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URGENT: Submission No.1 – Variations and Changes to Complying Development

URGENT SUBMISSION DEADLINE 5pm 24th JUNE.

Summary 

The State is proposing to increase the uptake of ‘Complying Development’ applications to fast track housing.

Complying Development replaces Tweed’s building assessment codes with statewide, cookie cutter, ‘sea of roof’ style, building codes, that bypass consideration of virtually all other Tweed planning controls, bypass public exhibition, and bypass your right to legal appeal. 

The character of our Shire would be stripped away, forming one urban sprawl to the next under these State building codes. 

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Please feel free to use the following Caldera Environment Centre Submission as a template.

Submission Objecting to the Proposed NSW Variations and Changes to Complying Development.   read more

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URGENT: Submission No.2 – Low Rise Housing and Targeted Assessment Pathways – Discussion Paper

URGENT SUBMISSION DEADLINE ALSO 5pm 24th JUNE.

Summary:

The State is proposing another, whole new development pathway, called Targeted Assessments. This would be for virtually all other residential developments that still doesn’t fit the Complying Development criteria. 

The State’s cookie cutter building codes would again replace Tweeds building codes for these Targeted Assessments, and Tweed’s other planning and environmental controls would be weakened so much as to be virtually ineffective except in the most extreme cases.

Tweed has the highest number of threatened species in Australia, is a fragile, steep, wet, active, erosion caldera, and has an urban population within the midst of this stunning ‘National Iconic Landscape’.  We have an obligation to protect this region in Australia’s public interest.  read more

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World Environment Day Festival 2026

Well done to all for the event, a turn-out of local community groups, all with the common interest of the local natural environment, its value, its preservation and its restoration.

Thank you all.

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The Caldera – The Tweed Volcano Erosion Caldera

The Tweed Volcano was active about 20 million years ago.

Volcanic eruptions lasted about three million years. 

The shaped volcano basin has been hollowed out by the erosion effects of the landform induced, very high local rainfall.

The central once molten hard rock core of the volcano is Mount Warning, aka Wollumbin.

The volcano basin’s encompassing walls are exposed in the north, they are a high, vertical, hard-rock, …

This kind of geological formation is called an ‘extinct volcano erosional caldera’.

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Australia was once at the south pole, there was no ice, it was so warm that there were crocodiles.

The mountainous entire eastern side of the continent was rainforest, inland Australia was a shallow warm sea. [Sea levels were higher because there was no ice.] read more

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Housing and the Environment – Finding the Balance: Mur’bah Daring Dialogues

With the NSW removal of public consultation for neighbouring buildings approval, with the TSC vote to permit un-rate-chargable second remote dwelling construction, with the public apathy of defeatism … what on earth will become of the landscape ecology and what can be done to arrest the building out of the Tweed rural and natural environment. A Daring Dialogue at the Kambucha Cafe Tuesday 9th June 6.30pm.

Please also be aware of the Draft Growth Management Housing and Employment Strategy (GMHES) (soon up for exhibition) and a new fast track proposal by the state that will bypass the low rise housing (1-2 storey) DAs and their local conditions such as site placement, compensatory bush regeneration etc.  read more

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Tweed Council conditions for approval of new buildings will no longer apply! CEC Position Statement: 

NSW State government are taking authority away from local councils to set the conditions for new building approval, State approval conditions will apply.

The State approval conditions are unknown at this time.

Note also that Public Notice and Right to Comment requirements on local building proposals are separately being removed.

The current Council set conditions for building approval reflect not only local environmental concerns but also the will of the local population.

Locally set environmental conditions for building approvals on rural land have been fought for and have been decided in favour of by the majority votes of democratically elected Tweed Shire Councillors. 

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The Caldera Environment Centre position on this issue is:  read more

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URGENT Your Right to be Consulted under Threat

RED ALERT!!!

Very important – submissions needed please before 5pm 3rd June.

Proposed NSW Community Participation Plan.

NSW Labor and the Liberals have teamed up again this time to attack your right to community consultation on local development applications.

Thrilled by their latest success in December that will entirely strip your local Councillors of any powers to determine development applications, they are now trying to cut the community out too.

Under their new proposed Community Participation Plan a development application won’t be publicly advertised for comment if it apparently meets all the planning controls, whether it’s the house next door or a high rise.
The problem is that planning controls can be open to interpretation and arguable, eg bulk and scale, visual impact, privacy, environmental impact or even hazard risk impacts. That’s why we have consultation. read more

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NSW Government’s Forest Industry Action Plan, Consultation Report Released

Stakeholder Consultation Report, attached, interesting bits highlighted for quicker reading.

