Glow in the Park

916776_thumbnail_280_Glow_In_The_Park_An_Event_By_Alexandria_Vet.v1On Saturday 22nd November, Alexandria Vet is hosting the annual “Glow in the Park” in Alexandria park. Glow in the Park is a charity event that raises money for Fetching Dogs (a dog re-homing charity).
The aim is for owners to bring their dogs and dress them up in glow / lights. There will be glow items for sale for pets (and kids) professional pet-Santa photos by Fuzzy Beast (a pet photography business in Alexandria), a bbq, prizes for best dressed, a raffle and 80s music. It goes from 6.30pm to 9-9.30 pm. Kids and families without a dog are welcome to come along.

100,000 extra cars? Community meeting.

WestConnex are planning to extend the M5 to Sydney Park, next to the border between St Peters and Alexandria. The new 6 lane tollway could put 100,000+ extra cars into our streets every day – as if they weren’t already close to gridlocked much of the time.

Alexandria Residents group will be discussing how we can respond as a community , at:

  • Alexandria Town Hall, 73 Garden St
  • 7:00pm, Wednesday the 12th of November

Everyone with an interest in preserving the suburbs we live in is invited to attend.

Guest Speakers:

  • Mehreen Faruqi, Greens Transport spokesperson
  • Matthew Hounsell, EcoTransit Co-Convenor

Hope to see you there. Please help spread the word.

August meeting notes

As discussed at our last meeting:

Central to Eveleigh Feedback

The meeting collected comments on Central to Eveleigh redevelopment proposals. These will be submitted to Urban Growth along with feedback from Vanessa Knight and Gary Speechly who attended an information session in June.

Please send any additional comments to info@arag.org.au.

Extra votes for business owners

ARAG has sent a letter to the premier in objection to legislation proposed by Shooters and Fishers Party that seeks to give more votes to people who own businesses than to other people.  (If you wish to send your own objection, we have uploaded a template for a draft objection letter that may be posted or submitted online.)

BPN Planning for People Charter

ARAG is now a signatory to the BPN Planning for People Charter.

See also the explanatory note.

Alexandria Scouts

There will be a public meeting in support of reopening Alexandria Scout Hall at:

3-4pm, Saturday 23 August
Australian Technology Park, Bay 8, Room 6b.

Central to Eveleigh Corridor to be discussed at our August Meeting

The ARAG meeting to be held on Wednesday the 13th, at the usual time and place of 7PM at Alexandria Town Hall, will be on the proposed redevelopment of the ‘Central to Eveleigh Corridor’ – basically, everything along the railway lines from Goulburn Street car park in the CBD to Macdonaldtown rail station, including Central and Redfern stations, the Australian Technology Park, and Eveleigh Rail Yards.

This is an opportunity to have your say on the impact of the concept plan on: Australian Technology Park (ATP), Sustainability, Connections & Transport, Heritage & Culture, Public Spaces & Social Facilities, and Housing and Employment.

Secondary Education Forum

The City of Sydney is partnering with the NSW Department of Education and Communities and hosting a forum on Tuesday 3 June at Alexandria Park Community School in the school hall between 6.30pm and 8.30pm.
The Forum is on Public Secondary Education in the Inner Sydney area.
If you have children or plan to have children – you need to be there!
This is your opportunity to have your say and learn about how the Department plans for high schools, raise your concerns and contribute your ideas.
Some of the things that need to be considered:
  • Alexandria families will be facing the added pressure of increasing numbers of children from the Ashmore Estate (6,000+ more people) and other developments including whatever comes from the Central to Eveleigh corridor concept.  We must make sure there is good and informed planning for this growth in education demand – and it needs to start now!
  • We need to protect the Alexandria Park School from any attempts to sell land to make a quick buck – that’s how the Department of Education got into this mess with short term thinking.
  • We need to nurture the growing success of the Alexandria Park Community School – did you know that the school is ranked in the top 200 of all schools in NSW (public and private)?
  • We need to ensure the Alexandria Park Community School is maintained adequately.
Some background information:

Don’t just hope that it will all work out in the end – no-one cares about the future of your kids more than you!

RSVP online.
If you can’t attend, there is another meeting on Thursday 5 June, at Sydney Secondary College Blackwattle Campus, and there is a website where you can leave feedback – http://dec.engagementhq.com/consultation.
Thanks and regards
Vanessa Knight
Alexandria Residents Action Group

It was fabulous. We have lost property.

The fair is over. Thanks to all who attended, we hope you had a good time.

We’re still dealing with paperwork, trying to get prizes to raffle winners, sorting photos.

In the meantime, we have lost property:

  • one pair of glasses, frames are black at the front, with tortoise shell arms.
  • one black hat

If either of these might be yours, please email us at info at arag.org.au.

12th March Meeting

The next ARAG meeting is to be held this coming Wednesday, 12th March at 7pm at Alexandria Town Hall.

Agenda & Topics for Discussion

 

Report on the July meeting

Draft City of Sydney Employment Lands Strategy – Tamara Bruckshaw, Senior Specialist Planner.

Employment Strategy needs to balance a number of objectives.  Land zoned for industrial use is less valuable than land zoned for residential, so land-owners are keen to see rezonings.  At the same time, increases in the price of industrial land drives industrial activity further west, and much of this activity is supporting other activities in this area, for eg, the Green Square development needs a large supply of concrete. If that isn’t produced locally, it needs to be trucked in from elsewhere, with all that implies for increased congestion and polution.

The government requires the City to plan for an increase of 109,000 jobs by  2031, mostly in the CBD, with 7,000 planned for the Green Square area.

Overall, the balance is shifting away from industrial, and towards commercial and mixed, although mixed includes residential, so the effect is likely to be much the same as if it were zoned residential.

There are four more studies coming:

  •   Traffic and Transport, in conjunction with the RMS
  • Social Sustainability, which will look at a range of things including schools
  •   Urban Design, including heights and floor space ratios
  •   Economic Feasibility

We are also encouraged to look at the Airport Master Plan, which is on exhibition now. (See http://www.airport-technology.com/news/newssydney-airport-releases-master-plan-double-passenger-capacity and http://www.sydneyairport.com.au/corporate/master-plan.aspx)

Proposed Council Amalgamation – Deputy Lord Mayor Robyn Kemmis

There are currently two proposals under consideration, the Sansom review, and the Metro Strategy.  They both propose mergers, but different mergers.  Neither provides a cost-benefit analysis of mergers.

For the smallest councils, there are savings to  be had, but for councils that are already as large as the City of Sydney, there are few gains in becoming larger still. (The proposed mergers would create a council with more residents than are in Tasmania.)

Unlike, for example, Brisbane, the expanded council would not have the authority to develop infrastructure, and remember that the current State Government will not allow the City the authority to build even a bikepath.

Metro Strategy – Geoff Turnbull, REDWatch

What makes the Metro Strategy different to what has come before is the New Planning System – it gives the Metro Strategy far more power.  It allows developers to override Local Development Plans, and probably allows them to ignore Heritage concerns as well.