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Archive for January, 2010

High Tide in Hervey Bay

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

The forecast this morning for Hervey Bay included a high tide of 4.29 metres that was set to peak at Urangan Pier 0929hrs … and it was indeed a very high tide that attracted a lot of onlookers .

This is the view from the access gate at Shelly Bay right at 9.29am

High tide at Shelly Beach in Hervey Bay

An hour later at Toogoom the water was receding but you can see from the pile of leaves that it had reached the top of the boat ramp.

High tide at Toogoom on the Fraser Coast

At its highest the water level must have got fairly close to the top of the rock wall to the north of the boat ramp too.

High tide at Toogoom on the Fraser Coast

The water level was well up along the Burrum Heads Road and the road into Toogoom as well.

High tide at Toogoom on the Fraser Coast

High tide at Toogoom on the Fraser Coast

90 minutes after high tide there still wasn’t much of the beach visible down at Dundowran Beach either.

High tide at Dundowran Beach on the Fraser Coast

The Last Fast Ferry to Fraser Island

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

Kingfisher Bay’s plans to cease operating a fast Cat service to Fraser Island comes to a head today with the very last fast service departing from Urangan at 10pm tonight.

 Kingfisher Bay Fast Cat

From tomorrow morning it’s the slow boat (barge) to Fraser Island and it will leave from River Heads. While the resort’s general manager for tours and marine … David Hay … is quoted as saying that operating from River Heads is “… very convenient” it may be less so for people from Hervey Bay who may wish to travel over to the resort just for the day.

Bogus Report Cards

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

Self-assessment is always fraught with danger so I’m sure that many of us who saw what our representatives on the Fraser Coast Regional Council thought of themselves a few weeks back was almost funny.

If you missed it, most of our esteemed councillors thought that they were doing an absolutely wonderful job and gave themselves an A or 10 out of 10 for the effort they were putting into the Council. They were so happy with themselves that I bet they all thought that they deserved a raise.

But now we’re discovering that if that’s their best effort then it just isn’t good enough because we’re sinking into a very deep financial mess. It seems the Council budgeted for receipts of around $7.7 million from developers … after all the Council knew that every developer and his dog wanted to build something in Hervey Bay.

Unfortunately … while they might have wanted to build something in Hervey Bay … they weren’t prepared to pay the sort of money that the Fraser Coast Regional Council expected so they didn’t. Instead they stopped their developments and went off to places where Councils didn’t want to kill the goose that layed the golden egg.

So now … instead of sitting on a cash pile worth $7.7 million dollars … the Council has only received $300,000 and that means that we could be broke and the Council is running around looking for excuses … almagamation costs is a good one to trot out at times like this and that’s what Mick did today in the Chronicle. But I’m not quite sure what amalgamation costs have got to do with developers fees so maybe there’ll be some more excuses coming in the next few days.

I wonder what those report cards would have looked like if they had been written by someone who really knew what was going on inside Council. How much longer are we stuck with this lot?

The Council Fiddles and Hervey Bay Misses Out

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

When we first moved to Hervey Bay in 2003 we were told that the extensions to Centro Hervey Bay were “coming soon” and seven years later the extensions still haven’t been started.

Obviously some of that delay has been caused by the developers … there was a financial hiccup back around the time the global financial crisis looming but that’s been overcome and the developers are now eager to start. But now the Fraser Coast Regional Council wants to fiddle … they want more money from the developers … another $3 million according to today’s Chronicle … and quite understandably the developers have had enough.

While Hervey Bay cries out for jobs the Council wants someone who can provide those jobs to cough up $1.1 million for a public art levy and another million dollars for roads that already exist.

Nero is said to have fiddled while Rome burned and now it seems that the Fraser Coast Regional Council wants to emulate him while Hervey Bay goes down the drain.

Doing the Best They Can

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Jim Mackellar takes a look at the Fraser Coast Regional Council and suggests that they’re doing the best they can … but is their best really good enough?

Despite the rising tide of criticism concerning the performance of our Fraser Coast Regional Council, we should not consider this as a failure of effort by our incumbent Councillors.

Don’t be too harsh on the Councillors. They are doing the best that they can. It is just that the job at hand is beyond the knowledge and skills of most of them. But despite this most are still putting in their best efforts to achieve good outcomes for the region. But they are not attaining these outcomes.

Evidence of their endeavour can been seen in many fields of Council activity, but so also may evidence of their limitations be seen in the outcomes being achieved. Lets look at some examples.

Capital Works.
In the face of the Global Financial Crises the Council, last financial year, put in place a capital works program of over $70million to provide a much needed stimulus to the local economy. However at the end of the financial year they had managed to complete only about 66% of their planned projects. Over $20million worth of projects had to be carried forward. In many areas less capital works was achieved than by the previous administrations.

This failure was blamed on the inability of Council staff to get projects out to tender and to obtain suitable tenders when they were called for. So, to remedy the situation, the created a new executive position (with new executive salary costs) of Director Capital Delivery, whose role is to expedite the process of completing capitol projects.

Result? So far this year Council is already over $6million  behind in its capital project deliveries. And most of these projects are much needed by the community and every delay means that we fall that much further behind in providing the infrastructure needed by the people of the region. No change in approach, just more of the same.

Economic Development.
In times of economic hardship across the region this is a very important sphere of Council activity. And we have seen much of this activity. We have had studies done, working groups formed to study the issue and finally a standing committee of the Council and community stakeholders formed. And what has been achieved?

The backbone of the economy of any region is small and micro business. The mum and dad local business people who provide the basic services to the community. And how do they find dealing with the Council when they wish to expand to create more employment and economic activity? Very, very difficult because the Council is geared for dealing with the big applicants and applies the same process to the small as to the large.

Thus we still have a stagnant economy with falling employment while we continue to look for the single ‘silver bullet’ large investor while neglecting those who are the very foundation of our economic wellbeing. Once again still trying the same means to achieve a different outcome.

Marketing and Tourism.
Well that sign says it all. Great idea, shocking execution. Only three small problems. It does not welcome our visitors, it merely informs them that they have reached the vicinity of Hervey Bay. It cost an absolute fortune and then our Council, in their great wisdom, locate it in a position where it is invisible until one is almost on top of it. One would think that they were actually ashamed of the sign and tried to hide it behind the trees in the hope we would not notice it.

And so the list goes on. They are trying, there is much activity, much money being spent, but are we going forward or backwards?

Who is Carrying Who?

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Remember back to the days just before concil amalgamation?

That was the time when the good people of Maryborough were complaining that they would have to carry the people of Hervey Bay because Hervey Bay had such high debt levels … and Maryborogh council knew that Hervey Bay had high debt levels because the Hervey Bay Council didn’t try to hide that information.

Well now it seems that it’s not the good people of Maryborough who are going to have to carry the Hervey Bay community … instead it’s us, the people of Tiaro Shire and the people of the old Woocoo Shire who are going to have to chip in to support Maryborough and their failing sewerage and water system.

It seems that these were problems that the Maryborough Council knew about well before amalgamation but decided not to tell anyone about.

Of course now there are some questions that we’d all like answers to … questions that are asked over on Strewth is Back … questions that are probably way too hard for anyone from the old Maryborough Council to answer.

Hervey Bay High Tides

Friday, January 1st, 2010

Hervey Bay can expect some very high tides over the next few days and this morning’s peak at Urangan  at 9am was set for 4.15 metres.

At around 7.15 this morning an onshore breeze was already pushing spray over the seawall at Urangan and this was the view from the pier at Torquay. There is a beach somewhere under all that water.

Almost two hours before high tide in Hervey Bay