Wednesday, July 4

Mike Brunker weighs in to de-amalgamation debate in Whitsundays


The state government will hold their community cabinet meeting in the Proserpine/Airlie Beach area on August 5 and 6.
Mayor Jennifer Whitney shared this news with the Guardian yesterday after the LNP’s business breakfast in Mackay celebrating 100 days in government.
"I gave a thank you speech to the premier which expressed council’s gratitude for him taking time out to visit smaller communities like us in the Whitsundays," the mayor said.
The LNP went to the 2012 State Election promising to consider applications from former shires which wanted to revert to their old boundaries.
The Boundaries Commissioner Col Meng who is former mayor of the first amalgamated council has been appointed to assess the viability of the de-amalgamations.
"Personally I don’t think there will be a large amount of councils that want to de-amalgamate purely because of the cost associated, but if the Whitsunday region is one then whoever is pushing the de-amalgamation will have to get a petition signed by at least 20 per cent of the voting population," Mr Meng said.
"Over the next few weeks I would like to sit down and talk with community groups, as well as councils and see what their intentions are," he said.
The LNP has put up an online fact sheet detailing exactly what was required to be considered for de-amalgamation including a deadline of August 29.
If the Whitsundays is one of the successful shires, a referendum will be held before the year’s end.
"Basically it has to be all done and dusted by February next year," Mr Meng said.
If residents back de-amalgamation and the
Government supports the proposal, new elections will be held for a mayor and councillors in the breakaway area.
Former Whitsunday mayor who was also mayor of the former Bowen Shire Mike Brunker says he will not be putting up his hand should de-amalgamation be successful.
"I don’t think de-amalgamation will be successful but what this will prove is that the old Whitsunday Shire was broke. Nobody would believe me, even Jennifer wouldn’t believe me. Let’s see what happens now?"
The former Mayor who rejected rumours of him running for a seat in any of the three tiers of government, including the state seat of Mackay which is currently held by Tim Mulherin, said it was amazing how people’s views changed overnight.
"If the 600 votes had have gone my way, then there’d be people at the beach screaming for de-amalgamation … now they’re fully supportive because they have a mayor they think they can control. These people just attacked everything we did for four years. They were pushing their own barrow, Mr Brunker said.
However, Mayor Jennifer Whitney said she certainly did not think the former Whitsunday Shire was broke, and rejected Mr Brunker's comments.
"We had a debt of $22m which was quite sustainable … if I thought we were a basket case for the debt of $22m what are we now with this new debt of $80m contracted out the water and sewerage plant work? We are a sustainable council," she said.
The mayor said if the greater community wanted to look into de-amalgamation then the council would certainly listen to their views, however she warned the process wouldn’t be too unlike a divorce.
"We are one region and we can be one great region … we just need to work together," she said.

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