Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Letter To ALP Members

Dear Secretary,
We write to correct misleading impressions about the Lawson Old Community Hall (aka Mechanics Institute) that may have emanated from the ranks of ALP BMCC councillors who have consistently voted with Liberal councillors to demolish the hall

These councillors are staunchly rejecting Phil Koperberg’s efforts, following substantial community feedback, to save the hall. They first voted (with the Mayor using an extra casting vote) to demolish the hall despite huge public support for an option to relocate it, arguing that it would be too expensive.
Mr Koperberg then negotiated with the RTA and the Minister for Roads to save the hall with a different plan that would be far cheaper, and presented it to Council. Council now demands that the State Government pay for the most substantial upgrade of the hall if they are to accept the plan.

It seems some councillors keep finding new reasons to prevent saving the hall, and misleading impressions may have been given to support this resoluteness:

False assertion: The RTA owns the hall.
The RTA does not own the hall. It did resume in 1988 a minor portion of the land where the hall stands – from the front of the block to a point in line with the first internal wall. $200,000 was subsequently provided in compensation to help fund the Mid-Mountains Community Centre. However, legal opinion disputes that the RTA also owns the equivalent minor front portion of the hall itself, but rather that this portion (along with the bulk of the hall) remains in the ownership of Council as Trustee for the public.

False assertion: The RTA wishes to demolish the hall. It is out of Council’s hands.


The RTA does not wish to demolish the hall. Encouraged by Mr Koperberg, the RTA and Minister for Roads responded to the overwhelming percentage of submissions from a broad cross-section of the community to the Council’s Plan of Management process, advocating that the hall be saved. The RTA revised its plan so the highway could avoid the hall after the RTA relocates the portico at the side, at no cost to Council. The portico was not a feature of the original 1903 structure. As a bonus the RTA would return the resumed portion of land so Council could again be trustee of the entire block. The decision on whether this new RTA plan should go ahead rests entirely with Council.

False assertion: The RTA has submitted a DA to demolish the hall.


The RTA has submitted a plan to save the hall. A recently-exhibited DA to demolish the hall was submitted by Noel Bell Ridley Smith & Partners acting on behalf of Council, the owner. Council is waiting for a public submissions report.

False assertion: It would be too expensive for Council to save the hall.

Of three options costed by Council in relation to the new RTA plan, at least one of these options would be cheaper than demolition.
Further ongoing savings would be made by allowing the Youth Centre back into the hall, as the Council has been needlessly paying $300pw to rent alternative accommodation for years because it closed the hall, and from the Brook Theatre Group which has offered not only to undertake remedial work associated with POPE standards, but also pay a regular rent to Council to use the hall.

We encourage you to verify this information with the Senior Project Development Manager, GWH Upgrade, RTA, Blacktown (PO Box 558 Blacktown NSW 2148 or call 131782). He and his project team may well be concerned.


Our hall…
  • was built by the community in 1903 with stone reclaimed from the Lawson railway station, to provide education for the working class
  • was the site of the first shire council meeting provided community recreation including library, roller skating rink, picture theatre and dance hall
  • was part of the landmark WW1 Hitchen’s Coo-ee rally
  • has brilliant acoustics, perfect for performances
  • is heritage-listed
  • is unique in the Blue Mountains and one of the few remaining Mechanics Institutes in NSW


    The Blue Mountains was named a “City of the Arts”. Where is Council’s associated vision? The plan for a Cultural Centre in Katoomba is bereft of performance space. How irresponsibly unsustainable to demolish a fine existing facility!

    The Lawson hall should be respected not only as an excellent performance space but also as an important part of the heritage of the development of social community values, values that incidentally helped constitute Labor’s platform. If all Labor councillors support saving the hall, the history of nation building by the working class represented by the hall could be preserved for future generations.

    Councillors should not be in the business of obfuscation to suit themselves. The community is appalled that some of them, including two of the four Labor party members, appear willing without any logical basis to bend over backwards to demolish this historic and valuable community asset.

    They also voted in favour of spending millions for town centre redevelopment that includes further demolition of heritage buildings, to make way for parking. Questions are constantly being raised about the propriety of the process particularly with the current press concerning Wollongong Council.

    Ultimately Lawson’s heritage could and should be a major issue for candidates at the coming council elections to put forward their positions on, so voters can decide. Meanwhile any potential candidates who may seek to bend the truth to justify their opposition to emphatic community sentiment should be treated with caution at the very least.
    We hope this clarifies a number of matters. Thank you.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

PEITION SIGNING

Petition signing next Saturday from 11am.
Near Carrington Hotel

SIGN PETITION......... SHOW YOU CARE!
we want thousands of signatures!!!


