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Welcome to the Save
Cranebrook Website
The old Air Services Australia Site,
Northern Rd, Cranebrook
No Development of this land

The best way to look after the Cranebrook site is if it is put in the
hands of the NSW Dept of Environment and Climate Change to be protected
and managed as part of their National Parks Reserve System.
This will mean a proper management plan for the site, a fire hazard
regime, proper fencing to restrict illegal access to the site, funding for
ongoing management and to enhance the sites existing conservation values
and legislation to prosecute.
Don't listen to anyone that argues that developing the site will benefit
the community and stop illegal access to the site. They are obviously in
cahoots with the developer.
What
the NSW Department of Environment and Conservation said about the
Cranebrook Site when it
wrote to Penrith Council urging Council to rezone the site for
conservation:
"Based on the assessments
that have been undertaken to date it is clear that the site has
significant biodiversity and Aboriginal heritage values. The DEC
considers that those values must clearly drive any future decisions
regarding the site.
Having regard to those values, the DEC is of the firm view that the site
has virtually no development potential. Given the identified
conservation values and its size, shape, and current and likely future
surrounding land uses, the protection of the entire site is therefore
considered essential to maintaining its ecological integrity and the
protection of Aboriginal heritage.
The DEC therefore considers that strong preference should be given to
ensuring that the LEP delivers protection for the site as a whole. Options
to achieve this outcome will obviously need to be the subject of further
discussion. However, the DEC is not convinced that simply because
the land has passed into private ownership that this in itself provides
clear justification for making the site available for development".
Federal Election 2007 information
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Vote 1 Geoff Brown and Team
- North Ward Independent - Penrith Council Election
Geoff's election webpage here
Another win for
the people and the environment of Western Sydney
4th August 2008 -
Penrith Council tonight resolved to support the community view that
the entire site be protected from development and that the
Cranebrook land be rezoned E2 Environmental Conservation in the new
Penrith LEP. The only way development can now occur is if Frank
Sartor back flips on his
commitment not to over ride Penrith Councils planning powers and
rezones the site for housing as State Significant Development under
Part 3A of the EP & A Act 1979.
Such a move by Frank
Sartor would reflect poorly on the ALP and have the effect of
tarnishing his local ALP colleagues who along with Liberal and
Independent Councillors assisted in achieving this conservation win.
Council passed five
recommendations including pursuing the NSW Government to acquire the
site from the developer and that the developer be required to
properly manage the site until a time comes that they no longer own
the site.
NEW!!
A new Regional Park for
Western Sydney. The alternate vision for the site.
Download
PowerPoint presentation
Rickabys
Creek Regional Park 3 mb
More latest news: Documents have
been obtained from the Dept of Environment and Climate Change under
Freedom of Information. These documents will be released shortly on
this site. One of the documents can be viewed now and it reveals
Frank Sartors Planning Dept wrote to IFC Capital Ltd in 2006 stating
that DoP had enough release areas to meet future housing needs and
that the inclusion of additional sites on the Metropolitan
Development Program is only likely to occur in exceptional
circumstances and that the IFC proposal does not "demonstrate such
exceptional circumstances". So why the back flip from Frank Sartors
Dept? What exceptional circumstances have arisen in two years that
warrant an MDP listing? See FOI'd document
here Other news can be found
here Other documents can be found
here
The developers new plans: IFC Capital Ltd have
lodged a new development proposal with the NSW Government. They have
bypassed Penrith Council and gone straight to the Planning Minister
Frank Sartor and applied to have the site listed on the Metropolitan
Development Program and assessed as State Significant Development
which if allowed means Frank Sartor becomes the sole consent
authority and can rezone the site for development with little or no
input from the local community or Penrith Council.
The new
IFC proposal will now be a massive overdevelopment of the site. They
have scrapped plans for a 180 lot rural subdivision and now propose:
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84
hectares of residential land
catering for 610 –
740 lots down to 350 square metres with detached housing, and other
forms of housing including three storey town houses
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1800 residents
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8 hectares of storm water and flood
mitigation
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89 hectare conservation area
A new 18 megabyte movie has been added explaining the latest
situation. See it
here. There is
also a YouTube version which is a smaller file size but not of same
picture quality .
A new conservation
report by Teresa James compiled in December 2007 again
highlights the importance of conserving the entire site. This latest
botanical information has been sent to Frank Sartors Planning Dept.
Verity Firth the Assistant NSW Environment Minister recently
conferred Biodiversity Certification on the Sydney Growth Centres.
