South Australia Member Councils as at June 30 2013 Adelaide City Council District Council of Karoonda East Murray City of Port Lincoln Adelaide Hills Council District Council of Kimba Port Pirie Regional Council Alexandrina Council Kingston District Council City of Prospect The Barossa Council Light Regional Council Renmark Paringa Council District Council of Barunga West District Council of Lower Eyre Peninsula District Council of Robe Berri Barmera Council District Council of Loxton Waikerie Municipal Council of Roxby Downs City of Burnside District Council of Mallala City of Salisbury Campbelltown City Council Corporation of the City of Marion Southern Mallee District Council District Council of Ceduna Mid Murray Council District Council of Streaky Bay City of Charles Sturt City of Mitcham Tatiara District Council Clare and Gilbert Valleys Council District Council of Mount Barker City of Tea Tree Gully District Council of Cleve City of Mount Gambier District Council of Tumby Bay District Council of Coober Pedy District Council of Mount Remarkable Corporation of the City of Unley Coorong District Council Rural City of Murray Bridge City of Victor Harbor District Council of Copper Coast Naracoorte Lucindale Council Wakefield Regional Council District Council of Elliston Northern Areas Council Corporation of the Town of Walkerville The Flinders Ranges Council City of Norwood, Payneham and St. Peters Wattle Range Council District Council of Franklin Harbour City of Onkaparinga -
Eyre and Western Region Plan a Volume of the South Australian Planning Strategy
Eyre and Western Region Plan A volume of the South Australian Planning Strategy April 2012 Eyre and Western Region Plan A volume of the South Australian Planning Strategy The Eyre and Western Region Plan has been prepared by the South Australian Government, through the Department of Planning, Transport and Infrastructure, as a volume of the South Australian Planning Strategy pursuant to section 22 of the Development Act 1993 and is subject to change. For further information Please visit www.dpti.sa.gov.au or telephone the Department of Planning, Transport and Infrastructure on 08 8303 0600. Disclaimer While every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that this document is correct at the time of publication, the Minister for Planning, the State of South Australia, its agencies, instrumentalities, employees and contractors disclaim any and all liability to any person in respect to anything or the consequence of anything done or omitted to be done in reliance upon the whole or any part of this document. © Government of South Australia. Published 2012. All rights reserved. ISBN 978-0-7590-0210-4 FIS 23351 iii iv MiniSter foR PlAnning South Australia’s Eyre and Western region has many strengths: it is it is one of South Australia’s most important primary production regions, it has a growing aquaculture and commercial fishing industry based around Port Lincoln, a strengthening mining sector, and a growing energy generation industry that is able to maximise the region’s competitive advantage in renewable energy. The region is also home to South Australia’s largest industrial city, Whyalla, and is serviced by a range of commercial townships. -
Ordinary Council Meeting Agenda – Tuesday 28 April 2020
Ordinary Council Meeting Agenda – Tuesday 28 April 2020 Committed to a sustainable future Notice is hereby given pursuant to Section 83 of the Local Government Act 1999 that the next Ordinary Meeting of Council is to be held on Tuesday 28 April 2020 commencing at 7:00 pm. The meeting is to held electronically via Zoom due to the current COVID-19 pandemic. Council is unable to livestream at this point in time, with a recording of the meeting to be published as soon as practicable following the meeting. Notification of the video availability will be published on Council’s website www.renmarkparinga.sa.gov.au Mr Tony Siviour Chief Executive Officer 22 April 2020 Page 1 | 139 Agenda Ordinary Council Meeting - 28 April 2020 RENMARK PARINGA COUNCIL ORDINARY MEETING Tuesday 28 April 2020 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. OPENING BY THE MAYOR..............................................................................................5 2. PRESENT..........................................................................................................................5 3. APOLOGIES .....................................................................................................................5 4. MEMBER'S DECLARATION OF INTEREST....................................................................6 5. DEPUTATIONS.................................................................................................................7 6. QUESTIONS FROM THE GALLERY................................................................................7 6.1. Previous Questions -
Murray and Mallee Local Government Association
