Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeGazetteCouncil votes to bar the unruly

Council votes to bar the unruly

By Paul Dunlop
UNRULY people can now be barred from attending Cardinia Shire Council meetings.
New local laws give council the power to order people considered to be disrupting meetings to leave the public gallery. Depending on their behaviour, they may not be allowed back.
Council recently made several amendments to its meeting procedure laws in a move mayor Bill Ronald said would provide more open and transparent governance.
But other councillors spoke out strongly against the changes.
Cr Kate Lempriere was against banning people from meetings.
“I think it’s a bloody nonsense,” she said.
Councillors also disagreed over the merits of moves to reintroduce the provision for motions without notice and allowing recision motions to be signed by one councillor only.
Cr Doug Hamilton said he was concerned the changes meant councillors could use the new rules as a way of “getting at” senior shire officers.
Cr Hamilton said the changes were totally wrong and he did not believe it was democratic.
Previously, a councillor had to have the support of at least one colleague before he or she could lodge a recision motion.
Councillors also had to give notice of their intention to move other motions that were outside the agenda framework.
“If a councillor wishes to deliberately disrupt any important decision, he or she just has to move a recision motion,” Cr Hamilton said.
Cr Bill Pearson said the new notice without motion provision was wrong.
He said allowing motions without notice means councillors now operate under different rules from the rest of the community.
Residents wanting to question councillors or shire officers must submit their questions in writing by midday on the day of the meeting.
“Councillors should be subject to the same rules as everybody else in the community,” Cr Pearson said.
Cr Graeme Legge also spoke against the changes but he and councillors Hamilton and Pearson were outvoted four to three.
Councillors Ronald and Lempriere and councillors Brett Owen and Ed Chatwin supported the new provisions.
Cr Lempriere said there were some things she agreed with and some she didn’t.
“I trust that councillors will act honourably,” she said.
Cr Owen said questions without notice were part of an open council. Cr Chatwin was confident councillors would not abuse their new powers.
“I don’t have any fears with councillors behaving badly,” he said.
Cr Ronald said the meeting procedure law was a “live, working document” that could be changed again if necessary.
“It’s about openness and transparency,” he said. “Council and the community have nothing to fear.”
>>> What’s your view? Email the Gazette at editorstarnewsgroup.com.au or phone 5945 0666 to have your say on council’s new meeting procedure local law.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Community farewells Warwick

Family, friends and community members gathered at Tobin Brothers Chapel in Berwick on January 12 to celebrate the life of Warwick Keith Glendenning. He is...
More News

Pakenham History: Century of medical care

The new Pakenham Community Hospital, due to open later this year, is a stone’s throw and a century away from the town’s first medical...

Pakenham History: Opening a grand affair

This is how the Gazette covered the opening of the temporary Pakenham Bush Nursing Hospital on 29 May 1926 - and an update a...

Pakenham History: Mary travelled far and wide to provide medical care

As pioneering families carved out a living in the Pakenham district, times were tough and help was a considerable journey away. Early settlers had few...

OPINION: The back-to-school survival guide for working mums

So, you survived Christmas and are limping to the finishing line as school holidays come to a close. You are expected to be ‘refreshed’...

OPINION: How should Victorians celebrate Australia Day this year?

It is 2026, and Australia remains the only Commonwealth country without a national treaty with its Indigenous peoples. Other settler nations, such as Canada, New...

Bunjil Place set to hosts vibrant Open Space festival this summer

Open Space will be taking over Bunjil Place this summer, with a packed lineup and events to keep you busy during the summer holidays....

What’s On

The Lang Lang Show 'n' Shine The Lang Lang Show 'n' Shine plus Swap Meet is back this February. Run by the Rotary Club of Kooweerup/Lang...

Calder blasts Clyde into big dance

A knock for the ages has lifted Clyde into the grand final of the Casey Cardinia Cricket Association (CCCA) Kookaburra Cup Premier Division. The Cougars...

Fire station needs community support

Brandi Richardson has called Bayles home for 23 years. When she saw a concerning social media post from her local bridge, she knew she...

Soft-plastics recycling boost in South East

More than 16,000 tonnes of soft and hard-to-recycle plastics will be recycled each year at four sites including Pakenham and Dandenong. The State and Federal...