The Byron Shire Echo – Issue 35.21 – November 4, 2020

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TOO MANY PODCASTS AND NOT ENOUGH PROTESTS The Byron Shire Echo • Volume 35 #21 • Wednesday, November 4, 2020 • www.echo.net.au

letting BRUNS Holiday code announced ZOMBIES! Hans Lovejoy

A long-awaited Code of Conduct to regulate holiday letting has been released by the government, which includes a mandatory premises register that ensures a ‘two strikes and you’re out’ policy for unruly guests. Also known as short term rental accommodation (STRA), the NSW government say the code comes into effect December 18, 2020. At 24 pages, the code aims to be ‘a state-wide planning framework to achieve consistency and certainty across local planning controls’. It applies to ‘online accommodation platforms, letting agents, facilitators, hosts and guests’. Minister for Better Regulation and Innovation, Kevin Anderson (Nationals MP) says of the code, ‘The standards are enforceable, with powers available to NSW Fair Trading Commissioner to take disciplinary action, including penalties and exclusion from the industry for repeat offenders’.

McDonald Trump supporters held a small mask free election rally in Brunswick Heads last Saturday, ahead of the November 3 US election. A little known virus replicating itself at alarming rates in the US and Europe is helping global ratings for 2020 go though the roof. Photo Jeff ‘Three Meals Away From A Zombie Apocalypse’ Dawson

Compliance unclear

Bioenergy waste facility touted, have your say Ideas and feedback are being sought on Council’s plan to build a $15 million bioenergy facility that would convert much of the Shire’s organic waste into renewable energy. Council say, if built, the facility would be the first of its kind in Australia and would process residential green bin waste, commercial food waste, and turn grease trap waste into biogas, via a process

called anaerobic digestion. Also to be converted would be wastewater from the Byron Bay Sewage Treatment Plant (STP), which is where the proposed facility would be located. Council had previously proposed to build the facility at the Brunswick Valley STP on Vallances Road, but changed the location in 2018. According to Council, the entire process would generate approximately four million kilowatt-hours

of renewable electricity per year, equivalent to powering 267 households. This electricity would be used to run the Byron Bay STP – one of Council’s most power-hungry operations – with the excess energy fed into the grid, creating a revenue stream which Council hopes will make the project economically viable. ‘This could revolutionise the production of bioenergy in this country’, the manager of the project

Hospitality leaders help Melbourne’s night life ▜ p5

A day to remember the dead, Nov 8 ▜ p6

Ballina news ▜ p8,14

Paul Bibby

John Hart said. ‘It doesn’t require any fossil fuels to operate, effectively solves the Shire’s organic waste problem, and it stacks up financially on its own’. Key to this financial viability is the fact that phosphate-rich bio soil compost is made as a byproduct of the process. Council believes this will be highly sought after by farmers around the region, creating an â–ś Continued on page 3

NAIDOC week ▜ p13

Yet details regarding who will enforce compliance are still to be announced. Within the code’s compliance and enforcement section (page 21), there are no responsibilities defined, other than what the commissioner can do with the findings. The Echo asked Mr Anderson’s office, ‘Does the government expect that local councils and police will provide the commissioner with evidence that an industry participant has contravened this code? If so, won’t this be an added burden on their resources?’ â–ś Continued on page 5

Phillip Frazer’s take on the US election ▜ p17

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Students helping koalas

Concerned about the depletion of koala habitat, Mullumbimby High students, through their Student Representative Council, kicked off a new project last Tuesday to help save the vulnerable species. Trees for Koalas – Connecting Communities, aims to increase planting of koala food trees on private properties across Byron Shire. The project is supported by Byron Shire Council, along with the Department of Planning, Industry and Environment (DPIE) through their Saving our Species/Regional Koala Strategy program, who provided trees and materials for the planting day. Photo Jeff ‘Student-Bearing Trees’ Dawson

Living celebrate the departed

Mullumbimby’s Latin American-based school, located on Main Arm Road, celebrated the Day Of The Dead last week with music, face painting, food and crafts. For more on the Day Of The Dead, see page 6. Photo Jeff ‘Pachamama’ Dawson

COVID-19 impacts on job vacancies Paul Bibby

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The Byron Shire Echo Volume 35 #21 • November 4, 2020 Established 1986 • 24,000 copies every week

www.echo.net.au Phone: 02 6684 1777 Editorial/news: editor@echo.net.au Advertising: adcopy@echo.net.au Office: Village Way, Stuart Street, Mullumbimby NSW 2482 General Manager Simon Haslam Editor Hans Lovejoy Photographer Jeff Dawson Advertising Manager Angela Harris Production Manager Ziggi Browning

Nicholas Shand 1948–1996 Founding Editor

The Echo acknowledges the people of the Bundjalung nation as the traditional custodians of this land and extends respect to elders past, present and future. Disclaimer: The Echo is committed to providing a voice for our whole community. The views of advertisers, letter writers, and opinion writers are not necessarily those of the owners or staff of this publication.

‘The job of a newspaper is to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.’ – Finley Peter Dunne 1867–1936 © 2020 Echo Publications Pty Ltd – ABN 86 004 000 239 Reg. by Aust. Post Pub. No. NBF9237

2 The Byron Shire Echo mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ

It’s no secret that unemployment in the Byron Shire has spiked as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the associated recession. But it appears that while thousands of locals are out of work, some businesses are struggling to find staff, particularly in the tourism and hospitality industries. In a sign of a significant disconnection between supply and demand within the local job market, some employers say they are looking for staff but have found no suitable candidates to fill the positions. The major contributing factors appear to be the absence of foreign workers, who often filled hospitality and tourism positions, and the mass exodus of local staff from these positions as they search for more stable occupations. One local restaurant owner looking for a qualified chef said she had received just two applications for the position in three weeks. ‘Usually, we have a flurry of resumes coming in, both via email, Seek ads and just walkins – this is now non-existent’, the restaurant owner said. The owner said she believed the loss of skilled workers from overseas, owing to the pandemic, was a major contributing factor. ‘There has always been a number of skilled professionals travelling from other countries who are keen for work, and this has always been a help for our team both front-of-house and in

the kitchen’, she said.

Skills shortage ‘Over 80 per cent of the applications that we used to receive, prior to COVID-19, were qualified and skilled workers from overseas on either student or workingholiday visas. ‘They are no longer in the country, and therefore we are seeing almost zero applications coming through.’ With the Shire expecting a surge in domestic visitors over summer, owing to the ongoing prohibition on international travel, the staff shortage could create a major headache for tourism operators, just as they attempt to get back on their feet. It’s part of a trend that is expected to see staff shortages at regional tourism hotspots across the country. ‘This is a national crisis facing the industry, because so many people have left tourism and hospitality to find better surety of work’, the Chief Executive of the Victorian Tourism Industry Council, Felicia Mariani, told traveller.com last week. ‘The brain drain from our industry, the intellectual capital we’ve lost from the tourism sector is immense, not just in Victoria.’ However, one local looking for work said hospitality and cleaning positions were not offering attractive wages and conditions. ‘Unfortunately, hospitality and cleaning are not offering the security and hours I am looking for, plus to be honest, the battle to Byron is

ridiculous some days’, the job seeker said on social media. ‘I have applied for a temp job, which would only see me employed until July, which I will take if I get it. The risk is not being able to return to Centrelink [benefits], when it ends.’ While the skills shortage is a worrying trend, the increase in the number of available positions still represents a positive development. According to figures from the Federal Department of Education, Skills and Employment, there were 2,800 job advertisements in the NSW North Coast in September. This is a 62.3 per cent increase in the number of job ads compared to March, and a doubling of the April figure when the country experienced a major COVID-related slump.

Business NSW releases survey Meanwhile, the state’s peak business organisation, Business NSW, believes the state is getting back on track. According to its quarterly business conditions survey, there has been a bounce in business confidence, the first in a year.

Business NSW Regional Manager, Jane Laverty, says the outlook has improved, and Northern Rivers businesses are expecting further lifts in the economy for the remainder of 2020. She says, ‘While fewer businesses are scaling back their capital spending and staffing levels, fewer businesses are in a position to expand without innovative support’. ‘That is why Business NSW is calling on the NSW government to continue the jobs push by announcing a payroll tax rebate in next month’s budget. ‘Our survey also examined some of the factors common to businesses most affected by COVID-19. ‘While business services, hospitality and tourism businesses are heavily impacted overall, business performance in these industries varies dramatically depending on location and the type of customers serviced, suggesting somewhat of a two-speed economy. ‘Businesses located in a CBD (regional or metro) and reliant on foot traffic, for example, are among the most vulnerable, as are those reliant on international visitors’.

New members for Masterplan Group At Council’s previous ordinary meeting, all councillors voted in favour of increasing membership of the Byron Masterplan Guidance Group, from 22 to 27, while also inviting eight new applicants to join. The Masterplan Guidance Group are tasked

with providing feedback to Council over improvements for the town. The new members are: David Vago, Lisa Hansberry, Louise Tingey, Meredith Wray, Michael Gudgeon, Alan Maizey, John Robert McKay and Pippa Noble.

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


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Bioenergy waste facility touted ▶ Continued from page 1

HAVE YOU GOT TICK PREVENTION ON YOUR PET?

Left: John Hart, the Council project manager for the proposed bioenergy facility.

additional revenue stream. Money will also be saved by the removal of the need to truck the Shire’s organic waste to Yatala in Queensland, a practice that also comes at a heavy environmental cost.

Below: A simplified diagram of Council’s bioenergy anaerobic digestion proposal.

Byron Bay 6685 6899 myvetbyronbay.com.au

EXHAUST STACK

Funding needed However, Council would still need between $15m and $20m to build the facility. ‘We’re in the process of applying to the Australian Renewable Energy Agency for funding’, Mr Hart said. ‘They offer funding of up to 50 per cent, but realistically, we’re hoping for between 20 and 40 per cent.’ The Council is considering partially funding the remainder from its Sewerage Fund Capital Works Reserve. The Council has promised that the facility would have no negative impact on the surrounding environment, and that there would be virtually no noise or smell from the waste conversion process itself. However, the operation would require a significant increase in truck movements

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into and out of the site, though Council says it would reduce the number of truck movements in the region overall. This is largely because it will remove the need to truck organic waste to Queensland. This costly process is one of the difficulties Council currently faces when dealing with the 20,000 tonnes of waste generated in the Shire each year. This includes the fact that neither the Queensland facility, nor Lismore’s composting facility, is able to accept biosolids. The Lismore facility is also unable to take dewatered grease trap waste. Currently the majority

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of the Shire’s commercial organic waste – from cafes, restaurants and farms – goes into landfill; something it hopes to change if the facility goes ahead. ‘By creating renewable energy here in the Byron Shire, and using our green waste to fuel it, we can reduce landfill, get trucks off the road, and work smart as a community to tackle climate change’, Mayor Simon Richardson said. ‘By investing in this technology, Council will reduce its emissions, increase

productivity of its sewage treatment plant, create jobs in the renewables sector and support the local agriculture industry’. The project is currently in its feasibility stage, and Council is seeking feedback and suggestions from the local community. To have your say, go to www.yoursaybyronshire. com.au/byron-shirebioenergy-facility. Council staff will also be at the farmers markets in Mullumbimby, Bangalow and Byron Bay in coming weeks.

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A dive into the adolescent brain, Nov 9 Mullumbimby High P&C President, Damian Farrell, is inviting parents to a forum on the adolescent brain and risk-taking behaviours, to be held Monday, November 9, from 6pm at the Societa Bistro, Mullumbimby RSL. Mr Farrell says ‘Emma Treanor, from Youth Safe, will present an evening where

participants can find out what makes young people tick, what kinds of risk taking behaviours are common in young people, and why’. ‘Participants can learn practical, take-home strategies to help support your child’s transition to adulthood. Youth Safe are a charity that partners with government,

schools, business and community organisations to prevent unintentional injury of young Australians. ‘The evening will be facilitated by local psychologist Peter Chown. ‘The evening is targeted at parents whose children may be learning to drive now or in the coming years’.

Mr Farrell added that the presenter and facilitator will give a talk at Mullumbimby High School to the students the following day. Owing to COVID-19 restrictions, forty persons are permitted with a suggested $10 donation for entry. To book, email mullumbimbyhighschool@ pandcaffiliate.org.au.

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Story & photo Eve Jeffery Last Wednesday, 20 firefighters from Fire and Rescue stations at Byron Bay, Alstonville, Ballina and Mullumbimby, doorknocked over 180 private residences in a Byron blitz. The visits were for residents to meet their local firefighters, and to be provided with home fire safety education and advice on topics such as planning and preparing homes before, and during, fire events. Northern Rivers Zone Commander, Greg Lewis, said the ‘safety visit blitz’ was aimed at reducing the risk of accidental fire in the home, and to plan for an escape in the event of a fire occurring. ‘Byron Bay Fire Station has received more than 190 calls to incidents this year – 14 per cent of these were to building fires,’ he said. ‘During safety visits, firefighters check for the presence and condition of smoke alarms and install new batteries for existing smoke alarms, should they be required,’ said Commander Lewis. The inspections are

Eve Jeffery’s photo of Greg McQueen on his death bed has won the annual Palliative Care Australia (PCA) art competition.

Northern Rivers Zone Commander, Greg Lewis, and Byron Bay Captain, Gary Speers, with local fire fighters. voluntary, whereby residents invite firefighters to inspect their homes to assess fire safety.

”ĕſƆĹ&#x;Ĺ•ĂŤĹ?ĜƆĕĎ ĜŕĪĹ&#x; He said, ‘Firefighters asked residents to show them around their homes, so they were able to provide personalised fire safety information about cooking fire safety, heaters and open fires, barbeques and bedroom heating and wheat bags’.

Commander Lewis said that the majority of house fires begin in the kitchen. ‘The risk of fatality in a house fire is halved if the home has a working smoke detector. Smoke alarms must be replaced every 10 years, and batteries should be checked, and changed if required, every six months. ‘Coming into summer, the backyard BBQ can be a common cause of fires. Keep your barbeque clean, remove

any excess fat after cooking, and ensure an adult is in charge of the barbeque at all times to remain safe.’ Firefighters left a Home Fire Safety info flyer for those residents who were not at home at the time. Commander Lewis said during the bushfire season, one of the best tools is the Fires Near Me app, which is free to download. Q For more information, visit www.rfs.nsw.gov.au.

Echo drudge, Eve Jeffery, aka the Tree Faerie, has won a national art competition. Ms Jeffery’s photo of Greg McQueen on his deathbed won the annual Palliative Care Australia (PCA) art competition. Angela McQueen and her family said goodbye to Greg on St Patrick’s Day in 2016. Angela asked Eve to come and take photos during his final days. Angela said, ‘We didn’t even really feel there was a photographer there. It was all very natural and easy. Some people weren’t into it, which was fine’. ‘I understand it’s not everyone’s cup of tea.’ The art competition’s

theme was ‘Palliative Care‌ It’s more than you think!’ and was aimed at challenging common misconceptions about palliative care. Chosen from 288 entries, the photo is of Greg eating a chocolate ĂŠclair. ‘Greg knew he was living his last few days,’ said Ms Jeffery. ‘Everyone was doing their best to give him what he wanted and needed, and what he wanted right then was a chocolate ĂŠclair. So someone was dispatched to the bakery and got the biggest one they could. ‘He really enjoyed that pastry. As it turned out, it was his last supper, he was gone less than 24 hours later.’

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The Solar for Low Income Household Trial is supported by the NSW Government.

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


Local News Hospitality leaders help Melbourne’s nightlife Story & photo Eve Jeffery There’s nothing like a lunch date to get good ideas cooking, and local hospitality leaders have done just that with an initiative to support the struggling hospitality industry in Melbourne. Raes on Wategos GM, Francesca Webster, the concierge at Harvest, Kylie Ball, and publicist Georgia Bateman came up with the idea over lunch at Harvest recently. Ms Bateman said that hospitality people were among the first to swing into action, raising money and feeding people affected by last year’s bushfires. ‘Now, even as hospitality faces its biggest challenges in living memory, the first instinct from people in the trade is to ask how they can help out others who are doing it tough’. While Byron is thriving, Melbourne has emerged from an 111-day lockdown with no new COVID-19 cases for the first time since June.

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Kylie Ball, Francesca Webster, Wal Foster-Eyles, Jason Saxby, Evan White, Santiago Socrate, Georgia Bateman and Amelia Stokes. They are part of the crew helping the #ByronForMelbourne initiative. Georgia contacted Pat Nourse at Melbourne Food and Wine, to discuss ideas and charities to support and #ByronForMelbourne was born. She’s encouraging the whole of the Shire to jump on board. Georgia says there are

plenty of great ideas to help out. ‘You could prepare a special set menu for an event; encourage guests to book your private dining room; pour Victorian wines and beer; create a special cocktail using Victorian spirits; have raffle prizes or

a silent auction; share flyers with guests in the lead up to the event; create a tip jar and tag #ByronForMelbourne in your Instagram posts and stories, and we will help promote what you are offering’. To donate, visit the tip jar charity www.tipjarfund.org.

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Short term rental accom code announced ▶ Continued from page 1 A spokesperson from Mr Anderson’s office replied, ‘Any industry or non-industry participant can lodge a complaint about an alleged breach of the code. This includes neighbours, owners, corporations, but also police or councils etc, if they wish. There are no barriers. There will be more details about the complaints process prior to the code coming online on December 18’. Meanwhile, Byron Shire councillor Michael Lyon (Independent) said, ‘It’s a toothless tiger at this stage. ‘Who is going to enforce it? ‘None of this will be able to take shape until the SEPP instrument for STRA is released, scheduled for June 2021. ‘Of more concern is that Byron Shire Council have been attempting to get their own local solution implemented to restrict STRA to 90

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days. We were made an election promise, which we continue to work towards getting implemented. We have been told we must now provide an economic analysis, but [have been] given insufficient detail as to the scope’.

Housing availability ‘The main game in Byron Shire is housing availability and affordability for our residents – families and workers. There is much to do in this space, but one key component will be to restrict non-hosted STRA to 90 days so we can move some properties back into the long-term rental pool’. He said that unregulated STRA is a driving force behind housing stress and lack of rental availability. The latest snapshot shows around 3,500 of the Shire’s dwellings are listed on Airbnb, 80 per cent of which are entire homes.

‘This represents 20 per cent of our overall housing stock. Our housing has become big business to some. Streets have no neighbours, and suburbs few residents’. ‘Byron Council have a plan to address our housing crisis, and we are continuing to work with the state government to honour its commitment to our community and implement it’.

Code favours hosts, says VOHL Meanwhile, Doug Luke from Victims of Holiday Letting (VOHL) says the new code is a tentative step in the right direction for protecting the residential amenity rights of neighbours of holiday lets. ‘However, the proposed regulations are biased in favour of hosts, STRA management companies and online providers’. Mr Luke said despite most

problems involving occupant behaviour occurring outside business hours, the code states that a host or the host’s authorised representative must be contactable within ordinary hours, 8am to 5pm daily. ‘There needs to be the requirement that the owner/ manager must be contactable 24 hours, seven days a week to be able to respond to complaints from neighbours within 30 minutes to deal with issues such as offensive noise, parties and anti-social behavior, which affect the residential amenity of the neighbourhood’. The Department of Planning, Industry and Environment say they are also developing a ‘government-run premises register and state environmental planning policy for short-term rental accommodation, which will round out the reforms to this sector and launch in 2021’.

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Local News

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Wards put their necks out

A day to remember the dead, Nov 8 Story & photo Eve Jeffery

Congratulations Julianne and Stephen Ross from Wards Landscape Supplies, who the Mullumbimby Chamber of Commerce have named Staff Giraffe for the month. The Chamber’s Jenelle Stanford says, ‘Their nomination was brought to us from customers of theirs, who couldn’t express how much they helped them’. The award recognises Mullum businesses who support the community and provide outstanding service. To nominate a Mullum business, visit www.mullumbimby.org.au. Pictured is Stephen and the Chamber’s Jenelle Stanford. Photo Jeff ‘Outstanding In The Fields Of Excellence Since 1986’ Dawson

Light rail study for Tweed A $1m study into the possibility of a light rail connection between Tweed Heads and Coolangatta has been announced by the NSW Liberal-Nationals government. Minister for Regional Transport and Roads, Paul Toole, said the study comes after the NSW and Queensland governments signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)

earlier this year to assess the cross-border region’s needs and build a stronger public transport offering.

Five km corridor Mr Toole said, ‘The study will see NSW identify a suitable five-kilometre corridor for a future light rail extension from Coolangatta to the Tweed, while Queensland will investigate the corridor

to the north’. Mr Toole’s office added ‘The Queensland government released an Expression of Interest in August for a consultant to carry out the Tugun to Tweed Multimodal Corridor study. Transport for NSW is using the shortlisted consultants from the EOI as the basis for a Request for Tender as part of the joint study approach’.

BreastScreen bus in Byron A mobile BreastScreen van will be in Byron Bay from November 11–30 for eligible women aged between 50 and 74. No referral is needed. It will be located at the Cavanbah Centre, 249 Ewingsdale Road. Organisers say the van carries the latest

digital mammography technology and a secure wireless communication system. A range of hygiene and social distancing measures have been implemented, they say, to ensure clinics and mobile screening vans are COVID-19 safe.

To book, call 13 20 50 or visit book.breastscreen. nsw.gov.au. Jane Walsh, BreastScreen director NSW North Coast, says, ‘Detecting breast cancer early increases your chance of survival, while reducing the likelihood of invasive treatment’.

Between pagan and Christian days of observance – All Hallow’s Eve, All Saints Day, All Souls Day and the Day of the Dead – this week, every year, is traditionally a time to remember those who have flown away to the next place. As western culture begins to understand the need to bring death out of the closet, talking about death and learning about the process and how we can embrace it, rather than fear it, is becoming more common. A local chapter of the international Death Cafe movement is planned for this Sunday, November 8 from 10am to noon at the Brunswick Picture House. To be hosted by Jennifer Henderson and Craig Mathewson, its goal is to educate and help others become more familiar with the end of life. The idea originates with the Swiss sociologist and anthropologist Bernard Crettaz, who organised the first ‘Cafe Mortel’ in 2004.

International event Jon Underwood, a UK web developer, was inspired by Crettaz’s work and developed the Death Cafe model in 2011. He was instrumental in the spread of the idea. They have since been held in 66 countries. Ms Henderson decided to do a Death Cafe as she says she has experienced a lot

of death this year, including facing her own mortality for the first time. ‘When it was in my face, despite having experienced a lot of sudden death, I realised I still had a lot of fear around it, and I wanted to know death more intimately’. Jennifer said she met Craig, who was very comfortable with death, which was inspiring. ‘It gave me a sense of hope and peace about death and the dying process. I have been learning that the more I embrace death, the more I embrace life.’ There is no structure to the Death Cafe and it is not a forum for counselling. ‘The goal is to provide a safe place, where people can share whatever they feel – or not. The discussion will have its own life, depending on where those present take it’. The Death Cafe is free to attend this Sunday. Numbers are limited and bookings essential. Please contact Jenny for

more info: 0413 057 600 or jennyahenderson@me.com.

Crystal Castle event Later in the day, a celebration of those who have died will be held from 3.30 till 6.30pm at the Crystal Castle. Facilitator, Zenith Virago, says the Day of the Dead ceremony is an opportunity for everyone to come together for those who have died, are dying, or who are lost to us in some way. Zenith says, ‘Although it has the same name as the South American celebration, this is a uniquely Australian cultural experience, open to any religion, spirituality, belief or culture’. Bring a blanket, or chair, if it is a sunny day bring a hat. Crystal Castle gates open, with free entry, at 3.30pm. From 5pm till 6pm, Zenith will conduct a ceremony of love and remembrance, accompanied by Ballina-ACapella and opera singer, Tania De Jong.

Writers complete voluntary mentorship lockdown For the first time in its twenty year history, the coveted Bryon Writer’s Residential Mentorship was threatened by this year’s COVID-19 lockdown laws. Normally held in May, the residency finally went ahead

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Craig Mathewson and Jennifer Henderson will be hosting a Death Cafe at the Brunswick Picture House on November 8 from 10am.

last week, under the guidance of acclaimed author, Marele Day. Selected authors include Meg Grace, from Cabarita Beach, Mullumbimby filmmaker and psychotherapist, Kimberley Lipschus,

Bellingen teacher, Rachel Faith, and fellow Bellingen resident, Jacqueline Mohr. All four participants will have the opportunity to discuss their projects with publisher Allen and Unwin later this year.

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Local News Byron High receives Sustainable Schools Grant Louis Trisley, Rex Coppin and Tosh Perrow Byron Bay High School has been successful in receiving a $15,000 Sustainable Schools Grant from the NSW Department of Education. This will enable the school to develop innovative projects that support students in learning about sustainable practices, as well as take steps to enhance the sustainability of the local environment. In response to the grant, the school has designed a three-pronged approach to mitigate the school’s carbon footprint.

Three step approach The first project is to install three rainwater tanks at the school to water the native plants that the school has in abundance in the playground. This will limit the usage of potable tap water, ultimately reducing resource consumption as a school community. The second project, in consultation with local Arakwal Custodians Delta Kay and Nickolla Clarke, is the planting of bush tucker and endemic plants around the school to create ‘pocket forests’.

From left: Lola, Coby and Taina. Photo Sarah McGregor Pocket forests are microregions of native bushland that are planted to restore original plant life and to link forests and the urban environment. The third project is to reduce the waste generated by the school. This will be achieved through the removal of rubbish bins and the installation of composting and paper recycling systems. Byron Bay High School is asking students, families and staff to be responsible for the waste that is

produced as a result of the food that is consumed. Most families in the region already compost and recycle so this should be second nature for most of the students. A recent survey at Byron Bay High has clearly shown that a vast majority of the students are highly motivated to help reduce the impacts of climate change through waste management protocols, avoiding singleuse plastics, and implementing recycling programs in the school community.

Aware of the privilege of learning and living on Arakwal land, right next door to the Arakwal National Park and the Pacific Ocean, the school is particularly keen to reduce consumption and disposal of single-use plastics consumed at Byron High School. As global waste production skyrockets from two billion tonnes in 2016, to an estimated four billion tonnes by 2050, this transition to more sustainable methods of waste management is a necessary response to globalisation and consumerism in the Western world. For the issue of waste management, and more broadly climate change, action must be taken on all scales. Local environmental initiatives make a positive impact both environmentally and by demanding more sizable action by governments and larger organisations. One small step by a local organisation or institution can play a critical part in demanding systematic change. Q Louis Trisley, Rex Coppin and Tosh Perrow are Byron Bay High School students.

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Local Ballina News

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Helping to heal women’s trauma

Calls for a Bundjalung Cultural Centre in Ballina Story & photo David Lowe

Story & photo David Lowe Every day, thousands of people see the sign for Heartfelt House at Wollongbar as they drive between Lismore and Ballina. With the organisation embarking on a new stage, The Echo was invited inside to find out what makes Heartfelt House tick. Back in 2005, Heartfelt House was founded by a survivor of childhood sexual abuse, who couldn’t find a support group, so she decided to start her own. These days, clients come from across the Northern Rivers and beyond. Business manager Tracey Kristiansen says, ‘What we’re doing is providing programs for adult survivors of child sexual abuse. There’s not very many services in Australia just doing that’. ‘The organisation is not for profit. We’ve got a board, and we’re funded by the government, via social services, and then donations.’ Ms Kristiansen started at Heartfelt House shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic began. ‘I came in initially to do a review,’ she said. ‘Then everything went into lockdown, and we had to stop all the programs, but we had this great opportunity to review the organisation. And we discovered the current business model was not sustainable.’ With high demand for their unique service, Heartfelt House faced the hard

Heartfelt House business manager, Tracey Kristiansen. question of what to do. ‘It was looking quite dire,’ said Ms Kristiansen. With Heartfelt House facing closure, staff searched for another local organisation with aligned values, to see if a merger might be possible. Ms Kristiansen said, ‘We approached Northern Rivers Women and Children’s Services Inc. (NORWACS) in Lismore, and they were delighted. So that’s been our life raft, really, to say, “Yep we’ll help you and we’ll bring you on board”.’ ‘NORWACS have their own great facilities next to Lismore Base Hospital, so they’ll stay there, but they’re going to support us with their governance and policy and procedures, and their systems, and we’ll continue to do what we’re doing here.’

Group work Most of what happens at Heartfelt House is group work. Ms Kristiansen explains, ‘It’s getting

survivors in a room together, and working together as a group, which is what makes us different’. ‘There’s a lot of one-onone work in Australia and around the world, with people in those situations, but group work around this issue is quite unique,’ she said. ‘And some of that’s around doing some art, or thinking about different things that help you get through, and sharing those things.’ For more info, visit www. heartfelthouse.org.au. For trauma sufferers in need of emergency help, please contact the Blue Knot Foundation on 1300 657 380. While Heartfelt House doesn’t provide services to men, the group SAMSN (Survivors and Mates Support Network), is a men’s child sexual abuse program which offers services in the Northern Rivers. Their website is www.samsn.org.au. If this story has brought up issues for you, please contact Lifeline on 13 11 14.

Community consultation on the draft Far North Coast Regional Water Strategy

Local community member Eli Cook is calling for a new Bundjalung Cultural Centre for Ballina, and a change.org petition to Ballina Shire Council has already gathered over 1,200 signatures in support. The wording of the petition says sustainable industries are needed for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities to have something to aspire towards. ‘We want to create jobs for our children’s future,’ it says. ‘We want to share our culture with broader Australian society as a means of breaking down misconceptions and working towards reconciliation. Help us convince the council of the importance of this movement.’ Mr Cook envisions the cultural centre as a showcase for local artists, and a keeping place for the many artefacts discovered in the region. He works as a teacher, and says the Centre could be

Eli Cook wants to provide opportunities for young people a ‘key learning resource for local schools’, providing the basis of a legitimate cultural tourism industry within the Ballina Shire, as well as being a safe space to share language and culture with future generations. Mr Cook has ambitious plans for the Cultural Centre, but thinks the first step is a shopfront with high exposure in town. ‘We really want to do something for our mob here in Ballina, so we don’t want it to be too far away from our schools, or from local

families, Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal, for them to access as well.’ Mr Cook says what set him on this path is seeing the disadvantages local Indigenous children face. He says he has also been talking to Arakwal woman Delta Kay and other local Bundjalung people. To sign the petition, visit www.change.org/p/ballinashire-council-bundjalungcultural-center-for-ballina.