Highlights:

Submissions from more than 1500 individuals and 160 organisations.

Viewpoints and evidence in support of environmental concerns tended to submit that:

• Native forest harvesting in NSW has major impacts on biodiversity and endangered species and should cease as soon as possible.

• Healthy, protected and intact forests are intrinsically, socially and culturally valuable.

• The forestry industry does not have the capability to deliver beneficial environmental outcomes.

NEFA: “Stakeholder Consultation Report confirms the public want an end to logging public native forests.”

“The Stakeholder Consultation Report for NSW’s Forestry Industry Action Plan (FIAP) raises more questions than it answers, though with 70% of submissions expressing support for ending native forestry it confirms that most people want an end to this archaic and destructive industry. read more

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Thank You Council: Microplastics with your coffee

Council voted 3 to 4 against the proposed single use materials policy, which would have banned plastic lined cardboard coffee cups at public markets on Council land.

Councillor James Owen, voting against the policy, said “Any Councillor who votes for this policy is against small businesses.” No Councillor James Owen, that’s not true. The other Councillors are against waste, single use plastics, and we reckon that if the small business owners of the market coffee shop stalls knew they are ingesting millions of nanoparticles of plastic with every cup of coffee, they themselves wouldn’t drink from a plastic lined cardboard coffee cup.

When the plasticised-cardboard of the take-away coffee cup goes through the temperature change of being filled with the hot liquid, thousands of micro and millions of nano sized plastic molecules fracture and fragment away from the plasticised-cardboard, into your cup of coffee. [Source: (link).] read more

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[nefanews] Local Land Services Amendment (Private Native Forestry) Bill 2026

The Shooters and Fishers Party seek to stop Councils that require consent for PNF in rural zones (most private native vegetation) from doing so, such as Kyogle, Tweed, Coffs Harbour, Port Macquarie-Hastings, ect.

They don’t want logging to be subject to the same scrutiny as most other developments that require DAs – such as actually having to survey for threatened species, complying with Council requirements, notifying neighbours, and assessing impacts. They just want to comply with LLS’s tick-a-box assessments.  

The Shooters and Fishers have introduced “An Act to amend the Local Land Services Act 2013 and the standard instrument prescribed for principal local environmental plans under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 in relation to private native forestry; and for related purposes“. read more

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M’Arts, Food Forever

Talk & Community Forum.

Food Forever!

Building a local food movement for the Northern Rivers with Michael Shuman.

Sat 23 May, 2–4:30pm at MJArts Precinct, Mur’bah.

Only $5 entry (kids free).

Ideas, skills & action needed!

Scan QR or get tix @ Humanitix.

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Forest Frontline Forum

On March 21, at the Southern Cross University campus, hear from frontline campaigners and local experts who know the forests best, to hear about the plan to secure protection for Richmond River Koala Parks.

This is a chance to understand what’s at stake – and how protection is possible when our community stands together.

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Tell Council: “YES, do that.”

They are asking, so tell Council “YES” to going back to crockery and cutlery at events and markets.

When the single use plasticised-cardboard take-away coffee cup goes through the temperature change of being filled with the hot liquid, thousands of micro and millions of nano sized plastic molecules fracture and fragment away from the plasticised-cardboard, into your cup of coffee. Almost all plastic we ingest passes through us, though the <1% we retain accumulates primarily in the brain. Lets not ingest plastic.

We note that washable plastic cups or plates will of course still leave the problem of millions of plastic particles shattering and fragmenting from the plastic due to temperature change of the hot food or drink, and ingested. We therefore request and highly recommend the inclusion in the policy that replacement of the single use items is to be with non-plastic cups and plates, even if washable, due to the the plastic ingestion issue. read more

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Please make your Submission to the TSC Draft Development Control Plan

The opportunity to ‘Have Your Say’ on the Tweed Development Control Plan closes 5pm Friday!

We’ve attached the CEC submission document for your interest, and for copy and pasting all or parts of as your own submission which is allowed and we encourage.

Please do make a submission, it is quick and easy on the Council website (link here: www.yoursay), or forward the attached CEC submission expressing your own support for it (email to tsc@tweed.nsw.gov.au).

To the General Manager Tweed Shire Council,

Submission on the Draft Tweed Development Control Plan 2026.

