Northern Beaches Council

This article is about the local government area. For the region, see Northern Beaches (Sydney).
Northern Beaches Council
New South Wales

Population 263,413 (2015)[1] (10th)
 • Density 1,037/km2 (2,690/sq mi)
Established 12 May 2016 (2016-05-12)
Area 254 km2 (98.1 sq mi)
Administrator Dick Persson
Council seat Manly Town Hall
Mona Vale Memorial Hall
Warringah Civic Centre
Region Metropolitan Sydney
State electorate(s)
Federal Division(s)
Website Northern Beaches Council
LGAs around Northern Beaches Council:
Hornsby Broken Bay Tasman Sea
Ku-ring-gai, Willoughby Northern Beaches Council Tasman Sea
Mosman Sydney Harbour Tasman Sea

The Northern Beaches Council is a local government area located in the northern beaches region of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. The Council was formed on 12 May 2016 replacing Manly, Pittwater and Warringah Councils.[2]

The Council comprises an area of 254 square kilometres (98 sq mi) and, at the time of its establishment, had an estimated population of 263,413.[2]

The Administrator of the Northern Beaches Council is Dick Persson AM, until the elections for councillors to take place on 9 September 2017.[3]

Suburbs and localities

The following suburbs are located within Northern Beaches Council:[2]

The following localities are located within Northern Beaches Council:

  • Akuna Bay
  • Allambie
  • Avalon North
  • Bantry Bay
  • Barrenjoey
  • Bungan Beach
  • Bungan Head
  • Bungaroo
  • Careel Bay
  • Careel Head
  • Clareville Beach
  • Collaroy Beach
  • Cromer Heights
  • Curl Curl Beach
  • Dee Why Beach
  • Fishermans Beach (Collaroy)
  • Foleys Hill
  • Freshwater Beach
  • Gooseberry Flat
  • Ingleside Heights
  • Long Reef Beach (Collaroy)
  • Loquat Valley
  • Narrabeen Beach
  • Narrabeen Peninsula
  • North Curl Curl Beach
  • North Narrabeen Beach
  • Paradise Beach
  • Peach Trees
  • Sand Point
  • Sorlie
  • South Warriewood
  • Stokes Point
  • Taylors Point
  • The Basin
  • Towlers Bay
  • Tumbledown Dick
  • Turimetta
  • Warriewood Beach
  • Wingala

Council composition

The Northern Beaches Council is under the management of Administrator Dick Persson and Interim General Manager Mark Ferguson until elections are held on 9 September 2017. The Code of meeting practice for Manly Council will be used as the provisional code for the new council.[3] The first meeting of the Northern Beaches Council was held at Manly Town Hall on 19 May 2016.

Council AdministrationNotes
Administrator Dick Persson AM Administrator of Warringah 2003–2008 and Port Macquarie-Hastings 2008–2009
General Manager Mark Ferguson General Manager of Pittwater 2006–2016 and Coffs Harbour 1998–2005

Advisory committees

Several committees were established at the council's first meeting to advise the Administrator and the Council on implementation matters and are composed of former councillors and mayors of the three former councils:

Future council

The Local Government Proclamation announced that the next council elections for the newly formed area would occur on or about 9 September 2017. That election will be for fifteen Councillors elected proportionally in five wards, with three councillors elected in each ward.[3] The mayor will be elected annually by the councillors; a process that continues the practice of Pittwater, but not Manly or Warringah, whose mayors were formerly directly elected since 1995 and 2008 respectively.

The names of the wards and the former council areas they cover are as follows:[2]

History

Warringah Shire Hall in 1954 with the Mackellar County Council offices to the left.

Early history

The traditional Aboriginal owners of the land we now know as Warringah had mostly disappeared from this area within years of European settlement, mainly due to an outbreak of smallpox in 1789.[5] Much evidence of their habitation remains especially their rock etchings in Kuring-gai Chase National Park which borders Northern Beaches's north-western side.The Northern Beaches were explored early on in the settlement of Sydney, only a few weeks after the arrival of the First Fleet. However, it remained a rural area for most of the 1800s, with only small settlements in the valleys between headlands. While it was geographically close to the city centre, to reach the area over land from Sydney via Mona Vale Road was a trip of more than 100 kilometres (62 mi).