▶ More Ballina news on page 14

Far North Coast Water Strategy welcomed Local water conservation group WATER Northern Rivers Alliance, which was formed in the response to the proposed Dunoon Dam at The Channon, say they welcome the diverse water supply options featured in the Far North Coast Water Strategy, released by the NSW government on Friday. WATER Northern Rivers is an alliance of groups and citizens who want smart water options for the region, and spokesperson, Annie Kia, said the group are pleased to see a list of diverse options, not all of which will be progressed. ‘We have been very concerned about the narrow focus of Rous County Council’s Future Water Strategy 2060, which has ignored

many of the modern solutions available that, when combined in a mixed portfolio, help create a resilient and drought-proof water system.’ Ms Kia said the broadoptions approach in the draft strategy is exactly in line with the recommendations of Water Services Association of Australia (WSAA) in their document All Options on the Table.

Drought resilience ‘The WSAA recommends a suite of diverse options and strong water efficiency measures. In particular, they note that new dams, being rainfall-dependent, do not provide drought resilience. ‘If new supply is needed, it’s advantageous if these sources are independent of

rainfall, such as water re-use and desalination. ‘Dr Stuart Khan recently echoed this when asked about the Rous Future Water Strategy, noting that a drought-resilient system would have 30-50 per cent of its water coming from sources not dependent on rain’. The group has also welcomed other initiatives within the strategy, supporting Aboriginal rights and a focus on improving the health of the Richmond and Tweed Rivers. ‘WATER Northern Rivers is ready to assist the development of this new vision of water supply in our region,’ said Ms Kia. ‘We look forward to the public consultation process empowering our community.’

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Local News

mĕƆĆ? ćĹ&#x;ƜĕƆ Ć?Ĺ&#x; IJÄ•Ĺ?Ĺź ćƖƆIJÇ• ſĕ ĂŤÇ” ĕĈĆ?Ä•ÄŽ ƹĜĹ?ÄŽĹ?ĜĪÄ• NSW govt Bill will diminish Mullumbimby-based environmental start-up, Wildbnb Wildlife Habitat, has partnered with the NSW government and Worldwide Fund for Wildlife (WWF) to supply nest boxes to support threatened species impacted by last year’s bushfires. The joint trial project, under the Saving our Species Program, will see 111 nest boxes installed across the region. Wildbnb Wildlife Habitat founder Dave Brook said the project will provide critical data for bushfire impacts on threatened species and how to best to support them during recovery. According to www.environment.nsw. gov.au, nest boxes have been deployed to bushfire affected areas in the Minyumai Indigenous Protected Area, Ngunya Jargoon Indigenous Protected Area, Bundjalung National Park and Tabbimoble Nature Reserve. Principal project manager, Tania Reid, said the 2019–20 bushfires destroyed many hollow-bearing trees, leaving hollow-dependent animals like the threatened squirrel glider, powerful owl and turquoise parrot without safe homes for shelter and nesting.

Locally made ‘Tree hollows can take hundreds of years to develop, and the bushfires left us with a shortage of this critical habitat, putting significant pressure on the animals who rely on tree hollows and the older forests that support them’, said Ms Reid. Dave Brook says the nest boxes are made in workshops in Yelgun and Upper

biodiversity, say Council Council say they will be objecting to the NSW government’s Local Land Services Amendment (Miscellaneous) Bill 2020 over the potential impact it could have on biodiversity, and koalas, in the Shire. Deputy Mayor, Michael

Lyon (Independent), said, ‘My concerns, and those of other Councillors, are that the changes proposed by the bill will remove important protections for koala habitat and will further facilitate excessive and inappropriate clearing’.

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Annika Hallinan from SCU, with David Brook and Lachlan Brereton and a number of nesting boxes. Photo Jeff ‘Boxed In With Natives Since 1986’ Main Arm, with the HQ in Mullum. He says, ‘I have been building habitat for wildlife all my life, but have been fulltime and focused over the last ten years as I realised more animals were being displaced, and heavily impacted through the loss of natural habitat’. â€˜Wildbnb Wildlife Habitat started last year, as a response to an urgent need to support wildlife in agricultural and urban environments. â€˜In January this year, we built the capacity to respond to the bushfires; a partnership with the NSW government in relation to the bushfire recovery efforts,

and started a range of projects including this significant trial funded by WWF. â€˜The idea for building wildlife habitat in agricultural environments, where there were benefits to both farmers and wildlife, was last year selected as a leading biodiversity business idea and went through the Wild Idea Biodiversity Business Incubator program. Mr Brook added, ‘A range of nest boxes will be installed across the Shire, starting next Monday, and the Wildlife Safe Havens project is run by Alison Ratcliffe from Brunswick Valley Landcare’. For more info, visit wildbnb.com.au.

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We have recently welcomed Southern &URVV 8QLYHUVLW\ WKb\HDU ODZ VWXGHQW Sita to our work family. :LWK D PRGHUQ DQG ćH[LEOH DSSURDFK ZH UHFRJQLVH WKH QHHG WR RIIHU our tech savvy clients contemporary web-based legal solutions, but it’s our old school charm and open door policy that clearly endears us to our clients, young and old.

Looking for a smart solution to your problem? Call your friendly team at Castrikum Adams Legal on 6687 1167. www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives Korff-Byron Echo-178x129-011020-CV4-outlines.indd 1

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The Byron Shire Echo Volume 35 #21 • November 4, 2020

When disaster strikes!

L

ast year’s large-scale bushfires are now the subject of two major reports – the NSW government’s Inquiry was published in August, and now the Royal Commission into National Natural Disaster Arrangements dropped last week. As the new report notes, the fires late last year started in Australia’s hottest and driest year on record, and the ‘Forest Fire Danger Index was the highest since national records began’. Chair Mark Binskin writes, ‘Australia wide, there was significant community loss, devastation of wildlife and adverse health impacts. These losses were exacerbated by severe hailstorms, and floods in some areas that were just starting to recover from the fires. Then COVID-19 hit’. The commission’s long list of recommendations highlight a nation woefully ill prepared for such disasters. According to the report, such disasters will continue, and be exacerbated by climate change. From page 22: ‘Extreme weather has already become more frequent and intense because of climate change; further global warming over the next 20 to 30 years is inevitable. Globally, temperatures will continue to rise, and Australia will have more hot days and fewer cool days. Sea levels are also projected to continue to rise. Tropical cyclones are projected to decrease in number, but increase in intensity. Floods and bushfires are expected to become more frequent and more intense. Catastrophic fire conditions may render traditional bushfire prediction models and firefighting techniques less effective’. The plethora of recommendations in the 594-page report also provides an insight into how disconnected the states, territories and the feds are in general. Here’s a related fun fact – Queensland and NSW have different rail gauges. Given that, how can governments be expected to have the same standards when it comes to construction codes, air quality, air quality forecasting and communicating natural hazard risk information to households? All those are mentioned as ways to improve resilience. Creating simpler disaster recovery funding application processes is helpfully suggested, as well as establishing an authoritative disaster advisory body. Supply chain risks should be reviewed too, to ‘consider options to ensure supply of essential goods in times of natural disasters’. Yet disaster management should still be handled by the states and territories, the authors say. The feds can assist in providing ‘logistical support, help transport personnel and equipment during and after disasters, assist in large-scale evacuations, and provide food, water and medical assistance to emergency responders and communities’. If there’s one stand out recommendation that might make a difference it’s this – ‘Australian state, territory and local governments should explore further opportunities to leverage Indigenous land and fire management insights, in the development, planning and execution of public land management activities’. Hans Lovejoy, editor

Seats in the upright position: it’s the US election

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wo crunch Tuesdays for Australia and the US coming up: not just the Melbourne Cup, vital as that is for the nation’s well-being. November 4 (Tuesday in the US, Wednesday in Australia) will determine whether the United States of America regains its sanity, or embarks on another quadrennium of demented Trumpery. And frankly I am not optimistic. Four years ago I thought it absurd that enough Americans could be hauled from their caves to risk the almighty gamble; not only with their own immediate future but that of their compatriots, their allies, the entire world – that they were so fed up with the admittedly flawed, but still workable system that had served them for two-and-a-half centuries. I thought that simple self-interest would prevail, that the mindless slogans about building walls, draining swamps and throwing opponents into jail would be seen as the bluff and bluster it was, and that whatever the limits of Hillary Clinton’s appeal, she would at least be a safer pair of hands in troubled economic times than the mendacious wheeler-dealer. I thought that the revelations about his personal behaviour – his financial chicanery, his refusal to come clean about his taxes, and finally his boasts about grabbing pussies would surely make him unacceptable to a conservative republic. And if nothing else had ended the farce, I thought that he had offended, denigrated and outraged so many Americans – particularly women, blacks and Latinos – that he could never secure even the minority vote that would deliver him the electoral college. But of course I was wrong, as were the vast majority of other observers. And having been bitten once, I am shy to the point of despair, because having jumped off the cliff once and survived, there is no good reason for the lemmings not to repeat the plunge. Joe Biden may have many splendid qualities, but he is not an inspirational leader. And while simply being not Trump is a rational response to an unhinged braggadocio, it can hardly be regarded as a killer policy. From where I sit, admittedly many thousands of kilometres away on the other side of the Pacific, I do not detect

any real momentum for change. And the opinion polls are not helping. Because of the American system of voluntary voting, they are unreliable at the best of times, and in an election with unprecedented, massive early polling they are even less useful than normal.

Trump will certainly maintain his rage through rallies and mass demonstrations of civil disobedience Mungo MacCallum And even if they are right, so what? Under the electoral college system, a majority of votes is no guarantee of electing a president, as we saw in 2016 and in many earlier elections. If Trump can manoeuvre his way through the federal labyrinth, he will not worry about how small the numbers are when he arrives back in the White House. But at least it will all be over this week, won’t it? Well, probably not. Even if all the votes are counted promptly, and the results appear to be clear, Trump and his goon squad have foreshadowed delays, protests, appeals, whatever it takes to obstruct the wishes of the people. He may or may not enlist the aid of a Supreme Court dominated by his chosen reactionaries, but he will certainly maintain his rage through rallies; mass demonstrations of civil disobedience in the name of his sacred mission to keep the socialist radicals out of power. So any win for Joe Biden, whether large or small, will be considered illegitimate and contested, leaving America riven and tormented. But a win for Trump could be even more horrendous: re-elected, he could abandon any pretence of restraint and become an apocalyptic megalomaniac capable of unleashing Armageddon, just to show that he could. Whatever the results, there will be riots in the streets. Actually there already are. Of course, those are the worst possibilities. It is conceivable that even

if Trump refuses to concede defeat, those around him will blink and accept reality, and call the serious nurses in white coats to escort their former leader to a sedated retirement in a padded cell somewhere far from the madding crowds in Washington. The Republicans could revert to being the GOP, a conservative political organisation, rather than a war party fuelled by partisan bloodlust at the behest of a belligerent dictator. The evangelical right could admit the possibility of a separation of church and state. The warriors of the National Rifle Association could lay down their arms. Well, they could, but I’m not holding my breath. And come what may, America is not going to be great again any time soon. So perhaps it is time to turn to a somewhat less catastrophic election, the result in Queensland. Labor’s win was not a surprise, but securing a five per cent swing was certainly an unexpected bonus. There had been speculation that it would be very close – that Anastacia Palaszczuk may be forced back into minority government. Instead, regional Queensland held firm, and even the marginals in Townsville and Cairns could not be swayed. The premier was rewarded for her resolute defiance on the borders and freedom fighter Scott Morrison’s incursion into the sunshine state was clearly counterproductive. And the opposition LNP remained determinedly divided. 12 years after merging, the disunited party still hasn’t worked out what it represents, or whom. But the big story of the election was the collapse of the mad right. The One Nation vote plummeted, and Clive Palmer’s millions were spent in vain – not only did he not win a seat, but his scare campaign failed to dent Labor. For once, Queenslanders did not go bananas. Indeed, they showed exemplary judgment, endorsing incumbency and rejecting insanity. But this, unfortunately, will be the choice facing Americans this week. Donald J Trump enjoys the power of office, but for the handicap of senile dementia. We are about to find out which is more important, not just to a fractured electorate, but to the country which, for all its manifest faults, is still the last, best hope of the world. Now back to the Melbourne Cup.

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Letters ƖƆŊĶŕī ćĕŕĕǕ ƐƆ I am a local singer/songwriter who has grown up in the area. I first got booked at the Rails in Byron Bay in the early ’90s. Fast forward to 2016 when busking started becoming a viable source of income as travelling musicians started taking full advantage of our amazing beachfront and the huge appreciative crowds that often gathered there. I got myself a busking permit and started busking at Apex Park, and it’s been fantastic. The joy, gratification, and financial reward for doing so has helped support myself and my family. Fast forward to 2020 and with COVID-19 busking has been suspended three times, and is now suspended till January 2021. Now that venues are opening up I’m booked at the Beach Hotel and the Railway Hotel in town. People are gathering at the markets, restaurants have cheaply paid musicians on their doorsteps, tourist buses and kayak trips are all there for the taking. But busking is still suspended. Can we please review this situation? Anyone who lives in the

Letters to the Editor Send to Letters Editor Aslan Shand, email: editor@echo.net.au, fax: 6684 1719. Deadline: Noon, Friday. Letters longer than 200 words may be cut. Letters already published in other papers will not be considered. Please include your full name, address and phone number for verification purposes.

Authentic Mid-Century Specialists

Cartoon by Antoinette Ensbey Shire will notice that the pubs and the markets are making money while the musos are being paid a pittance. Those of us that hold a permit can’t play, yet those musos passing through don’t give a damn, they take the money and run. For me the satisfaction and financial reward from performing up at the beachfront has sustained and supported myself and my little family between gigs for years now. It is time to re-evaluate this ‘no busking’ rule. Fintan Callaghan Byron Bay

Thanks Mungo I want to thank Mungo for the crossword. I think over the many years I have got better at them, they are the only ones I do. Occasionally I get them out in a few days over my morning coffee, and then again, it can take me all week and sometimes not at all! There are times when I think old Mungo’s lost it, e.g. ‘throwing things out

the window’ – what could that possibly be? Then from the recesses of my brain the word floats to the surface. Thank you, Mungo, I look forward to the challenge every week. D May Byron Bay

Shaws Bay, Ballina A pile of sand in a bucket of water will, over time, slump and spread out over the entire bucket. So, while I appreciate the council dredging Shaws Bay, Ballina it needs to be a regular, 10-year cycle. I don’t understand why they aren’t removing it from the bay, which obviously fills with sand anyway. The stretch west of the Marine tower, which is greatly loved by the public, has filled even faster since they tried to resculpt the edges. While not as aesthetically pleasing as a grass to sand interface, it probably requires a small rock wall with access points and

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dredging through the centre of the waterway to make it a good swimming area, even on lower tides. The current sea grass has drastically reduced since the construction, possibly smothered? I feel the whole bay needs to be considered as a park that requires regular maintenance. It is not a ‘natural’ waterway, and without dredging will become a shallow mangrove swamp. The Council is on the right track, but please consider the natural equilibrium between water and sand. Richard White East Ballina

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Sport/Letters

For North Coast news online visit

DşşƐćëōō ĈşëĈIJĶŕī ĈōĶŕĶĈ Ǖ ŕĎƆ ĶƐƆ ĪĕĕƐ EşōĪ ĈIJëŔżĶşŕƆIJĶż Ʊşŕ ćƷ ë ƆĶŕīōĕ żşĶŕƐ Ross Kendall Bouncing out of the COVID-19 lockdown of sport, a small team of local coaches have started a fully mobile football development school to bridge the gap between community and elite football. The OutoftheBox coaching team of Michael Leung, Andy Morrison and Albert Moses are all experienced coaches who have been a part of the Brunswick Valley Mullumbimby Football Club, as well as the Liverpool FC International Academy at the Southern Cross University. When SCU closed the academy as part of budget cuts, they needed to find new work and saw an opportunity. ‘Collectively we saw a need for more guided learning and mentoring of players wanting to be more confident on the field, but who were maybe not quite at a level of technical ability or dedication to be considered for elite programs,’ Albert said. ‘We noted that the SCU football centre was re-inveting itself as the Northern Rivers Football Academy and saw an opportunity to fill that niche between community and elite football. One thing lead to another and we began by offering to help a small group of players from our club with some extra coaching sessions. This rapidly and organically grew into a few different pop-up clinics in different locations,’ Albert said. The team now does events such as school programs, one-on-one coaching,

▶ Continued from page 11 will go through checks and balances,” he said. “We know some people just don’t like having short-term holiday rentals nextdoor to them”.’ Victims of Holiday Letting (VOHL) was appalled at the Minister’s comments. It reminded us ‘vexatious complainant’ is the favourite term used by many Byron Shire holiday let owners to justify themselves when complaints are made. Holiday letting is still illegal in Byron LGA (local

Lennox, Zeph and Harley enjoy a coaching session at Mullumbimby. Photo supplied development squads and holiday clinics for local community clubs to complement the incredible work that volunteer coaches already do from week to week. ‘We also do great Champions League themed kids’ birthday parties,’ he said OutoftheBox coaching now offer a weekly program at the Cavanbah Centre on Tuesday afternoons and are encouraging both girls and boys to come along and get involved. The program will run in eight-week cycles to coincide with school terms and can even be partly paid for using Active Kids vouchers. To get involved email: outofthebox2482@ gmail.com, go online at OutoftheBox, or phone: 0421 921 450 for more information.

government area) Residential Zones without development consent. There are still a number of these owners/ managers who fail to vet their occupants or to have ongoing management to prevent occupants from disrupting residential amenity. VOHL has always advised neighbours of holiday lets to contact the local police when there is offensive noise or other damage to their residential amenity. Next morning, contact the police again and ask for

information about what was done, request a CAD (computer aided dispatch) report number and report this information to Byron Council enforcement. This is the best form of evidence to lodge a complaint about host/guests to the secretariat that will administer the Code of Conduct. VOHL advises neighbours to not use the HLO Byron ‘A Quiet Time’ (previously called a Noisy Neighbours Hotline). VOHL members have consistently complained that

Sally Symons took on wind, rain, a challenging golf course as well as strong competition over three days to win the Byron Bay Golf Club ladies’ championship for 2020. This is the second time Sally has won the championship. She ended the three-year winning streak of Di Grieve, who is leaving the club for the Gold Coast after 22 years. Sally and Di also won the club foursomes championship earlier in the year. Although she led from the first day, the going was tough, but her hard slog was enough

point after the three days. Last year’s B-grade winner, Stella Reakes, was also the winner.

The Bangalow Summer 6s football competition may have taken a considerable COVID cut, but the community-based event has held on to its values and is well underway for 2020. ‘We had to reduce team numbers, and drop the junior competition altogether, but the competition is up and

running,’ organiser Paul Hanigan said. Instead of the regular 72 senior teams there are just 48 this year, evenly split between men and women. The junior competition is on hold. ‘It may be a quieter atmosphere at the Bangalow oval this year, but the competition has retained

its community-based and friendly playing environment,’ Paul said. There are already some standout teams. ‘The Goats are pretty successful and the Futsal Boys are showing red-hot form. In the women’s competition Kicking Balls are going alright,’ he said.

the NSW legal standard for offensive noise is not applied by them. On some occasions it has been witnessed that inadequate investigation has been undertaken by the security officer. VOHL does recognise that there are some responsible and conscientious hosts/ managers who properly vet their guests and have effective ongoing management and want to protect residential amenity who make themselves contactable 24/7. Doug Luke VOHL Coordinator

Floodplain planning

don’t support the stay-inhouse approach to flood safety, but are down to 10 volunteers, despite having 37 on the books. I want us to recognise two strings of flood planning: that for existing floodplain dwellers, and that for the future. Please let’s treat them separately. From a hydrologist with 50 years of experience in flood analysis and floodplain management, here’s an example; to alleviate risk on existing wet properties ▶ Continued on page 15

A guide to the region’s medical and allied health professionals

OUT VERY SOON! 12 The Byron Shire Echo mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ

to get her over the line. ‘It wasn’t pretty,’ she said. In a very tight field Sally managed to be ahead by one

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BBGC Ladies Championship grade winners (L to R) Robyn Knaus, Stella Reakes, and Sally Symons

Thanks to The Echo for last week covering what might look like small bickies, a Council committee meeting on flooding. On Thursday, 29 October the committee heard from experts and authorities like State Planning and State Emergency Services (the SES). Planners discussed the technicalities of land being promoted by Council for housing on the floodplains south of Mullumbimby (Council’s own Lot 22, plus several neighbours). SES

CHESS by Ian Rogers Chess has been largely absent from popular culture since Chess The Musical but the remarkable success of the Netflix series The Queen’s Gambit may change that. The widely praised series is based on a Walter Tevis novel from 1983 of the same name and has been Netflix’s most streamed show in the US in recent weeks. The series charts the progress of an American female player, Beth Harmon, in the 1960s and is much closer to a fictional depiction of the rise and rise of Bobby Fischer (with gender reversed) than the novel. Like Fischer, Harmon has a troubled childhood but her struggles with pills and alcohol are all her own, though many chess players will be able to empathise with her acute depression after the loss of an important game. Ultimately, The Queen’s Gambit is a period drama, showing an era which has disappeared since the Berlin Wall fell; one where round-robin chess tournaments in Europe were held at opulent venues in front of large crowds. While the chess-technical side of The Queen’s Gambit is done

well (thanks to advice from Garry Kasparov and prominent US chess personality Bruce Pandolfini) and the main characters are wellschooled, the extras seem to have little idea how tournament players conduct themselves. Since showing Harmon’s crucial final game against the World Champion in Moscow would be too much of a spoiler, here is a position from another Harmon game in the series, supposedly from the 1963 Kentucky State Championship. In the diagrammed position Black could play 39...Rd3! with good chances, but incautiously grabbed the g6 pawn and after 39...Nxg6 40.Rf7+! Kh6 Harmon as White found the forced mate in seven moves with the queen sacrifice 41.Qxg6+!! Kxg6 42.R1f6+ Kg5 43.Rf5+ Kg6 44.R7f6+ Kh7 45.Rh5+ Kg7 46.Rg5+ Kh7 47.Bf5! Checkmate!

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Articles

Storylines: NAIDOC Week 2020 Budgeram – always was, always will be

ALL ABOUT YOU Club Trading Hours Sunday to Wednesday 9am to 10pm Thursday to Saturday 9am to 12am Ballina RSL is proudly Covid-19 Safe Certified

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t’s fast approaching that time of year when Black Lives do Matter – National Aborigine and Islanders Day Observance Committtee (NAIDOC) Week. Normally held in the first full week of July, 2020 has seen COVID-19 push NAIDOC Week back to 8–15 November. This year, more than ever, our community needs to come together to celebrate our strength in our cultural identity, country, and our relationships with each other. The theme for NAIDOC Week this year is ‘Always Was, Always Will Be’ and recognises that First Nations people have occupied and cared for this continent for over 65,000 years. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are spiritually and culturally connected to this country, our collective adaptation and intimate knowledge of Country has enabled us to endure climate change, catastrophic droughts, and rising sea levels. We have always worked together to share our skills and knowledge to benefit our people, our culture, and our country. There are elements of Aboriginal First Nations culture that are ancient and enduring, and some that have evolved in response to colonisation. Importantly culture continues to evolve through the impacts of genocide and new technologies. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture is the oldest living culturel on planet Earth and the theme for NAIDOC Week celebrates the hard work of our old people to ensure this legacy for our people continues.

Stop the culture of death – BLM In 2020 First Nations Australians drew breath as the world stopped for the Black Lives Matters (BLM) movement. Over 6,000 people attended the Black Lives Matter protests in the Byron Shire, standing with the world to stop the violence toward and killings of black people in custody. Shockingly, since then, our people have continued to die in custody here in Australia. As culture evolves, and laws are changed I hope that we won’t pass on this culture causing death in custody, and that the unaccountability of those who perpetrate

Join us for lunch or dinner overlooking the beautiful Richmond River 7 days Lunch 12pm to 2pm DInner 6pm to 8pm

A program including Bush Tucker tours, music with Emily Wurramarra and Aine Tyrrell, an Aboriginal art exhibition, weaving and art workshops, and much more, will be taking place. Look up Bunyarra Culture Collective on Facebook for details. Photo Tree Faerie these crimes will end. We can, and must, do better.

Celebrating together Bunyarra Culture Collective has curated an exceptional program of events for the Byron Shire community at the Bangalow A&I Hall. The program is diverse and rich; including Bush Tucker tours with Arakwal woman Delta Kay, music performance with renowned songstresses Emily Wurramarra and Aine Tyrrell – showcasing their incredible collaboration ‘We Call, You Know’, a week long Aboriginal Art Exhibition, weaving workshops, art workshops and more. Look up Bunyarra Culture Collective on Facebook for details on events and times.

Initiative and community An exciting and unique offering this NAIDOC Week is the launch of locallybased Zion Engagement and Planning training with Elle Davidson. Elle is a Balanggarra woman from the East Kimberley and one of the few town planners who identify as Aboriginal. Elle is also a descendant of Captain William Bligh and she feels uniquely placed to navigate two worlds and two systems. Elle started Zion to assist the built environment industry in working with Country, community, and culture. Through Zion, Elle seeks to empower mob to care for Country, strengthen community, and revive culture. Elle is developing training packages with OneTime Productionz for the built environment industry to develop awareness and personal commitments to Aboriginal Cultural Frameworks. ‘I hope the Zion training will create a learning platform where the built

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

environment professionals feel equipped to work with Country, community and culture. This will result in better outcomes where mob feel their voice is empowered, they have authority in decision-making, and Country is cared for by Aboriginal people,’ Elle said. ‘We will be launching the first training module – “Working with Country” during NAIDOC Week. Although the training is aimed at the built environment industry, everyone will walk away with new knowledge. ‘We have never ceded sovereignty of this land and [yet] we have no authority when it comes to decision making for Country. Given the events of 2020, it seems important to stop and listen to the oldest living culture and seek wisdom from people who have always been here; Always was, always will be’. The Zion launch is Saturday, 14 November, 5.30pm at Bangalow A&I Hall. RSVP: office@zionep.com.au. The NAIDOC week program has something for everyone, it is an important time to acknowledge, connect, and learn with the local Aboriginal community. At the very least, please – stop and give thanks to the Arakwal people of the Bundjalung Nation who have cared for this country for many thousands of years so that we can live here and appreciate the wonder of country. Q Budgeram means story in

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Bundjalung language. Q Storylines articles are published on Echonetdaily: www.echo.net.au/naidocweek-2020-always-wasalways-will-be and are made possble with the support of Ninbella Gallery.

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 13


Ballina Local News

For North Coast news online visit

Hoonfest continues on South Ballina beaches Discontent rumbles over David Lowe Stephen Totterman of the Coastal Defenders Network has been looking at YouTube evidence of the ongoing issues with 4WDs on the beach south of the Richmond River. In a study of 56 publicly accessible videos from the last five years he found numerous cases of people documenting their own bad behaviour, including rock-driving, driving on beach dunes, driving in illegal locations and ‘hooning’ (speeding, wheel spins, and racing). Dogs are also being taken outside dog zones, people are riding dirt bikes and quad bikes, and camping illegally. This is also having negative impacts on endangered birds that are being frightened and their nests threatened. Mr Totterman said in an accompanying email to decision-makers, including National Parks and Wildlife, Ballina councillors, and MPs, ‘Only a minority of four wheel drivers record their adventures, few upload videos to the internet, and fewer still publish their videos on YouTube.’

Dune driving on South Ballina Beach. YouTube screenshot.

Enforcement failing Mr Totterman says the problem is that authorities are failing to control numbers of 4WDs on the beach. ‘There was an enforcement blitz on the 3–5 October 2020 long weekend, yet rock driving, dune driving, taking dogs onto the beach, and camping continued,’ he said. He says that the closure of the Keith Hall, Moylans Lane and Patchs Beach 4WD access tracks has not solved the problem, as there are ‘many informal 4WD tracks’ onto the beachfront. Mr Totterman also says there’s a clear correlation between increased 4WD activity and decreased numbers of locally endangered pied

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oystercatchers, and ‘the only solution to the negative social and environmental impacts is to lock the beach to 4WDs.’

Traditional owners also concerned Ballina Bundjalung man Eli Cook, whose family has a very long connection with the area, is calling for a Bundjalung Cultural Centre at Ballina (see p8). He’s also concerned about the southern beaches being trashed by 4WDs. ‘As part of that petition, me and my brother recently did a walk from Evans Head to South Ballina, over three days. We camped in behind the dunes and what we saw was that those dunes have been demolished, run

over, trampled, completely smashed – they’ll never be as they were,’ he said. Of the drivers damaging the beaches he said, ‘It’s people that don’t know better, they’re young and they’ve got flash cars they want to flog for some reason. ‘All of the local people, in my opinion, who use the beach for fishing and all that sort of stuff, they do the right thing. It’s a shame for those people who miss out, but you’ve got to draw a line’.

Gov’t response A spokesperson for the Department of Planning Industry and Environment – Crown Lands told The Echo they will consult with the community on closing the other access points. Four wheel drivers should abide by the beach access policies of local councils on issues around speed, distances from pedestrians, not driving above the high tide water mark, avoiding sensitive areas etc. Report dangerous activity to NSW Police.

▶ Read more online in Echonetdaily: www.echo.net.au

ōƆƐşŕưĶōōĕ Ǖ ōŔ żōëŕƆ A range of Alstonville community organisations remain unhappy with Ballina Shire Council’s (BSC) decision to lease the Alstonville Cultural Centre to Byron Studios. ‘In the past, various service clubs in the area have used the facility either to raise funds for local community groups e.g. Red Cross, Heartfelt House, local hospitals, victims of domestic abuse, aged care, disability services, RFS, Landcare and other wider concerns such as regional floods and bushfires,’ said Mr Bruce. ‘Youth groups have used it for such activities as physical culture, gymnastics, and basketball. Schools and other groups have used it to provide activities for older citizens, performance, formal dinners, lunches for carers, etc.’