Tweed Council is commended for the many proposed improvements to the Tweed Development Control Plan.

Please find below some further requests for inclusion in the Plan. read more

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The Draft Tweed Development Control Plan – Have Your Say

The Tweed Development Control Plan (DCP) is the Plan by which Council Controls Building and Development Works.

Section B2 of the plan, ‘Preservation of (Urban) Trees and Vegetation’, applies restrictions on the clearing of vegetation.

The CEC support that the draft includes a new protection level for urban local natives at 3 m or higher, previously 5 m, and exotics protected at 40 cm stem diameter, previously 80 cm.

These new reduced limitations are reflected in Table B2.1, urban vegetation which cannot be cleared without Council approval.

Link to Tweed Shire Council’s website to Have Your Say: www.yoursay

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WITHDRAWN! Fingal Mining Exploration Licence Application

Update: The application has been withdrawn.

An exploration licence application to sample the mineral content of the sand that is being pumped by the Tweed Sand Bypass at Fingal Head NSW to the Gold Coast beaches was advertised in the Tweed Valley Weekly Public Notices on 19th Feb.

Minerals sought include Rutile, Zircon and Ilmenite. 

If sampling is successful the aim is to build a processing plant next to / connected to the Sand Bypass to extract these heavy minerals from the pumped sand.  

The extracted minerals would be trucked out through Fingal Head.

We don’t know the specific method of extraction or its actual impacts but concerns from initial research of such activities include: read more

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Takayna/Tarkine Rainforest Update

While a mining company’s scrapping of plans for a tailings dam in Tasmania’s Takayna rainforest is welcome, its revised site reflects how little the environment minister cares. By Bob Brown.

MMG was flagging the withdrawal of its contentious plan to dump its acid wastes in the Takayna/Tarkine rainforest at McKimmie Creek. That project involved constructing a pipeline from Rosebery, north over the Pieman River into Takayna – discounting the values of the rainforest and its wildlife to zero.

Read more: https://www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au/share/22750/VkQBExYS

Also, a reminder of the March for Forests in March event, Lismore, Sunday 22nd of March.

March in March for Forestshttps://marchforforests.org  read more

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Caldera Report > With Every Cup of Coffee: 25,000 micron-sized and 12 million nano-sized microplastic particles!

Cardboard take away coffee cups are plasticised, because, if not, the cardboard cup would soak and fall apart when filled with liquid.

When the plasticised-cardboard of the take-away coffee cup goes through the temperature change of being filled with the hot liquid, thousands of micro and millions of nano sized plastic molecules fracture and fragment away from the plasticised-cardboard, into your cup of coffee. [Source: (link).]

Mostly the plastic we ingest passes through us, however, we accumulate plastic nano-particles and studies show them throughout our bodies.

The plastic nano molecules we accumulate accumulate primarily in our brains, we don’t know why, however plastic accumulates in our bodies mostly in our brain, Plastic accumulates in the brain at ~10 times higher levels than in the liver or kidneys (91% vs. 4% and 4% of total plastic mass in these organs). [Source: (link).] read more

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The Wollumbin Caldera – It’s Geological Formation and Flora

The Wollumbin / Mount Warning shield volcano and its erosion caldera is a unique volcanic landform which has functioned as a refugium, over the 20 million years since it’s formation, for a core area of Gondwana rainforest flora.

The Caldera is located in a major climatic transition zone, between temperate and tropical floral and faunal species, giving high species diversity under a wide range of habitats, its volcanic origins and very high localised rainfall make this a very complex and interesting landform.

20 million years ago the continent, bearing its Gondwanic rainforest flora, was moving north, away from Antarctica. The continent had been passing over one of the earths hotspots, and this had given rise to a chain of volcanic activity down the east coast of the continent, including the volcanic eruption and subsequent laval covering of the landscape which was the formation of the Mount Warning / Wollumbin Shield Volcano. The height and spread of the laval mound of the volcano is estimated at 2km high and a spread which for example extended 30km out onto the continental shelf beyond the current sea level. read more

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They are removing the environmental protections from the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act [!] .

Key purposes of the Act until now have been: to ensure that ‘development’ is done in an environmentally sustainable way; to protect the environment; to ensure community participation – they are rewriting it so that they can ignore all of those things.

Example: One of the many changes is a new assessment pathway that is “unconstrained and expressly prohibits consideration of environmental impacts and the public interest.” note the EDO.

