Sunday, December 27, 2015

Holiday wishes from Balmoral


Holiday wishes to share

from a special place







Wishing you peaceful time and space


to live in the moment
 
with the timelessness of a child





To do something joyful and playful

To find your holiday rhythm



And look forward to a Happy New Year in 2016

Claire and Christopher


Photos from 'Through the Heads to BALMORAL, SYDNEY
to be released late January.

Available now as an Ebook - http://www.amazon.com/THROUGH-Balmoral-Sydney-Claire-Mitchell-ebook/dp/B01830DBKO



Sunday, December 6, 2015

"Will our local issues matter under proposed amalgamation?"

I ask myself this question, 'Will our local issues matter?

The answer has to be, "Not as much."



KEEP LOCAL SERVICES LOCAL ** SIGN THE PETITION **
Mega councils mean less input on local matters that directly affect YOU. Call your local MP and tell them you want to keep your local services local. Sign the petition today > http://chn.ge/1L7wPyQ

‪#‎KeepCouncilsLocal‬ ‪#‎KeepItLocal‬ ‪#‎NoForcedMergers‬



We strongly urge the New South Wales government to engage in a more collaborative and consultative process before undertaking any action to amalgamate councils. Many of the proposed amalgamations involve councils that have clearly demonstrated that they are viable entities. The claimed advantages of scale resulting from council mergers are unsubstantiated while at a community level there has been little or no serious engagement in the amalgamation debate. 

Local government is the closest tier of government to the people and as such is most responsive to the needs of the community enabling them to have an input into matters that impact on them directly (such as development applications and strategic planning).

There is a very real risk that in creating larger councils residents will be alienated from the decision-making process and that sense of community will be eroded or lost. Participatory democracy at a local level is fundamental to good governance providing residents with a mechanism by which their voice can be heard.  This is best served by viable, smaller councils, rather than large, unwieldy bodies.