No access for three years The commercial contract lasts for two years (with an option to extend), and one year is scheduled for refurbishment of the building, which means Alstonville will not have access to the centre for at least three years.

‘Our library will be moved we are told but we have no timeframe or location at this time,’ said Mr Bruce. ‘A number of fairly vague commitments have been made by Council. Not unreasonably we expect firm commitments that Council promises made now will be delivered on.’ Critics have said that not only will the community lose the use of the facility, but funds that are raised using the facility will also no longer be available to the wider community.

Minority objecting Ballina Mayor, David Wright, has previously commented that those in opposition to the studio are a minority, that people were consulted, that alternative arrangements were put in place, and very few people were using the facility anyway, especially since COVID-19.

▶ Read more online in Echonetdaily: www.echo.net.au/ discontent-rumbles-on-inalstonville-over-film-plans

Lake Ainsworth Percy the Prawn joins Mark for part of a 1,000km run Blue-green algae David Lowe red alert removed Ballina’s Percy the Prawn The blue-green algae bloom Red Alert level warning (high alert) for Lake Ainsworth that has been in place since 20 October has been removed. ‘The red alert at Lake Ainsworth on the North Coast has now been lifted as blue green algae concentrations have remained low over the past two weeks,’ said a spokesperson for Ballina Shire Council. ‘As the red alert has been lifted there are no longer any restrictions on recreational activities.’ Swimming, water sports, and consuming seafood were banned under the red alert.

Naturally occurring Blue-green algae usually appear as green paint-like scums on the water, near the edges, or as greenish clumps throughout the water. It generally has a strong musty or earthy odour. Updates about bluegreen algae blooms and red level warning areas can be obtained visiting Water NSW (www.waternsw.com. au/water-quality/alga) or by calling 1800 999 457.

joined Mark Avery for 100 metres of his epic run down the east coast of Australia last week. They were joined by Mr Avery’s wife, Vicki, and their two kids Alfie and Lily, who are also his support crew as he runs twenty marathons in twenty days; all the way from Tweed Heads to their home town of Sydney, to raise funds for Gotcha4Life and to generate discussions about building mental fitness. As Mark Avery caught his breath, The Echo asked him how he was feeling after his third marathon in three days. ‘I feel really good,’ he said. ‘I had some company today, and it was so much easier than yesterday, on the back roads from Pottsville to Byron. Beautiful countryside, but I had to be really careful of the traffic.’

Why so far? ‘About five years ago, a good friend and neighbour of ours unfortunately passed from cancer,’ said Mr Avery. ‘I think it hit us all pretty hard. I think being a typical bloke, I tried to keep a stiff

Vicki and Mark Avery with Percy the Prawn, Alfie and Lily Avery in Ballina. Photo David Lowe upper lip, I didn’t really say much and I tried to be what I thought was strong, and it sort of creeps up on you. ‘All of a sudden I went from being anxious, to becoming depressed, then I was having panic attacks at work, something I’ve never experienced before... I didn’t know what to do. So I went to the doctor, had a chat, and it all came out. ‘I started to feel a little bit better. So I just started running in the morning, entered my first marathon. I swapped a load of old habits like drinking too much with good habits, like getting up early and eating well. ‘Then on one of the training runs I was feeling really, really bad, and just thought, I wonder if I could run from Brisbane to Sydney?’

Mark says his main goal is to ‘encourage people to speak up and take action, to be mentally healthy.’ The Echo asked Ballina’s ambassador, Percy the Prawn, if he’d had to run anywhere before? ‘Only from the prawn trawlers!’ he said. Get involved, or sponsor Mark at: www.run4mentalfitness.com.

Help is at hand If you, or someone you care about needs urgent support, contact: Lifeline 13 11 44, Suicide Call Back Service 1300 659 467, MensLine Australia 1300 78 99 78, or Beyond Blue 1300 22 46 36.

▶ Read more online in Echonetdaily: www.echo.net.au/ mark-running-1000-km

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Articles/Letters Better education or land grab for M’bah schools? Last week’s announcement that Murwillumbah’s four primary and high schools would be amalgamated into one mega-school has met with significant local backlash. Deputy Premier John Barilaro and Education Minister Sarah Mitchell made the announcement last Wednesday, saying that the new mega-school would cater for up to 1,5000 students from Kindergarten to Year 12 at the Murwillumbah High site. Ms Mitchell pledged that no permanent teaching jobs would be lost, and spruiked the ‘community benefits’ of the plan. ‘The new Murwillumbah Education Campus will truly be at the heart of the community,’ Ms Mitchell said. However, local state and federal Labor members are up in arms over the announcement, which they

â–ś Continued from page 12

subdivided through historical mistakes, I’d support flood gates (one-way stormwater flaps) because they sometimes do work. But to bring new people to a floodplain, these and other non-natural interventions must not be considered. Rezoning is about bringing in new people. Lot 22 is flood-prone. I do support making housing affordable. But let’s house people on dry land, not land that puts them, and our few remaining SES volunteers, at risk. When the Shire has run out of dry land, then maybe let’s look at Lot 22. It’s a shame to see such enthusiasm for affordable housing go down the gurgler. Duncan Dey Main Arm

Who’s the wannabe? Councillor Michael Lyon must be doing something right if he’s raised the ire of

say effectively involves the closure of three schools.

No consultation Tweed Mayor, Chris Cherry (Independent), told The Echo that at the announcement she had ‘expressed to both the Deputy Premier, Minister Mitchell, and the Board of Education representatives there, my disbelief that a decision like this could be made with no consultation with the community’.

Land grab? Lismore’s state MP, Janelle Saffin (Labor), accused the Liberal-National state government of breaking their promise before the last election to upgrade the ‘Murwillumbah East Public School before the last election’ after it was flood damaged. ‘Despite all their hollow the narcissist and dodgy developer from Coorabell. Patrick Morrisey Goonengerry

žƖǔ Ĺ&#x;Ĺ?ĹŠ ”ÍſŊ ĎƖŕĕƆ Late last week I witnessed a chainsaw being used by a person up a ladder to cut down a large casuarina tree in the sand dunes at Suffolk Park. It had also been used to remove numerous pandanus trees. Upon inspection I noticed a viewing platform with now cleared views of the sea and a cleared path leading directly to a house. This is not the only clearing that has been done along this stretch of dunes. Two houses further along are now visible where previously they could not be seen. This is setting a precedent, especially to the new residents in the area. Alcorn Street is very valuable real estate and I imagine that direct access to the beach and a viewing

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promises, it seems that yet more privatisation is their true agenda. This decision has all the signs of a dirty land deal, and is not about improving educational outcomes.’ Federal Richmond MP, Justine Elliot (Labor), highlighted that under the current government there have been ‘cuts that have severely impacted Murwillumbah including the closure and sale of the Murwillumbah TAFE; cuts to front line services at the Murwillumbah hospital; cuts to police numbers and the closure of the Tweed Valley Women’s Service. ‘In the past weeks we’ve seen shocking evidence at the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) confirming that Premier Gladys Berejiklian turned a blind eye to the corrupt business dealings platform with wonderful views would certainly enhance the price even further. These dunes are cared for by a group of volunteers that do an amazing job. It is a shame that some residents feel they are entitled to destroy this rare habitat for their own benefit. Anne Martin Newrybar

ÉÍĆ?Ä•Ĺż Ć†Ä•ÄˆĆ–ſĜĆ?ơ To secure a reliable water supply we need a plan involving many options, and the greater proportion of those must not be rain dependent. Dams and rainwater tanks can be a short-term backup, but what happens in a two, three, or four year drought when there is no rain? The main elements to a secure water plan must be non-rain dependent. Purified recycled water, finding the leakages and efficiencies within the entire water

of her boyfriend, Liberal MP Daryl Maguire, and didn’t report this to ICAC.’

Scare tactics Nationals MP, Geoff Provest responded, saying the ‘claims by Richmond Ms Elliot that the NSW government is cutting funding to Murwillumbah schools are malicious and plain wrong.’ ‘The reforms to education in Murwillumbah is a NSW government investment of over $100 million for our local schools. The intention is to keep this land in public ownership for the community and for community use’. He also said there would be no loss of permanent positions and that heritage aspects of the school would be ‘incorporated into the final design’.

â–ś Read more online in Echonetdaily: www.echo.net.au system, and desalination. The sources are abundant and the yield is large, and they do not rely on rain. If we relyon a dam there is no incentive to mend the leaks or find more efficient ways of using water, and it will prove to be of temporary use in a protracted drought. I encourage Rous Water to adopt a smart multisource non-rain dependent approach to water management for the future of the Northern Rivers. A Hart The Channon

—ĕŔĕŔćĕſ Ć?IJÄ• Ć?ſĕĕƆ The Mullumbimby Farmers Market was awarded #1 in Australia, with a photo of the organisers given all the credit while surrounded by, and literally leaning on, the huge trees. But it probably could have been anyone organising those markets. The real draw to that market, â–ś Continued on page 16

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mĹ&#x;ưĕŔćĕſ ÇŤÇ˝ NJǧNJǧ The Byron Shire Echo 15


Letters

For North Coast news online visit

Managing the human impact on the shifting sands of Byron’s beaches navigable conditions. If the cost is split between those councils that benefit and state/federal government, it would be a win-win for the entire north coast and beyond. Ray Hunt Ballina

Q In response to Dailan Pugh (Let-

ters, 28 October). We let nature take its course, the beaches will always return or reform. Many properties, even Byron itself, will be washed away (hopefully they will be moved or recycled instead). The new Pass will be Cowper Point. I won’t have to paddle so far. You could, I suppose, build a sea wall from Cape Byron to Kingscliff but we’d lose our surf breaks! Wally Hueneke Byron Bay

Byron’s Clarkes Beach erosion has been there before says Byron local Guy Hastings who supplied these comparison images.

Q One of the first letters I wrote to

The Echo when I arrived in Byron 32 years ago concerned the rockworks at Main Beach. At the moment, what happens is that storm surges hit this confrontational structure and form a whirlpool off the beach. This causes sand to be swept out to sea rather than moving north to replenish the beach from The Wreck up to the Belongil as it should. In this letter I suggested that a series of terraces be built out from the current structure. Such terraces should be built with a rim at their edges. What would happen, I think, is that the waves would surge up the slope and deposit sand behind the rims and a sand bank would eventually form. The area behind the rock walls is obviously too valuable as a recreational area to sacrifice, but it

▶ Continued from page 15 and Bangalow (the other most popular market), is the lushness and shade that the big trees provide! We need to start respecting these amazing life-giving, moisture-holding, shade-providing, carbon-sequestering beauties for what they do for us. Instead of constant talk of planting new ones, realise the old ones are who provide all the services we rely on for our every breath. Every single one should be protected in perpetuity; it’s now or never. Australia is in the top ten worldwide for deforestation. And to make it worse,

might be possible to have our cake and eat it too. David Gilet Byron Bay Q I feel compelled to reply to Warwick Anderson’s suggestion (Letters, 21 October) to drill a pipeline from the cliff base of the Cape below the Byron lighthouse and run it to Wategos, for the purpose of dredging sand, to possibly ‘get the beaches back to normal, as they were when I was a kid’. It is a folly and will only waste money – money badly needed for other urgent projects. I don’t wish to sound harsh, but ‘normal’ is forever changing, and the ocean will have her way, however much we tamper. I used to live in Hawks Nest near Jimmy’s Beach in Port Stephens,

The Nationals have just wrenched us backwards in time by 25 years for koala protections, right after the big intergovernmental report came in that the koala will be extinct by 2050 if land clearing doesn’t ease up. This is ecocide. And it needs to be made illegal, like all other forms of murder. It really is time to wake up and stop treating our only planet like our worst enemy. Let’s start by crediting old trees for all they do, and treat them like the absolute kings of the land that they are. Shaunti Kiehl Suffolk Park

where they’ve been dredging sand for decades now, trying to save some lovely homes at Winda Woppa. It’s been a futile exercise and a total waste of money to everyone except those few whose homes are clinging on. Many homes and fishing shacks are long gone. It’s worth mentioning a local bigwig owned a home there back then, so the sealed road was always kept in good order, although the sand is constantly covering it by wind and water. There’s an old saying about building your home on solid rock, as opposed to shifting sands. The constant northerly drift of sand up the eastern seaboard is what has created Fraser Island, the largest sand island on the planet. Sand will always come and go, come and go. With climate change thrown in, it

Sorry Simon I have been canvassing Bayside Brunswick to notify residents of a community meeting for those concerned about the proposed boarding house SEPP for Bayside. After speaking with several people about The Kollective group that have already built microhousing, I decided to get back in touch with our mayor to inform him of some alarming facts. In Simon’s response he said The Kollective group were at least trying to provide affordable housing in the Shire. He seemed unopposed to more of same being built.

will only come and go in even more extreme measures. Janet Lavis East Ballina Q I have observed the silting/ shoaling of the Richmond River over the last 40 years owing to removal of the permanent dredge that was required to maintain channels for navigation. The placement of bridges and abutments adds to the problem. A possible solution could be a sand bypass similar to the one at Tweed River. This would replenish sand to the Ballina coast, Lennox Beach and eventually sand would migrate to Byron, getting into the bay and beyond. The original design of all the river breakwalls on the east coast was reliant on a dredge to maintain

I responded, asking Simon why he supported it when, owing to the costs of renting The Kollective housing, it would be only available for an elite few. I pointed out that $400pw for a boarding room was not affordable. Simon responded suggesting that I was being rude and that he would refuse to acknowledge my emails. I have read my email to several people who did not find my fact-finding email rude. I immediately emailed back to apologise, although I thought, as a Green voter, I

Q In response to Dailan Pugh (Letters, 28 October); upon your recommendation I did go and look at the Belongil. Have you been down there recently, by which I mean any time in years? The idea that the construction of the rock walls would lead to disappearance of beach turned out to be a myth. There’s more sand now than in the ‘80s, brother! The whole coastal retreat philosophy was dreamt up because mining companies tore out the heavy black mineral sands. In order to avoid those mining companies having to do something about it, government departments suddenly began to develop the idea that it was all ‘natural processes’. The beaches of Byron Bay have been managed landscapes for over a century. We can debate how they should be managed, but manage them we must. Sand supply has to be addressed further down the coast. Let’s look at that, shall we? Love your work, Dailan. Matt Hartley Byron Bay

should be entitled to ask the question I asked of him? But obviously not. Why support developers to build in the cheapest way possible, with no sound proofing in adjoining walls, under the guise of supplying affordable housing, when it’s not affordable? I ask the so-called professional couples, would you wish to sign a six-month lease to live in a boarding house room, without a car parking space, and pay $400pw for that accommodation? Annie Radermacher Brunswick Heads

Wealthy humans I try to live really simply but still have rubbish and lots of recycling – wine bottles, baked bean tins, the little cardboard thing from inside the dunny paper, etc. A lot of people are just trying to feed themselves and their families, but all of us in the wealthier countries have this need for bigger, better, brighter; consume, consume, consume – and we’re the ones who make the overabundance of waste happen. We wealthier humans are surly, pernicious and in disgrace for the

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16 The Byron Shire Echo mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


Articles/Letters If you’re reading this copy of The Echo early-ish this morning – 4 November – then it’s evening yesterday in New York and afternoon in LA, and...

It’s Election Day in America Phillip Frazer

A

mericans like to know who the new president is on Election Day. This year, it might be not so fast, because COVID-19 means many millions of ballots are in the mail, and because Trump & Co are trashing the postal system, and because they’ve eliminated more than 1,000 polling stations in poor neighbourhoods to discourage voting, and because other weird and possibly terrible things might happen... or might already have happened. Here are some things that could delay a result into next year, or provide an excuse for the Republican Supreme Court justices to decide who becomes President, like they did in 2000:

How votes are counted, or not Voting is managed by the 50 states, not by a federal authority. Rules differ – for example, about when postal votes are counted, mismanagement of this beautiful planet that we are doing our best to fuck up. The water is finite and the air is full of pollutants, a lot of those are aerosols from car exhausts. We’ve got to love simpler lives or otherwise humans and every other creature and plant are gone – defunct! Ultimately, when this rock in space is a dry dead thing, it will be humans that caused it. PS to the man who comes and takes all the bottles out of our bins on recycling day – good on you! Hannah Grace Ocean Shores

Joke on Replying to Victoria King’s letter (14 October) concerning praising Victorians for saving us up here from COVID-19. Victoria, were you writing about those Victorians who didn’t try and smuggle themselves into Queensland, or falsify flying papers to enter, or those two women who were found to be infected – and knew they were – who also escaped Victoria – eh? No joke Victoria. Paul Brecht Evans Head

Stabbing park Noted in the recent Council Local Traffic Committee meeting was a request for No Parking signage to be installed in Heritage Park, following the fact that ‘staff

when they’re too late to count, and about who gets ‘cleansed’ off the rolls from the last election to this one. Hundreds of thousands of mostly poor and/or black voters will be told they don’t exist. These matters are decided by local party bosses; vast sums of money are involved.

Which states matter A group of 538 people called ‘the electoral college’ actually decides the presidential election. Each state has as many voters in the college as they have members in the two houses of Congress, so the same bias toward small-population states that plagues the Senate also skews the college. This system was originally designed to bribe slave-owning states into joining the union. Today it means a few tossup states – such as Florida, Ohio, or Pennsylvania – will decide who wins. The 50 states combined have 539 votes, so whoever gets 270 or more wins. Democrats Gore and Clinton won the most votes in 2000 and 2016 but were screwed by the

witnessed two stabbings during recent enforcement inspections’. It might be preferable for Council staff to re-purpose the signage into body armour. Blake Williamson Mullumbimby

Not enough passengers? Byron Shire’s Councillor Alan Hunter’s assertion that ‘our Casino to Murwillumbah rail service’ did not have enough passengers or freight to justify it 16 years ago and that is not likely to have changed’ is totally wrong. Just a small check on historical information/ statements from MPs/ mayors/councillors, business Chambers of Commerce, business owners, and multitudes of citizens show the need for a rail service, and then consider the increased population of locals and the growing tourism industry. With increased vehicles on the roads, this need [for rail services] is even greater, especially for connection across our massive Northern Rivers region. The disgusting assertion that subsidy fares were the main users is abhorrent – when actually country passengers cost less per person than city folk. Our rail service was stopped only because of a very political action to ‘save’ the Labor Mini-Budget of 2004–2005; when transport

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skewed college thing, which could happen this time too.

What else could go wrong Electoral college voters don’t have to vote for the candidate their citizens preferred – a state government could flip all their college votes to Trump even if Biden won that state by a landslide. They don’t need an excuse, but they might create one. Trump’s mate, Roger Stone, organised a riot that helped sabotage vote counting in 2000. Vote suppression expert Greg Palast asks: ‘What happens if Stone tweets, “There are 10,000 fraudulent ballots from Venezuela in the Jacksonville Post Office”’ – how long before that PO is in flames?’.

Proud Boys as weapons There are hundreds more nightmare scenarios and every one has a dozen possible lawsuits. If only one suit by Trump or another Republican mogul makes it up to

minister Michael Costa stopped our train six months ahead of the promised 12 months. The only reason our Heritage Rail (including yards) were disused was the result of allocated monies being spent elsewhere. For example, 8,000 steel sleepers along sections of our rail line were moved to the Walgett rail line, costing $315,000. And while the XPT did not carry as many passengers as the Motor Rail, it was because the timetable was changed – and the result was fewer passengers, and this was what was behind one of the so-called ‘reasons’ quoted to give credence to stopping the train service. Jillian Spring Billinudgel

ëĈŊōëƆIJ ǩǨ wĈƐşćĕſ It is truly difficult to believe that your Backlash editor could bother to cover such spin as the ABC’s Dr Norman Swan pontificating on the Victorian COVID-19 reductions as being a world record. The truth of the matter is the performance of the Victorian government in fighting the COVID-19 situation is nothing short of disgusting at best, and criminal at worst. The Victorian problem stems from the gross mishandling of the hotel quarantine requirements, which is currently under

A member of the neo-fascist group, the Proud Boys wears military gear in Delta Park in Portland. Photo John Lamparski in Mother Jones the Supreme Court, Trump’s six justices of the nine could endorse another four years of neo-fascism. That ‘riot’ 20 years ago was staged by a few hired frat boys. Today there are thousands of angry ‘proud boys’ in SUVs and pickup trucks with automatic weapons up their wazoos, just itching to open fire on the mile-long lines of regular Americans trying to vote in Democratic neighbourhoods.

investigation by the most ineffective inquiry ever held. The resultant position, rather than a world record for reductions is, in reality, a shocking revelation that Victoria is responsible for 817 deaths, 90 per cent of the Australian total of 905, and 20,330 cases, being 74 per cent of the total Australian infections. A national disgrace. In the following article of the same issue of Backlash, your correspondent quoted a philosopher of last century, Hannah Arendt, who said

There will be blood; how much and when it goes viral could determine the future of us all. If the people’s wishes are trashed again, America’s brewing Second Civil War will rage more viral than all its viruses, and wilder than all its wildfires. Q Phillip Frazer will update on the United Fuck-Ups of America at coorabellridge.com.

‘Totalitarianism can flourish where people systematically refuse to engage with reality, and are ready to replace reason with ideology and outright fiction.’ Nothing could better summarise the actions of the Victorian government, the ABC and Dr Norman Swan and also, unfortunately, your Backlash editor. Tim Harrington Lennox Head

!wÈP' ĈşŕƐſşō Forty-eight people died soon after receiving the new, now

proven deadly RNA vaccine last week, consequently Singapore was forced to halt their lethal vaccination program (https://reut. rs/34NGRKs) [the article states, ‘they found no direct link between the deaths and the shots]. Oh and by the way, there appears to be a very sophisticated plan underway, to reduce the world’s population by 90 per cent over the next few years, in order to stop global warming. Peter Olson Goonengerry

Check out our Council notices online! On exhibition this month • Development Control Plan for Biodiversity closes 15 November • Proposed variation to Byron Farmers Market Inc Licence closes 24 November

For information on DAs, public notices and projects go to our website. Have your say at: www.yoursaybyronshire.com.au Follow us on Facebook and Instagram

• Draft Sustainable Visitation Strategy and Resilience Discussion Paper closes 27 November • Draft Plan of Management Charlotte Street Park closes 27 November • Australia Day Awards nominations closes 4 December Byron Shire Council, 70 Station Street Mullumbimby NSW 2482 T: 02 6626 7000 | E: council@byron.nsw.gov.au | www.byron.nsw.gov.au

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 17


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Good Life

Authentic Mexican food and feel at Chupacabra Eve Jeffery Coming up to their lucky third anniversary, Amelia and Evan have loved creating an experience for someone on a night out. ‘Both of us love the hustle and bustle of hospitality and we go crazy when we aren’t working six days a week,’ says Amelia. ‘What people love most about Chupacabra is being transported to Mexico! Oftentimes the food we think about as being Mexican – burritos and nachos etc – is actually Tex-Mex and not what we really eat in Mexico.’ Amelia says there are so many amazing authentic dishes that Chupacabra try to Learn the secret art of fermentation that turns normal replicate to give people a taste food into healthy probiotics. In this fun course you will of the fresh, delicious food they learn the skills necessary to start making your own eat in Central America. ‘In a fermented foods at home. At the end of the course you similar way, a lot of restaurants will take your self-fermented sauerkraut home with you. paint a caricature of Mexico with sombreros and cactus Sunday 29th of November everywhere – we tried to 9am –1pm Price $120 design and decorate our venue as close to a real beachside Where: 56 Natural Lane, Coopers Shoot cantina as possible, so people often tell us they feel like they are really there.’ Amelia says that the pandemic and the recent lockdown demonstrated to them that the Byron area has some of the luckiest hospitality people in the country and the world. ‘So many places will struggle to re-open, but we are lucky enough that our region is To book, or for more information flourishing right now. We have zena.gourevitch 0409 302 548 | learnt so much about adapting

Amelia Stokes and Evan White have been in the hospitality industry a long time, so they really know what they are doing, and their current venture is on point for getting it right. Chupacabra is a little slice of Mexico without the airfare – Evan has worked around the world as a chef, including a stint in Mexico when he was young.

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and the way we work has changed over and over, all year long. We are hoping to keep giving the people what they want and facilitating great nights out for them.’ Amelia says when people couldn’t get out she wanted friends to be able to make some of the Chupacabra dishes at home. ‘We put up some recipe walk-throughs on our instagram @chupabyron. People sent us the results and told us their meals were surprisingly easy – that’s because our food tastes great from using great products, not fancy cooking techniques.’ Chupacabra are gearing up for the festive season and are looking forward to hosting Christmas parties. ‘For the next few months we are offering no venue hire fee for daytime events.’ Q Chupacabra are at Shop 12A/3 Clifford St, Suffolk Park. You can find out more at: chupacabra.com.au.

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One of my favourite plants is fennel (Foeniculum Vulgare) so I was extremely pleased to find these lovely people, Dougal and Hannah, from Forrest Organics, selling their wonderful home grown fennel plants at the New Brighton Farmer’s Market recently. Fennel is a hardy perennial herb and can be grown in most conditions, but likes dry soil. The seeds are the most medicinal part, although the whole plant (stalks and bulb) are beneficial and delicious. Its healing properties are well known for gripe and colic, especially in children. The roasted seeds can be consumed after meals to promote good digestion and to calm the nerves, and are excellent when added with cumin and coriander as a cooling spice mix. Make a tea by pouring half a litre of boiling water onto 1-2 teaspoons of the crushed seeds and let it sit for 10 minutes. This lovely aniseed-tasting brew will help with many digestive problems and also helps to cleanse the liver. The same mixture can be used to help bring down mother’s milk and when added to barley water it makes a nourishing drink for nursing mothers, and for the elderly with poor

Dougal Forrest and Hannah Vollmerhouse, from Forrest Organics, with some lovely fennel. nutrition. Fennel juice can be used for chronic coughs when taken regularly, and the soft green tender leaves are great for garnishing eggs and fish, helping with protein digestion. In medieval times, fennel was added to other herbs and hung over doorways on Midsummer’s Eve to ward off evil spirits. I prefer to eat it, and one of my favourite ways to consume fennel is to bake the larger bulbs in a hot oven, slice them through and place the slices in a baking dish with olive oil, a little butter, pepper and salt. They are delicious with any protein and will definitely help your digestion by cleansing the blood and the liver.

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EVERY MONDAY HALF PRICE PIZZA

Ballina

Story & photo Eve Jeffery Sitting under the vast verandah of the Bangalow Heritage House Museum & Cafe, it is easy to be carried back in time by the cool breeze and grassy surrounds of this Bangalow landmark. For 20 years the Bangalow Historical Society Inc has overseen the Bangalow Heritage House Museum & Cafe. President of the Bangalow Historical Society, Trisha Bleakley, says that she really enjoys engaging with the community and being part of a team that are custodians of Bangalow History. ‘It’s a quiet and beautiful setting next to the parklands – we offer a friendly and welcoming service, good food and access to Bangalow History.’ The large eating area, both indoors and out, make it a perfect combination of great food and history for both patrons and staff. ‘We want the community to see Heritage House as their own, a place they can be proud of and to recommend it to friends and family. A place of welcome to visitors from near and far.’ Next month the venue is having a fundraiser. ‘Bringing the past into the present’ is one of the functions of the Bangalow Historical Society and its museum and cafe. The popular community facility is set to broaden its appeal by hosting temporary art exhibitions; creating opportunities for local emerging artists to gain exposure for their work. The committee is seeking sponsors to donate $100 to buy doors; which will be configured in various combinations around the museum and on which will hang artwork.

Dine in and take away

FB/Insta: wharfbarballina 12–24 Fawcett St, Ballina 6686 5259

www.wharfbarballina.com.au

BANGALOW

Bowlo Kitchen

Family friendly, tradies’ local, restaurant quality, Wednesday to Friday happy hour, midweek specials, excellent wines, foodies delight, creative cocktails, local produce, massive kids’ space, welcoming staff, Open Wed–Fri 12–2.30pm & 5–8.30pm; and CovidSafe. Sat 12–8.30pm; Sun 12–7pm.

The Bowlo, Bangalow 6687 2741

Bangalow Historical Society Inc president Trisha Bleakley says she enjoys engaging with the community and being part of a team that are custodians of Bangalow History.

Come along to the Bangalow Bowlo and find out.

Club open Wed–Sun from 12 noon www.bangalowbowlo.com.au bangalowbowlo @thebowlo

BYRON BAY A number of doors have already been sponsored but more are needed for the first exhibition, to be held December 11–12, from 5.30pm to 7.30pm. These opening events are COVID Safe and tickets will cost $20, to provide much needed funds for the museum. This will include a drink on arrival, and other refreshments will be on sale. The first exhibition is Terry Bleakley’s Emotional Landscapes – a series of acrylic mounts that celebrate the beauty and permanence of the landscape by inserting images of people – taken from 70-yearold home movie footage – into Terry’s contemporary landscape photography. Q Tickets are available from Heritage House by calling 66872183, or go to bangalowhistorical@bigpond.com or by contacting the museum on Facebook Messenger. The Bangalow Historical Society are looking for volunteers who would like to be involved with Heritage House either in the museum or the cafe.

St Elmo Dining Room & Bar Open Thursday – Sunday 5 – 10pm Cnr Fletcher St and Lawson Lane, Byron Bay 6680 7426 www.stelmodining.com

Chupacabra

Fresh authentic Mexican in a relaxed atmosphere.

This is food made with love, all produce sourced locally. Eat in or take out. Margaritas and tacos all night long! Shop 12A, 3 Clifford St, Family friendly, totally GF menu. Suffolk Park DINNER 5pm – 9pm 6685 3059 WED – SAT www.chupacabra.com.au Book via Resy @chupabyron

U EN M LY ND E I FR LY I FAM

Farmers and the whims of weather Federal farmer Sue Mangan was just one of many whose property was hit by massive hail on the weekend. Sue lost broad beans and wombok during the storms. Sue says that although hail has caused significant damage to their vegetable crops only a few times before, the threat is always there, and when it does happen the outcome can be one of devastation. ‘What doesn’t get pulverised on the day may well succumb to shock and damage by the end of the week. The result is the same – pick up the hoe and the seedling trays and start planting like crazy to try and reduce the time gap between what might have been, and the next harvest’. Sue says these events are going to become more commonplace and for farmers who grow in open fields, there is a limit to what can be done to mitigate the threat. ‘There’s a time for disbelief, frustration and then grief, but then there’s time for making a fresh start, making a ton of kimchi and planning for future harvests.’

