Casey & Cardinia Free Press 7 July 2017

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CASEY & CARDINIA

FREE PRESS CCFREEPRESS.COM.AU

7 July 2017

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Cardinia

Drop in family violence reports Cardinia Council has welcomed new crime statistics showing an 11 per cent drop in reports of family violence in the shire, suggesting the Together We Can program has made a difference. According to the council, the new statistics put the local government area as the fourth worst for family violence reports in the southern metropolitan region – an improvement on its previous position of second worst. “Cardinia Shire was the only LGA in the [region] to have recorded a decrease in the rate of family violence offences,” mayor Brett Owen said in a media release. “Council strongly believes that this is, in part, a result of the combined efforts of collective impact initiative Together We Can, and changes in the focus of governments and local organisations to actively stop, prevent, and end family violence in Cardinia Shire.” Together We Can is a Cardinia Shire-focussed project set up to find local solutions to the problem of family violence. A council spokesperson said a 2016 report suggested Cardinia had the “highest number of recurring victims in Victoria, and under-reporting is estimated to be at around 30 per cent of all cases.” If you need support or advice about family violence, visit 1800respect.org.au.

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FREE PRESS

Piles of piglets! Doveton’s Myuna Farm welcomes 10 cute new babies to the family // Page 7

Aussie planning among ‘worst’ █ William Kulich @WillPJK

IN FOCUS • Australia has become slack with its town and city planning and it’s affecting how we live as well as how we use our land, according to one researcher. Anyone living on or near

Melbourne’s urban fringe is acutely aware our farmland is being replaced by urban sprawl. It’s something we expect - our population is growing (see the Census report on Page 6 of this paper) and we need places to put people, right?

Our rapid housing growth over some of the state’s most productive agricultural land is a problem we need to deal with. We can’t just keep expanding forever, but we only seem to talk urban planning when we’re forced to. In this first in a series of features

on managing Melbourne and periurban Victoria’s growth, we talk to RMIT’s Michael Buxton, who is a professor of Environment and Planning at the School of Global, Urban and Social Studies.

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