seq catchments catching up newsletter brisbane and moreton region january 2012

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  • 7/27/2019 SEQ Catchments Catching Up Newsletter Brisbane and Moreton Region January 2012

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    Happy new year to all and heres looking forward to a wonderfuland productive year ahead!Building Resilience afer the Pine Rivers Flood

    Its hard to believe that a year has passed since the devastang oods of 2011.

    However, its been a very busy year for Pine Rivers Catchment Associaon (PRCA), who

    have been hard at work with their Building resilience aer the Pine Rivers ood project.

    The project aims to build long-term management and monitoring of the catchment,

    increasing resilience through adapve learning and implementaon techniques. The

    project inially focussed on awareness raising, educaon and future planning.

    In September 2011, PRCA moved into the on-ground phase, restoring parts of

    Laceys Creek, Baxters Creek and the North Pine River that had been damaged in the 2011

    oods. On-ground works have taken place at twenty three properes, restoring almost

    three kilometres of bed and banks, with over 2500 plants going into the ground.

    Part of this huge restoraon eort was achieved through the help of the Dayboro

    community with over twenty residents turning out to parcipate in a Community Planng

    Day. With funding provided by Energex, the Community Planng Day was held in October

    2011 and involved planng two sides of the North Pine River on Laceys Creek Road. The

    majority of the planng was held on the McKavanaugh property, which had been

    signicantly damaged in the 2011 ood event. Fences and livestock had been swept away

    by ood waters as well as a signicant amount of land lost through erosion. In the days

    prior to the Community Planng Day, Ian Smith from PRCA guided the re-proling of both

    the North Pine River frontage and Baxters Creek on the McKavanaugh property, ensuring

    that ponds and ries were reinstated so that bed and banks regained their natural

    funcons.

    In addion to the planng day, a Naonal Green Jobs Corps team under the

    tutelage of Janet Mangan from PRCA had been hard at work over several weeks. They

    cleaned out ood debris and planted out a long secon of the North Pine River below the

    North Pine Dam, an area which was also signicantly damaged by the 2011 ood event.

    Riverine Protecon PermitsIf you wish to remove vegetaon, excavate or place ll within a watercourse, lake

    or spring, you may need to comply with the Water Act 2000 (QLD) and you may need a

    Riverine Protecon Permit.Informaon on your rights and obligaons under this

    legislaon can be found at the Department of Environment & Resource Management:

    www.derm.ld.gov.au/water/management/rpp.html

    In the Brisbane and Moreton regionJanuary 2012

    The Building Resilience afer the Pine Rivers Floodproject has been made possible

    through the generous support of SEQ Catchments, Energex and seqWater and will conn-

    ue over the next few months.

    For further informaon please contact Pine Rivers Catchment Associaon on 07 3325

    1577 or Louise Orr, SEQ Catchments on 0439 024 400.

    Ian Smith & Janet Mangan PRCA at the

    North Pine River Revegetaon site

    RevegetaonNorth Pine River, Whiteside

    Community Planng Day North Pine River, Dayboro

    Baxters Creek Dayboro aer re-proling & reshaping

    http://www.derm.qld.gov.au/water/management/rpp.htmlhttp://www.derm.qld.gov.au/water/management/rpp.htmlhttp://www.derm.qld.gov.au/water/management/rpp.html
  • 7/27/2019 SEQ Catchments Catching Up Newsletter Brisbane and Moreton Region January 2012

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    Tweed Shire Sustainable Agriculture StrategyCATCHMENT GROUPS

    CORNERBulimba Creek Catchment Coordinang Commiee

    (B4C)

    07 3420 4800

    [email protected]

    www.bulimbacreek.org.au

    Northern Catchments Network07 3407 0865

    [email protected]

    www.northerncatchmentsnetwork.org.au

    Cubberla-Wion Catchments Network

    07 3878 4581

    0407 583 441

    [email protected]

    www.cubberlawion.org

    Kedron Brook Catchment Network (Inc.)

    [email protected]

    www.kedronbrook.org.au

    Bayside Creeks Catchment Group

    07 3893 2332

    0419 726 543

    [email protected]

    www.baysidecreeks.org.au

    Moggill Creek Catchment Group

    07 3374 4240

    [email protected]

    www.moggillcreek.org

    Norman Creek Catchment Coordinang Commiee

    (N4C)

    07 3324 8307

    [email protected]

    www.n4c.org.au

    Oxley Creek Catchment Associaon (OCCA)

    07 3278 2899

    [email protected]

    www.oxleycreekcatchment.org.au

    Pine Rivers Catchment Associaon (PRCA)

    07 3325 1577

    [email protected]

    www.prca.org.au

    Pullen Pullen Catchments Group

    [email protected]

    www.pullenpullencatchment.org.au

    Save Our Waterways Now (SOWN)

    0423 763 361

    [email protected]

    www.saveourwaterwaysnow.com.au

    Wolston and Centenary Catchments (WaCC)

    07 3178 9816

    [email protected]

    www.wacc.org.au

    Redclie Environmental Forum

    [email protected]

    www.redenviroforum.org.au

    Pumicestone Region

    Catchment Coordinaon Associaon (PRCCA)

    07 3888 8209

    [email protected]

    www.prcca.caloundra.qld.gov.au

    Bribie Island Environmental Protecon Associaon

    (BIEPA)