St Elmo is a place where you can enjoy great company, first-class food, sophisticated cocktails and an extensive wine list. St Elmo is plating up modern Spanish cuisine to be enjoyed amongst friends and family. Our menus change regularly and feature daily specials.

indian

VE GA N&

billi

GL UT EN FR EE F

Billi Indian

OO

DA VA IL

AB

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Authentic

Indian Restaurant Now taking bookings for Christmas & end of year parties Takeaway and delivery Open Tuesday till Sunday 4.30 – 8.30pm

8 Wilfred St, Billinudgel

02 6680 3352 Instagram @billis.indian

Hail that fell at Sue Mangan’s farm.

Happy Hour $6 LOFT LAGER $6 LOFT WINE $10 APEROL SPRITZ $14 MARGARITA Open every day 4pm till Late 4 Jonson St, Byron Bay 0266809183

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives Loft-Echo-Ad-XL_260x88mm_V23.indd Loft-Echo-Ad-XL_260x88mm_V23.indd 11 Loft-Echo-Ad-XL_260x88mm_V23.indd 1

Book online: loftbyronbay.com.au @loftbyronbay

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 19 31/8/20 31/8/20 3:19 3:19p.p.m. m. 31/8/20 3:19 p. m.


Good Taste BYRON BAY

Eateries Guide BYRON BAY

continued

Forest Byron Bay

www.crystalbrookcollection. com/byron/forest

@forestbyronbay

Open 7 days 9am till after midnight Shop 1 Woolworths Plaza 90-96 Jonson Street 6685 5700 www.legendpizza.com.au

Check us out on

Gourmet burgers created by chefs

Open 7 days 11.30am until late Call to make a reservation or for takeaway orders

Cafe • Restaurant • Bar 11 Marvell Street

Thursday – Sunday Tapas 2.30pm, Dinner 5.30pm Aperitivo happy hour 3–5.30pm & Cheese/wine special Single cheese plate & 2 glass wine $30 Double cheese plate & 2 glass wine $35

Byron Bay 6680 9960 targabyronbay.com targabyronbay@gmail.com

Krill Bar Lennox Head 47 Ballina St, Lennox Head www.krillbar.com.au 6685 5538 KRILLBARANDRESTAURANT

2/29 Brigantine Street 0431 842 340 BYRONBAYOLIVECO byronbayoliveco.com support@byronbayoliveco.com

The Empire 20 Burringbar St, Mullum

6684 2306 Tues–Fri 8.30am–2.30pm Sat, Sun 9am–2pm FB/Insta: EmpireMullum empiremullum.com.au

Yaman Mullumbimby

Mon – Fri 9am–3.30pm

62 Stuart St, Mullumbimby 6684 3778

Our Rocking New Brunch Menu Come and join us at the Rocks for some light brunch options or hearty breakfasts. We offer a range of home-made, locally sourced produce at affordable prices, including our delicious new loaded halloumi or chorizo tacos, vegan nasi goreng and our signature Rocks Big Brekky which will keep you going for hours! Fresh juices, Byron Bay coffees and healthy smoothies available too. The Rocks is registered as COVID Safe, and is practicing all NSW health guidelines.

Fishheads

www.yamanmullumbimby.com.au

Open 7 days from 9am–8pm Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner

Harvest

GREAT SUMMER MENU

www.harvestnewrybar.com.au @harvestnewrybar

Enjoy! The Fishheads Family

All your favourites every lunch and dinner Experienced Thai chefs cooking fresh delicious Thai food for you. BYO only Welcome for lunch, dinner and takeaway.

Mon-Fri lunch & dinner closed Sundays Lunch 12 noon–3pm Dinner from 5–8.30pm 3/31 Lawson St, Byron Bay www.facebook.com/ pages/Success-ThaiFood/237359826303469

Sun Bistro Bottleshop and Home Delivery 61 Bayshore Drive, Byron Bay

02 6685 6500 www.thesunbistro.com/ deliveries deliver@thesunbistro.com

- book online. Gin Making Gift Vouchers available. LORDBYRON.COM.AU LordByronDistillery Incredible cocktails, locals beers & all-day snacks and food to share with ocean views. Happy Hour | Every day 4-6pm $6 Loft Lager or Wine, $10 Aperol Spritz, $14 Margarita Espresso Martini Nights | Every day 9-11pm 2 for $25 Classic Espresso Martini Open every day from 4pm till late.

Open Thursday 5pm–10pm, Friday 12pm–3pm & 5pm–10pm Saturday 5pm–10pm, Sunday 11:30am–4:30pm Amazing cocktails, fabulous local food, a la carte and bar menus all with super friendly service. Head Chef Minh Le was a finalist for Australian Chef of the Year in 2016 and has owned multiple hatted restaurants. Come in and experience his fine food in the stylish decor. Happy Hour Thursday – Saturday 5–6pm Online booking preferred

The Empire is where it’s at! Something for all tastes from epic burgers to vegan delights. Enjoy delectable treats and good vibes at this Mullum icon. Takeaways and lots of grab-and-go goodies available. Phone orders welcome – call ahead and avoid the queue.

Coffee, Malawach Rolls, Pita Pockets, Falafel, Traditional Yemenite spices and all your favourites always freshly made. Drop in for an authentic atmosphere, Dine-In or Takeaway .

Lunch: Wed – Sun 12–3pm Dinner: Thurs – Sat from 5.30pm 3 courses from the wood-fired oven in the historic bakery Sat + Sun 8–12pm: Baked goods at Sourdough Weekends Sunday 3–5pm: Chook Night Deli hours are 8am–4pm

At the Sun Bistro Bottle Shop you will find a hand curated range of quality wines, spirits and beers. RARE AND NATURAL WINE • CRAFT BEER • HANDCRAFTED SPIRITS • TEQUILA AND MEZCAL • HOME DELIVERY Open 7 Days 10am – 8pm Monday to Sunday

CATERING

CELEBRATIONS Celebrations Catering By Liz Jackson

BY LIZ JACKSON

20 The Byron Shire Echo mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ

MAKE YOUR OWN BOTTLE OF GIN

ALCOHOL SUPPLIERS

Menus available on Facebook Barrio’s canteen takes its inspiration from locally sourced produce with Moorish cuisine. Offering daily bakes, breakfast cakes, classic sandwiches, vibrant salads, smoked fish, grilled meats. Aperitif Hours Friday 5–7pm: $10 plates + drinks Private Dining: Now taking private party enquiries for lunch and dinner with your closest friends: gather@barriobyronbay.com.au

Free from added artificial flavours and colours.

HARVEST RESTAURANT, DELI + BAKERY

18-22 Old Pacific Highway Newrybar NSW 2479 02 6687 2644

We are proud to say, that for over 20 years, we have been serving the Byron community fresh, local seafood and ingredients. To improve your dining experience, we have developed a smaller plate menu, designed to be shared, and enabling you to try a greater variety of dishes.

Success Thai

Naturally Better!

NEWRYBAR

Indulge in one of our new creations!

FISHHEADSBYRON

Handcrafted spirits using locally sourced ingredients.

MULLUMBIMBY

French deli shop that offers all products by Byron Bay Olive Co and amazing options for breakfast and lunch. Sandwiches, salads, soups and Mediterranean style products such as olives, dips, cured meats and French cheeses.

by Byron Bay Olive Co

CELLAR DOOR – TASTINGS & TOURS

LENNOX HEAD

Indoor & outdoor seating (puppies welcome)

La Cuisine Deli Shop

7am–3pm Mon–Thu 7am–7pm Fri 1 Porter St, North Byron Booking via our website barriobyronbay.com.au Walk in tables available

Book online: www.loftbyronbay.com.au

Open 7 Days Breakfast & Lunch

Targa Modern European

Barrio

4 Jonson Street, Byron Bay 6680 9183

Cocktails, wine and beers served all damn day. Group bookings available, please email mainstreetburgerbar@gmail.com for reservations.

18 Jonson Street 6680 8832

1 Jonson Street, Byron Bay 6680 7632

Loft Byron Bay

facebook.com/byron.legendpizza Scan code for our menu! BYO Home delivery 7 days Established 1992

Main Street

Byron Bay

Open Tuesday–Saturday 12 noon – 5pm 7, 4 Banksia Drive, Byron Bay 8646 4901

FRESH PIZZA BYRON STYLE

Legend Pizza

Brunch 7am–12 noon Mon–Fri 7am–1pm Sat & Sun 16 Lawson St, Byron Bay 6685 7663 – Menus at therocksbyronbay.com.au

Lord Byron Distillery

Set next to a lush rainforest oasis, Forest celebrates sustainability working hand-in-hand with local farmers, growers and artisans. Serving breakfast, lunch, dinner and just-drinks… the perfect place to feed your soul. Stay a while. As a Byron Bay Crystalbrook Local you get to enjoy 15% off food and drinks when you sign up online.

77-97 Broken Head Rd, Suffolk Park 6685 4969

The Rocks @ Aquarius

continued

Celebration cakes Personal catering services Event co-ordination and management

E: lizzijjackson@gmail.com P: 0414 895 441

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


www.echo.net.au/soap-box

MANDY NOLAN’S

SOAPBOX

HOW TO BE KOOL

Are you who you are supposed to be? In your wildest dreams, who would you be, say, if you didn’t have a job, or weren’t obsessed with homewares, or paying a mortgage? Who would you be if you weren’t indentured to the capitalist system of constant acquisition? What if you just answered that voice inside you and stepped into that self? What would that self actually look like? Would it still dress like you do now? Would it care about the things you think you care about now? Who are you without indoctrination? Without limitation? Who are you without regulation, without rules or without self-doubt? What makes your heart truly sing? What brings you joy? Who are you when no one is looking? I don’t think most of us know that self. I don’t think most of us are brave enough to find out. We only have one shot at this life, so I often wonder why so many of us struggle to walk that person, our authentic self, into the light? I guess it’s shame. We are ashamed of our real selves. It’s why Adam and Eve fashioned garments from leaves in that lesser known Tolkien fantasy called The Bible. It takes courage to be seen. To show who you truly are to the world makes you absolutely vulnerable. But conversely, in that vulnerability is power. A different sort of power to the power you see in politics, or real estate, or big money. A quiet bubbling power of realness. When you see it, it is unmistakeable. When you see it, you can’t look away. It’s the unremarkable occurrence of something quite remarkable – someone being themselves. It happens so rarely that when you see it, you are transfixed. We’re so busy contriving our lives that most of us haven’t noticed how far we have drifted from our shore. Some can’t even remember what the shore looks like. It’s something that visits them in shadowy dreams – but by morning, their place of return is gone. It takes courage to listen to who you truly are. It takes even more courage to live it. There is a man I have seen who I wonder about. I wonder what happened in his life that led him to be who he is today. I wonder who he was before. He is The Pineapple Man. He hitches from Murwillumbah to our local markets and he hula hoops and shakes his pineapple for hours at a time. His name is Kool. I don’t imagine that’s his birth name. I gather it’s the name he gave himself. Kind of perfect, because he actually is. Kool. Maybe he’s in his 60s? Maybe older, it’s hard to tell. His exuberance makes him ageless. Every time I see him swinging his hips and shaking that pineapple he makes me feel good. He makes me really laugh. Not just because he is a mature man hula hooping in public with a percussive fruit, but because his joy is infectious. He is the antithesis to a man in a suit. I would love to sponsor him to take his pineapple and his hoops to Canberra, to Parliament House – to see if he could stir up some joy there. I’d like to see if he could be an uncomfortable reminder of the frail yet magical humanity that lurks beneath even the most expensive suit. I want to see Scott Morrison join in with a hula hoop, shaking a pineapple, see if he can find something real beneath his veneer. I wonder what happened. I wonder what made Kool become Kool, what made him decide to pick up his hoops and his pineapple shaker and think, damn, if I am not taking this to the street! Man cannot live on private hula hooping alone. It must be seen! That is courage. Men are not conditioned to show themselves to the world in this way. It’s so wonderful to see an older white man dancing in sandals to music of his own making, connecting with passersby with his improvised pineapple-infused song. Kool actually gives me hope for ageing white men when I had pretty well given up.

One day Kool woke up with the courage to walk his real self into the light. So, why don’t you? There’s enough busking spots for all of us. Shake it up.

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

ENTERTAINMENT

TIM FREEDMAN AND THE BALLAD OF BERTIE KIDD This has been the most unexpected year. The pandemic has brought the music industry to its knees. With musicians just starting to leave the cocoon of the covid sabbatical, Tim Freedman is one of the acts playing venues again, thanks to the Great Southern Nights initiative, although Tim believes the government support has been slow and tempered with a bias. ‘The support is slow in coming and keeps going to people who are established. The government needs to be saving places like Enmore Theatre – when we come back, we need to know the venues exist.’ Entertainment contributes more to GDP than mining and sport. It’s not a hobby. How will this impact on the music industry? ‘How strong are we? How resilient has everyone managed to be?,’ asks Tim. ‘The strong will survive, they usually do. I think there is a culture war going on here, it’s happened in the universities and in the arts sector – the government doesn’t respect artists and academics, they trot out the old warhorse. Howard always thought “Why bother about them? They aren’t the ones who vote for us.” It’s never been shown to be truer.’ Tim hits the stage to launch the first new song written with The Whitlams in 14 years: The Ballad of Bertie Kidd. ‘I was attracted to the story for the slapstick nature: these fellas get told to put their balaclavas on, on the way to a robbery, and because they put them on so early the police clock them, and they get charged with conspiracy to commit an armed robbery. I thought, that’s hilarious! Then I found out the ringleader was this very imposing and threatening fellow called Bert the Blue Eyed Killer. I finished the song in November last year and played it at Camelot in Marrickville, and the fella who told me the story said, “You probably need to change the name from Bert Kidd because he’s pretty serious, and if you write a song that makes him out to be a bit of a dufus or a clutz, he might not appreciate it”.’ ‘I thought, I have one shot, so I rang his biographer; Bert was let out of jail two years ago, Peter Dutton thought he was so dangerous he tried to get him deported at the age of 85 – he

LOCAL BANDS STEP UP FOR BAYFM BENEFIT

emigrated to Australia at 14 and hadn’t been back to the UK since. One of the reasons we don’t know a lot about Bert is that none of the crims ever talked about him because they were scared of him. When he was in Pentridge, he was next to Ivan Milat, and Ivan refused to walk around the yard with Bert because he thought Bert would kill him.’ So Tim asked the biographer if he knew about the robbery with the balaclavas in Gosford? ‘He said “No”, so he rang Bert, and [Bert] said “Hmm, that one didn’t go down the way I wanted it to!” The biographer played [the song] down the phone and he said “Yeah, go for it!” We filmed him last week in Launceston for the clip.’ The song is a six-minute epic that tells the story of a robbery gone wrong. ‘It’s a funny tale, very Australian, it’s got slapstick and menace, it’s about that moment when you are going inside, when you think, “Can mum visit?”’ laughs Tim. Even our local choir got to feature. ‘Dustyesky came to assist – in the chorus there is this line “some men when they are drinking they mistake their thoughts for thinking” and we thought, [it needs] a male choir. I was recording at Rockinghorse and thought of Glenn Wright, and he brought eight of his comrades into the studio – they come with their own brand of vodka. They make it sound like a Russian Tooheys ad.’ Tim is looking forward to returning to the region, the place he first toured, nearly 30 years ago. ‘I am very fond of Byron – the Whitlams’ first gig out of town was at the Rails in 1992 – I didn’t realise how special it was, we turned up and the double bass came out of the Kingswood, the next night we would play on the floor of the Great Northern – out the back when it was a tin shed.’ Tim Freedman plays Lismore City Hall on Thursday 12 November (lismorecityhall.com.au) and the Byron Centre on Saturday 14 November (byroncentre.com.au)

CONTINUED ON P22

SEASIDE

Triple J Unearthed local winners for 2018 Splendour in the Grass

WHAT’S ON MULLUMBIMBY’S MAGIC: PART 3 – THE ARTS LIVE CINEMA EVENT Thursday 5 November, 7pm $20 | Ages 13+

LOOSE CONTENT Mullum Music Fest 2019 Youth Mentorship winners + mentored by Husky

THE BUCKLEYS – GREAT SOUTHERN NIGHTS LIVE MUSIC EVENT Friday 6 November, 7.30pm $28.80

FRIDA KAHLO – EXHIBITION ON SCREEN LIVE CINEMA EVENT Sunday 8 November, 3pm Full $22 | Conc $20 | Student U18 $15

With regular airplay on BayFM, we are thrilled to showcase Seaside + Loose Content to help raise vital funds for the Shire’s own, and only community radio station.

ONE SHOW ONLY!

SUN 15 NOV/Doors 6:30pm/On stage 7pm Indoor Seats / Garden Seats with Marquee

brunswickpicturehouse.com

THE BIG BIKE FILM NIGHT 2020 LIVE CINEMA EVENT

Friday 13 November, 7pm Full $28 | Child U15 $18 | Group of 6+ $24

TIM FREEDMAN LIVE MUSIC EVENT

Saturday 14 November $53.80

Arrive early and enjoy a drink at the Theatre Bar

NOVEMBER

Kool is my favourite busker. He doesn’t need an amplifier. He doesn’t even need musical talent. He busks with his authenticity. He busks with his joy. He shows us what it looks like to be without shame. To be unselfconscious. To be comfortable with exactly who you are. And exactly who you are can be humble and unsophisticated, and still be powerful. More powerful than a dickhead in a fancy car and an expensive suit. How amazing to have nothing, but to actually have everything. I think that is fricking cool.

Issue# 35.21 November 4 – 10, 2020 Editor: Mandy Nolan Editorial/gigs: gigs@echo.net.au Copy deadline: 5pm each Friday Advertising: adcopy@echo.net.au P: 02 6684 1777 W: echo.net.au/entertainment

Byron Theatre & Community Centre 69 Jonson Street, Byron Bay byroncentre.com.au @byrontheatre

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 21


E N T E R T A I N M E N T ▶ CONTINUED

BEST IN SHOW

Gold Logie winning Tom Gleeson is truly one of the smartest of the southern comedians – he has enjoyed his covid lockdown in Byron Bay. Ironically he had a go at us on his Go Away with The Weekly – but here he is! (It’s a fabulously funny segment btw). ‘The idea in Getaway was to focus on three good things about a place, so I came up with Go Away and talk about three particularly bad things, and recommend you never come here.’ It’s probably the best thing a celeb has done for locals in years! And Byron, while up itself one moment, is also up for the laugh… unlike some tourist towns.

‘When I was doing it around Byron I’d tell them I was doing a travel show and I was going to tear Byron Bay to shreds, and most people, they said, “Fair enough there’s a lot to make fun of” but when I did Cairns, it felt like the whole town turned on me!’ says Tom. ‘It’s weird to read headlines in the Cairns Post that say “Tom Gleeson is an unfunny drongo” and then to read quotes from the mayor who is upset because I pissed in the pool in the esplanade. It’s a TV show – I squeezed water from a bottle into the pool. It got closed down for a once a year refurbishment [after that] and everyone thought [it was because] I had pissed in the pool! The mayor had to squash the rumour.’

BINGO FOR BAY FM! Two lines wins at musical bingo! Dropping beats not balls, mark off the songs on your card and enjoy the best bits of your favourite hits. It’s fun for the whole family, or just with your mates, and best of all, it’s a way to stay seated and still be entertained. Wednesday 4 Nov in The Backroom from 6.30pm, and Friday at The Hotel Brunswick from 6.30pm.

Gleeson has been in Byron since August, and aside from getting a tattoo, a colonic and changing his name, he’s loving it. ‘I have been coming here for 20 years for holidays, and the longest in the past was two weeks, not being here for a long time, like now, I realise that it’s smaller than I thought: in a two week window the possibilities seem endless. ‘The main reason I came here was because it was the furthest north I could get. ‘The best part has been avoiding the Vic winter and the second wave of the pandemic. We got the kids in a local school, the beaches, the weather – are all fantastic – the hardest for me is knowing my friends are going through misery in Victoria. Now the numbers are down, and I didn’t realise how much it was getting to me, I can feel the weight come off my shoulders – I hear them saying, “Oh dear, it must be so difficult living with the guilt”.’ You don’t move to Byron without bumping mindsets! ‘Last night I had a party at my house and we had a couple over and they were telling me, at length, about the virtues of Ayahuasca – I enjoyed the conversation, as it was clear they got something out of it, you would never get that in country Victoria, but I don’t fancy the idea of taking it myself – I quite enjoy reality. Between Netflix, going to the beach, unpacking the dishwasher and putting the kids to bed, I can’t see where to do it.’ Tom Gleeson brings his oneman show Lighten Up to the Brunswick Picture House – back where it all started.

Friday 6 November

BOOK NOW byroncentre.com.au

CLASSICAL STEINWAY CONCERT Sunday 22 November

Tom Gleeson presents Lighten Up at the Bruns Picture House 9–13 Nov at 7pm. Tix at brunswickpicturehouse.com

THE BEST TEX Long time local and all-round good guy, Tex Perkins, is donating his time to put on a benefit gig for BayFM. The band Tex has put together features Tasmanian songstress Lucie Thorne, and local musicians Christian Pyle and Jez Mead. The show delivers a range of songs from The Cruel Sea to The Beasts of Bourbon, Dark Houses, to Tex, Don & Charlie and each member will be in the spotlight for the show. Friday 20 November at the Byron Theatre at 8pm. Tix limited on byroncentre.com.au

Biodynamics A 2-day introductory workshop

PERFORMERS & BUSKERS OF BYRON Wednesday 25 November

Start Byron’s ‘Day of The Dead’ on Sunday at the Death Cafe, a place where people gather to eat cake, drink tea and talk about death. There is directed discussion of death with no agenda, objectives or themes. Death Cafes have been going for nine years and have become a global movement, with 7500 held worldwide. The objective is ‘to increase awareness of death with a view to helping people make the most of their (finite) lives’. 10am–12pm at the Brunswick Picture House. Free, but bookings are essential. RSVP to jennyahenderson@me.com

‘I won best comedy show at the Adelaide Fringe and then the pandemic started. It’s the same show, but it is a different show already. One of the themes was moving on from the horrible summer we’d had, and a routine about having too much free time – and that has become more than true! If anything the show has gained more relevance than it had before – kind of spooky!’

LIVE MUSIC BYRON THEATRE 69 JONSON ST BYRON BAY

DEATH CHAT

Presented by Hamish Mackay with Charlie Arnott November 16 – 17 @ Binna Burra

Friday 27 November Sunday 29 November

The workshop brings together the art and science of agriculture and how biodynamic preparations contribute to the soil food web. suitable for home gardeners, those working in horticulture and agriculture and anyone who is interested in where their food comes from.

Call Fi on 0409 988 783 or visit

charliearnott.com.au for further information.

22 The Byron Shire Echo mşưĕŔĕćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


THE BLEACH FESTIVAL SHOWS STARS A VERY DIFFERENT GOLD COAST ON P39 This year’s Gold Coast Bleach Festival gives hope to artists and creative practitioners that we are making our way back to innovative gatherings and cultural happenings. Artistic Director is Rosie Dennis, who returns to the region after her tenure as a placemaker with the Urban Theatre in Sydney. Her appointment at Bleach last year saw her in the unique position of being able to come home. ‘Pre-covid it was amazing’ says Rosie, ‘a dream come true to move back to where I grew up and have a job in the creative sector – you can’t underestimate that.’ Of course COVID-19 changed the landscape significantly, but Rosie is thrilled that Bleach is able to adapt and go ahead. On a positive note, covid has had some positive effects for artists in SEQ – with so many of them being engaged in Bleach’s programming this year. ‘I have spent all my career in Sydney – working between Melbourne and Sydney where there is a huge flow – so losing all of them, it’s actually been an interesting way to program a festival! I have met a lot of artists I may not have met in the first year because I had to go hyper-local. There are great artists practising up here.’ A good festival director knows they have to be resourceful, so with limitations on the scope of where Rosie could draw her artists from, she went deep, instead of wide. Indigenous story will occupy a significant part of the programming.

The Gold Coast is not somewhere ordinarily associated with the arts, but there is a growing creative community there who are having an impact on this coastal mecca that has long been perceived as a resort town. ‘I think people have perceived superficiality and that the Gold Coast is pro development, there are lots of nouveau riche, and because so many more people are buying property and raising family here, the southern Gold Coast in particular is nothing like it was when I was a kid; it’s really cool – great coffee, and bakeries and bars. There are these great pockets of bars and art studios, and you can see in a few years you will have self-determined cultural precincts.’ Rosie believes the Gold Coast could become a home to artists. ‘There are a handful of artist-run spaces, and we need more. There are challenges to move through – with local government embracing the arts – I think there is an untapped resource – we have amazing beaches and a growing art scene and we’re so close to the airport – you can get anywhere in the country and have a relatively cheap space to make your work in. The cost of living here, as an artist, is great.’

‘The program has a big First Nations program, with the shift in covid restrictions and having no internationals and no interstate artists, it was time to have a conversation with First Nations artists living on the Gold Coast – our Burleigh program is heavy on First Nations story telling – it’s not something people would necessarily align with the Gold Coast to have a large and hungry First Nations artistic community. There is a growing appetite for people who want to dive in and be part of learning more about the place they live in. Superficially it looks like it doesn’t exist, but scratch the surface and there it is.’

Bleach runs through Burleigh Heads, Benowa Botanic Gardens and Chevron Island with a program featuring work by 204 artists in more than 214 unique arts experiences. It’s not about just turning up at some venue – expect the unexpected! Such as the commissioning of artists to paint houses that are soon to be demolished! ‘We are working across four houses that are going to be painted – Rebecca Ross, Glenys Briggs and the Mint Arthouse Collective – the house is their canvas and they have a week to paint it. So it becomes Chez Nous on Chevron – the home to cabaret, live music, spoken word, queer stories, a bunch of different works – it really will be a very fun place to come. I hope audiences will come and check out the artwork on the houses, spend the night on the Gold Coast and see some great performances, I think that’s a big part of the festival’ says Rosie.

A renowned placemaker, Rosie has innovated the opening of the event to be more reflective of the times we have just lived through. Times that saw so many coastal people wake early and start their day with long beach walks. ‘One of the things that I love, my most favourite thing is – the way we’re beginning every festival now, is that we launch at sunrise. The dignitaries and the stuff that would happen at night is now happening in the morning in Burleigh Heads – a two-hour plus ceremony. The ticket allocation for that is exhausted.’

