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$300,000 funding agreement to help deliver food resilient land in the Byron Shire
The NSW Government is providing Byron Shire Council $300,000 through the Resilient Lands Program to provide safe, food resilient land for new housing at the Saddle Road Precinct in Brunswick Heads.
holds us back from proper decision-making. Obsessively waiting for the latest records creates fragmented minds, hinders us from deep thinking or exercising sensible choices, and makes us foat on the wishy-washy waves of superfciality.” And there’s the gleaming, well said and easily missed cause of much of our woe – infobesity and superfciality.
Having made a default, if not a deliberate ploy out of not plumbing the depths of anything, we have smugly drifted into a know-it-all, echo chamber of a reality that is devoid of any mystery or lasting intrigue. As Dietrich Bonhoeffer once suggested, “The lack of mystery in our modern life is our downfall and our poverty. A human life is worth as much as the respect it holds for the mystery... Living without mystery means knowing nothing of the mystery of our own life, nothing of the mystery of another person, nothing of the mystery of the world... It means remaining on the surface, taking the world seriously only to the extent that it can be calculated and exploited, and not going beyond the world of calculation and exploitation.”
As such, it is not too late for the human being to challenge itself and change the course of its narrow, surface-dwelling ways; to fathom and delve into things deeply, so as to increase what we know for the betterment of all. We have the chance to correct a world as Eduardo Galeano once said, “Where the funeral matters more than the dead, the wedding more than love and the physical rather than the intellect. We live in a container culture, which despises the content.”
The funding from the NSW Reconstruction Authority (RA) will allow Council to complete a Structure Plan, Infrastructure Priority Plan, technical studies, and community engagement to investigate suitability for new housing and public infrastructure in the precinct.
Located on the western side of the Pacifc Motorway, the site is just fve minutes by car to Brunswick Heads and eight to Mullumbimby. It is well above projected food heights which will provide opportunities for new homes off the food plain.
Saddle Road is the third site to be identifed under the RA’s Resilient Lands Program (RLP). The site is also the frst to be identifed outside of the Lismore LGA under the program, and has also been fagged in Byron Shire Council’s Residential Strategy as a key site for future residential development. It follows the recent announcement of 400 new lots in East Lismore and up to 50 new households in the Mount Pleasant Estate at Goonellabah.
While the fnal number of homes at Saddle Road will be determined following detailed planning and community engagement, based on site-specifcations, it is estimated between 500-800 homes could be delivered.
The RLP is accelerating the delivery of new land and housing options, linking with the $700 million Resilient Homes Program (RHP), giving food impacted homeowners a pathway to move to a safer location.
The RA will work with RHP buyback participants to secure suitable and affordable land and will provide further support to those eligible who wish to relocate their existing homes.
For more information, visit NSW Reconstruction Authority.
Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully said:
“This funding is a win- win for the community and Byron Shire Council.
“Not only will it help to unlock food-resilient lots for people to build on, it also helps Council and the NSW Government deliver on its promise of more homes for our growing population.
“The land is positioned near existing services and an established community and will provide a beautiful, safe place to live for those affected by the nearby food plain.”
Parliamentary Secretary for Disaster Recovery Janelle Saffn said:
“The announcement of this third site under the Resilient Lands Program is the frst one outside of Lismore.
“Locals communities and Councils can be assured that the wheels of the RLP are starting to turn right across the Northern Rivers.
“This announcement will be followed by others in our local government areas and will see more land become available, giving people accepting buybacks in the Resilient Homes Program a variety of places to choose from.”
Byron Shire Council Mayor Michael Lyon said:
“We are thrilled to receive this initial funding support which will not only beneft members of our community displaced by the natural disasters in 2022, but also address the housing crisis that has existed since before the foods.
“Council can now get on with the important job of structure planning for this site on The Saddle Road and get the land ready for building food-resilient houses more quickly which is a huge win.
“The work ahead includes an Aboriginal Heritage and Environmental Sensitivity Assessment, a Structure Plan that includes a vision and concept plan for the site, a Planning Proposal to amend Council’s LEP and an Infrastructure Priority Plan that addresses the infrastructure required to support a new community such as roads, sewer and water.
“As these works are progressed, we look forward to working with our community to achieve the best outcomes.”