Exciting news ... draft Armidale Creeklands Master Plan released for your comments

We are delighted to let you know that Armidale Regional Council has just released the draft Armidale Creeklands Master Plan for comment by the public. You may know that we have lobbied Council many times over the past two years for its release.

A recent letter to the Administrator, Mr Viv May, from another community group - New England Visions 2030 Institute (NEV2030) - seems to have prompted this most welcome action. Our association acknowledges this valuable intervention by NEV2030 and Mr May.

Now we can all get busy reading the 114 page document and provide feedback to Council by the deadline of 17 September, 2020. Our initial impressions are that it is an impressive document and we wonder why it has been kept ‘under wraps’ for so long - especially since our association was instrumental in getting Council to fund the consultancy in the first place!

Visions for Armidale Creeklands Inc will be liaising with all our members to make sure we take this opportunity to fully reflect on the analysis and many ideas put forward in the draft Plan. The Plan received input from a wide range of organisations, individuals and through community surveys.

If you would like to add your voice to ours, feel free to join us! We recognise that this is only the first major success on our journey to improve our creeklands. There is much still to do to respond, refine ideas and visions and turn them into reality for the benefit of all.

Here you can find Armidale Regional Council’s announcement and download the draft Master Plan.

If you are interested in what our association put forward two years ago, you can read the submission our association made to the consultants back in April 2018.

Since then, our group has been reaching out further to other groups and coming up with more exciting ideas for the future. Without broad community agreement, we might never see the healthy water flowing through our beautiful city that so many of us dream of.

If not you, then who?

If not now, then when?

Why not join us?

Cover page of Armidale Creeklands Master Plan (2018)

Cover page of Armidale Creeklands Master Plan (2018)

Assembling our members' ideas to make Armidale’s creeklands even more beautiful ...

What better time is there to make new plans for our environment than during a global pandemic?

Your Visions for Armidale Creeklands Inc committee has been busy of late making plans to see more water along our city’s creeklands. The video (5 min) below describes some of our aims and shows a little of some discussions among some of our committee members.

Over the coming months, we will be gathering more ideas - especially from our members - so that we create plans which are seen as exciting and visionary by the wider community.

 
 

If you are not already a member and you would like to get involved, feel free to join us.

You might also like to consider a donation to assist our not-for-profit association achieving its aims.

And feel free to comment below …

The community must be given an effective voice BEFORE this playground is built
Concept for Curtis Park playground

Concept for Curtis Park playground

Might Armidale playground look like something like this?

Might Armidale playground look like something like this?

Shelter under construction in Curtis Park

Shelter under construction in Curtis Park

Sydney Park toilet block

Sydney Park toilet block

Sydney Park slides

Sydney Park slides

Cascading water in Sydney Park

Cascading water in Sydney Park

Wildplay garden, Centennial Park, Sydney

Wildplay garden, Centennial Park, Sydney

Wildplay garden, Centennial Park, Sydney

Wildplay garden, Centennial Park, Sydney

Tamworth playground

Tamworth playground

Our association agrees that Armidale needs a great new playground for our kids!  And yes, we need it now! 

But our community association believes that there are serious problems that must be considered before it is built. We have evidence of support from the community - see comments on our most recent Facebook post. Also, have a look at all the good ideas from the community put forward in response to the recent Press Release from Council published in the Armidale Express online. Council has not asked whether you think this playground is a good overall concept or whether it is in the best location.

Please ask yourselves these questions before you give Council a thumbs up:

  • Will any of your ideas put forward on Facebook be taken notice of by Council?  They want you to do their survey - strictly limited to just possible additional equipment (if more money can be found) via Council's Yoursay website - but only after you register - and how many will bother to do that? 

  • Is Curtis Park the best location?  It is what the Economic Development team of Council has proposed.  The ideas from community comments to the Council press release are asking for lots of features - areas for toddlers, small kids, bigger kids, adults, disabled facilities, etc ... all great ideas. So, will Curtis Park really be big enough? 