Session Times: Thu 5 Nov - Wed 11 Nov FOR BRITISH FILM FESTIVAL PROGRAM PLEASE VISIT: PALACECINEMAS.COM.AU/ FESTIVALS BRITISH FF OPENING NIGHT BLITHE SPIRIT (CTC) Tix selling fast! Tue: 7:30PM RETRO SCREENINGS STARSHIP TROOPERS (MA15+) Fri: 6:45PM JAWS (M) Mon: 6:45PM STUDIO GHIBLI: HOWL'S MOVING CASTLE (PG) Thu: 6:30PM Sat: 2:00PM

SPECIAL EVENTS IDIOT PRAYER - NICK CAVE ALONE AT ALEXANDRA PALACE (M) Tix selling fast! Thu: 7:00PM BALL & BOE: BACK TOGETHER (CTC) Sat, Sun: 4:00PM ROYAL BALLET: GISELLE (CTC) Sun: 1:00PM Wed: 11:00AM BABY DONE (M) Thu, Mon, Tue: 12:15, 2:15, 4:50 Fri: 12:15, 2:15PM Sat: 12:00PM Sun: 2:30PM Wed: 4:50PM

108 Jonson St, Byron Bay Admission Prices: Adults: Stud/Conc: Senior: Child:

$14 $12 $11 $10

Wednesday All tickets

$10

BRAZEN HUSSIES (M) NFT Thu: 12:00, 2:00, 4:00, 7:20PM Fri, Mon, Tue, Wed: 12:00, 2:00, 6:50PM Sat, Sun: 11:30AM, 2:00, 4:00, 6:50PM CORPUS CHRISTI (MA15+) Daily: 11:40AM, 2:00, 4:20, 7:30PM HONEST THIEF (M) NFT Thu: 2:50, 5:00PM Fri, Mon, Tue, Wed: 2:50, 5:00, 7:20PM Sat, Sun: 12:00, 2:10, 7:20PM ON THE ROCKS (M) Thu, Tue: 12:00, 2:15, 6:30PM Fri, Mon, Wed: 12:00, 2:15, 6:50PM Sat, Sun: 12:00, 2:15, 7:10PM RADIOACTIVE (M) NFT Thu: 12:15, 2:30, 7:15PM Fri, Mon, Tue: 12:15, 2:30, 4:00, 7:15PM Sat, Sun: 12:15, 2:30, 4:50, 7:15PM Wed: 11:50AM, 2:15, 4:00, 7:15PM

Running 12–22 November – check out the program on bleachfestival.com.au

NFT = No Free Tickets

CINEMA

RAMS (PG) NFT Daily: 11:45AM, 2:10, 4:30, 7:10PM THE CRAFT: LEGACY (M) NFT Daily except Sat, Sun: 5:00PM Sat, Sun: 5:00, 6:50PM THE EMPTY MAN (MA15+) NFT Daily except Thu, Tue: 4:30, 7:15PM Thu, Tue: 4:30PM THE MYSTERY OF HENRI PICK (M) Thu, Fri, Mon, Tue: 12:30, 2:30PM Sat, Wed: 2:30PM Sun: 12:00 THE SECRET GARDEN (PG) Thu, Tue: 12:00, 2:15, 4:20PM Fri, Mon, Wed: 12:00, 2:15, 4:20, 6:30PM Sat: 12:00, 2:00, 4:20, 6:30PM Sun: 12:00, 4:20, 6:30PM TROLLS WORLD TOUR (G) Thu, Fri, Mon, Tue: 12:15, 5:00PM Sat: 12:00, 5:00PM Sun: 11:00AM, 5:00PM Wed: 12:15PM

Some people can’t believe in themselves until someone else believes in BALLINA FAIR CINEMAS them first.” Book online now at PalaceCinemas.com.au

Thursday November 5 to Wednesday November 11

NOVEMBER

Tel: (02) 6686 9600 ballinafaircinemas.com.au

THU 5TH

FRI 6TH

SAT 7TH

SUN 8TH

MON 9TH

TUE 10TH

WED 11TH

HONEST THIEF M 98 min

12:05pm 3:00pm

12:05pm 3:00pm 5:25pm

12:05pm 3:00pm 5:25pm

12:05pm 3:00pm 5:25pm

12:05pm 3:00pm

12:05pm 3:00pm

12:05pm 3:00pm 5:25pm

HOPE GAP M 100 min NEVER TOO LATE M 98 min

10:25am

10:25am

10:25am

10:25am

10:25am

10:15am 2:15pm

10:15am 2:15pm 10:35am 12:45pm 4:50pm 7:00pm 1:55pm 3:40pm 7:15pm 4:05pm 6:35pm

10:15am 2:15pm 10:35am 12:45pm 4:50pm 7:00pm

10:15am 2:15pm

10:15am 2:15pm

10:15am 2:15pm

10:35am 12:45pm 4:50pm

10:35am 12:45pm 4:05pm

10:35am 12:45pm 4:05pm

3:40pm 7:15pm

3:40pm

1:55pm 4:50pm

1:55pm 4:50pm

4:05pm 6:35pm

4:05pm

3:40pm

3:40pm

10:15am 2:15pm 10:35am 12:45pm 4:50pm 7:00pm 1:55pm 3:40pm 7:15pm 4:05pm 6:35pm

12:20pm

12:20pm

12:20pm

12:20pm

12:20pm

10:25am 1:55pm

10:25am 1:55pm

RAMS PG 119 min

Purchase A Ticket To Win An Aussie Holiday for Two

THE CRAFT: LEGACY

M 94 min

THE EMPTY MAN MA15+ 137 min THE TRANSLATORS M 105 min French Movie With English Subtitles

TROLLS WORLD TOUR G 91 min

10:35am 12:45pm 4:05pm 1:55pm 4:50pm 3:40pm 12:20pm

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

12:20pm

– Sean Maguire, Good Will Hunting

GIG GUIDE WEDNESDAY 4

Q HOTEL GREAT NORTHERN, BYRON BAY, 6.30PM MUSICAL BINGO Q RAILWAY HOTEL, BYRON BAY, JON J BRADLEY Q BEACH HOTEL, BYRON BAY, 5PM RICHIE WILLIAMS, 8PM JASON DELPHIN

THURSDAY 5 Q RAILWAY HOTEL, BYRON BAY, THE SWAMP CATS Q BEACH HOTEL, BYRON BAY, 5PM KARUAH, 8PM TWO MOONS Q BYRON THEATRE 7PM MULLUMBIMBY’S MAGIC — PART 3: THE ARTS Q BRUNSWICK HEADS PICTURE HOUSE 7PM CHEEKY CABARET, 7PM LOCAL BANDS STEP UP FOR BAY FM Q OCEAN SHORES COUNTRY CLUB 6.30PM TRIVIA Q SLIPWAY TAVERN, BALLINA, 7PM TIM STOKES

FRIDAY 6 Q RAILWAY HOTEL, BYRON BAY, HARRY NICHOLS Q BEACH HOTEL, BYRON BAY, 3PM PHIL HOWELL, 5.30PM JOCK BARNES, 8.30PM JOE WEST TRIO Q BYRON THEATRE THE BUCKLEYS Q HOTEL BRUNSWICK 6.30PM MUSICAL BINGO Q BRUNSWICK HEADS PICTURE HOUSE 7PM CHEEKY CABARET Q SLIPWAY TAVERN, BALLINA, 7PM SARAH GRANT Q BALLINA RSL LEVEL ONE 7PM CROAKER & THE HONEYBEE Q KINGSCLIFF BEACH HOTEL 7PM EMILY WURRAMARA AND TASMAN KEITH Q CURRUMBIN RSL 5PM JON J BRADLEY Q COOLANGATTA HOTEL 5PM RICK BARRON, 9.30PM MIKE EDWARDS

SATURDAY 7 Q RAILWAY HOTEL, BYRON BAY, MAJESTIC KNIGHTS Q BEACH HOTEL, BYRON BAY, 1PM JOE CONROY, 4.30PM NATHAN KAYE, 8PM JESSE MORRIS TRIO Q BYRON THEATRE 6.30PM ‘HEROIC DEEDS’ PRESENTED BY BRIGHT LIGHTS PERFORMANCE SCHOOL Q BRUNSWICK HEADS PICTURE HOUSE 7PM CHEEKY CABARET Q KULCHA JAM, BYRON BAY, TONY BACKHOUSE A CAPPELLA Q WANDANA BREWING CO., MULLUMBIMBY, 4PM DJ ROBIN SYDNEY, 6.15PM DJ MATTY P Q SLIPWAY TAVERN, BALLINA, 7PM CHRIS ARONSTEN Q MARY G’S, LISMORE, 7.30PM SARAH GRANT Q KINGSCLIFF BEACH HOTEL 7PM THE GIN BUGGS Q SHEOAK SHACK, FINGAL HEAD, 3.30PM FELICITY LAWLESS AND BLACK RABBIT GEORGE Q COOLANGATTA HOTEL 5PM SHAWN MARKHAM, 9.30PM LOCKY

SUNDAY 8 Q RAILWAY HOTEL, BYRON BAY, JAMIE ASHFORTH TRIO Q BEACH HOTEL, BYRON BAY, 1PM JOE CONROY, 1PM DUSTY BOOTS, 4.30PM SARAH GRANT TRIO, 8PM DALLAS JAMES DUO Q KULCHA JAM, BYRON BAY, TONY BACKHOUSE A CAPPELLA Q WANDANA BREWING CO., MULLUMBIMBY, 4PM HARRY NICHOLS Q BALLINA RSL PIANO BAR 2PM SHARNY RUSSELL Q CHILLINGHAM MARKET 8AM ROBIN GOGAI Q SALTBAR, KINGSCLIFF, 2PM JON J BRADLEY Q COOLANGATTA HOTEL 4PM LIVING IN THE 70S

MONDAY 9 Q RAILWAY HOTEL, BYRON BAY, JASON DELPHIN Q BEACH HOTEL, BYRON BAY, 5PM ADAM HARPAZ 8PM GUY KACHEL Q BRUNSWICK HEADS PICTURE HOUSE 7PM TOM GLEESON – LIGHTEN UP Q COURT HOUSE HOTEL, MULLUMBIMBY, 6.30PM ART IN THE PUB

TUESDAY 10 Q RAILWAY HOTEL, BYRON BAY, SUNSTONE DUO Q BEACH HOTEL, BYRON BAY, 5PM BEN WHITING, 8PM SAM BUCKINGHAM Q BRUNSWICK HEADS PICTURE HOUSE 7PM TOM GLEESON – LIGHTEN UP

WEDNESDAY 11 Q RAILWAY HOTEL, BYRON BAY, SARAH GRANT Q BEACH HOTEL, BYRON BAY, 5PM MIGHTY MAX FOG, 8PM BEN WALSH Q BRUNSWICK HEADS PICTURE HOUSE 7PM TOM GLEESON – LIGHTEN UP

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 23


Property Insider

propertyinsider@echo.net.au

Bryce Cameron, Cape Byron Property Even as a life–long Byron Bay local, the honor of being able to call this magical region home is definitely something that’s not lost on Bryce Cameron. His passion for the area and drive to showcase it to the world has led to the launch of Cape Byron Property; a boutique, independent and family–owned agency dedicated to providing exceptional, personalised service for all of our clients. It’s the human layer to real estate that initially sparked Bryce’s interest in the industry. Real estate is a business about people, and it’s the day–to–day interaction, building a genuine connection and hearing his clients’ inspiring stories that continues to foster Bryce’s passion for property. Now with more than 8 years’

experience under his belt, Bryce’s new challenge is launching an agency Byron Bay can be proud of. With transparency, trust and accountability at their core, Cape Byron Property has made it their mission to exceed clients’ expectations and deliver outstanding results. An energetic and fresh approach to property has seen the team quickly gain traction in the local real estate market as they leverage innovative marketing strategies and techniques along with consistent and clear communication. Having worked for multiple leading real estate organisations in the past, Bryce has a deep understanding of the industry and the fine art of selling. Pairing this

wealth of technical knowledge with his life–long experience in the region gives Bryce a unique advantage and insight into the Byron Shire’s residential property market. A passionate family man and lover of the ocean, Bryce and his family’s life revolves around the ocean. An active start to most mornings is often followed by a sunrise surf before enjoying breakfast with his wife Rachel, daughter Isla and son Cooper. When he’s not working for his clients, you will find Bryce enjoying some valuable family time or fishing off the coast in his boat. Bryce is a proud member, and a previous president, of the Byron Bay Boardriders Club and a part of the Byron Bay Deep Sea

Fishing Club. Whether you’re looking to buy or sell in the Byron Shire and you would like to work with a passionate local who lives and breathes Byron Bay, chat to Bryce Cameron from Cape Byron Property today. Capebyronproperty.com

Bryce Cameron Cape Byron Property 0412 057 672

coastal & hinterland sales Congratulations & Welcome Freddie This month Katrina celebrates 20 years in real estate. She is looking forward to the next 20 with the recent B Y R O N B AY 11 Shelley Drive $1.5M - $1.65M 3

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606.2m2

+ Magical oasis in prime, quiet, sought-after location + Spacious creative studio space with 2nd bathroom + Relax in total privacy in the lush green backyard + Cool off in the large in-ground saltwater pool + Easy walk or ride to cafes, schools & beaches

addition of her son Frederick Joseph to the team.

Katrina Beohm 0467 001 122 or Christopher Plim 0467 000 222

Katrina Beohm Director

Christopher Plim

Rachael Jenkins

Sales Agent

Sales Manager

0459 066 087 24 The Byron Shire Echo mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ

Gail Beohm Sales Support

Lily Hewitt

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Sales Admin

8 P O R T E R S T R E E T B Y R O N B AY

1VOU *HYTLS

kbrealestate.com.au

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


Property

62 Tweed Street, Brunswick Heads Originally an early 20th century cottage, discover original weatherboards, timber floors, high ceilings - the ideal renovator. Great shed and central location. 807m² lot & 2 road frontages make for a neat dual occupancy & strata subdivision subject to BSC approval. Last sold in 1961.

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Inspect Saturday 7th Nov. 11-11.30am Auction - If not sold prior Saturday 28th Nov. 1pm Todd Buckland 0408 966 421

AU CT IO N 87 Prince Street, Mullumbimby Positioned close to town, this mid-century charmer is bursting with character. Beautifully restored whilst maintaining its original appeal & offering high ceilings, floorboards throughout, open plan kitchen /living plus a spacious back yard with rear lane access & room for a pool.

Modern Townhouse

Layers Of Potential

10/20 Booyun Street, Brunswick Heads

62 Tweed Street, Brunswick Heads

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Auction

1

This 2 storey centrally located townhouse is one of ten, stylishly built in 2007. With a versatile floorplan offering 2 bedrooms plus a study or 2nd living, this property will make a great family home, investment, or holiday house. Walk to everything and leave the car behind, you’re right in the heart of the village, but with a sense of privacy, being set back from the street access. Features include: • polished floors throughout • built-in storage • single garage with laundry • covered decks on the northern and southern sides • reverse cycle air conditioning and ceiling fans

• vaulted ceilings • stainless appliances • stone kitchen benches • minutes to walk to Brunswick River, cafes, pub and beaches

Auction: Saturday 5 December, 10am onsite Contact: Todd Buckland 0408 966 421 Byron Shire Real Estate

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

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EN M OP 10A T SA

EN M OP 11A T SA

AU CT IO N

byronshirerealestate.com.au

3 Land: 807m2

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1

Inspect Saturday 7th Nov. 10-10.30am Auction - If not sold prior Saturday 28th Nov. 11.30am Todd Buckland 0408 966 421

Be Your Own Landlord 2/8 Wollongbar Street, Byron Bay Auction Approx. 123sqm

Originally an early 20th century weatherboard cottage, the home was extended with a second storey providing plenty of room for a family. The house is due for updating but the bones are brilliant. Original weatherboards, timber floors, high ceilings, a structure in fantastic shape and a beautiful private garden with 60 years worth of love and care – the perfect renovator. Off the lane, there’s a huge shed. The carport and garage attached to the house provides triple depth under cover parking. A very interesting potential development subject to council approval, the lot is over the threshold size for dual occupancy and ideal for strata title subdivision – especially suitable with two road frontages. We don’t need to describe why it’s so good to live in Brunswick Heads. This property was last offered to the market in 1961 and it’s our pleasure to help usher in a new owner. Don’t miss this unique opportunity. Auction Saturday 28th November 1pm on site Contact: Todd Buckland 0408 966 421 Byron Shire Real Estate

$635,000

Commercial property in the heart of the Byron Arts and Industry Estate, this light industrial unit is walking distance to shops, good coffee, tavern and surf beaches. East facing, flood free location, with all the comforts of home, your clients will feel welcome and super relaxed. • Kitchenette, bathroom, ceiling fans throughout • NBN available, small complex of five units • Roller door, perfect for loading and unloading • Glass sliding door, reception area + several workspaces • Wood panelling, sturdy mezzanine catches sea breezes • Sought after location, 5 minutes from Byron’s Main Beach • Endless possibilities for small business or creative space • Reasonable strata fees just $1700 per annum • Rental estimate $650 – $680 per week Inspect: Private inspections are welcome by appointment Contact: Fiona Johnson, 0400 418 886 fionajohnson@atrealty.com.au www.atrealty.com.au

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 25


Desirable 25 acres in Possum Creek with Original Farmhouse • ‘Willowvale’, originally the Possum Creek Town Hall, rare property rich in history

10.23 HA (APPROX . 25 ACRES)

• Possum Creek is renowned for its beauty and prime location to Bangalow and

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world famous beaches of Byron Bay • Set over 10.23 ha (approx. 25 acres) of beautiful, cleared and undulating pasture

Address:

• A large rustic shed and bales both have power connected

Price:

Forthcoming Auction

• There is an alternate, elevated building site which is accessible from Gittoes Lane

Open:

Thursday, 5th November 2.00pm – 2.30pm

620 Friday Hut Road, Possum Creek

• This property is water rich with a permanent water supply fed from springs • 8 minutes to Bangalow and 10 minutes to Newrybar

Rare Vacant Land on the Outskirts of Mullumbimby 4.6 HA (11.5 ACRES)

Saturday, 7th November 11.00am – 11.30am Enquiries:

Helen Huntly-Barratt 0412 332 232

Development Dream in Brunswick Heads 5

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• Approx. 4.6ha (11.5 acres) of vacant land zoned RU1 – Primary Production

• Ideally positioned within an easy stroll to beach river, schools and shopping

• Ample space to construct your dream home

• Over 520m2 of stable usable land

• This amazing property has been held by the one family for several generations

• 20m2 street frontage for profitable development

• 2.5km to Mullumbimby town centre and 18 minutes to Byron Bay

• Enjoying a B4 Mixed Use Zoning for a variety of opportunities

• Creek, beautiful ancient fig trees and space to accommodate horses

• Divided into 4 leased flats on a stable level site

• An amazing network of walking and riding trails for your enjoyment in the area

• Currently achieving a combined rental return of $3,000 plus per month

Address:

1247 Myocum Road, Mullumbimby

Address:

17 Booyun Street, Brunswick Heads

Auction:

Auction Price Guide $795,000 to $870,000

Auction:

Saturday, 21st November 10.00am

Open:

By Appointment

Open:

Saturday, 7th November 11.00am – 11.30am

Enquiries:

Su Reynolds 0428 888 660, Luke Elwin 0421 375 635

Enquiries:

Denzil Lloyd 0412 871 500, Lee Grimes 0400 462 312

35 FLETCHER ST, BYRON BAY NSW 2481 PH: O2 6685 8466

26 The Byron Shire Echo mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ

SALES@BYRONBAYFN.COM WWW.BYRONBAYFN.COM.AU

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


Luxurious Townhouse in Byron Bay 3

2

Gorgeous Cottage Set on Huge Immaculate Block 3

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892M2

• “Vue” is one of the most luxurious townhouse developments in the area • Spectacular ocean and bushland views • Beautiful, spacious, premium finished 3-bedroom, 2-bathroom home • Large second living/media room or an ideal home office space • Access to the neighbouring resort facilities - heated pool, spa, sauna & tennis court • Short walk through National Park to Tallow Beach • Easy 20-minute stroll to Byron town centre

• Charming timber home positioned on an elevated quiet cul-de-sac

Address:

4/22 Mahogoany Drive, Byron Bay

Address:

6 Muskwood Place, Bangalow

Price:

Contact Agent

Price:

$1.2m to $1.275m

Open:

Saturday, 7th November 2.00pm – 2.30pm

Open:

Saturday, 7th November 9.00am – 9.30am

Enquiries:

Su Reynolds 0428 888 660, Luke Elwin 0421 375 635

Enquiries:

Su Reynolds 0428 888 660

Huge Potential in Gorgeous Bangalow 4

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• Character design features and timber floorboards • Three light-filled bedrooms with built-in wardrobes • Master features an ensuite, walk-in wardrobe and private timber deck • Stunning, well-established gardens and landscaping • Located 15-minute walk/3-minute drive to Bangalow town centre

Escape to ‘Kurum Estate’ in Tranquil Ewingsdale 8

6044M2

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1.8 HA

• Lovely single storey home on 1.5 acres (approx) • Elevated position captures sea breezes and hinterland views • Spacious contemporary kitchen with breakfast bar, gas stovetop & garden outlook • Pitched timber-slated ceiling with exposed beams and hardwood flooring • 3 light-filled bedrooms, the master with ensuite and walk-in wardrobe • Large studio with doors opening to North with private bathroom and patio • Room to move, farmland atmosphere without the maintenance

• This is a special 4.45-acre estate (1.8 HA) with a rich community history • Ideally located in a private and peaceful garden setting only 10 minutes from town • The estate comprises: Main Residence, Summer House, Granny Flat, Machinery/ utility Shed and Studio • Generous open plan living, kitchen and dining space opens via bi-fold doors to a large covered patio overlooking the pool • 3 bedrooms that feature their own ensuite and private deck

Address:

Address:

‘Kurum’ Estate, Ewingsdale

Price:

Contact Agent

Open:

By Appointment

Enquiries:

Helen Huntly-Barratt 0412 332 232

6/231 Fowlers Lane, Bangalow

Price:

$1.55m – $1.7m

Open:

Friday, 6th November 2.00pm – 2.30pm Saturday, 7th November 11.00am – 11.30am

Enquiries:

Paul Prior 0418 324 297, Oliver Aldridge 0421 171 499

35 FLETCHER ST, BYRON BAY NSW 2481 PH: O2 6685 8466

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

SALES@BYRONBAYFN.COM WWW.BYRONBAYFN.COM.AU

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 27


Property

For North Coast news online visit

Brunswick Heads

N O I

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38 Yamble Drive, Ocean Shores

AUCTION – BIGGER THAN BEN-HUR The title says it all! This one is huge! 4 bedrooms downstairs with its own living area and slider to the back yard. Upstairs: huge open plan kitchen, living, dining, formalish media/ lounge and north facing balcony/verandah with views over the golf course, and master bedroom with ensuite. Located on 1037m2 block of land with a gentle northerly slope with views. Subdivision DA approved with plans for a three bedroom house. Owner has found a property south of Sydney and is highly motivated to sell.

5 Auction Inspect Contact

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1,037m2

Saturday 14 November, 11.30am on-site Saturday 11–11.30am Peter Browning 0411 801 795

ljhooker.com.au | 6685 0177 @ljhookerbrunswickheads

The Brunswick Bolthole

Large Industrial Block

Residential | Commercial | Rural | Finance

Old World Charm

2/3 Newberry Parade, Brunswick Heads 6 Grevillea Street, Byron Bay 17 Stuart Street, Mullumbimby $560,000 – $580,000 Land size 3110 sqm 1 1 1 2 2 21 4 1 1

Well we all want a blue chip investment in one of Australia’s most sought after seaside villages – Brunswick Heads! This neat sweet one bedroom apartment with a large separate lock up garage and fenced yard, is the ideal bolthole or hole in the wall, for you to secure yourself a position here in town at what will be the most affordable property in Brunswick Heads. Ideal to have as a holiday apartment or a quaint property to embrace the lifestyle on offer, location plus, quiet tranquil setting and only a minutes’ walk from the harbour and river, a short stroll on the river’s edge to unspoiled parks, beaches, boutique shops, exquisite flavours of the cafes/restaurants and The Hotel Brunswick. Come embrace, relax and buy yourself the bolthole. Call me now to secure your piece of paradise. Open: 10–10.30am Saturday Contact: Peter Browning 0411 801 795 LJ Hooker Brunswick Heads

28 The Byron Shire Echo mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ

Here is an opportunity for an exciting new Byron Bay venture and/or to continue the diverse range of existing tenancies in one lot. This rare large industrial block is in a prime location and has loads of potential. • Convenient location to the motorway and Byron CBD • High exposure along Ewingsdale Rd, main road into Byron Bay • 3110sqm industrial block with 1463sqm of buildings including a residential unit, 3 large sheds and plans for a warehouse • 21 car parking spaces Shop 1 - 326sqm: a large showroom, 2 offices (1 air-conditioned), lunchroom, bathroom and workshop Shop 2 - 502 sqm: 2 showrooms, 6 offices, lunchroom, workshop, storage, huge mezzanine, ducted air conditioning, an accessible toilet and 10kW solar power system. This shop includes 172sqm passageway for Shop 1, Shed 3 and a vacant lot to build a warehouse Shed 3 - 509sqm: large workshop, air-conditioned office, mezzanine, kitchenette and accessible toilet Caretakers Unit - 89sqm: 3 rooms, kitchen, living and bathroom Contact: Katrina Beohm 0467 001 122 Katrina Beohm Real Estate

Auction

At the prestige end of the “Golden Grid”, the northern end of Stuart Street is one of the most tightly held locations in Mullumbimby. Radiating old world charm and a stone’s throw from the river and parkland sits this gorgeous original Mullum home. Ensuring peace and privacy in the gentlest, quietest part of town, it’s ready to live in now... a bespoke renovation would take it to the next level.

Auction: Saturday 7 November 10.30am Open: Saturday 31 October 12.30pm–1.00pm Saturday 7 November 10.00am–10.30am Contact: Heidi Last 0416 072 868 Stuart Aitken 0419 242 432 McGrath Byron Bay 6639 1200

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


17 Philip Street, South Golden Beach

3

2

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39 Yamble Drive, Ocean Shores

5

WALK TO SOUTH GOLDEN BEACH

A LITTLE BIT COUNTRY MEETS THE COAST !

Tucked away in a private, peaceful nothrough street is this contemporary steel framed and Colourbond home. Unpack your bags and se le onto the sumptuous north facing deck which overlooks mature trees and the backyard and start enjoying the indoor-outdoor living In our subtropical climate.

Shhhhh, don’t tell anyone…. How do you feel about 13 acres of natural bush conservation area at the back of your property?

• Covered timber deck • 639 square metre block • Double carport and roller door storage This property will definitely appeal to the savvy investor, young families, professional couples or those seeking a weekend coastal escape.

This fabulous lifestyle property features: • Three bedrooms • Two bathrooms

View

• Office or Second Lounge area

Saturday 7 November 11.30am–12.00pm

• Air conditioning in living area

Auction Saturday 14th November 10.00am

• 3000 litre rain water tank

Agent

• 6.1kW solar system

Leah Ashenhurst 0408 871 400 Adrian Howe 0477 222 457

Walk the trails and feel like you are in a National Park somewhere way out on the Range? But… you are in Ocean Shores, close to the beach, Brunswick Heads and Byron Bay, OMG, tell me more. This home includes: • 2984 sqm • Five bedrooms • Study or Nursery • Three bathrooms • Dining room • Carport • 10KW Solar system

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• Tandem garage • 40 fruit trees The space on this property is incredible! With the potential to add a secondary dwelling (STCA) on this ¾ acre block plus you can be in Brunswick Heads in 5 minutes and Byron Bay in 25 minutes so do not delay in inspecting this home!

View

Saturday 7 November 12.30pm–1.00pm

Auction Saturday 21st November 10.00am Agent

Leah Ashenhurst 0408 871 400 Julie-Ann Manahan 0411 081 118

3 2 23 Sco s Wood Grove, Mullumbimby Creek

2

TRANQUILITY AND PRIVACY IN THE TREETOPS Imagine living on top of the tallest ridge in Mullumbimby Creek in an east facing home on over two acres with ocean views and only being six kilometers drive to Mullumbimby? This incredible property has: • 2.2 acres • 3 bedrooms • 2 bathrooms • Wrap around timber decks • Deck off master suite • Town water and rain water tank • Air-conditioning in Lounge and Master bedroom • Solar hot water + Solar panels • Gas cooking This home is unique with its privacy and views and position. Where else can you find seclusion but still only be ten minutes away from the eclectic town of Mullumbimby with great restaurants, cafes and everything else your heart desires? Call Leah today for your private inspection on 0408 871 400! View

Saturday 10.30am–11.00am 7th November

Auction

Wednesday 25th November, 5.30pm

Leah Ashenhurst 0408 871 400 leah.ashenhurst @oceanshores.rh.com.au

(02) 6680 5000 rh.com.au/oceanshores www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 29


Property

For North Coast news online visit

E ASY ST R E E T L I V I N G A PA R T M E N T S

Beautiful 25 acres in Possum Creek

Open for Inspection Belle Property • • • • • •

43 Pacific Pde, Lennox Head. Sat 9–9.30am 2/3 Pacific Vista Dr, Byron Bay. Sat 10–10.30am 6/6 Electra Cl, Byron Bay. Sat 11–11.30am 5 William Pl, Lennox Head. Sat 11.30am–12pm 18 Ibis Pl, Lennox Head. Sat 12–12.30pm 3A College St, Skennars Head. Sat 1–1.30pm

Byron & Beyond Real Estate

• 11 Tweed St, Brunswick Heads. Sat 10–10.30am • 8/3 Sallywattle Dr, Suffolk Park. Sat 12.30–1pm

Byron Bay First National Real Estate • 69 Lilli Pilli Dr, Byron Bay. Wed 12–12.30pm. Sat 11.30–12pm

• 12 Pine Ave, Mullumbimby. Wed 12–12.30pm. Sat • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

12–12.30pm 18 Rush Ct, Mullumbimby. Wed 12.30–1pm. Sat 12.30–1pm 620 Friday Hut Rd, Possum Creek. Thu 2–2.30pm. Sat 11–11.30am 6/231 Fowlers Ln, Bangalow. Fri 2–2.30pm. Sat 11–11.30am Lot 4, 28 Coolamon Scenic Dr, Mullumbimby. Fri 2–2.30pm. Sat 10.30–11am 6 Muskwood Pl, Bangalow. Sat 9–9.30am 37 Ruskin St, Byron Bay. Sat 9–9.30am 48 Myocum Ridge Rd, Myocum. Sat 9.30–10am 10 Cooper St, Byron Bay. Sat 10–10.30am 41 Massinger St, Byron Bay. Sat 10.30–11am 17 Booyun St, Brunswick Heads. Sat 11–11.30am 2/24 Mahogany Dr, Byron Bay. Sat 12–12.30pm 54 Duncan Rd, Numulgi. Sat 1–1.30pm 356 Ridgewood Rd, Rosebank. Sat 2–2.30pm 4/22 Mahogany Dr, Byron Bay. Sat 2–2.30pm

Byron Shire Real Estate • • • •

87 Prince St, Brunswick Heads. Sat 10–10.30am 62 Tweed St, Brunswick Heads. Sat 11–11.30am 10/20 Booyun St, Brunswick Heads. Sat 12–12.30pm 1 Tongarra Dr, Ocean Shores. Sat 1–1.30pm

Elders Brunswick Valley

• 22 Tweed St, Brunswick Heads. Thu 4–4.30pm. Sat 11–11.30am

• 32 Redgate Rd, South Golden Beach. Sat

Fiona Johnson @Realty

• 1a Train St, Mullumbimby. Sat 11.30am–12pm

Harcourts Northern Rivers

• 24 Ramses St, Wollongbar. Wed 12.30–1pm. Sat 12.30–1pm

• 33 Highfield Terrace, Cumbalum. Sat 11–11.30am • 1 Kulgun Ct, Ocean Shores. Sat 11–11.30am • 319 Hermans Ln, Pimlico. Sat 12–12.30pm

LJ Hooker Brunswick Heads

• 2/3 Newberry Pde, Brunswick Heads. Sat 10–10.30am

• 38 Yamble Dr, Ocean Shores. Sat 11–11.30am

McGrath Byron Bay

• 4/86–88 Bangalow Rd, Byron Bay. Thu 12.30–1pm. Sat 11.30am–12pm

• 152 Shara Boulevard, Ocean Shores. Sat 10–10.30am

• 37 Browning St, Byron Bay. Sat 11.30am–12pm • 22 Shelley Dr, Byron Bay. Sat 8.30–9am • 17 Stuart St, Mullumbimby. Sat 10–10.30am

Raine & Horne Ocean Shores/ Brunswick Heads • • • • • • • •

17 Philip St, South Golden Beach. Wed 3.30–4pm. Sat 11.30am–12pm 39 Yamble Dr, Ocean Shores. Wed 4.30–5pm. Sat 12.30–1pm 16/2 Rajah Rd, Ocean Shores. Thu 3–3.30pm. Sat 9.30–10am 8 Botanic Ct, Mullumbimby. Thu 5–5.30pm. Sat 11am–12pm Pinnacle Estate, Ramsay Cl, Goonellabah. Sat 9–10am 1 Hunter St, Burringbar. Sat 9.30–10am 23 Scotts Wood Grove, Mullumbimby Creek. Sat 10.30–11am 34 Reserve Creek Rd, Kielvale. Sat 11.30am–12pm

Real Estate of Distinction

• 1787 Kyogle Rd, Uki. Sat 2–2.30pm

New Listings Belle Property

• 2/3 Pacific Vista Dr, Byron Bay 30 The Byron Shire Echo mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ 10–10.30am

Byron Bay First National Real Estate

620 Friday Hut Road, Possum Creek Forthcoming Auction 3 2 3

• 20 Lovegroves Ln, Uralba • Taylors Ln, Ewingsdale • 620 Friday Hut Rd, Possum Creek

Elders Brunswick Valley

• 32 Redgate Rd, South Golden Beach • 3/7 Fingal St, Brunswick Heads

Fiona Johnson @Realty • 2/8 Wollongbar St, Byron Bay

Raine & Horne Ocean Shores/ Brunswick Heads

• 34 Reserve Creek Rd, Kielvale • 8 Botanic Ct, Mullumbimby • 23 Scotts Wood Grove, Mullumbimby Creek

Auction Belle Property

• 43 Pacific Pde, Lennox Head. On site 22 Nov, 10am • 6/6 Electra Cl, Byron Bay. On site 22 Nov, 11.30am • 3A College Ave, Skennars Head. On site 22 Nov 1.30pm

• 5 William Pl, Lennox Head. On site 22 Nov 3pm • 18 Ibis Pl, Lennox Head. On site 22 Nov 4.30pm

Byron Bay First National Real Estate

• 69 Lilli Pilli Dr, Byron Bay. Saturday 14 Nov, 1.30pm • 1247 Myocum Rd, Mullumbimby. Forthcoming Auction

• 17 Booyun St, Brunswick Heads. Saturday 21 Nov,

The location of Possum Creek is renowned for its beauty and prime location close to Bangalow and the beaches of Byron Bay, here you will find ‘Willowvale’. First time offered for sale in over 50 years, ‘Willow Vale’ is an original working farm set over 10.23 ha (approx. 25 acres) of beautiful, cleared and undulating pasture. There is a permanent creek supplying fresh water which is fed from springs. The RU2 zoning that this lot enjoys will allow for Dual Occupancy development (STCA). There is an alternate, elevated building site which is accessible from Gittoes Lane and this area of the farm looks north across the property and beyond to the picturesque rural surrounds. The rich potential of this holding is there for those who have the desire and vision to realise their dream rural lifestyle.