The intention behind the changes is to allow development in otherwise environmentally protected areas.

The Act is New South Wales’ primary legislation for land use planning and development assessment. It governs environmental planning instruments like State Environmental Planning Policies (SEPPs) and Local Environmental Plans (LEPs). read more

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Tweed Landcare UPCOMING EVENT Seed Collection Safari

Join Tweed Landcare and Michelle Chapman for an engaging and informative seed collecting safari bus trip. Contribute to the North Coast Regional Seedbank Project, creating a vital, genetically diverse native seedbank for the entire NSW North Coast region.

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The Tweed Valley: “A deep rich valley clothed with magnificent trees, … ” Oxley: 1823

In 1823 John Oxley was the first European to see the Tweed Valley, and he wrote of it: “A deep rich valley clothed with magnificent trees, the beautiful uniformity of which was only interrupted by the turns and windings of the river, which here and there appeared like small lakes. The background was Mt. Warning. The view was altogether beautiful beyond description. The scenery here exceeded anything I have previously seen in Australia.”

Oxley was sailing up the eastern coast of Australia from Sydney in search of a penal settlement site “for difficult convicts”. Sailing further, they decided on Redcliffe, part of now Brisbane (perhaps explaining something of the Queensland culture of today). read more

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We Are All Ingesting Plastic

Plastic does not decompose back to its original naturally occurring elements. The plastic existing today, if exposed to sunlight, temperature change or abrasion, will degrade into smaller particles, though those particles will still exist, hundreds of thousands to millions of years from now.

The CEC note the growing awareness of the public to the issue of our unwanted ingestion of these plastic molecules, and the retention of these molecules in our bodies.

Bioaccumulation of microplastics in human brains.

25,000 micron-sized microplastic particles released from disposable paper cup into 100ml hot drink, 21 million sub micron particles [!].

Microplastic flakes found in ‘almost all’ bottles of mineral water on sale.  read more

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Live at The Citadel: The Mushroom Whisperers is an immersive experience, perfect for the intimacy, acoustics and intention of The Citadel.

Sunday December 14th 3pm & 7pm.

You might have caught Follow the Rain on Netflix;Steve Axford and Catherine Marciniak’s gorgeous stop-motion fungi imagery and documentary, affectionately known as “the Fungi film”.

As a special event for the arts and nature lovers of Murwillumbah, the world-class musicians behind the music to Follow the Rain are coming to perform live at The Citadel. 

Carla (flute & voice) and Romano (violin & piano) accompany additional fungi time-lapse imagery to channel the hidden pulse of the fungal kingdom. Fusion arts and improvisation at its most exquisite.

The Mushroom Whisperers is an immersive experience, perfect for the intimacy, acoustics and intention of The Citadel. We invite you to join us in this enchanting world where music and nature intertwine. read more

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The NSW Far North Coast Regional Water Supply Project

NRG: The NSW Far North Coast Regional Water Supply Project will be assessing regional options to improve long-term water security in our region. Several information sessions will be held to inform the public about the project. One will be held online; the others will be local drop-in sessions. See details below, as provided by the project:

Online session:  
Wednesday 19 November 2025, from 10.30 am – 12 pm via MS Teams. To register, go here

Drop-in sessions: 
Sessions will be held in Tweed Heads, Byron Bay, Ballina, Mullumbimby, Casino, Lismore and Murwillumbah. 

  • Monday 24 November from 5 pm –7 pm at Tweed Heads South Community Centre, 18 Heffron Street, Tweed Heads 
  • Tuesday 25 November from 10 am – 12 pm at Murwillumbah Community Centre, 113 Wollumbin St, Murwillumbah 
  • Tuesday 25 November from 4 pm – 6 pm at Byron Community Centre, 69 Jonson St,Byron Bay 
  • Wednesday 26 November from 10 am – 12 pm at Mullumbimby CWA Hall, Cnr Gordon and Tincogan Sts, Mullumbimby 
  • Wednesday 26 November from 4 pm – 6 pm at Ballina Surf Club, 65 Lighthouse Pde, Ballina 
  • Thursday 27 November from 10:30 am – 12:30 pm at Lismore Library, 110 Magellan Street, Lismore 
  • Thursday 27 November from 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm at Casino Community and Cultural Centre, 35 Walker Street, Casino 

Registration for drop-in sessions is not required.

We look forward to sharing project updates.

For more information, visit the project webpage read more

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