  • What about parking - for the playground, for the Information Centre, for Hungry Jacks, for those having picnics?

  • What will happen to the markets?

  • Is the playground equipment proposed really what we want to see?  Is the equipment made of natural materials?  Is it really what the community wants?

  • Yes the Tamworth playground it great.  But what about the other great playgrounds many of you (and our association in our ‘Inspirations’ web pages) have mentioned?

  • Will there be real shade from real trees or is that just part of the concept design?

  • Will there be any room left for water features in the creeklands after the playground is installed or will we have to keep the stone-lined drain? We think that the view from the Marsh St bridge over the creeklands through Curtis Park is the “jewel in the crown” of views to attract visitors to stop (or NOT stop) in our beautiful city.

  • Will the inevitable intermittent flooding damage the playground and/or any fencing?  If so, should the playground be located above the flood zone?

  • What did the Creeklands Master Plan (completed by Council consultants for $80,000 in 2018) say about the best location for a playground(s) and what changes did they envisage for Curtis Park?  To our knowledge, no-one has seen the Plan - why not?  Surely we should see it as it was prepared by the same consultants who designed the admirable water and playground and toilet/kiosk facilities you can see on our website link.  Why won't Council release it?  The ratepayers paid for it!

  • What does the Armidale Regional Plan 2040 - recently prepared by Sydney consultants (due to be released in May 2020) - say about this playground proposal?  This plan has not been released yet; nor has it been commented on by the public/community; nor has it been voted on by Council.  Should Council be pushing ahead constructing a playground before any recommendations of these expensive planning exercises have been seen, commented on and voted upon?

Please consider the above questions and take any action you think is appropriate.  We encourage you to communicate to Council (council@armidale.nsw.gov.au) if you support or have concerns about the playground which is currently under construction in Curtis Park.

If Council goes ahead with this development as is, we believe it may well turn out to be $1m of public money 'down the drain'.  

To see just a few inspirations we have proposed for our creeklands, please visit more of our Inspirations web pages and follow links to the next several pages which show lots of water and plenty of inspirational playground ideas.  They have been up on our website for ages - but Council does not seem to be interested, even though we have met with them and made submissions to inform them of our ideas.

Residents should insist that our Council listens to those who put forward ideas and visions that the community supports.  If we don't know what the community supports, then we should find out via a thorough process of community consultation.  And THEN, hopefully we can all enjoy a great playground in the best location possible!

And if you support what Visions for Armidale Creeklands Inc is trying to achieve for Armidale, why not Join Us and/or Donate to lend your weight to our community voice.

Your sincerely,

The committee, Visions for Armidale Creeklands Inc.

Report on recent bus tour along creeklands with members of the local Aboriginal community

In November 2019, our committee hosted a bus tour along parts of the Armidale creeklands with members of the local Aboriginal community.

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During the tour we learned something about how Aboriginal communities are connected in an inseparable way to the land and environment:

Aboriginal communities have a connection and sense of ownership of the land. The land and water and its biodiversity values are the centre of Aboriginal spirituality and contribute to Aboriginal peoples’ identity. Aboriginal heritage and nature are inseparable from each other and need to be managed in an integrated manner. Management of cultural heritage should accordingly focus on conservation across the whole landscape and recognise the role of people in the landscape. Natural resource use remains an important part of Aboriginal people’s lives in NSW. It is associated with the use and enjoyment of valued foods and medicines, caring for the land, passing on cultural knowledge and strengthening social bonds. The Armidale Creeklands provided the local ANAIWAN people with a rich variety of foods, medicine, resources, shelter and utensils.
Front page of report on bus tour with Aboriginal representatives

Front page of report on bus tour with Aboriginal representatives

Our submission to Armidale Regional Plan 2040

On December 3, 2019, our association made a detailed (15 page) submission to the consultants undertaking the Armidale Region Plan 2040. It was copied to the CEO and all Councillors. You can download it here.