    07 3410 0757

    0400 627 477

    [email protected]

    www.biepa.org

    Mt Nebo and Mt Glorious Envi-

    ronmental Protecon Associaon

    (MEPA)

    07 3289 0093

    [email protected]

    www.gloriousnebo.org.au

    Louise OrrSEQ Catchments

    Community Partnerships Manager | Brisbane and Moreton region0439 024 [email protected]

    www.seqcatchments.com.au

    Climate change, rising food prices and theuse of food crops as an alternave fuel source

    have been recognised as three of the main chal-

    lenges to food security and nutrion through-

    out the world. In addion to these challenges,

    local governments across eastern Australia

    must also deal with populaon growth and

    compeng land uses, such as farming, urbanand acreage development.

    Tweed Shire Council is aempng to

    address such issues through developing and

    implemenng a Sustainable Agriculture Strate-

    gy. One of the rst local governments in Aus-

    tralia to aempt such a strategy, Tweed Shire

    looked to Brisbane based consultancy Think

    Food, part of the Food Connect Foundaon

    founded by Robert Pekin, to assist them.

    Working in partnership with John

    Mongard Landscape Architects and drawing on

    their own considerable knowledge of regional

    farming and food systems, Think Food broad-

    ened the strategy development process to look

    not only at regional producon, but also region-

    al distribuon and consumpon, parcularly

    the retail markets available in nearby South

    East Queensland.

    The Project team wanted the strategy

    to look at current and future barriers to sustain-

    able agriculture in the region, and nd ways to

    encourage farming that was not only ecological-

    ly sound, but that would support local farmers

    and growers, connect them with local business-es and residents and thereby smulate local

    economies and communies. To achieve this

    vision, Think Food and John Mongard idened

    four main aims for the Strategy. It had to:

    Inuence Council policy;

    Empower and engage farmers and the

    community;

    Be developed through an open process;

    Be an iterave document

    To accomplish this an innovave and

    open engagement process previously devel-oped by John Mongard was adopted: Set Up

    Shop. For two days, an empty oce in the main

    street of Murwillumbah was opened and every-

    one invited to come in and give their ideas and

    thoughts on how sustainable food and farming

    in the Tweed could work.

    Farmers, shopkeepers, residents, poli-

    cians, businessmen, local industry representa-

    ves, government representaves: everyone

    had their say. Their ideas were recorded on

    butchers paper and displayed around the walls,

    prompng plenty of creave thought.

    The ideas, thoughts and comments

    from the Set Up Shop are now being turned

    into a praccal dra Strategy, with acons for

    both Council and the wider community to un-

    dertake. Comments are being sought on this

    dra from Catchment Management Authories,

    State Government, and Tweed Shire Council.

    The Tweed Sustainable Agricultural

    Strategy is an innovave and ambious step

    forward, one that aims to shape regional food

    producon and consumpon into the future,

    smulate regional community and economy

    and transion regional agriculture into a new

    phase.

    The Tweed Shire Sustainable Agriculture Strat-

    egy is expected to be released in the rst half

    of 2012.

    For more informaon please contact Nick Rose

    at [email protected] on

    0414 497 819.

    When someone comes into the room, they

    immediately start to see what everyone else

    is saying. So it opens them up and takes

    them out of what they have to come to talkabout and instead they begin to consider

    other ideas, other perspecves, and think

    more deeply about the issues.Robert

    Pekin

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.bulimbacreek.org.au/http://www.bulimbacreek.org.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.northerncatchmentsnetwork.org.au/http://www.northerncatchmentsnetwork.org.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.cubberlawitton.org/http://www.cubberlawitton.org/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.kedronbrook.org.au/http://www.kedronbrook.org.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.baysidecreeks.org.au/http://www.baysidecreeks.org.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.moggillcreek.org/http://www.moggillcreek.org/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.n4c.org.au/http://www.n4c.org.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.oxleycreekcatchment.org.au/http://www.oxleycreekcatchment.org.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.prca.org.au/http://www.prca.org.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.pullenpullencatchment.org.au/http://www.pullenpullencatchment.org.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.saveourwaterwaysnow.com.au/http://www.saveourwaterwaysnow.com.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.wacc.org.au/http://www.wacc.org.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.redenviroforum.org.au/http://www.redenviroforum.org.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.prcca.caloundra.qld.gov.au/http://www.prcca.caloundra.qld.gov.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.biepa.org/http://www.biepa.org/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.gloriousnebo.org.au/http://www.gloriousnebo.org.au/http://www.seqcatchments.com.au/http://www.seqcatchments.com.au/mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]://www.seqcatchments.com.au/http://www.gloriousnebo.org.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.biepa.org/mailto:[email protected]://www.prcca.caloundra.qld.gov.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.redenviroforum.org.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.wacc.org.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.saveourwaterwaysnow.com.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.pullenpullencatchment.org.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.prca.org.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.oxleycreekcatchment.org.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.n4c.org.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.moggillcreek.org/mailto:[email protected]://www.baysidecreeks.org.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.kedronbrook.org.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.cubberlawitton.org/mailto:[email protected]://www.northerncatchmentsnetwork.org.au/mailto:[email protected]://www.bulimbacreek.org.au/mailto:[email protected]