Mornington News 23 February 2021

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Mornington YOUR GUIDE TO WHAT’S ON THIS WEEKEND FOR PENINSULA FAMILIES FACEBOOK:

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Tuesday 23 February 2021

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Tips from the experts

Picture: Yanni

MOUNT Martha House community gardeners enjoyed some expert cultural induction training, Friday 19 February. Their teachers were members of the Bunurong Land Council Aboriginal Corporation, who aim to preserve and protect the sacred lands and waterways of their ancestors, their places, traditional cultural practices, and stories. They aim to guide and advise groups on what artefacts may be encountered and their significance to the Bunurong people. The community gardeners say they “don’t intend to carry out major excavations on the site but are keen to understand the land on which they will be working”. They also want to strengthen their relationship with the traditional owners. The garden, in the grounds of the cottage at the rear of Mount Martha House, will be a demonstration garden with a focus on education and community inclusion through garden activities and related workshops for young and old. The garden team welcomes new members and friends. Details: mmhcgarden.org

‘Fire risk’ audit excludes houses Keith Platt keith@mpnews.com.au THE state government has been accused of ignoring aluminium composite cladding fire risks faced by people living in single and two-storey homes. Houses have been excluded from the government-ordered audit of buildings incorporating the flammable material. “The irony is that apartments are included in the audit, so there's a line drawn to say it's OK for home owners and residents to be housed in combustible buildings but not tenants or owners of apartments,” Ron Corcoran said. Alarm about the dangers of aluminium composite cladding was raised in

June 2017 when 72 died when London’s 20-storey Grenfell Tower caught fire. In March 2019, a cigarette was blamed for a blaze in Melbourne's Neo200 building that that jumped five storeys. Several years ago, Mr Corcoran bought one of two $1 million plus luxury townhouses in Mornington, only to later discover “a lot” of aluminium had been used in their construction. An expert in galvanic corrosion, Mr Corcoran knew that besides its well publicised flammability, the aluminium would also corrode because of the townhouses’ proximity to the sea. He said the extensive use of aluminium posed “all of these problems that you don’t expect”. “You can’t sell without these type of

problems - which were against buildings regulations - being fixed.” The discovery of the aluminium and the lack of adequate waterproofing on a deck started lengthy negotiations with the builder. Inspections found 40 to 50 problems with the two townhouses which eventually cost about $100,000 to fix. Mr Corcoran said that neither the Victorian Building Authority or Mornington Peninsula Shire wanted to know about the problems, and he was forced to appeal to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal’s disputes resolution board to force the builder to act. The shire will not identify buildings on the peninsula uncovered by the state-wide audit by the VBA. Instead

of agreeing to call on its own staff to report on the progress of making the buildings safe, councillors have agreed to the mayor Cr Despi O’Connor telling the state government that its building surveyour, not the shire’s, should be responsible for ordering buildings to be repaired or even evacuated (“Fire risks clad in secrecy” The News 1/2/21). It is understood that a hospital is one of the buildings identified in the VBA audit. Mr Corcoran believes the government, by not including single and two storey houses in the aluminium cladding audit, is “trying to keep a lid on it”. He said it was obvious that aluminium cladding was used in the con-

struction of many houses along the Esplanade from Mornington to Mount Martha and along the peninsula’s Port Phillip coastline. “There’s a double standard in buildings. The aluminium is all right for use in houses but not in aged care or hospitals.” Mr Corcoran said builders often “use the cheapest materials out of Asia”. “Many big new residences are completely built from flammable cladding, you only have to look along the Esplanade and think how many there must be around the country,” he said. “According to the building code they can be built out of any combustible material, such as weatherboards or ACP.

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