Extract from the submission to the plan:

Our association’s aim is: “To assist in the careful planning, design and development of beautiful, healthy and safe public spaces featuring wetlands, lagoons and billabongs, connected by flowing water along the Armidale Creeklands”. 

We support the development of user-friendly infrastructure such as attractive bridges, paths and cycle ways, play and recreation areas, along with performance and creative spaces which will complement water features and improve the quality of life, economy and beauty of Armidale.

More water features will encourage tourism, grow the economy and provide educational and research opportunities. An enhanced creeklands environment will see more environmental flows of water supporting healthy life along the entire centre axis of the city - supporting water birds, frogs, eels, fish, invertebrates, etc.  Billabongs, lagoons, ponds and wetlands will greatly enhance the recreational opportunities and enjoyment of all residents as well as visitors to the region.

Visions for Armidale Creeklands Inc aims to collaborate with the wider community by seeking the visions of the aboriginal community, sporting associations, recreational users, the business community, educational institutions, residents and visitors of all ages and those wanting environmental protection, stream health, wildlife corridors, native vegetation and deciduous colour. 

Reflections on water - in Armidale ...

Watching the doom and gloom @abc730 segment last week was surely not inspiring to many of us who have enjoyed - and continue to enjoy - living in this great city. As we wrote in our most recent newsletter to our members, “We have so many invaluable assets - including human capital - in this region and we need to maintain a positive frame of mind to overcome the current obstacles; just like our forebears did!”

It was disappointing to learn that some managing this drought crisis in Armidale think that watering the trees in our precious Central Park with 4 mm of irrigation water per week is cheering up members of the local community. Well, on behalf of members of Visions for Armidale Creeklands Inc, they are wrong.

What to do? What would cheer us up would be to have all those well-watered Sydney viewers of abc730 come to Armidale for a visit and spend a few nights in our gorgeous region, stay in the highest city in the country, and spend some of Sydney’s fabulous wealth in our beautiful multi-cultural city - the first city in Australia to be the proud location of a University outside a capital city. We should declare that some of our association are refugees - from Sydney (!) - who enjoy the cool climate and the high quality-of-life in this modest-sized city. We like to see on our app each morning “Traffic is light in your area”, the Hinton art collection at NERAM, education, music, light manufacturing, theatre, good health infrastructure, etc.

Might the ABC consider, through its various media platforms, how it might help repair some of the damage done to our city from this short and shallow segment?

Sales and Crabb could bring some laughter - and chatters - to the region for a @Chat10Looks3 show in Armidale’s beautiful town hall. They could chat about water with our region’s avid chatters and those who know something of water in Australia and our region. They could meet a water scientist from Armidale’s very own internationally recognised company with experts in irrigation and water balance studies who could measure the water use of the precious trees in Central Park and advise Council on the need for more than 4 mm/week.

Yes, with our 13,000 ML Malpas Dam, we have enjoyed 50 years of water security. Yes, our various planners might have become too complacent about our need for a future water strategy. But we do look enviously at the secure water supply of another high country city in Australia with its 353,000 ML of water storage, all stored within that wonderfully managed Murray Darling Basin, Canberra!

Perhaps @abc730 might revisit Armidale if it were to produce a follow up program looking at the security of water supply of ALL Australian cities and towns and compare them to Sydney’s water security where the show is produced?

If any readers care about water in a regional city, we encourage them to join our Visions for Armidale Creeklands association which aims: “to assist in the careful planning, design and development of beautiful, healthy and safe public spaces featuring wetlands, lagoons and billabongs, connected by flowing water along the Armidale Creeklands”.

As a reward for those few who might have read to the bottom of this blog, we reproduce a poem from one of our late friends. In light of the current drought and our need for rain, we think it appropriate to reproduce it here.

The late Roger McKnight wrote:

‘Send ‘er down, Hughie’

But we want to go to tennis,
or some other sort of sport,
wails the city-slicking menace
over some old cocky’s snort –
Send ‘er down, Hughie; send ‘er down.