10am

• 620 Friday Hut Rd, Possum Creek. Forthcoming Auction

Byron Shire Real Estate

• 87 Prince St, Mullumbimby. Open Sat 10–10.30am. Sat 28 Nov, 11.30am on site

• 62 Tweed St, Brunswick Heads. Open Sat 11–11.30am. Saturday 28 Nov, 1pm on site

Elders Brunswick Valley

• 22 Tweed St, Brunswick Heads. Sat 11.30am

McGrath Byron Bay

• 22 Shelley Dr, Byron Bay. Saturday 7 Nov, 9am

Open:

Thursday 5 November 2.00pm – 2.30pm Saturday 7 November 11.00am – 11.30am Contact: Helen Huntly-Barratt, 0412 332 232 First National Byron Bay

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


Lifestyle or Investment - Your Choice 48 Wooli Street, Yamba Property Description: Lot 65 DP 751395 Land Size: 1,745 m2 Zoning: R3 Medium Density Residential Planning Report available on request

Options: Multiple dwelling housing, three lot subdivision, senior citizen housing or your lifestyle home on a large lot in a prime Yamba position.

To Be Auctioned On Site Saturday 21st November 12noon Open for Inspection Saturday 11am - 12noon Angus Suttor 0436 006 717 Ken Giese 0429 450 006 www.ljhooker.com.au/PNDF6G Open Saturday

4

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20 Jubilee Street Maclean No Neighbours, Private and Extra Income Investors will be lined up to view this home on the edge of Maclean. The property has the ability to produce two incomes with the main home and the attached granny Ђ ˔˧ʡ ʿˢ˖˔˧˘˗ ˢˡ ˧˛˘ ˘˗˚˘ ˢ˙ ˀ˔˖˟˘˔ˡ ˔ˡ˗ Townsend, the property has no neighbours ˔ˡ˗ ˜˦ ˩˘˥ˬ ˣ˥˜˩˔˧˘ʡ ʹˢ˥ ˔˟˟ Ё ˥˦˧ ˛ˢˠ˘ ˕˨ˬ˘˥˦ʟ ˕˘ ˦˨˥˘ ˬˢ˨ ˔˧˧˘ˡ˗ ˢˡ ˧˛˘ Ё ˥˦˧ ˢˣ˘ˡ ˛ˢˠ˘ this Saturday. Be quick. Auction On-Site Saturday 21st Nov 10.30am

N O I D CT L U O A S TO R O I R P

View Open Home Saturday 11.00am – 11.30am Agent Travis McConnell 0407 450 007 Web: www. ljhooker.com.au/PGAF6G LJ Hooker Maclean 6645 2222

Open Saturday

4

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32 Taloumbi Street Maclean Be the Lucky Winner on this Investment Multi Options Your lifestyle home on a great block or • 2 lot subdivision • Multi dwelling housing, meaning 3 or more • Dual occupancy attached or detached • Planning Report available on request

Auction On-Site Saturday 28th Nov 10.30am View Saturday 10.00am – 10.30am Agent Ken Giese 0429 450 006 Web: www. ljhooker.com.au/PGAF6G LJ Hooker Maclean 6645 2222

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

20 Ibis Close Woombah

4

Expansive Family Home with Fabulous Shedding on Easy Care 5,000 sqm

2

8

Auction On Site Saturday 28th November 11am

• Four living, relaxation or entertaining spaces • Well-appointed kitchen with new range and large pantry • Ducted air conditioning and insulated building • Extensive shedding 7x9m plus 6x12m plus 3m awning and RV port • 3 Phase power, town water and water tanks

View By Appointment Agent Ken Giese 0429 450 006

Web: www. ljhooker.com.au/PU5F6G LJ Hooker Maclean 6645 2222

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 31


Property Business Directory AGENTS

CONVEYANCING BUYING and SELLING REAL ESTATE

ONLY USE THE BEST TO SELL YOUR PROPERTY

You need an alternative legal specialist

NP CONVEYANCING We are here to help AND we’ll save you money

NPC TARA TORKKOLA

SALES MANAGER & SALES SPECIALIST

A FRESH APPROACH “Tara was a pleasure to work with. Her knowledge and assessment of the market is very apparent. She is tenacious, dedicated, astute and savvy and her negotiating skills are awesome.� Ewingsdale vendor

CALL REZ TODAY

0405 350 682 rez@byronproperty.com.au

Contact Tara to discuss your property or career at First National Byron M: 0423 519 698 E: TARA@BYRONBAYFN.COM

PHONE 6685 7436 FOR A QUOTE 2/75 Jonson Street Byron Bay 2481 Fax: (02) 6685 7221 Lic No 1041865

PROPERTY ADVICE ESTATE PLANNING WILLS

bvk

bvk.com.au Upstairs in the

Byron Arcade 13 Lawson St Byron Bay

SOLICITORS ATTORNEYS

QUALITY LEGAL ADVICE

BYRONBAYFN.COM.AU

FINANCE

PAUL PRIOR Professional and results-driven with extensive marketing knowledge. Servicing the Byron Shire and beyond. Call Paul for an appointment today.

0418 324 297 paulprior@byronbayfn.com

02 6680 8522

*DU\ %UD]HQRU 1HJRWLDWLQJ VWURQJ UHVXOWV IRU P\ VHOOHUV IRU RYHU \HDUV

JDU\#E\URQVKLUHUHDOHVWDWH FRP DX

6685 8466 | byronbayfn.com.au

VICKI COOPER 0411 757 425 tim@millerrealestate.com.au millerrealestate.com.au @timmiller_realestate

Buying, Selling, Renting? All our properties can be viewed online at

www.harcourtsnr.com.au Byron - Ballina - Lismore and everywhere in between! (02) 6686 1100

(02) 6685 6552

SELL YOUR PROPERTY MORE PROFITABLY

Experience award winning service and results WITHOUT paying high commission fees VICKI COOPER 0418 231 955 vickicooper@atrealty.com.au www.atrealty.com.au

PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

Property Management Melissa Phillips 02 6685 0177 rentals@ljhbrunswickheads.com Save yourself thousands, call the expert property management team.

Investment Management Team LJ Hooker Brunswick HeadsÂŞ

ljhooker.com.au

PROPERTY STYLING

!

Enchanting Broken Head IG–@tamsin.smyth

32 The Byron Shire Echo mĹ&#x;ưĕŔćĕſ ÇŤÇ˝ NJǧNJǧ

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


Service Directory SERVICE DIRECTORY RATES, PAYMENT & DEADLINE

ACCOUNTANTS & BOOKKEEPERS

DEADLINE: For additions and changes to the Service Directory is 12pm Friday. LINE ADS: $99 for 3 months or $340 for 1 year prepaid. For line Service Directory ads email classifieds@echo.net.au. DISPLAY ADS: $68 per week for colour display ad. Minimum 8 week booking 4 weeks prepaid. Please supply display ads 85mm wide, 28mm high. New display ads will be placed at end of section. For display Service Directory ads email adcopy@echo.net.au. The Echo Service Directory is online in Echonetdaily – www.echo.net.au/service-directory

ACCOUNTANT Paul Mayberry..............................................................................................66847415

INDEX

TAX AGENT Graeme Toohill graeme@saltwateraccountancy.com.au .................................66874746 BECK THE BOOKKEEPER All platforms, BAS & Payroll. beckthebookkeeper.com.au ....02 66084372

ACUPUNCTURE

UNWANTED CARS

6684 5296 BAYSIDE RADIATORS Windscreens & air-con. Billinudgel. AU29498 .................................66802444

BLINDS, AWNINGS, CURTAINS, SHUTTERS

ACUPUNCTURE CHINESE HERBAL MEDICINE M Collis..................................................66842559 MARLENE FARRY Acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine marlenefarry.com ..............66842400

LOCAL

SHOWCASE DEALER SHOWROOM

SUNSCREENS

ACUPUNCTURE & acupressure massage. Ph Dr. Derek Doran .......................................0414 478787

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

AIR CONDITIONING & REFRIGERATION 1/84 Centennial Circuit Byron Bay

66 680 0 8862

FREE E MEASURE E QUOTE E

CURTAINS

PLANTATION SHUTTERS

˘˗ ˘˞˛ ˌ˘˖˙˕ˎ˝ˎ ˛ˊ˗ːˎ ˘ˏ ˒˗˝ˎ˛˒˘˛ ϻ ˎˡ˝ˎ˛˒˘˛ ˠ˒˗ˍ˘ˠ ˝˛ˎˊ˝˖ˎ˗˝˜

AIR CONDITIONING & REFRIGERATION

PLEASE CALL 6680 9394 artisanair.com.au AU 37088

Lic 246545C

AWNINGS

SPECIALISTS IN HOM E AUTOM ATION

ZZZ EOLQGGHVLJQE\URQED\ FRP DX

COMPASS CURTAINS

ROLL BLINDS

23 years and going strong! Custom made curtains, blinds and decor items We come to you, wherever you are: Byron, Lismore, The Clarence and beyond…

Barbara Wilson Mullumbimby Refrigeration & Airconditioning Services

– Sales – Installation – Repairs – All Commercial Refrigeration – Residential & Commercial Airconditioning – Coolroom Design & Construction – Freezer Rooms

0435 954 212

Lic: 299433C ARC: AU40492

BRICKLAYING Highly skilled experts in high end residential and commercial brick and block laying.

COOLMAN AIR CONDITIONING 23 years experience. Lic 178464C AU30147 ..............0412 641753 RAINBOW REGION AIR CONDITIONING ARC AU36141. Lic No. 264313C.....................0487 264137

ANTENNAS & INSTALLATION

compassinteriors@optusnet.com.au

YOUR LOCAL BLIND MAN at North Byron Blinds .................................................. Amos 0404 421518

6684 2783

45 Manns Road, Mullumbimby

Pty Ltd Lc no: 308231C

Contact Blake on 0412 785 055 E: blhbricklaying@gmail.com

BRICK/BLOCK LAYING Contractors. Lic 291958C. Phone Mark ........................................0409 444268

0439 624 945

AH

BUILDING TRADES

02 66 804 173 Friendly Reliable Prompt Local

Digital TV ALL Antenna Installations & Repairs ALL Electrical Work

• DEPT OF FAIR TRADING: A licence is required for all residential building work where the reasonable market cost of the work to be done (labour and materials) exceeds $5000 (including GST).

• RELIABLE TRADESMAN • DECKS & PERGOLAS • TIMBER SCREENS & DOORS • GARAGE CONVERSIONS

IWIRE

ANTENNAS

• New digital antennas * • Reception NO FIX NO CHARGE problems For fast service call • Extra TV outlets

0402 022 111

David Levine iwireantennas.com.au

*conditions apply

JP DIGITAL ANTENNAS Reception problems, new antennas, extra TV points, all areas .....0432 289705

LICENCE NUMBER 344531C

SERVICING THE BYRON SHIRE

CALL BRETT 0414 542 019

ALL CARPENTRY WORK FULLY INSURED

ANTENNAS PLUS. TV, WiFi, Electrical. Reliable. Call Norm ............................................0422 668582

ANTIQUES/RESTORATION FURNITURE RESTORATION Old/antique. 40+ yrs exp. erwinfurniturerestoration.com 0412 528454

NSW Lic. 83568c Qld BSA 1238105

• Floor installations • Door & Window installations • Decks & Pergolas 0488 950 638 matt.rowan.wardle@gmail.com • Alterations

APPLIANCE REPAIR COFFEE MACHINE SERVICE & REPAIR coffeetechbyron.com.au Phone Stuart ............0407 395263

ARCHITECTS OCEANARC ARCHITECTS Reg. 6042 www.oceanarc.com.au ..............................................66855001

AUTOMOTIVE

Lic: 317362C

Licensed builder, specialising in Bathroom renovations.

0417 654 888 • Tyres • Batteries • Wheel Alignments MULLUMBIMBY TYRE SERVICE Dalley Street, Mullumbimby 6684 2016

LEGENDARY OFFROAD TYRES

Mobile Panel, Paint & Bumper Repairs FREE QUOTES Lic No: MVTC157416

Accountants & Bookkeepers.............................. 33 Acupuncture ....................................................... 33 Air Conditioning & Refrigeration ...................... 33 Antennas & Installation ..................................... 33 Antiques/Restoration ......................................... 33 Appliance Repair ................................................ 33 Architects ............................................................ 33 Automotive ......................................................... 33 Blinds, Awnings, Curtains, Shutters .................. 33 Bricklaying .......................................................... 33 Building Trades ................................................... 33 Bush Regen & Weed Control .............................. 34 Carpet Cleaning .................................................. 34 Chimney Sweeps................................................. 34 Chiropractic......................................................... 34 Cleaning .............................................................. 34 Computer Services ............................................. 34 Concreting & Paving ........................................... 34 Counselling ......................................................... 34 Decks, Patios & Extensions ................................ 34 Dentists ............................................................... 34 Design & Drafting ............................................... 34 Driveway Maintenance ...................................... 34 Earthmoving & Excavation ................................ 34 Electricians .......................................................... 34 Fencing ................................................................ 34 Floor Sanding & Polishing ................................. 34 Flooring ............................................................... 34 Funeral Services.................................................. 34 Garden & Property Maintenance ...................... 34 Garden Design .................................................... 34 Gas Suppliers ...................................................... 34 Graphic Design ................................................... 35 Guttering ............................................................. 35 Handypersons ..................................................... 35 Health .................................................................. 35 Hire ...................................................................... 35 Kitchens ............................................................... 35 Landscape Design .............................................. 35 Landscape Supplies............................................ 35 Landscaping ....................................................... 35 Locksmith ............................................................ 35 Osteopathy.......................................................... 35 Painting ............................................................... 35 Pest Control ......................................................... 35 Photography ....................................................... 35 Physiotherapy ..................................................... 35 Picture Framing .................................................. 35 Picture Hanging .................................................. 35 Plastering ............................................................ 35 Plumbers ............................................................. 35 Pools .................................................................... 35 Removalists ......................................................... 35 Roofing ................................................................ 36 Rubbish Removal ................................................ 36 Self Storage ......................................................... 36 Septic Systems .................................................... 36 Solar Installation ................................................ 36 Television Services ............................................. 36 Tiling .................................................................... 36 Tree Services ....................................................... 36 Tuition ................................................................. 36 Upholstery .......................................................... 36 Valuers ................................................................. 36 Veterinary Surgeons .......................................... 36 Water Filters ........................................................ 36 Water Supplies .................................................... 36 Wedding Services ............................................... 36 Welding ............................................................... 36 Window Cleaning ............................................... 36 Window Tinting................................................... 36

• Scratch & Dent Repairs • Rust Repairs • Pre Sales Tidy Ups • Car Park Dents • Accident Damage

We come to you. Fully qualified, fully insured and all work is guaranteed.

Bumper to Bumper Repairs | Cory 0403 918 831

Quality workmanship, and reliable and personalised service.

www.stoneysbuildingcreations.com

Complete Home Maintenance Solutions Bathroom and Kitchen Renovations • General Carpentry • Timber Decks • Home Maintenance RAY GOUGH 0477 005 144 completehome_1@bigpond.com

Lic. 266174C

ACCOUNTS & BOOKINGS: 6684 1777

BOOKKEEPER Local and reliable .................................. barbarasbookkeeping.com.au 0402 118649

CASH PAID FOR

Building Trades continued on next page mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫ, ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 33


Service Directory

For North Coast news online visit

BUILDING TRADES (continued)

RONNIE SPINKS Everything electrical. Lic 27673 .........................................................0429 802355 THE DECK DOCTOR Sanding & refinishing, cable balustrading. Free quotes. Richard ...0407 821690 JP ELECTRICAL All electrical. Level 2 ASP. Solar, data + TV. Lic 133082C .......................0432 289705 SPECIALIST DECK SANDER (raised nail heads no prob), deck oiling, etc by FCR ..........0419 789600 JIM LABELLE ELECTRICAL O.Shores, Mullum, Byron, Brunswick. Lic 176417C..............0415 126028

CLARKE CONSTRUCTIONS New builds, renovations & extensions, decks & pergolas, door & window installs. Bathrooms, concreting, fences & gates, weather damaged repairs.

deanmclarke069@gmail.com | 0415 152 487

Lc no: 1075512

ABN: 67443309529

PROJECTS LARGE & SMALL

QUALITY BUILDING & CARPENTRY SERVICES

COUGHRAN ELECTRICAL 24 hour service, Lic 154293C .......................... 0439 624945 or 66804173

DECKS, PATIOS & EXTENSIONS

BUILDER – JOHN McGAURAN Personalised Service. 20 yrs exp. Lic 170208C .............0415 793242

BLUE BEE ELECTRICAL 25 years experience. Lic 189508C. Call Dave ............................0429 033801

LITTLE LANE DENTAL, MULLUMBIMBY ...........................................................................66842816 BEN FORSYTH, Electrician. Lic:240691C. Ocean Shores & surrounds. No job too small ...0422 136408 BRUNSWICK HOLISTIC DENTAL CENTRE .......................................................................66851264 CIRCUITS PLUS. For everything electrical in Byron Shire. Lic 201844c ..........................0422 668582 E4 ELECTRICAL SERVICES Lic 116621c. Solutions made E4 EASY! Phone Jamie ..........0410 502060

DESIGN & DRAFTING

DINGO DEMOLITIONS & ASBESTOS REMOVAL ................................. 66834008 or 0407 728998 BUILDER Renovations, maintenance, 30yrs exp. mchughdesign.com.au Lic 29792C....0408 663420

SPINKS ELECTRICAL Lic 284939C..................................................................Call Mitch 0421 843477

DENTISTS

FENCING

BAREFOOT BUILDING DESIGN www.barefootbuildingdesign.com..........Bob Acton 0407 787993

DAVID ROBINSON DESIGN DRAFTING All Council & construction requirements ......0419 880048 BYRON & BEYOND FENCING Any fence, any time, prompt quotes....... 66804766 or 0422 207299 FABRICA JOINERY Quality kitchens/timber doors/windows. Lic 244652C .........................66808162 BYRON ENERGY EFFICIENT DESIGN & DRAFTING www.beedad.com.au ...............0423 531448 EDL FENCING Installations & repairs. Prompt service. ..................................................0432 107262 CARPENTER HANDYMAN FB Greg’s Handyman Services Byron Bay Lic No 1039897....0414 109595 FENG SHUI DESIGN CONSULTANT Lizzie Bodenham livingbalancedesigns.com.au Ph .0431 678608 FLOW FENCING Pool fencing, timber/colourbond, local, professional and reliable.......0416 424256 HAVEN BUILDING All aspects of building. Lic 326616C ...............................................0432 565060

LELAND CARPENTRY All carpentry – small renovation specialist (under $5K) Jesse ...0458 968290 BORRELL DESIGN Drafting & design. Commercial, retail, residential, shop fit-outs .....0412 043463 SASH WINDOW REPAIRS Sash cords & balances, jammed sashes etc Ph John ............0498 340879

BUSH REGENERATION & WEED CONTROL WEED CONTROL SPECIALIST Lawns – bindii weeds – Army worms – grass grubs .....0418 110714 EAST COAST BUSH REGENERATION Tree planting, weed control. Call Rossco Faithfull.0409 157695

CARPET CLEANING FRANCHISE OF THE YEAR!

Green & Clean

0408 232 066

FLOORING

0467 482 948

oast Asph alt st C Ea

ALL ASPECTS OF ASPHALT & BITUMEN SERVICES

THE TIMBER FLOORING SPECIALISTS NEW DISPLAY 10 Dudgeons lane, Bangalow T 6687 2483 | M 0410 406 334

FUNERAL SERVICES

6677 1859

Commercial / Domestic / Insurance &

CHIMNEY SWEEPING BLACKS CHIMNEY SWEEPING & REPAIRS AHHA member, insured. 3rd generation .....66771905

CHIROPRACTIC BAY FAMILY CHIROPRACTIC Peter Wuehr 17 Bangalow Rd Byron Bay ..............................66855282 WAVE OF LIFE NETWORK CHIRO (lowforce) 8/9 Fletcher St, Byron Bay. Andrew Badman...66858553

CON

C RET E ED G

SERVICING THE EAST COAST OF THE NSW NORTHERN RIVERS

ING

NORTHERN RIVERS DIRECT CREMATIONS Personal service, female-led exceptional care 24 hours. All-inclusive and local. $2100 .........................................................................1300 585778

Burringbar

GARDEN & PROPERTY MAINTENANCE

EARTHMOVING & EXCAVATION

Acreage & Residential Mowing | Gardening Fire Hazard Reduction | Landscaping | Turfing Brush Cutting | Tip Runs | Fully Insured

TINY EARTHWOR

0430 297 101 / 6684 5437

Philip Toovey

CLEANING

livingearthgardens.com.au

0409 799 909

ACTION WINDOW & PRESSURE CLEANING

various implements available for limited access projects

actionjoewindow@gmail.com

• House washing • High pressure or soft wash • Window cleaning • Driveways, paths & roofs • Gutters & flyscreens • Water efficient • Free quotes Phone Joe or Helen 0409 207 646 or 0412 495750

Byron Bay

Coast to Country Asphalt Specialising in For a Free Quote Call Now

Cleans deeply, dries in 1-2 hours

FLOOR SANDING & POLISHING THE FLOOR SANDER New & old floors, decks, non-toxic finishes, special effects, free quotes..0407 821690

• Asphalt Driveways • Sub-divisions • Earthworks • Carparks • and all Maintenance!

Carpet and upholstery cleaning, urine extraction, rust removal, heavy traffic areas, deodorising and sanitation. Far North Coast NSW John & Teresa

DRIVEWAY MAINTENANCE

WILSONS

Excavation & Plant Hire

Specialising in Driveway Construction & Maintenance

• Tip Trucks 3 to 12 Tonne • Excavators 5 & 21 Tonne • Posi Track Loader • Driveways • Roads • Cleaning • Civil Works • House Pads • Drainage • Carparks • Bush Rocks • Rock Walls • Water Truck

Training & Assessment: Earthmoving Plant & Forklift Nationally Recognised Qualifications

5 Stars

admin@wilsonexcavationsandtruckhire.com.au Byron Bay 0427 663 678 or 0452 400 565

CLEANING SERVICE

THE BYRON BAY GARDEN & LANDSCAPING COMPANY Structural Landscaping

5.5 TONNE EXCAVATOR, POSITRACK & TIPPER HIRE

CLEANS: Holiday, Residential, Bond, Commercial, Spring

Phone Mick 0409 009 024

DETAILED CLEANER/GUEST HOUSE MANAGER All natural products 4.8 Stayz rated ..0410 723601

Specialising in road works, land clearing, retaining walls and general earthworks. Augers and rock grab available.

BEYOND CLEANING GROUP Quality focused. Brunswick to Ballina from $39.60ph .....0451 102239

EXPERIENCED OPERATORS | FREE QUOTES 0432 299 283

Email: mickbhl@gmail.com

• Paving • Stonework • Timber work • Retaining wall • Garden maintenance • Planting • Turfing • Mulching • Hedging • Lawns

0434 329 111

MULLUM.MOWING@gmail.com. Ride-on, large lawns & acreage. Ph Peter................0423 756394 NORTHERN RIVERS TRENCHING 65hp chain trencher, mini excavator, cable locating.0402 716857 GUTTERS CLEANED Solar panel cleaning, all areas, free quotes, fully insured ... 66841778 or 0405 922839 ALWAYS AVAILABLE ALL AREAS ALOHA! 5A rated window cleaner! Ph John.............0411 842117 EXCAVATOR & TIPPER HIRE 300mm, 450mm augers & concreting Lic#143161C. Steve . 0431 678130 A-Z Lawns & acreage, trees & hedges, clean ups & tip runs, all gutters ..........................0405 625697 PROFESSIONAL LOCAL CLEANER excellent references, good rates. Shire wide. Ph Krissy ..0410 860330

COMPUTER SERVICES

GRADER HIRE Driveways, horse arenas, house pads. Adrian.........................................0428 845091 A.C.E. LAWNMOWING & GARDENING Best rates, reliable, guaranteed. Ph Sam.......0438 655763

CONCRETING & PAVING

SALISBURY

DARYL 0418 234 302

Over 25 yrs local experience. All forms of concreting. Residential • Civil • Industrial

Lic.136717c

0439 624 945

CONCRETING

Lic No. 337066C

ALL AROUND

CONCRETING

Free Quotes

Call Daniel

0424 876 155

PLATINUM CRETE CONCRETING Lic 225874C. 20 years exp. Free quotes. Justin .........0458 773788 FLANAGAN CONCRETING & EXCAVATIONS. Lic 155456C. Ph Andrew.........................0401 968173

COUNSELLING COUNSELLING & LIFE COACHING Get unstuck & reclaim life purpose. TracieAnne.com .. 0437 174804

34 The Byron Shire Echo mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ

LEAF IT TO US Specialists in acreage mowing, garden, tree maintenance .....................0402 487213

ELECTRICIANS

AH

PAUL’S MOWING Local & reliable. Mullum, Bruns, O. Shores, Byron & Bangalow.........0422 958791 A GREEN EARTH Garden restoration, maintenance, tree & rubbish removal ................0405 716552

24 HOUR SERVICE

TIP RUNS & RUBBISH REMOVALS 4m3 trailer..............................................................0408 210772

02 66 804 173

BRUSHCUTTING Rubbish, Property Maintenance, Lawns.............................................0412 469109

Lic: 154293c

BETTER CALL SAUL The Mac Doctor. Repairs. Upgrades. Used Macs.............................0411 562111

All Jobs Small or Large

Domestic Commercial

RICK’S PROPERTY MAINTENANCE Mowing, brushcutting, gardening, pool service ...0424 805660 GREEN DINGO for all your mowing and gardening needs. Ph Michael .........................0497 842442 GW GARDEN MAINTENANCE Mowing, brushcutting, trees & hedges, trailer ..............0408 244820 A1 RUBBISH REMOVAL AND TIP RUNS. 9m3 trailer. Same day service. Best rates .....0413 289443

ELECTRICAL Steve Nicholls ph: 0455 445 343 lic: EC28753

SECURITY, DATA, TV Tim Nicholls ph: 0468 384 203 lic: 000102498

LAWN MOWING rubbish removal, hedge trimming. Mullum, Bruns, Ocean Shores. Mark ..0437 343348

GARDEN DESIGN www.simplybeautifulspaces.com.au FENG SHUI / GARDEN DESIGN .........................Lyn 0428 884329

GAS SUPPLIERS

nichollselectrical@outlook.com

Electrical Contractor ŽŵŵĞƌĐŝĂů Θ ZĞƐŝĚĞŶƟ Ăů

LIC#222635C

RENT-A-GEEK Mobile PC Repair (Byron Shire) ....................................................................66844335

Power – Phone – Data DK ͗ Ϭϰϭϯ ϱϰϭ Ϯϭϰ ͗ ďŝůůĞŶŐůĞĮ ĞůĚΛŐŵĂŝů͘ĐŽŵ

Free Delivery No Rental Reliable

Locally Owned Est 18 years

www.brunswickvalleygas.com

6680 1575 or 0408 760 609 North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


Service Directory GRAPHIC DESIGN

PAINTING

PICTURE HANGING

• DEPARTMENT OF FAIR TRADING INFO: When dealing with home owners, painters are required PROFESSIONAL PICTURE HANGING, also display of art and objects. Phone Lenny ....0407 031294

PLASTERING

to quote a licence number only for external work valued over $5000.