MURRAY AND MALLEE LOCAL GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION. ANNUAL REPORT - 2003/2004. Comprising – The Berri Barmera Council; Coorong District Council; District Council of Karoonda East Murray; District Council of Loxton Waikerie; Mid Murray Council; The Rural City of Murray Bridge; Renmark Paringa Council; and Southern Mallee District Council. 2 PRESIDENT’S ANNUAL REPORT. Having been given the honour of being the President of the Murray & Mallee Local Government Association (M&MLGA) in June 2003, I would like to say a big thank you to those who served before me. The previous Mayor of Loxton-Waikerie, Jan Cass did a lot of work in her role as President of the M&MLGA and I would like to acknowledge her great contribution to our organization. We have been kept busy on the M&MLGA front with bimonthly meetings held in our Region that have been well supported by the member councils and we have enjoyed great communications from our LGA Executive. One of the main topics lately has been the Natural Resource Management Bill. We are all waiting to find out how it will all work and the input from State Executive has been great. Thank you. Ken Coventry has continued to serve the M&MLGA well as he organises all our guest speakers and represents us on a lot of other committees. He has, however, now indicated he wishes to retire as Chief Executive Officer of the M&MLGA and will stay in place until we appoint a new CEO. On behalf of the M&MLGA I would like to say a big thank you to Ken for his untiring work and dedication to his duty and he will be sorely missed. -
Controlling the Ooldea/Yalata Aborigines, 1952-1982
The politics of space and mobility! controlling the Ooldea/Yalata Aborigines, 1952-1982 Maggie Brady Abstract In 1977 Isobel (Sally) White described the camp sites, spatial organisation and mobility of Pit- jantjatjara-speaking people at Yalata, a community 1000 kilometres northwest of Adelaide, South Australia. She remarked on the unusual living arrangements ofthat community, in which the entire Aboriginal population was periodically relocated from one Big Camp to another some where on the Yalata reserve, 4650 square kilometres of land running east-west along the Eyre Highiuay. In this article, I show that the unusual arrangement she described did not arise spon taneously, but was one of several last-ditch strategies designed to force Yalata people to remain well south of the dangerous and prohibited area of the Maralinga atomic testing site. White observed and described this state of affairs without knowing its origins. She and the people with luhom she lived up until the early 1970s could also not have imagined that resettlement in the spinifex country of the Great Victoria Desert zvould eventually take place, and that there would be a reclamation of the ivide-ranging mobility the people once had. In 1949 one hundred and thirty Aboriginal men, women and children from the United Aborigines' Mission (UAM) station at Ooldea Soak became actors in the feature film 'Bitter Springs'. Accompanied by their missionary carers, they travelled east by train from Ooldea, on the edge of the Great Victoria Desert in South Australia, to the film site at Warren's Gorge, near Quorn. There, for the director Ralph Smart of Ealing Studios, they acted out a fictional dispossession of their land, a dispossession which was already taking place in real life. -
Draft Regional Public Health Plan Review-March 2020 1
DRAFT REGIONAL PUBLIC HEALTH PLAN REVIEW District Council of Ceduna, District Council of Streaky Bay, District Council of Elliston and Wudinna District Council Draft revised plan pursuant to section 51(19) of the SA Public Health Act 2011 following a 5 yearly review undertaken by the partner Councils of the initial Regional Public Health Plan issued 10 March 2015. Date: 30 March 2020 Draft Regional Public Health Plan Review-March 2020 1 Table of Contents 1. Western Upper Eyre 2. Plan Scope 2.1. Planning for a Healthy Population 2.2. Strengthening the role of Councils 3. Planning Principles 4. Review of the Plan 5. The Regional State of Health 6. The Region 6.1. Regional Profile 6.2. The population 7. Population Health Status 7.1. Personal Health and Well-being 7.2. Stakeholder priorities for Personal Health and Well-being 8. Socio-economic and Environmental Determinants of Health 8.1. Stakeholder priorities for Socio-economic and Environmental Determinants of Health 9. Strategic Plan for Public Health 10. Governance and Implementation 11. References 12. Abbreviations and acronyms Draft Regional Public Health Plan Review-March 2020 2 1. Western Upper Eyre – Planning for a Healthy Region Good health and positive wellbeing are essential for any thriving community. Everyday life is improved by public health systems and services that support a clean, safe and healthy environment. In order to develop a sustainable health system for the future, we need to reduce the burden of disease and associated costs to our community by focusing on protecting and promoting health and wellbeing and preventing illness. -
March 2021 Newsletter
March 2021 DG Newsletter Dear fellow Rotarians and friends of Rotary, Lyn and I have continued visiting clubs within our District travelling to our furthest part in Alice Springs where we were well looked after when visiting the 3 Alice Springs clubs. A big thank you to Area Governor, Ron Saint for sharing some generous Rotary fellowship with us. February 12th, Lyn and I had the pleasure of attending the Riverland and Mallee Vocational Awards at the Berri Hotel. Now in its 38th year and brilliantly hosted by the Rotary Club of Berri it is the largest event of its kind held in regional Australia. It was a fabulous example of Rotary emphasising the importance of Vocational Service and supporting young people to strive to do exceptionally well in their chosen career paths. Covid only allowed 200 to attend but was well supported by local sponsors and businesses. Congratulations Madison Lailey, Apprentice Chef at the Barmera Hotel Motel and Jakob Johinke-Milich, Apprentice Fitter and Turner at TWG Loxton, who were awarded joint winners of the 2020 Apprentice of the Year. Kathy & Bruce Richardson (Berri), joint winner, Madison Lailey, President, Mary Hansen (Berri), DG David & Lyn Jones Rotary Leadership Institute (RLI) seeks to have Rotary Clubs identify those Rotarians who appear to have the potential for future club leadership (not necessarily as club presidents) and provide those so identified with a quality education in Rotary knowledge and leadership skills which is important in any voluntary organisation. RLI was conducted on 5th-6th February for 19 Rotarians from D9510 at Charles Campbell College (see later report). -
