Sunday, 20 January 2008

Celebrations at Kandanda Pub

A crowd of campaigners and campaign supporters gathered at the Kandanga pub on Thursday night to celebrate a major hurdle in the fight against the Traveston Crossing Dam - responding to the EIS.

The deadline for submissions to the Coordinator-General was Monday (January 14) and a fantastic effort was made by all. A total of more than 16,000 submissions were made from people all over the south-east Queensland.

On the Fraser Coast the Greater Mary Association (GMA), with the help of an army of volunteers, organised the signing of around 10,000, mainly short submissions, along with hundreds of letters to Andrew Macnamara (Member for Hervey Bay), Federal Environment Minister Peter Garrett and Federal Minister for Climate Change Penny Wong.

"The farcical and flawed Environmental Impact Statement contemptuously dismissed any impacts downstream of the proposed dam," said the Chairman of the GMA, Darryl Stewart. "This response sends a clear message to the State Government that their jackboot approach will not be tolerated.

Tuesday, 15 January 2008

Indigenous Community Outraged


Anger over the State Government's lack of consultation with indigenous groups about the proposed Traveston Crossing Dam has been simmering among members of the Owens Clan of the Butchulla tribe in Hervey Bay.

The State Government has considered the Butchulla community 'irrelevant' and has excluded them from the consultation process, on the pretext that no part of the dam construction would be on Butchulla land, even though the Terms of Reference (TOR) does not restrict the consideration of cultural heritage to the dam footprint area.

This has been taken as a grave insult by members of the Fraser Coast Butchulla community.

The Mary River is considered by all Butchulla people to be the life-blood of their country and they feel the dam poses a threat to the survival of their culture. Their concerns are particularly related to the impacts a reduction of environmental flows from the Mary would have on the Strait, and how changes in the river would affect sacred sites and traditional practices. They are acutely aware of the importance of floods, both large and small, for river and estuary health. The affects of infrastructure already existing on the river have been keenly observed, and the feeling is unanimous that a further reduction in flows would be devastating for both the estuary and Butchulla culture in general.

Key members of the Owen's Clan in Hervey Bay have voiced their outrage in a submission responding to the EIS. A copy of this will soon be available on ourgreatsandy.com.