ALL-WAYS PAINTING Print | Branding | Social Media | Websites | Graphic Design

GUTTERING

BYRON BAY

• Domestic & Commercial • Servicing all areas • Workmanship guaranteed • Attention to detail

0438 784 226 • 6685 4154

PLASTERING CONTRACTOR DOMESTIC & COMMERCIAL

Lic No 189144C

DESIGN

C. A. Warwick Lic. No. 114578C ‡ )UHH TXRWHV ‡ *\SURFN À [LQJ VHWWLQJ

&UDLJ 0413

SPOTLESS GUTTERS. Gutter Guard Specialists. Ph........................................................0405 922839

SUNRISE PLASTERING. No job too small. Renovations + patchworks. Gtd sat. Free quote ....0418 992001 J. RAY PLASTERING 30 years experience. Quality workmanship. Ph John ....................0467 598038

HANDYPERSONS

PLUMBERS

A.S.A.P. All renos, carpentry, plastering, painting, studios & bathrooms .......................0405 625697 HANDY ANDY Carpentry, plastering, welding ......................................... 66884324 or 0476 600956

NEED A PLUMBER? DRAINER? GASFITTER?

AWESOME REPAIRS Professional, commercial & domestic. Wayne...............................0423 218417 THE HANDYMAN CAN All home maintenance, repairs, painting, odd jobs etc .............0427 110953 GOOD NEWS HANDYMAN Carpentry, home renovations/repairs etc. Jesse..................0458 968290

YVES DE WILDE

QUALITY PAINTING SERVICES

X FINALIST OF THE MASTER PAINTERS OF AUSTRALIA AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE X ENVIRO FRIENDLY PAINTING

ABSOLUTE HANDYMAN. Repairs, renovation, maintenance, painting. Call Mark ........0402 281638 HIGHPOINT Repairs & handyman services. Painting, plastering & tiling. Michael ........0421 896796

HEALTH

451 186

DQQH P ZDUZLFN#JPDLO FRP

www.duluxaccredited.com.au

Licence No. 207479C

www.thinkblinkdesign.com

Chay 0429 805 081 20 YEARS LOCAL SERVICE

X 6680 7573 0415 952 494 X www.yvesdewilde.com.au LIC 114372C

• OTHER HEALTH RELATED SECTIONS IN THIS SERVICE DIRECTORY: Acupuncture,

EAST COAST PILATES STUDIO Brunswick Heads Ph Judy .............................................0408 110006 REMEDIAL MASSAGE: Deep tissue, sports, relaxation. HICAPS avail. Aaron Ovens ......0408 707304

REIKI HEALING: Usui Master Teacher and Practitioner, 34 years exp. Paul Daniel.........0402 302897

HIRE MULLUM HIRE Builders, party and much more ........................www.mullumhire.com.au 66843003

KITCHENS D HINGED Kitchens & Joinery. Lic 283553C. www.hinged.com.au .......................Dave 0409 843689

LANDSCAPE DESIGN

PAINTER NEIL A McINTOSH

INTERIOR/EXTERIOR • PLASTER REPAIRS • WALLPAPERING CLEAN & TIDY • ALWAYS ON TIME • ALL AREAS Mobile: 0421 938 104 – 465 Uralba Road, Uralba

30 years experience ABN 48867459605 Lic 33995C

CRANIOSACRAL BALANCING to relax and energise. Byron Bay Ph...............................0499 235755

ZZZ JMJSDLQWLQJ FRP DX JDU\#JMJSDLQWLQJ FRP DX

4XDOL¿ HG ¹ ,QVXUHG ¹ /RFDO 4XDOLILHG ¹ ,QVXUHG /RFDO Free Quotes – 33 years \HDUV ([SHULHQFH experience )UHH 4XRWHV

PEST CONTROL

LANDSCAPING

ADM PLUMBING SERVICES‌ (NO JOB TOO SMALL)‌ Lic 234528C. ....... Call Adam 0466 992483

www.sanctuarypest.com.au

02 6681 6555 YOUR PEST & TERMITE SPECIALISTS www.allpestsolutions.com.au

PHOTOGRAPHY

Tree Faerie Fotos Professional • Commercial • Personal

Established 2008 ~ Lic No: 247282c

30+ years experience in commercial photography and photojournalism

Specialising in: • Retaining Walls • Pool Surrounds • Block Work • Paving • TurďŹ ng • Stonework

www.treefaeriefotos.com • 0417 427 518

0405 594 288

LEMONTREELANDSCAPES.COM.AU Liam. Lic No 277154C .........................................0423 700853 ALL ASPECTS landscaping, green waste & tree removal. Lic #143161C. Ph Phil ...........0499 359702

LOCKSMITH

PHYSIOTHERAPY NICK EDMOND Physiotherapy & Acupuncture. Open Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday 466 Main Arm Road, Mullumbimby.....................................................................................66845288 ANTHONY D’ORSOGNA Physiotherapy, acupuncture, hydrotherapy Suffolk Park 1 Bryce St ... 66853511 OCEAN SHORES PHYSIOTHERAPY Manual therapies, dry needling, custom orthotics,

shock wave therapy, real time ultrasound. Nigel Pitman, Ilse V Oostenbrugge....................66803499 Brendan Duggan Locksmith. Automotive car keys and lock installation/repair .......0412 764148 PETRA KARNI PHYSIOTHERAPY & Craniosacral, Manual Therapy, TMJ. Suffolk Park. Ph...0403 226858

OSTEOPATHY

PICTURE FRAMING

NORTH COAST OSTEOPATHY Jodie Jacobs. Mon/Tues/Thurs/Fri.....................................66857517 MULLUM PICTURE FRAMERS Stuart St rear lane behind Mitre 10 ............................0403 734791

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

POOLS

ATTENTION POOL OWNERS • All pool requirements • Professional advice • Water testing • Friendly service • Pool servicing

73 Station St, Mullumbimby (opp. Council chambers)

6684 3003

Free quotes on active termites Environmentally safe

BRUNSWICK BYRON PEST CONTROL................................................................................66842018

20 Years Experience

JARRAH DAVIDSON Plumbing, draining, gas fitting & roofing. Lic 187712C................0438 668025

Professional Property Protection you can Trust

THE PEST MAN EXTRAORDINAIRE Second opinion / alternative views. 50 yrs exp .....0418 110714

Shaun Savage Landscapes

PLUMBERS • DRAINERS • GASFITTERS

MARK STRATTON All plumbing & emergency. Sewer drain camera/locator. Lic 57803C ....0419 019035

6685 4490 or AH on 0414 769 018

6684 2323 / 0418 663 983

New Builds Hot Water Renovations Maintenance

BILL CONNORS All plumbing/draining. Lic #1051 .................................. 66801403 or 0414 801403

• Targeted treatments for all pests with “no sprayâ€? cockroach treatments • If you have found live termites, do not disturb them and call us for advice! No cost for quoting on active termites Relax, when safety, reputation and experience matters, we are the experts

1176 Myocum Rd, Mullumbimby (just past golf course)

0400 852 141

energyplumbing@gmail.com WWW.ENERGYJETTING.COM.AU WWW.ENERGYPLUMBING.COM.AU

ALL WAYS PAINTING NORTHERN RIVERS. Qualified, insured, clean. 0413 401907 or 66805015

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT Garden Design & Property Planning. Andrew Pawsey ..........0478 519804

• Sand • Soils • Gravels • Pots & statues • Lots, lots more

SHANE

AD PAINTING by John Hand. Lic 13246C ................................................ 0413 185399 or 66841249 BYRONBAYPAINTINGSERVICES.COM.AU – Reliable. Quality work. Ph .....................1300 255 724

BEAU JARDIN Landscape plans & horticultural consultations. beaujardin.com.au .................0417 054443

LANDSCAPE SUPPLIES

Blocked drain specialists Everything plumbing, drainage & gasďŹ tting

license no 322340C

ACUPUNCTURE & COSMETIC MEDICINE Dr Adam Osborne ...........................................66857366 MULLUMBIMBY HERBALS Naturopathy, Ayurveda, Massage, Herbs. .............................66843002

Lic 167371C

Chiropractic, Counselling, Dentists, Osteopathy, Physiotherapy

REMOVALISTS

Andy’s Move & More

Small & Medium Moves, Pianos, Artworks, Tip Runs, 1 or 2 Men at Low Prices to Most Areas Based from Byron Bay & Mullumbimby Calls always returned

0429149 533 Est 2006

SHIRE REMOVALS & FREIGHT CO

From Middle Pocket to Middle Earth – just give us a ring

• Freight services to Brisbane weekly • Carriers of ďŹ ne art • Furniture removal • E-bay pick up & delivery

0409 917646

LEAPFROG REMOVALS BYRON BAY’S LOCAL REMOVALIST MOVING THE SHIRE FOR OVER 10 YEARS

0432 334 200 02 6680 8170 leapfrogremovals@yahoo.com.au

Removalists continued on next page mĹ&#x;ưĕŔćĕſ ÇŤ, NJǧNJǧ The Byron Shire Echo 35


Service Directory

For North Coast news online visit

REMOVALISTS (continued)

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‡ /RFDO ‡ &RXQWU\ ‡ ,QWHUVWDWH

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WĹš ĎŹĎŽ ϲϲϴϴ Ď°Ď°Ď´ĎŹ

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Ç Ç Ç Í˜Ď´Ď´Ď´Ć?ŽůÄ‚ĆŒĆšÄžĹŹÍ˜Ä?ŽžÍ˜Ä‚Ćľ

02 6684 2198

SUMMERLAND TREE SERVICES ............................................. Call Tim 66813140 or 0417 698227

TXHULHV#PXOOXPELPE\UHPRYDOV FRP DX

Byron Coast Removals

Patrick - 0425 256 802

SERVICING THE NORTHERN RIVERS AND BEYOND.

Life’s Good with Solar

PETER GRAY Grad. Cert. Arb. AQF8. Consulting arborist................................................0414 186161

Juno Energy is your local authorised LG energy specialist offering solar and battery solutions for your business & home

BYRON TREE SERVICES Qualified, insured. Call Alex ....................................................0402 364852

www.junoenergy.com.au licence number: 255292C

Competitive rates and packing supplies available. 0432 552 067 | 6684 5481 | byroncoastremovals@gmail.com

BENNY CAN MOVE IT! .................................................................................................0402 199999

SunGrow inverter, 18x 370W SunTech (black) panels – $3699 installed

MAN WITH A TALL VAN Furniture removal services. $60 an hour. Call Evan .................0410 120777

S HOP LOCAL

LOCAL BUDGET MOVES Byron Shire and beyond. 7 days..............................................0413 289443

ROOFING DOMESTIC • INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL

MONTYS METAL

ROOFING

Metal RooďŹ ng Installations • Guttering Downpipes • Fascia • Skylights • Whirlybird Patios • Repairs • Leaf Guard

Craig Montgomery – 0418 870 362 Email: montysmetalrooďŹ ng@gmail.com www.montysmetalrooďŹ ng.com.au

Licence NSW: 30715C Licence QLD: 1227049

RESIDENTIAL / COMMERCIAL NEW ROOFS / RE-ROOFS INSULATED ROOF PANELS FASCIA & GUTTERS REPAIRS & MAINTENANCE 0 4 1 1 6 8 3 0 0 3 | Z A C . M A C TA G G A R T @ G M A I L . C O M | L I C 2 2 3 4 8 9 C

I30PAINT ROOFS years experience | Semi-retired Phone Paul: 0499 373 117

At budget prices.

1800 88 68 77

Hundreds of happy customers in the Northern Rivers.

MOWAT TREES – Local Arborist – Call Brad ..................................................................0482 613537

UPHOLSTERY BANGALOW UPHOLSTERY Now at Billinudgel. Re-covering specialists.............................66805255

ďŹ rstsunsolar.com.au

VALUERS BYRON BAY VALUERS NSW & QLD reg’d. Chartered Valuers ................... 0431 245460 or 66857010

No Money Down Finance Options. 10 Year Workmanship Guarantee

SIMPSON PROPERTY GROUP - Valuation, Advisory & Asset M/ment. Specialists in: Residential, Rural, Commercial & Industrial. www.simsonproperty.com.au..........0400 134562 or 0427 220976

Mullumbimby & The Northern Rivers 0424 652208 | dean@sunconnectsolar.com.au

Visit www.sunconnectsolar.com.au to get a free energy assessment

VETERINARY SURGEONS MULLUM VET CLINIC: Richard Gregory, Bec Willis, Mark Sebastian – After hours avail ...66843818

TELEVISION SERVICES

NORTH COAST VETERINARY SERVICES Dr Lauren Archer .................................................66840735

DIGITAL ELECTRONICS REPAIR & SERVICE TV. Audio. Antennas .......... 66843575 or 0414 922786

WATER FILTERS

TILING FRANCHISE OF THE YEAR!

Far North Coast NSW John & Teresa

The Water Filter Experts for home, commercial and rural properties

TILE & GROUT CLEANING

6680 8200 or 0418 108 181

Servicing the Far North Coast for 20 years. Free quotes. Experienced local technicians. ChemDry’s patented cleaning systems.

WINTER SPECIAL:

0408 232 066

WATER SUPPLIES

Every 5th m2 FREE

TILER/STONEMASON/WATERPROOFER Lic 24418C. Phone Karl ..............................0439 232434 TRIDENT WATER Remote access delivery, 4WD water truck. Northern Rivers & surrounds ..0412 580 564

RUBBISH REMOVAL OCEAN SHORES SKIPS Mini skip specialists ......................................... 0412 161564 or 66841232 TIP RUNS & RUBBISH REMOVAL 4m3 trailer................................................................0408 210772 A1 RUBBISH REMOVAL AND TIP RUNS. 9m3 trailer. Same day service. Best rates .....0413 289443 MAN WITH UTE. RETHINK REUSE RECYCLE. Ph Mark ................................................0411 113300 THIS IS RUBBISH Tipper truck for hire. Call or text Jono ...............................................0412 871438

WEDDING SERVICES

TREE SERVICES

CHOPPY CHOP TREE SERVICES

WILD WEDDINGS BYRON BAY. Life Celebrant, Jeni Gonzalez ......................................0407 629770

The Fully Insured Professionals

WELDING

• Stump Grinding • Bobcat • Cherrypicker • Crane Truck • 18� Chipper

WELDING & FABRICATION Structural, General, Repairs: Steel, Aluminium & Stainless ..0408 410545

Mark Linder QualiďŹ ed Arborist 0408 202 184 choppychoptrees@bigpond.com

SELF STORAGE

BBSS

A VERY HANDY MAN TREE SERVICES................................... Happy to help. Andrew..0412 558890

Solar designed by Electricians NOT Salesmen

ALL ROOF CLEANING & PAINTING by Full Circle Refinishing. Ph Oliver .......................0419 789600

Mon to Fri 9am–5pm

LEAF IT TO US 4x4 truck/chipper + crane truck. Local, qualified, insured. Free quotes .......0402 487213

PROBLEM CAMPHORS and woody weeds removed. No fuss-green waste, lantana too! ..0478 779650

Special 6.66kW package MAN WITH A VAN/TRUCK Reasonable rates. Phone Don ............................................0414 282813

MARTINO TREE SERVICES ..............................................................................Martino 0435 019524

WELDING REPAIRS & STRUCTURAL FABRICATION. Call Steely Dan ..........................0417 066978

WINDOW CLEANING CLEAN VIEW Prompt, professional, insured. Phone David .............................................0421 906460

WINDOW TINTING

BYRON BAY SELF STORAGE

SUNRISE W. T. 3/19-21 Centennial Cct, Byron. Cars, homes, offices, etc. High quality ..0412 158478 SURFWAGON - Car/Home/Office tint. Lifetime Warranty. W/sale price .........................0434 875009

Self storage with security. Largest choice of sizes.

8-10 Tasman Way, Byron Arts & Industrial Estate www.byronbayselfstorage.com.au | 6685 8349 | bbss@westnet.com.au

SEPTIC SYSTEMS Lic 312643C

PRUNING ~ REMOVALS ~ STUMP GRINDING

Home sewage solutions Commercial wastewater treatment Rainwater tanks concrete and plastic

• 20 years local knowledge and experience • Fully insured / free quotes • 19 inch chipper • Bobcat • Cherry picker • Crane truck

www.harttreeservices.com.au

Sales Installation Service

Northern Rivers Pty Ltd

• plumbing.td@bigpond.com

0418 754 149 • 07 5523 9930 • 1300 Taylex • www.taylex.com.au TRINE SOLUTIONS Local sewerage specialists. Plumbers, drainers & gas fitters. Lic 138031C. 0407 439805 NEWT wastewater treatment. Septic design, upgrades, maint & intall. Lic 207479C............... 0429 805081

ALL AREAS OF THE NORTHERN RIVERS & SOUTH EAST QUEENSLAND

0401 208 797

SOLAR INSTALLATION Pioneers of the solar industry

Serving Northern NSW since 1998

Call us on 6679 7228

Your local, qualiďŹ ed team. m 0428 320 262 Specialists in standalone & e sunbeamsolar@bigpond.com grid interact system designs.

Electric Lic 124600c

• Professional Tree Removal, Surgery & Maintenance • Stump Grinding • Weed Control • Arborist Reporting & Consultancy • EWP Cherry Picker Hire • Mulching of Green Waste • 24 Hour Emergency Call-Out • Professional, Reliable Service

! " #

$

36 The Byron Shire Echo mĹ&#x;ưĕŔćĕſ ÇŤÇ˝ NJǧNJǧ

0427 347 380

Find

The Echo Service Directory online anytime at

echo.net.au/ service-directory North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


Classifieds INDEX Annual General Meetings .37 Birthdays ............................38

ECHO CLASSIFIEDS – 6684 1777

Caravans............................37

CLASSIFIED AD BOOKINGS

DEADLINE TUES 12PM

Death Notices ....................38

PHONE ADS

Publication day is Wednesday, booking deadlines are the day before publication.

For Sale .............................37 Garage Sales .....................37

6684 1777 AT THE ECHO HEAD OFFICE

Ads may be taken by phone on

Halls For Hire .....................37

Ads can be lodged in person at the Mullum Echo office:

Health Notices ...................37

Village Way, Stuart St, Mullumbimby

House Swap ......................37 In Memoriam......................38 Items Under $100 ..............37 Lost & Found .....................38 Motor Vehicles ...................37 Musical Notes ....................38

EMAIL ADS

Positions Vacant ................37 Professional Services ........37 Public Notices ....................37 Social Escorts ....................38 Thank You ..........................37 To Let .................................37 Tradework ..........................37 Tree Services .....................37 Tuition ................................38 Vehicles Wanted ................37 Wanted...............................37 Wanted To Lease ...............37 Wanted To Rent .................37 Work Wanted .....................38

DISCLAIMER Advertisements placed in The Byron Shire Echo do not reflect the views or opinions of the editorial staff. The Byron Shire Echo does not make any representations as to the accuracy or suitability of any content or information contained in advertising material nor does publication constitute in any way an endorsement by The Byron Shire Echo of the content or representations contained therein. The Byron Shire Echo does not accept any liability for the representations or promises made in paid advertisements or for any loss or damage arising from reliance on such content, representations or promises.

PUBLIC NOTICES

GROUP SINGING

$17 for two lines is the minimum charge.

Ad bookings only taken during business hours: Monday to Friday, 9am–5pm. Ads can’t be taken on the weekend. Account enquiries phone 6684 1777.

These prices include GST.

KINESIOLOGY

Clear subconscious sabotages. Reprogram patterns and beliefs. Restore vibrancy and physical health. De-stress. Ph 0403125506 SANDRA DAVEY, Reg. Pract.

RAILWAY PARK, BYRON BAY

byroncentre.com.au

AGMs

People may not be time-travellers, but books are. A dangerous book from ancient Alexandria arrives in the present. US $15 + postage from: www.blurb.com/b/10221196hypatia-s-legacy

TREE SERVICES

Covering all aspects of tree work and tree stump removal (stump grinding)

Experienced climber • Insured • Licensed FREE QUOTES HAPPY TO HELP

Call Andrew Wilson 0412 558 890

After hours & emergency service available

Notice of Annual General Meeting

• FULLY INSURED • PROFESSIONAL SERVICE • FREE QUOTES

BEAUTIFUL RELAXING DEEP TISSUE MASSAGE Treat Yourself. Call now 0410395368

0402 364 852

6684 4421

Beginners Courses

BYRON BAY GOLF CLUB LTD

Yoga Yogalates

Notification is hereby given to all Full Playing Members of the Byron Bay Golf Club Ltd that the Annual General Meeting of the above club is to be held on Tuesday 15th December 2020 at 6pm. The meeting is to be held in the Clubhouse, at the Byron Bay Golf Club.

Bangalow Mon 6–7pm Hatha slow flow Sat 8.15–9.30am Yogalates Wed 6–7.15pm Yin Rejuv Yoga

ITEMS UNDER $100 KITCHEN DRESSER ‘30s style, 137w, 148h,36d. Mullum, $95. 0405028745.

WANTED

20 years local experience • 19 inch chipper • Stump grinding • Cherry picker • Crane truck • Bob Cat

GARAGE SALES

Summerland Storage Bangalow From $105 to $290 per month Call GNF Bangalow 66872833

TUESDAY 10, 58 NEW BRIGHTON RD All sorts, from tool belts to wigs! 18 COCKATOO CRES, MULLUM. Sun 8 Nov, 8am–2pm. Furniture (some antique), kids toys, Fisher-Price cubby house, 12 man tent, clothes, bric-a-brac and more.

Tip Runs & Rubbish Removal 0408 210 772

Fully insured • Free quotes

0427 347 380

VEHICLES WANTED

PROF. SERVICES

Mon 10–11.30am Yogalates Wed 6–7pm Yin Yang Yoga

FOR SALE

WE BUY ALL trucks, utes, vans, cars & caravans. Good or damaged 0403118534

DENTURES

Special: Book in for a month @ $95 Try as many classes as you like

STAINLESS WILLIAMS-WARN Personal Micro-Brewery (1 keg a week) + 25L keg. $3500 steve@huonbrookvalley.com.au

CARAVANS

0432 047 221 yogalates.com.au

HALLS FOR HIRE

THANK YOU

COORABELL HALL WEDDINGS, GIGS, CLASSES 66871307 www.coorabellhall.net

TRADEWORK

HEALTH

BEETU FULL BODY MASSAGE A divine exp: Therapeutic, sensuous, nurturing. 28 yrs exp. Lucy 0427917960

Bangalow Yoga Tuesday 6.15pm: Hatha + meditation Thursday 9.30am: Flow

All welcome $20 drop in Bookings: Alison 0479 067 066 www.queenofheartsyoga.com

3EPTIC 7ASTE 2EMOVAL

4HE ,IQUID 7ASTE 3PECIALISTS

s 3EPTIC TANK CLEANING s 'REASE TRAP SERVICING s /ILY ,IQUIDS s 0ORTABLE TOILET HIRE s HOUR SERVICE

MOTOR VEHICLES

WANTED!

GOOD, CLEAN CARS FOR $$ CASH $$ BARGAINS

ballinacarcentre.com.au

16 ENDEAVOUR CLOSE, BALLINA

TREE SERVICES

6686 5586 / 0418 676 274

LEAF IT TO US 4x4 truck/chipper, crane truck, stump grinding. Local, qualified, insured, free quotes. 0402487213

Ballina Car Centre

FIREWOOD • Fence posts • Poles • Sleepers • Sawn timber Kings Creek, Mullumbimby Mark 0427 490 038

DLN 19950

TO LET

Byron Bay & Surrounding Areas

6681 3140 Mobile 0417 698 227

OPALS Beautiful rough and cut material. Plus jewellery from Lightning Ridge. Direct from miner. Call Roy 0438 976 038

LOOKING TO RENT A HOME in a safe, quiet environment, close to town centre. Inspect this home today at Glen Villa Resort, 80 Butler Street, Byron Bay. $595pw, conditions apply.

WANTED TO RENT YOUNG PROF. fem working F/T, looking for ens. room in quiet house share to $250pw. N/S, local family. txt 0481700871 PROF COUPLE working from home, seek min. 2 bdrm rental for 6 months from early Dec. Anywhere from Bangalow to Kingscliff considered. Ph 0432968819 PROFESSIONAL, SELF-EMPLOYED local woman seeking a private home & workspace, 1 or 2 bdr. Ideally on acreage or in a private & secluded area between Burringbar & Myocum. 0490130645 WORKING PROFESSIONAL 15yr local resident, seeking long-term cabin/ studio accom. Single, non smoker, 2 dogs, excellent references. Amanda 0422176915 LONG-TERM SHIRE RESIDENTS, family of 3, working professionals, excellent personal, business & rental references need a place in rural or town. 2bdr min, pref north Byron Shire. 0410206627 WORKING SINGLE. Looking for 2bdr, small home with garage. Lismore or surrounds. 0416441191 RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN LIVING quiet tenant, 56, long-term resident, exc refs, seeking 1–3 bdr cabin/small home. in Byron Shire. 0408908960

HOUSE SWAP DOH HOUSE SWAP Beautiful 2bdr appt in Glebe near Sydney Uni & RPAH. Want a 2bdr place on North Coast. 0423405056

WANTED TO LEASE ACCESS TO ACREAGE, dwelling or not. Prefer 2x2 or 3x3 or similar. Substantial security deposit OK. Pls call 0423218417 SEEKING CONSULTING SPACE & BATHROOM. Day use only. Lease 2-4 days pw. References available. Email appsbyronbay@gmail.com

POSITIONS VACANT

Mon-Wed, by appointment Thurs/Fri 8am to 4pm | Sat, 8am to 3pm

Call Wendy today!

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

Road base, gravel, blue metal and metal dust. ALL SIZE DELIVERIES. Phone 66845517, 0418481617

CARAVANS We buy, sell & consign. All makes & models. 0408 758 688

• Arborist • 15” Wood Chipper • Stump Grinder • Fully Insured

www.wendypurdey.com.au

DAVID LOVEJOY’S BOOKS Available from The Echo reception: Between Dark and Dark, a memoir; Moral Victories, the biography of a chess player; Heresy, an historical novel. ALL JUST $10 each.

3UMMERLAND ARCHIBALD’S CHEAP %NVIRONMENTAL QUARRY PRODUCTS

30 years exp. Helping you to create positive changes.

0497 090 233

MIELE WASHERS

Dryers and dishwashers available at Bridglands Mullumbimby. 66842511

LOCAL REMOVAL

& backloads to Brisbane. Friendly, with 10 years local exp. 0409917646

Suffolk Park

LOOK GOOD FEEL GOOD Free consultation. SANDRO 66805002

WORKSHOP SPACE Ground floor, high ceilings. Beautiful studio for photography, meetings, events, classes or exhibitions. $100 per day. Byron Arts & Industry Estate. 0434512178

LP RECORDS: good condition, no op shop crap! Ph Matt 0401955052

SUFFOLK PARK 53 & 54 Coogera Cct. Sat 8am–2pm. H/hold items & clothes.

WELLNESS CENTRE Brunswick Heads COLON HYDROTHERAPY HYPERBARIC OXYGEN FAR INFRARED SAUNA REMEDIAL MASSAGE + more 66850498

HYPNOSIS & NLP David Lovejoy

A VERY HANDY MAN

PURA VIDA

BYRON SHIRE RESPITE SERVICE INC AGM will take place at 4pm on Tuesday 17 November 2020 at the Brunswick Valley Community Centre, 42 South Beach Road, Brunswick Heads NSW 2483. All members welcome. For more information, please email Karen at dementiafriendly@byronrespite.com.au / telephone 6685 1619.

THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE Aches & pains. Release stress, relax, revive & rejuvenate. 9am–5pm, 7 days, $35/ph. Mark 0448441194.

HYPATIA’S LEGACY

Prepayment is required for all ads.

Simple and effective solutions Anxiety, Cravings, Fears & Trauma. Maureen Bracken 0402205352

Every Saturday 4 – 9 pm

BRUNSWICK HEADS MARKETS Saturday 7 November, 2020 No dogs please

Cash, cheque, Mastercard or Visa

HYPNOSIS & EFT

BYRON TWILIGHT MARKET

A BIG THUMBS UP to Michelle who found my iPhone and delivered it to my door - you’re an ANGEL!

Phone 0408 239 273

LINE ADS: $17.00 for the first two lines $5.00 for each extra line DISPLAY ADS (with a border): $12.50 per column centimetre

Brunswick Heads, Thursday. Group singing for confidence and fun. 11.30am, Memorial Hall. Numbers limited, email to book a space ByronBaySinging@gmail.com.

MEMORIAL PARK, BRUNSWICK HEADS

Echo Classies also appear online in Echonetdaily – echo.net.au/classified-ads

RATES & PAYMENT

Display classies (box ads): adcopy@echo.net.au Line classies: classifieds@echo.net.au

Only Adults ........................38 Pets ....................................38

CLASSIFIEDS THAT WORK ALL WEEK!

RESIDENTIAL Middle Pocket 3 bed 2 bth $770 Mullumbimby 2 bed 1 bth contact agent L.J. Hooker Brunswick Heads 6685 0177 5/16 The Terrace, Brunswick Heads

ACREAGE MOWING POSITION Experienced, zero turn operator required for local mowing business. Must have industry exp. 0402487213 7am–6pm CARPENTER needed for 2–3 weeks for bush buildings. Ph 0421088783 RURAL FENCING labourer. Must be physically fit, a quick learner with drivers licence, and local to Northern Rivers. Tractor exp. an advantage. Email your resume to mjpruralfencing@gmail.com

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 37


Classifieds POSITIONS VACANT cont THE ROCKS @ AQUARIUS is looking for a barista / all-rounder for Front of House. Must be reliable, punctual, good at customer service and be able to work in a fast-paced environment. Must have minimum 2 years exp. as a barista, a current NSW RSA and be avail. to work weekends. Award rate, 20 hours a week. Email resumes to pattysaul@hotmail.com HAMMER HANDY LABOURER Reliable or don’t bother. O/Shores 0413721410 PHARMACIST: BANGALOW Community boutique pharmacy. 3 to 4 days available. Hours 9am–5.30pm. Please email your resume to: bangalowpharmacy@bigpond.com

For North Coast news online visit

EXPERIENCED BARISTA. Mullumbimby fast-paced cafe. Minimum 3 years barista experience. Mon, Wed, Thu. Locals only. Email mullum@otherjoint.com ADMIN LEGEND WANTED to join our growing team. An immediate start, full-time hours. We need a focussed, independent worker who loves the phone and gets a kick out of helping people. Join a cohesive, supportive team who value collaboration and high productivity. Head to www.myiict.com/careers for information about the role and how to apply. Applications close by Fri 27 Nov, 5pm.