There have been conditions attached to this approval including how
the proposed $530 million conservation fund is to be spent
protecting bushland outside the Growth Centres. The entire
Cranebrook site has been identified as a Western Sydney Priority
Area for conservation and Verity Firths conditions state first
preference is to be given to using Growth Centres funding to acquire
the identified priority areas. This information is extremely
important as any decision by Frank Sartor to allow development of
the site is now directly at odds with Verity Firth and the NSW Dept
of Environment and Climate Change. The NSW Government will be seen
to be a pack of hypocrites if they don't uphold the promises made in
conferring Biodiversity Certification on the Growth Centres. DECC
must stand up to Frank Sartor. See the Biodiversity Certification
conditions
here (Section 32) and the map showing the Western Sydney
Priority Areas
here 522 kb
Follow this link
to find the latest info (maps and documents) on the amended
development proposal and actions to conserve the site.
Bob Debus, the
former NSW Environment Minister, states in this
letter that protection of the entire Cranebrook site is a
'priority'.
Email Frank Sartor and Verity Firth to oppose any
development of the Cranebrook site:
office@sartor.minister.nsw.gov.au
office@firth.minister.nsw.gov.au
Email all the
to oppose any listing of the site on the Metropolitan Development
Program here
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The Sydney media have picked up on the controversy
surrounding the Cranebrook development. See the Daily Telegraph
story below here and an
earlier story from the Sydney Morning Herald
here.
The information
below is now partly out dated but still relevant
The former 181-hectare Air
Services Australia Site at Cranebrook was sold by the Federal
Government in October 2004 to a property developer called IFC
Capital Ltd. The Federal Government were condemned at the time
because of the secretive nature of the sale and because of a lack of
community consultation. The sale was dubbed the
ADI Site Mark 2 because of the similarities with the ADI Site
development debacle. There also appeared to be inadequate
environmental surveying of the site by the Federal Government
leading up to the sale. IFC Capital Ltd (then called Infracorp) paid
only $15 million plus GST for the entire site.
IFC Capital Ltd commenced discussions with Penrith City Council
in 2005 as they need to get the land rezoned by Council to allow
housing development. Council appears to have been working closely
with the developer assisting them with their rezoning application.
IFC have since completed a range of site assessments, required by
Council, and they have lodged a rezoning application with Council so
that they can develop a total of 85 hectares of the site for
what they are calling 'E4
Environmental Living'. E4 Environmental Living, as described by
the NSW Department of Planning,
is generally intended for land with special environmental or scenic
values where residential development could be accommodated.
The developers
proposal includes setting aside 78 hectares of the site for
conservation. Levies collected from land sales will go towards a
fund which the landowners are meant to use to manage the bushland.
This appears like green gloss to lull Penrith Council and the NSW
Government into supporting the development. One questions the merits
of this proposal as it is doubtful future landowners would have the
will or the management skills to properly care for bushland of such
conservation value.
The site has immense conservation
value and should not be developed in any way. The site should be
returned to public ownership. The land should be acquired by the NSW
Government and put into the management of the NSW National Parks and
Wildlife Service so that conservation and passive recreation
outcomes can be achieved for the community. A possible source of
funding could come from the Growth Centre Commission which
proposes a conservation fund of $530 million to offset the loss of
bushland that is proposed to be cleared for development within the
Growth Centres. Information about the Growth Centres Conservation
Plan can be found
here 1278kb. This document proves that the NSW Government is
wanting to conserve areas of high conservation value outside of the
Growth Centres and that there will be funds to do this. We now need
them to show some political will.
Getting the entire site acquired
and properly protected is a priority but as the State is crying poor
at the moment they appear reluctant to act. An alternative proposal
has been proposed that the Federal Government should offer a no
interest loan to the State to urgently acquire the site. The loan
can be repaid when the State has enough funds in the Growth Centres
Conservation Fund.
The Cranebrook Site is an
important link in a conservation corridor linking bushland south of
the ADI Site through to the Blue Mountains. The NSW National Parks
and Wildlife Service oppose the rezoning of the site because of its
immense Natural and Aboriginal Heritage values and because it is
part of this important corridor. Penrith Councils draft LEP Flora
and Fauna Conservation 1999
shows that the entire Cranebrook site is classified as a
conservation corridor. So why are they now contemplating allowing
housing on the site?
Penrith Council must stop
pandering to IFC Capital Ltd and reject their rezoning application.
Penrith Council must work with local residents to lobby the NSW and
Federal Governments to buy back the site and ensure it is properly
managed and protected. Penrith Council must do the right thing and
put local residents and the environment first.
The Cranebrook site is very
significant bushland but like most unmanaged bushland in Western
Sydney it suffers at the hands of people who use the site to ride
motorbikes, drive 4WD's, illegally dump rubbish, light fires, collect
firewood and participate in other anti social activities. It is in
desperate need of fencing and proper management. It is complete
nonsense for anyone to argue that bulldozing the site is the best way
to stop this anti social behaviour.
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