Local government history

The Municipality of Manly was first incorporated on 6 January 1877, being the first local government authority on the Northern Beaches. On 7 March 1906, the Warringah Shire was proclaimed by the NSW Government Gazette, along with 132 other new Shires. It ran roughly from Broken Bay in the north to Manly Lagoon to the south, and by Middle Harbour Creek and Cowan Creek in the west. It covered 264 square kilometres (102 sq mi) and had a population of around 2800, with 700 dwellings.[6] From 1951 to 1980, the Mackellar County Council operated on the Northern Beaches as an electricity and gas supplier and retailer as a joint operation of Manly Municipal Council and Warringah Shire Council.[7]

On 2 May 1992, The Governor of New South Wales proclaimed the establishment of the Municipality of Pittwater, the area of which roughly followed the area formerly known as ‘A’ Riding of the Warringah Shire.[6] On 1 July 1993, with the enactment of a new Local Government Act 1993, the municipalities of Manly and Pittwater were renamed "Manly Council" and "Pittwater Council" and Warringah Shire Council became "Warringah Council".[8]

Establishment of Northern Beaches Council

Manly Town Hall, the site of the first meeting of the new council on 19 May 2016.

A 2015 review of local government boundaries by the NSW Government Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal recommended that Manly, Pittwater and Warringah merge to form one single council. The government eventually considered three proposals. The first proposed a merger of Manly and Mosman councils and parts of Warringah to form a new council with an area of 49 square kilometres (19 sq mi) and support a population of approximately 153,000.[9] The second proposed a merger of Pittwater Council and parts of Warringah to form a new council with an area of 214 square kilometres (83 sq mi) and support a population of approximately 141,000.[10]

The third proposal, submitted by Warringah Council on 23 February 2016, was for an amalgamation of the Pittwater, Manly and Warringah councils.[11][12] Of the 44,919 submissions lodged to the Boundaries Commission about all the local government proposals statewide, 29,189 were from Northern Beaches residents (18,977 were submitted for the third proposal); this meant that the Northern Beaches proposals made up 65% of all submissions. Former Warringah mayor, Michael Regan, noted to the Manly Daily that this was an indication of the level of interest in the Northern Beaches over the future of their local government: "given the choice of splitting the northern beaches or uniting it the community opted for unity", while former Manly mayor, Jean Hay, commented that this interest translated into the final result: "Everyone is passionate about the area and we came out and let the powers-that-be know, [...] It must have made an impact because the minister and the premier looked at what the community told them and it was the majority decision to go with a single council."[13]

On 12 May 2016, with the release of the Local Government (Council Amalgamations) Proclamation 2016, the Northern Beaches Council was formed from Manly, Pittwater and Warringah councils.[3] The first meeting of the Northern Beaches Council was held at Manly Town Hall on 19 May 2016.

See also

References

  1. "3218.0 – Regional Population Growth, Australia, 2014–15". Australian Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Northern Beaches Council". Stronger Councils. Government of New South Wales. 12 May 2016. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Page 25 Local Government (Council Amalgamations) Proclamation 2016 [NSW] - Schedule 13 - Provisions for Northern Beaches Council" (PDF). Parliament of New South Wales. 2012. p. 25. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
  4. Morcombe, John (20 May 2016). "Former councillors to return in advisory capacity". The Manly Daily.
  5. "Was Sydney's smallpox outbreak of 1789 an act of biological warfare against Aboriginal tribes?". Sovereign Union. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
  6. 1 2 "About Council > Council History". www.warringah.nsw.gov.au. Warringah Council. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  7. "3488 Mackellar County Council". State Records Archives Investigator. NSW State Records. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  8. "LOCAL GOVERNMENT ACT 1993". New South Wales Consolidated Acts. Australasian Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  9. "Merger proposal: Manly Council, Mosman Municipal Council, Warringah Council (part)" (PDF). Government of New South Wales. January 2016. p. 8. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  10. "Merger proposal: Pittwater Council, Warringah Council (part)" (PDF). Government of New South Wales. January 2016. p. 8. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  11. Warringah Council (23 February 2016). "Manly, Pittwater and Warringah councils Proposal" (PDF). Government of New South Wales. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  12. Kembrey, Melanie; Robertson, James (27 February 2016). "Northern Beaches mega council back on the table after merger 'loophole' discovered". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  13. Morcombe, John (23 May 2016). "Peninsula lodges 65 per cent of all NSW responses to council amalgamation plans". The Manly Daily. Retrieved 1 June 2016.

External links

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