Clay Organic Beauty Mullumbimby

Beauty Therapist

WANTED QualiďŹ ed remedial massage therapist or myotherapist for well established clinic with great conditions, in Byron Bay. Must have insurance & health fund rebates. info@tonicosteopathy.com or telephone 0414320575

We are looking for a TXDOLĂ€HG %HDXW\ 7KHUDSLVW WR MRLQ RXU WHDP 7KH VXFFHVVIXO DSSOLFDQW ZLOO EH SDVVLRQDWH DERXW ZRUNLQJ ZLWKLQ D QXUWXULQJ KROLVWLF VDORQ XVLQJ OX[XU\ VNLQFDUH DQG SURYLGLQJ H[FHSWLRQDO FXVWRPHU VHUYLFH Waxing experience essential. )OH[LEOH ZRUNLQJ KRXUV

LADIES WANTED, MUST BE 18+ Casual or permanent work available in busy adult parlour. 66816038 for details. CHEFS AND WAITSTAFF WANTED to join our professional & friendly team for occasional weekend work. Ph 0439656063 or send CV to info@ yourgourmet.com.au

(PDLO &9 WR clayorganicbeauty@ bigpond.com

WARNING The Department of Fair Trading has warned people to be very careful about responding to advertisements offering work at home. Readers should be wary if asked to pay money upfront for employment opportunities and never send money to a post ofďŹ ce box

OFFICE/ACCOUNTING manager full time. MYOB, Word and Excel exp required. Busy wholesale nursery. You need a competent phone manner, great organisational & forward planning skills, accurate typing & writing skills and previous accounting experience. Email sales@amazone.com.au FRONT DESK RECEPTIONIST for Glen Villa Resort, 86 Butler St, Byron Bay. Must be a hands on, passionate person with very pleasant and professional attitude with excellent customer service skills. Only apply in person. FULL TIME ACCOMM CLEANER $50,000 to $60,000 per annum. Cleaning the common areas at student accommodation premises. Includes shared kitchen and bathroom, hallways, outdoor dining areas and grounds. Cleaning rooms on checkout. Immediate start. One year experience in commercial cleaning necessary. Email resume to info@byronbaystudentaccommodation. com.au THE ITALIAN BYRON BAY is seeking experienced oor staff, cocktail bar tenders, chefs and kitchen hands. Email resume to hello@ theitalianbyronbay.com

WORK WANTED

Byron Dog Rescue (CAWI)

WORDPRESS SETUP/TRAIN/MAINT Reas rates info@wordpressit.com.au

Leroy is a desexed male 15-monthold kelpie x cattle dog – a dancer, an acrobat and a goofball. He has suffered profound trauma in his early life and is now very fearful of men. He is an extremely soulful boy who can sooth you with his loving. He is fantastic with children, women and is generally great with other dogs. Leroy needs lots of exercise, attention, mental stimulation and socialisation. For more info please phone Shell on 0458 461 935. MC: 941000023205533

MUSICAL NOTES QUALITY PIANOS for sale, and expert piano tuning. Ph Fred Cole 0412216019 G U I TA R S , RECORDS, WE BUY AND SELL 66851005

HI-FI

BIRTHDAYS

Happy Birthday

Hans

Experienced kitchen manger and vegetarian chef needed at Byron Yoga Retreat Centre. Approx 20 hours per week including early mornings and weekends. Menu design, stock control, ordering, and rostering of kitchen staff. Proven leadership experience within a fast-paced kitchen environment. Good communications skills and a passion for creating vegetarian meals.

HANDS ON POSITION SHORT OR LONG TERM CONTRACT $88,000 per annum based on experience ConďŹ dential applications to:

For full job description email

operations@byronyoga.com,

Chincoganstore2482@gmail.com

Millie is a seven year old desexed female staffy x lab. She loves people but not other dogs so much. Microchip no: 982000167735710. If you can give Millie a permanent, loving home please contact Pam on 0421 017 461.

Tweed Valley Accounting is seeking an accountant to join our team. Full time position with salary negotiable depending on level of skill.

Courses starting soon... Mon 16th Nov

• HLTAID003 - Provide First Aid • Smartphone Photography For Social Media

Thu 19th Nov

• Face Yoga • Floristry Intermediate

• The Art of Research (for your next book) • Build Your Own Earth Oven • Watercolour Festive Cards - Online Class

Sun 22nd Nov

Sat 21st Nov

• Vegetables - Integrated Organic Production • Vegan Nut Cheeses and Milk

• Trees and Perennial Crops - Creating Food Forest

Limited places - don’t miss out!

byroncollege.org.au

MULTIPLE POSITIONS AVAILABLE Building and Grounds Maintenance 2+ years experience, perm position 3 days with additional work in peak holidays. Cert II Horticulture Traineeship Must have a strong commitment to work and desire to learn, full time or school based. Casual Retail / Sales 3+ years genuine sales/retail experience, varying hours from 2 to 5 days a week. Welcome Hut 3+ years ‘Meet and Greet’ exp, 2+ years data entry. Perm position 4 to 5 days per week. Cert IV Warehouse Operations Traineeship Must have a strong commitment to work and desire to learn, warehouse experience an advantage, full time position. All positions must be avail hols & w/ends. To apply please go to www.crystalcastle.com.au/workwithus

38 The Byron Shire Echo mĹ&#x;ưĕŔćĕſ ÇŤÇ˝ NJǧNJǧ

“

Always remember that you are absolutely unique.

20 King St, Murwillumbah

Email CV to executive@ flhealthcare.com.au

TUITION FRENCH • ITALIAN • GERMAN Eva 0403224842 www.languagetuitionbyron.com.au PRIVATE / GROUP ENGLISH CLASSES (including IELTS preparation) josierork@gmail.com Ph 0411794127 SPANISH, ITALIAN, FRENCH & MORE! www.chessandlanguageacademy.com

Adobe Tutoring Experienced Professional Trainer • Photoshop • Indesign • Illustrator contact@thinkblinkdesign.com www.thinkblinkdesign.com

All cats are desexed, vaccinated and microchipped.

No:953010004926436

Please make an appointment 0403 533 589 • Billinudgel petsforlifeanimalshelter.net

ONLY ADULTS EXQUISITE Be impressed with my hot body and warm hands. Tweed area. 0438573677

BALLINA EXCLUSIVE 34 Piper Dr. Open 7 days 10am till late. In & Out Calls. 66816038. Ladies wanted Find us on Facebook and Twitter! COVID SAFE Fantasies of a Hot Woman & Her Strap On? Skilled Erotic Artist 0407013347

Visit friendsofthepound.com to view other dogs and cats looking for a home. ABN 83 126 970 338

Email resume to: admin@ tweedvalleyaccounting.com.au

Min 2 days per week, plus regular relief work. Best Practice/ Medical Director experience preferred.

It’s me SARINA, and look where I am now‌ Oh dear me! I have just said goodbye to my kittens, had a bit of a snip at the vet’s, and now I am stuck here! I’m really very modest when I say that I am happy, friendly, smoochy, good looking (and a bit confused). So please come and take me home. I’ll be your best friend ever!

FULL BODY RESTORATION Fill your tanks & heal through pleasure massagebyronbay.com or 0425347477

It is with much sadness that we bid farewell to two beloved comrades. Bosco best dog and his loving owner

POSITION AVAILABLE

Casual Medical Receptionist for busy, expanding Medical / Allied Health / Specialist Centre in the heart of Byron Bay.

Millie

DEATH NOTICES

ACCOUNTING

closing date 13 November 2020.

LEROY

Love the drudges.

Kitchen Manager

Head Chef

02 6684 3374

EROTIC MASSAGE STAFF reliable and friendly for Gentlemen’s Relaxation Centre 18+. Tweed. Grace 0418185791

Just like everyone else.� JOHN KARL WALKER of Billlinudgel: former personal protector of Jimi Hendrix, Lisa Minnelli and others whilst in London. Self-proclaimed Consultant to the IRA and the US Military; banker; biochemist; and runner who won the Chincogan climb many times. May you Run in Peace Your pals Ray and Luke, and all who knew him.

IN MEMORIAM KEITH FLICK To Keith’s immediate and extended family, our sincere condolences. Keith, we thank you for allowing us into your world. To be able to refer to you as a mate has meant a great deal to us. Rest in peace squire, Geoff and Anne.

LOST & FOUND FOUND: Necklace, on path, Tallowwood Ridge Estate, Mullumbimby. 66843139

PETS BOOTS

Boots was very reluctantly surrendered when his owner fell upon hard times. We want to ďŹ nd Boots the best possible home full of love to help mend his broken heart. He’s a super affectionate boy and loves lots of attention. Would your love be able to ďŹ ll this Boots? This puss was made for walking and that’s just what he’ll do. One of these days sweet Boots is going to walk all over you! To meet Boots, please visit the Cat Adoption Centre at 124 Dalley Street, Mullumbimby. OPEN: Tues 2.30–4.30pm Thurs 3–5pm, Sat 10am–12 noon Call AWL 0436 845 542.

Like us on Facebook!

AWL NSW Rehoming Organisation Number: R251000222

Devoted to Pleasure Ɔ

Couples, Men & Women Ɔ

touchofjustine.com

0407 013 347

SOCIAL ESCORTS – Margaret Mead Full moon 1 Nov Third quarter 9 Nov New moon 15 Nov First quarter 22 Nov Full moon 30 Nov Day of Sun Sun Moon month rise set rise 1 S 0553 1906 1937 2 M 0552 1906 2031 3 T 0551 1907 2126 4 W 0550 1908 2222 5 T 0550 1909 2316 6 F 0549 1909 7 S 0548 1910 0008 8 S 0548 1911 0057 9 M 0547 1912 0142 10 T 0546 1912 0224 11 W 0546 1913 0303 12 T 0545 1914 0340 13 F 0545 1915 0418 14 S 0544 1916 0456 15 S 0544 1916 0538 16 M 0543 1917 0624 17 T 0543 1918 0715 18 W 0542 1919 0811 19 T 0542 1920 0911 20 F 0542 1920 1013 21 S 0541 1921 1114 22 S 0541 1922 1212 23 M 0541 1923 1309 24 T 0541 1924 1402 25 W 0540 1924 1455 26 T 0540 1925 1546 27 F 0540 1926 1638 28 S 0540 1927 1731 29 S 0540 1928 1825 30 M 0540 1928 1920

LOTS OF GORGEOUS LADIES available for your pleasure nearby. Spoil yourself. In & out. 7 days. Ladies always wanted. 0266816038. COVID SAFE

1.49am 12.46am 4.07pm Astronomical data 3.45pm and tides 8.29pm Moon High tide, Low tide, set height (m) height (m) 0614 0938 1.57; 2140 1.30 0302 0.19; 1545 0.34 0647 1012 1.60; 2213 1.23 0330 0.20; 1623 0.35 0723 1047 1.60; 2246 1.16 0359 0.24; 1702 0.38 0804 1124 1.58; 2323 1.09 0429 0.28; 1745 0.42 0850 1204 1.55 0501 0.34; 1833 0.46 0940 0005 1.02; 1249 1.51 0541 0.41; 1930 0.49 1036 0059 0.96; 1343 1.47 0630 0.47; 2037 0.50 1135 0212 0.94; 1446 1.45 0738 0.52; 2146 0.46 1237 0339 0.98; 1555 1.47 0901 0.53; 2248 0.39 1341 0453 1.09; 1700 1.51 1021 0.49; 2341 0.29 1445 0553 1.24; 1759 1.55 1130 0.41 1551 0645 1.40; 1852 1.58 0026 0.19; 1232 0.32 1658 0736 1.56; 1943 1.56 0108 0.11; 1330 0.24 1807 0824 1.70; 2031 1.51 0148 0.05; 1426 0.18 1917 0912 1.80; 2118 1.43 0228 0.02; 1521 0.16 2028 1000 1.86; 2206 1.32 0308 0.03; 1616 0.17 2137 1047 1.87; 2254 1.21 0349 0.08; 1714 0.21 2241 1136 1.83; 2345 1.10 0431 0.16; 1812 0.27 1227 1.74 2338 0516 0.26; 1911 0.33 0040 1.02; 1319 1.63 0607 0.38; 2012 0.39 0027 0145 0.97; 1415 1.53 0706 0.48; 2112 0.42 0109 0302 0.98; 1515 1.43 0818 0.57; 2210 0.42 0146 0417 1.03; 1615 1.37 0937 0.61; 2301 0.40 0218 0520 1.13; 1711 1.33 1051 0.60; 2345 0.36 0249 0610 1.23; 1801 1.31 1154 0.57 0318 0652 1.34; 1845 1.30 0023 0.32; 1247 0.53 0347 0730 1.44; 1925 1.29 0057 0.27; 1334 0.48 0416 0806 1.53; 2002 1.26 0128 0.24; 1416 0.43 0448 0841 1.60; 2039 1.23 0157 0.22; 1457 0.40 0523 0916 1.65; 2115 1.20 0227 0.21; 1536 0.38

NOVEMBER 2020

Times are Eastern Standard Daylight Savings Time. Time lags: Ballina Boat Dock: 15 min; Byron Bay: nil; Brunswick River Hwy Bridge: high 30 min, low 1 hr; Mullumbimby: 1 hr 10 min; Billinudgel: 3 hr 55 min; Chinderah: high 1 hr 15 min, low 2 hr; Terranora Inlet: high 2 hr 10 min, low 2 hr 25 min; Murwillumbah: high 2 hr 30 min, low 2 hr 50 min. Tides in bold indicate high tide of 1.7m or more and low tide of 0.3m or less. Data from Bureau of Meteorology.

North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


Community at Work On The Horizon DEADLINE NOON FRIDAY Email copy marked ‘On The Horizon’ to editor@echo.net.au.

Connecting Communities

Woolies site in North Byron Plaza, Jonson Street, Byron Bay from 16 till 28 November between 1Oam–4pm.

Connecting Communities is an initiative of the Conscious Elders group of Possum Creek. Together with Bangalow Basics, Conscious Elders are hosting a lunch at Heritage House Bangalow to bring together the many groups who are working towards supporting people who are isolated or lonely, particularly as we emerge from COVID19 restrictions. Damon Gameau will be the guest speaker, and a representative from each group will be given a few minutes to speak about the work of their organisation – with groups learning from each other’s experiences. Numbers are limited for this event on Sunday, 8 November. However, if you are a person or group involved in supporting lonely or isolated people and would like to be involved please contact Ruth on 6687 1648.

Suffolk Park AGM

Pop-up book sale Friends of Libraries are holding a special pop-up book sale instead of this year’s Book Fair. To raise funds for local libraries, a wonderful selection of books will be on sale near the former

The Suffolk Park Progress Association will be holding its Annual General Meeting on Monday, 23 November at 7pm at the Suffolk Park Community Hall. COVID Safe measures will be in place, and numbers will be limited. For enquiries email: sppa.secretary@gmail.com.

BV VIEW Club Brunswick Valley VIEW Club will meet on Thursday, 12 November at 10.30am for luncheon at Billinudgel Hotel. Numbers are limited so please book with Wenda on 0449 563 580 or email wjhunt@yahoo.com.au no later than the Monday before. The VIEW club supports seven disadvantaged students in The Smith Family’s Learning for Life program. Members have recently supplied Ocean Shores Public School and Brunswick Heads Public School with 80 colourful library bags made by the members. Info: president Margaret Alderton 0429 966 894.

Regular As Clockwork DEADLINE NOON FRIDAY Please note that, owing to space restrictions, not all entries may be included each week. Email copy marked ‘Regular As Clockwork’ to editor@echo.net.au.

Mullumbimby District Neighbourhood Centre MDNC services that are running include: Community support/emergency relief: Food parcels, meals, assistance with electricity and Telstra bills. Listening Space: free counselling. Staying Home, Leaving Violence program. Integrated Domestic & Family Violence program. Financial Counselling: outreach available Thursdays & Fridays Financial Counselling: free service funded by the government, offering advocacy & assistance to find options to address debts. Information, referral and advocacy. To enquire about accessing any of these services call 6684 1286 or fill out an online enquiry form.

Byron Community Centre Homeless Breakfast: 7:30–9am Wednesday. Homeless Showers: Monday and Wednesday 10am–12pm (book in at breakfasts). Women’s Support and Counselling: Friday 1–3pm, Community Cabin Carlyle St. Free Phone Counselling: Call 0415 322 064 10am–2pm. Seniors

STARS BY LILITH

With Mercury out of retrograde – yeah! – we get to enjoy more of Scorpio season’s chakra excitation and sexy fanfare……

Computer Club: Friday 9am–11am, Community Cabin Carlyle St. Seniors drumming, yoga, ukulele, art and drama: 66856807 for booking and time details. Volunteer Hub referral service: Call 66856807. Byron Community Pantry: free food box delivery to locals who are financially or physically unable to shop. Call/text your order to 0482 787 552. For more info call 66856807 or visit www.byroncentre.com.au

Low-cost or free food Food Box Thursdays 9.30–11.30am at Uniting Church, Mullumbimby. If you have any Centrelink card you may purchase cheap food, obtain free veges. Free Food Relief Bags for anyone doing it tough, every Wednesday 10–12noon at The Hub Ocean Shores, cnr Rajah Rd and Bindaree Way. No ID or Concession Card required. NILs referral service also available.

Tax Help Tax Help is now running at the Byron Community Centre every Friday from 1pm. Please phone through to reception on 6685 6807 with your contact details to make an appointment.

First Fleeters The Northern Rivers Chapter of the Fellowship of First Fleeters will meet on Sunday, 22 November from 11.15am at the Cherry Street Sports Club in Ballina. This will be our Christmas get together so all are very welcome. Contact Roddy Jordan on 6687 5339 or email: hollysbuddy1@bigpond.com to attend.

Mullumbimby CWA Mullumbimby Country Women’s Association (CWA) next branch meeting is at 10am on Wednesday, 11 November at the CWA rooms (on the corner of Tincogan and Gordon Streets). New members are very welcome. More information: 0427 847 282.

Prostate Cancer The Northern Rivers Evening Prostate Cancer Support Group will meet on Wednesday 4 November, 7pm till 9pm at Lismore Workers Club, Keen Street, Lismore. Men diagnosed with prostate cancer, and their partners or carers, are most welcome to attend. Enquiries, Bob Johnson 6622 5792.

CWA Bangalow is collecting donations of sanitary and personal care goods (e.g. dental and hair care, hand sanitiser, insect repellent) for Share the Dignity. This program supports girls and women in difficult or vulnerable situations. Donations can be left 12–27 October at the Byron Library, Bangalow Newsagent and CWA rooms in Bangalow, in boxes clearly marked ‘Share the Dignity’. CWA makes up bags of these goods for distribution through local neighbourhood and community centres.

Free guided relaxation

StandBy provides support to people who have lost someone to suicide. They provide free face-to-face and telephone support and are accessible 24/7. Follow-up contact is available for up to one year. Find out more at: www. standbysupport.com.au or call 13 11 14. If you, or someone you are with, are in need of immediate support please call an ambulance or police on 000.

Free lunch-time Yoga Nidra community class at Brunswick Heads, every Thursday 12.30–1pm (Wheel of Life Studio). A guided deep relaxation practice done from a lying position referred to as a ‘yogic sleep’. No experience required, just turn up. Contact Matt on 0430 008 293 or hello@sravan.com.au.

Byron Bay Croquet Club has resumed play with COVID-19 awareness. Play days are Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday, or by arrangement. Enquiries from new players welcome. Free lessons. Call Max for more information 0431 906 536. Pottsville Fun Croquet Club has resumed at The Black Rocks Sports Fields (end of Overall Drive) Pottsville. We commence play at 8.30am, Tuesday and Thursday. Please arrive 15 minutes before play starts. or information ring our Club Captains Pat on 0427976436 or Jean on 0431606376.

Mullum CWA opens up The CWA Rooms in Mullumbimby (Tincogan & Gordon Sts) will be open with refreshments and stalls each Friday morning from 9am to noon. Call in for a cuppa and browse the home cooking, plants, books, glassware, and more. Info: Jenny 0427 847 282.

Yoga and meditation A free yoga and meditation day, for volunteers in the Byron Shire, is offered on Thursday 29 October, at Byron Community Centre, 9am till 4pm.

TAURUS: With Mercury back on track, situations that have hit speed bumps pick up traction again. Although, as what you wanted seems to become available, the question is: do you really still want it? This week offers a celestial window of opportunity to deeply, honestly examine where you go from this point forward. GEMINI: With your ruling planet on the move again, something important finally becomes blindingly obvious in a light-bulb, ‘eureka!’ moment. So ask yourself: ‘Is this the right time for the course of action I’m considering? What, above all, do I really want?’ Keep doing this for as long as it takes…

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Ex-service members

Ballina Shire Meals on Wheels are running technology help sessions for over 65’s on Tuesday mornings. A volunteer works one-on-one to assist seniors to learn how to better use their devices – mobile phones, tablets and

Technology help 65+

Mungo’s Crossword

Share the Dignity

Byron Bay RSL Sub-Branch wish to collate the names of ex-service members who have served overseas in combat/ peace keeping roles in conflicts including Korea and post Vietnam, including Somalio, Namibia, Timor Leste (East) Timor, Bouganville, Iraq & Afghanistan. Ex-service members and their families from the Byron Shire area who wish to be included in this list, and on a planned honour board, should send their details to Jim Rogers. Phone 0412679870 or email jimrog48@gmail.com.

ARIES: As Scorpionic themes vie for attention, questions of where you invest time/energy/money, who you invite into your life, how you deal with power dynamics, and are you being stubborn about something all take centre stage. Know that surrendering doesn’t have to mean giving up. It could mean letting go of what doesn’t work.

www.echo.net.au/byron-echo Byron Shire Echo archives

laptops. These 25min sessions are free of charge, but we would appreciate any donations for the service provided. Bookings are essential. To make a booking, or for information contact Kristen on 0419 679 719. We follow COVID Safe practices.

Mullum Magic Toastmasters Practice public speaking and develop leadership skills in a fun, supportive environment, at the Mullum Magic Toastmasters Club. New members and guests heartily welcomed. It is held every 2nd, 4th and 5th Monday, from 7 till 9pm at the Mullumbimby Civic Hall, 55 Dalley Street Mullumbimby. Contact Ashni on 0439 843 657 for more information, or just turn up.

One Roof Byron raffle One Roof Byron’s prestige bike raffle draw was scheduled for 10 April at Mullum markets but was postponed owing to COVID-19 measures. Please keep your tickets and we will notify of a new raffle draw date.

End-of-life choices Voluntary euthanasia options are discussed at quarterly meetings at the Robina Community Centre. Attendees must be Exit members. More information on www. exitinternational.net or phone Catherine 0435 228 443.

CANCER: As Mercury ends its retrograde, what has been, for some, a challenging cycle of control issues, finger pointing and dealing with victim mentality, lets up for the rest of the year. Yes, it’s easier to get a read on people, but wait till next week when Mars stops stirring the drama pot before acting. LEO: Rowdy retrograde Mars brewing up a storm inside you is almost over, so don’t blow it by losing your cool and burning bridges. If this week’s combustible conversations are argumentative and demanding, hot and provocative – tranquilo! Hold your fire. Choose your battles. Edit before uttering, then aim for clear, concise communication. VIRGO: Mercury’s final retrograde for 2020 is done and dusted, and moving forward in your money and work sector this week, which could produce a revenue-stimulating idea or opportunity. And say that’s not the case, then what can you do about it? If spending less doesn’t appeal, think about ways you’d enjoy earning more.

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1. Weird B music – innovation of Braque and Picasso! (6) 4. Soluble chemicals found in top galleries (8) 9. Not arse, no president – a trick! (2,5) 11. Support a friend – within the law (7) 12. Part of target, part of shoe (5) 13. Orange-grey French ingredient of perfume (9) 14. Innate bias found, without being present (2,8) 16. Against one following worker (4) 19. Standard for little Mailer (4) 20. Directions: full deliveries for residents of Manhattan (3,7) 22. A dance and a drink – a game for children (9) 23. Fury out of range (5) 25. Infantryman traded, that’s right (7) 26. Emergency services worker? Sack the bloke! (7) 27. Princess’s territory finishes for swells (8) 28. Measure the big plant – of course! (6)

1. Picasso’s style of art (6) 4. Soluble salts (8) 9. Bid in bridge contract (2,5) 11. Within the law (7) 12. Interior, score in archery (5) 13. Valuable secretion from whales (9) 14. Vote taken by one not present (2,8) 16. Against, contrary (4) 19. Usual standard or benchmark (4) 20. Those who live in the Big Apple (3,7) 22. Child’s footpath game (9) 23. Fury, rage (5) 25. Military man (7) 26. Emergency worker (7) 27. Swells, expands (8) 28. Dinner course (6)

ACROSS

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ACROSS

DOWN 1. Proviso, reservation (9) 2. Stick, usually for conductor (5) 3. Most like regular quadrilateral (8) 5. Popular TV cook (9,4) 6. Large wild cats (6) 7. Patience, fairness (9) 8. Optical infections (5) 10. Homely, not attractive (5-8) 15. High citadel, especially in Greece (9) 17. Financial cover against damage (9) 18. Rehearsal, test for the real thing (5,3) 21. Writer, amanuensis (6) 22. Watered, damped down (5) 24. More courageous (5)

1. If level of fitness… (9) 2. …rises, no bill – stick (5) 3. Least innovative – most like Four Corners! (8) 5. Cliché: try beef stew by Lawson or Oliver, perhaps (9,4) 6. A thousand found in rows of carnivores (6) 7. Cheer in hypnotic spell – forbearance (9) 8. Thoroughfare? Okay, but they’re Last week’s solution N358 eyesores (5) E G O M A N I A S T A O O R T 10. Tear up DNA file, shred – they say it P A U L I N E H A N is not pretty (5-8) Y N S T T 15. Car pool is found in a high place (9) S E T T L E I D E A A A N S 17. Preparing for cruise, Ann took out B R A I N S T O R M rebate for damages (9) N E A 18. Legal case? Manage a rehearsal (5,3) E D I T A S C E N S 21. Writer has cheat sheet in second E O H I English (6) L A M P O O N S A S D R T S 22. Cultivate around the South – and P L E A S E E X P L watered (5) A A E R E 24. More courageous punter! (5) S N A R E S N O N S

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LIBRA: Mercury’s headed direct again, and in your sign, balancing the sensible, survival-oriented side of your scales with the take-a-wild-exciting-risk-whichmightn’t-work-but-what-the-heck side. But does it have to be all one or the other? How about getting them to dance together; making it a bit of an each-way bet?

CAPRICORN: If you’ve been beavering away quietly at something during Mercury retrograde, its forward move recalibrates your personal GPS. So direct focus this week onto one major project or task and you’ll be able to get a surprising amount done. Think launch date sometime after Mars goes direct in mid-November.

SCORPIO: Although it won’t be without challenges (what is these days?), this week brings increased clarity to the remainder of your birthday month. So pause and observe. Let realisations settle. Keep discussions calm, cool and objective. Next week, when red planet Mars accelerates again, is a better time for take-off.

AQUARIUS: This week strongly supports the air-clearing convos recommended after Mercury retrogrades in general, and the recent one in particular. And opens a celestial crack in current existential bottlenecks to slide through into a few days of easy communication and smooth operating. Smart Aquarians won’t waste this invitation…

SAGITTARIUS: With a pair of formidable Mercury/Saturn squares, this week’s not quite out of the woods yet in the communication zone, so be very clear about arrangements, agreements and expectations. It’s a stellar time though for hanging out with your like-minded tribe, even if you don’t feel like making the effort.

PISCES: If you’re feeling pressured or pushed to make a decision before you’re ready, let others rush this week while you take whatever time you need. Do all the homework and research and factcomparisons you think necessary before next week brings a more auspicious astral wind beneath your wings.

mşưĕŔćĕſ ǫǽ ǩǧǩǧ The Byron Shire Echo 39


Backlash

While Goonengerry appeared the heaviest hit by Saturday’s hail storm, other parts of the Shire also copped it. Crops were damaged, as were cars. Photo Maggie Wheeler

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Queensland voters deserted One Nation and Clive Palmer last weekend, and instead gave Labor’s Annastacia Palaszczuk a clear majority to wield a big legislative stick without the assistance of a cross bench. Fun fact – Queensland doesn’t have an upper house (legislative council), whereas NSW does. Queensland is the only unicameral state parliament in Australia. Q Q Q Q

The Australian Financial Review rich list is out, with claims that the nation’s 200 richest increased their collective wealth by 24 per cent to $424B. Q Q Q Q

PROUD TO BE LOCAL

Last week we published a story regarding the Mullumbimby Residents Association’s objection to the Draft Policy Unauthorised Dwellings 2020. Their objection was actually a draft, and was seeking resident feedback. Submissions for the draft policy, which has massive implications and comes with little detail, have been extended until November 4 (late subs are also taken). Visit www.marra2482.org to get informed. Q Q Q Q

VISIT OUR DISPLAY HOMES OPEN EVERY TUESDAY 1PM – 6PM 20 Bangalow Rd, Byron Bay, Cnr of Bangalow Rd and Constellation Close.

(02) 56 24 50 20 ‘So much more than just a Granny Flat’ WWW.BYRONBUILT.COM

While many of Australia’s biggest trading partners – China, Britain, South Korea and Japan – say they will set net zero emissions targets, Australia is proposing a gas-led recovery in a global market awash with gas. It’s a crazy plan designed by gas executives, who have long held the Liberal and National parties captive. Nationals Deputy Prime Minister, Michael McCormack, highlighted his captivity last week by demonising ANZ’s plans to impose emissions reporting on lenders as ‘virtue-signalling’. Q Q Q Q

Virus? What virus? Recent property price data from Domain shows strong increases right across Australia, with regional areas like Byron Shire up 29 per cent. Q Q Q Q

Good luck, America, with your election this week. Like most elections, it’s between two old wealthy white men. While both appear senile, at least one isn’t vulgar, incompetent and a white supremacist bringing in an apocalypse. See Phillip Frazer’s take on page 17.

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3/5 Clark Street, Ballina 6686 3855 North Coast news daily in Echonetdaily www.echo.net.au


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