Van Der Kley says that no-one is interested in saving the hall but we know otherwise and will be presenting him and other councillors with a copy of signed petitions.

The next council meeting to vote on DA for demolition will be on Tuesday 18th march (7pm for 7.30 start.)

Please be there to show your opposition to demolition of this historic building.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

STOP THE VANDALISM- SAVE OUR HALL !



STOP THE VANDALISM!

SHAME ! SHAME ! SHAME !

Councillors Van Der Kley, Hamilton, Angel and others have acknowledged that they see the demolition of the hall as the best option for the community despite the majority of the local community making it quite clear that they do not want the hall demolished. Councillor Hamilton alone received over 600 signatures to petitions to save the hall taken over only a few weeks.
This is nothing short of contempt for the constituents that they are meant to represent on this issue.
Councillors who have voted for demolition can only be described as participating in irredeemable statutory vandalism of our precious history.
If Clr Van Der Kley alone had voted with the other mid mountain councillors, Searle and McInnes, then the hall would be saved from demolition. The demolition of a community asset by those entrusted with its protection must be regarded as the worst form of vandalism.

Councillors, having the power to cast their votes to stop demolition must therefore be regarded as the principal causes of this statutory vandalism in the eyes of the people of the Blue Mountains.


Wednesday, February 6, 2008

WE FIGHT ON DESPITE COUNCIL VOTE

Residents of the Blue Mountains are entitled to know more about the large amount of money apparently lost in sub-prime investments made by the Blue Mountains City Council in the U.S. Our money that is!
Was it two, four or six million dollars , or was it even more? I know that not all councils in NSW were foolish enough to invest in this scheme. Did money change hands as a commission one wonders? and to whom was it paid? We have a right to know the answers.
We recently phoned Council about the possibility of forming a volunteer group to assist in restoring the unique contour map of Australia sculpture in Wilson Park, Lawson. wilsonparklawson.blogspot.com
I was told that Council had absolutely no money to spend on assistance for any project like this.
More neglect for Lawson! The unique contour map is actually the only one of its kind in Australia, built in 1932.
Where has all our money gone? Down the drain in a dodgy US scheme that's where!!!

Now, the majority of Councillors, thanks to Mayor Angel's casting vote, want the 104 year old Mechanics Institute Hall demolished, and soon! Yet the highway widening outside the hall is still years away. The reason for the hasty destruction of the hall and for what purpose we will eventually find out. It definitely isn't for the widening of the highway as they have been telling us for years.

We now discover after the amazing offer by RTA, that to demolish the old hall is actually more expensive than it is to retain it!

To borrow from a famous statement. If demolition takes place, Van Der Kley, Hamilton , Angel and other councillors will be remembered forever as the Councillors who broke the hearts of the people of Lawson and the Blue Mountains.

Congratulations councillors, at least you will be remembered for something.
A puzzle that is concerning many of us is that while Councillors are asking for government funding at this stage, they have never investigated any avenues of applying for any in the past.
It would appear a deal has been struck somewhere, sometime with a developer.

Friday, January 4, 2008

A Plea From Lawson residents


Dear General Manager
I am writing to protest against councils decision with regard to demolition of Lawson Community Hall. I have been involved with this hall since moving to the mountains in 1974. We were the first playgroup within the Blue Mountain area and we hired the hall for the playgroup occupying the larger hall plus the smaller kitchen area. In addition I was involved in the theatre group which operated during the eighties (??) and entertained and delivered some first class theatre/plays. I was a member of the Lawson Community Hall committee during which time I was responsible for the cleaning and bookings of the hall. My daughter enjoyed classes with Shirley Harris in Physical Culture and I participated in several dance classes. Most months there would be a bush dance where the hall would be filled to capacity, the acoustics brilliant with all who attended having a fantastic time. I am sure that my experience with Lawson Community Hall would be shared with numerous community members who are as saddened as I am with councils decision to demolish this grand old lady.
During the times I was responsible for the cleaning of this hall I would sometimes stop and imagine what the hall would have been in its prime, noting the projector box and the stage area with what was then, framed by beautiful velvet curtains. Sometimes, during those boring times of mopping I would sing to myself, amazed at how far my voice would carry.
As time went on, I noticed the deterioration of the wooden floor/kitchen area/toilets and wished that the council would acknowledge its responsibilities but noting that the new centre behind the post office was the "in" place and the community hall allowed to fall into disrepair.
I often thought that this may be a tactic used by council as vandals would then make their mark, perhaps a fire or two or broken windows would then support councils approach that this was a building not worth saving, that the monies to renovate and maintain would be too much and not supported by rate payers.
I only have to look at that most beautiful building that used to shine as train travellers rounded the bend on the approach to Katoomba. Now partly hidden by the Edge, it breaks my heart to see how sad it looks, will it now be demolished as a recommendation by council to make way for what???? Units, housing estate, shopping centre, something similar to that most ugly complex on the highway at Leura.
I have to ask, does the council have an ulterior agenda in relation to the land on which the Lawson Community Hall stands??? Is there money in it for the council???.
Surely, as you and we all get older, there is the need for recognition and acknowledgement and preservation of those buildings that represent the past and the contributions made by the local community. Council has to recognise that our old hall can be saved, can be used, can be maintained and can be an absolute asset and integral option for community groups! The council needs to voice its intent to do what the community wants!
I remember, not that long ago, when the council wanted to close the local swimming pool. I remember the local members (they aren't now) who were at a meeting at a local park adjacent to the swimming pool who were absolutely "shouted down" as the community was rightly outraged that the council would suggest such a thing. In the park where that meeting was held is a concrete map of Australia which again has been allowed to deteriorate. Weeds abound and the flow of the stream interrupted by the build up of sand and other debris. I sometimes look around that area and my village, the local shopping area, parks and wonder if the council just "skips" Lawson, it seems that the village that was so beautiful when we first arrived, with marked walks, camping areas, tracks, parks is now gone.
Do something for Lawson for a change, put some money into our village, support the preservation of our local hall, and listen to the people.
Andrea Jenkins
Brian Jenkins
Eric Jenkins
Lawson