Mid Murray Council.Pdf
__/ Mid v--- Murray Council FROM THE OFFICE OF THE MAYOR Ref: 5/LIA/1/MM 15 December 2020 Mr Michael Lennon Chair State Planning Commission GPO Box 1815 ADELAIDE SA 5001 Dear Mr Lennon, Consultation Submission – Revised Planning and Design Code Thank you for the opportunity to provide comment on the revised Planning and Design Code. Mid Murray Council are a Phase 3 Council and see this as the final opportunity to ensure our local policy, particularly, as it relates to the sensitive River Murray environment is not lost or eroded. Please find below a detailed submission which has been endorsed by Council’s Strategic Planning and Policy Development Committee, as well as the full Council. Preamble The purpose of this submission is threefold, firstly to consider the new Zones of the Code and how certain Zones and Policy Areas (within the Development Plan) are to be transitioned, and consider whether the ‘right’ choice has been made for the Zone. If not, suggestions are tabled as to what might be a more suitable Zone given the context outlined. Secondly, the submission seeks to flesh out whether there are opportunities in limited circumstances where there is obvious disparity between the existing built form and landscape character to the zoning intent of the current Zone or Policy Area, and in these circumstances consider an appropriate Zone in the Code that might be more reflective and cognisant of the existing situation and perhaps sway away from unrealistic policy of the current Zone in the context to a more appropriate Code Zone. For example, parts of the Urban Waterfront (Floodplain) Zone containing dwellings and riverfront residential allotments being transitioned to a Recreation Zone (which contemplates, among other things, sporting grounds) would appear to suggest an alternative Zone might be appropriate. -
Wudinna a Hub of Mining Activity
Whyalla News, Whyalla SA 16 Feb 2012 General News, page 22 - 137.28 cm² Regional - circulation 3,974 (-T-T---) Media Monitors Client Service Centre 1300 880 082 Copyright Agency Ltd (CAL) licenced copy ID 133972152 BRIEF LINCOLNMIN PAGE 1 of 1 Wudinna a hub of mining activity THE Wudinna District Council isand its contractors to ensure the committed to the advancement ofcommunity is well informed and that the region to make the Central Eyreimpacts are controlled for the benefit Peninsula a better place to live and of everyone. visit. Traditionallyanagricultural The council covers the towns ofdistrict of cereal cropping and sheep Minnipa, Yaninee, Pygery, Wudinna,and beef cattle rearing, the central Kyancutta, Warramboo and 21 LandEyre Peninsula locale also attracts Titles Office Hundreds. plentyoftouristsandsmall Currently the area is a hub ofbusinesses. mining exploration activity with a The "Australian Farmer" sculpture number of companies looking to setis located on the Eyre Highway at up operations there. Wudinna and isa key tourist There is interest near Wudinnaattraction. and Warramboo from companies The area saw an improvement in seeking iron ore such as Iron Road and Lincoln Minerals. health services in 2010, with the Iron Road has exploration leasescompletion of the Wudinna Health in the Warramboo area, and is Service. preparing a Definitive Feasibility The 2010-constructed Community Studytoproceedtomining,Waste Water Reuse project was processing and export stages. designed and constructed by the The iron reserves released to datecouncil and now goes a long way at 2.1 billion tonnes make it thetowardtheselfsufficiencyof largest magnetite reserve in theWudinna's irrigation water supply. -
Outback Communities Authority 2017-18 Annual Report
Outback Communities Authority 2017-18 Annual Report Outback Communities Authority 12 Tassie Street, PO Box 2353, Port Augusta SA 5700 www.oca.sa.gov.au Contact phone number (08) 8648 5970 Contact email [email protected] ISSN 2208 6846 Date presented to Minister 28 September 2018 Public – I2 – A1 2017-18 ANNUAL REPORT for the Outback Communities Authority To: The Hon. Stephan Knoll MHA Transport and Infrastructure Housing and Urban Development City of Adelaide Local Government This annual report is to be presented to Parliament to meet the statutory reporting requirements of Outback Communities (Administration and Management) Act 2009 and meets the requirements of Premier and Cabinet Circular PC013 Annual Reporting. This report is verified to be accurate for the purposes of annual reporting to the Parliament of South Australia. Submitted on behalf of the Outback Communities Authority by: Mark R Sutton Director, Outback Communities Authority Date 21 2017-18 ANNUAL REPORT for the Outback Communities Authority Contents Contents .................................................................................................................... 3 Section A: Reporting required under the Public Sector Act 2009, the Public Sector Regulations 2010 and the Public Finance and Audit Act 1987 ................. 4 Agency purpose or role ..................................................................................................... 4 Objectives of the Act .........................................................................................................