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Contact your councillor

If you would like to see the Lawson Mechanics Institute Hall saved from demolition why not email,write and phone your local Blue Mountains City Councillor and ask them to accept the RTA offer to move the entrance and give back the portion it purchased from council. This will not cost the ratepayer one cent!

Please contact councillors listed who voted to have the hall demolished (highlighted in red)

After all, this hall was built by the people of this township for the on-going use of the residents.

Our Council has a duty to respect the wishes of the ratepayers.
Click on email links to contact a councillor directly.
Write or phone councillors who voted for demolition.

Jim Angel
(Mayor)
40 Ninth Avenue
KATOOMBA NSW 2780
02 4782 4185 (fax/ph)
email: mailto:jangel@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/

Councillor Hamilton
(Deputy Mayor)
56 Hat Hill Road
BLACKHEATH NSW 2785
02 4787 6549 (fax/ph)
email:
mailto:thamilton@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/


Councillor O Grady
Locked Bag 1005
KATOOMBA NSW 2780
02 4782 4394 (fax/ph)
0431 501 981 (mobile)
email: mailto:kogrady@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/

SECOND WARD
Wentworth Falls to Faulconbridge


Councillor McInnes
Locked Bag 1005
KATOOMBA NSW 2780
02 4751 6359 (fax/ph)
0431 501 984 (mobile)
email: mailto:pmcinnes@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/

Councillor Searle
Locked Bag 1005
KATOOMBA NSW 2780
02 4757 4586 (fax/ph) (h)
0419 477 856 (mobile)
email: mailto:adam.searle@statechambers.net/

Councillor Van Der Kley
6 Murray Avenue
WENTWORTH FALLS NSW 2782
02 4758 6254 (fax/ph) (w)
02 4757 2376 (fax/ph) (h)
0427 805 810 (mobile)
email: mailto:cvanderkley@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/

THIRD WARD
Springwood to Warrimoo


Councillor McLaren
PO Box 4338
WINMALEE NSW 2777
02 4754 5742 (fax/ph)
0414 195 991 (mobile)
email: mailto:amclaren@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/

Councillor Myles
PO Box 455
SPRINGWOOD NSW 2777
02 4751 4928 (fax/ph)
0414 418 161 (mobile)
email: mailto:dmyles@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/


Councillor Trindall
PO Box 4313
WINMALEE NSW 2777
(02) 4754 3910 (fax/ph)
0414 195 986 (mobile)
email: mailto:ltrindall@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/


FOURTH WARD
Blaxland to Lapstone


Councillor Brown
Locked Bag 1005
KATOOMBA NSW 2780
02 4739 5860 (fax/ph)
0414 195 989 (mobile)
email: mailto:abrown@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/

Councillor Creed
Locked Bag 1005
KATOOMBA NSW 2780
02 4739 6261 (fax/ph)
0423 565 988 (mobile)
email: mailto:fcreed@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/

Councillor Frappell
Locked Bag 1005
KATOOMBA NSW 2780
02 4739 3529 (fax/ph)
0414 195 990 (mobile)
email:
mailto:kfrappell@bmcc.nsw.gov.au/