Arr, they want to go to beaches,
petty pleasures they desire,
while me pastures, or me peaches,
or me parsnips all expire –
send ‘er down, Hughie; send ‘er down.

They say that it’ll rain for years,
there’ll be a second Flood.
If all we get is city tears,
I’ll irrigate with blood –
send ‘er down, Hughie, blow ‘em, send ‘er down!

(from The Grass Trees - selected poems Roger McKnight published by Hyde Park Press, Adelaide, p35). Roger McKnight was a passionate poet and dairy farmer from Waitpinga SA, that one of your committee had the privilege to know - he is confident that Roger would not have minded it being reproduced here as we suffer through these extraordinary times.

Planning to encourage Visions from the next generation ...
Can students do better than this?

Can students do better than this?

Two members of our association had a very productive meeting this morning - planning our sponsorship proposal to local businesses and organisations. We will be seeking sponsors so we can offer substantial prizes for primary and secondary school students which will encourage visionary designs for all aspects of Armidale’s creeklands.

It will be exciting - look out for this over coming months!

Article in Armidale Express about our association and the history of droughts and floods
Year to 31 May 2019

Year to 31 May 2019

Year to 31 May 2017

Year to 31 May 2017

The current drought is seriously affecting much of Australia, over 90% of NSW and our Northern Tablelands region. This article puts the current situation into some perspective regarding the history of droughts and floods in our region.

It also invites members of the community to an upcoming presentation to be given at our Annual General Meeting - details here.

Survey 2 results (suggestions from members)

Here are the results of our 2nd survey which concerned the many suggestions for our creeklands put forward by our members for consideration. Understandably, members tended to rank their suggestions higher than non-members - but it is interesting that almost all were viewed positively.

It is important to note that this survey did not get as many responses as we would have hoped - perhaps because it was quite a long survey. We will try to ensure that future surveys are more tightly focused and shorter!

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Survey 1 results

RESULTS OF SURVEY 1: LEARNING ABOUT YOUR PREFERENCES

This survey was open to all those viewing this website. These results were received from 50 respondents of this 1st survey of visitors to our web pages. They were asked what they thought of a series of propositions, firstly about the creeklands themselves and secondly, about playgrounds that might be built along the creeklands (to read the full text of each proposition, see the original survey still shown under the SURVEYS tab). 

Firstly, let's see a chart of all responses from both members and non-members. Then, below this chart, you can then read some of the ideas put forward in response to the open-ended question seeking viewers’ thoughts.

Survey 1 - preferences for creeklands and playgrounds.png

Ideas put forward by members:

  • “I would like more attention to quality bicycle and walking paths and a venue for outdoor performance - like an amphitheatre.”

  • “The creeklands need to be a place of beauty where both residents and visitors want to spend time. Other attractions and installations such as a sculpture park, outdoor performance area and exercise stations should be considered. Improved walking paths and tracks and cycle ways are also needed to encourage users to easily explore further along the creeklands in either direction. An increase in the planting of both deciduous and evergreen trees need to be planted to provide shade, screening and general beautification of the creeklands particularly from Markham Street through to Taylor Street. Higher standard of crossing for both pedestrian and cyclist need to be constructed to encourage people to safely use a greater length of the creeklands.”

  • “Definitely need a maintenance plan for ongoing repairs and definitely would like to see a foundation established to guarantee ongoing improvements and continuation of this plan forever.”

  • “Remove reeds. Deepen the creek. Have better bridges across the creek in central areas.”

  • “I think the playground should be on the higher north Kirkwood Street side of the creek not concentrated in a smallish area on a busy road.”

  • “I realise that native trees will possibly attract bats (I like bats by the way).”

Ideas put forward by NON-members:

  • “Public transport from town to park.”

  • “I have some other ideas also of natural playgrounds for all ages. I will endeavour to send them through to you!”

  • “We need bigger playgrounds for young children to play in. Especially toddlers and young children. I think Armidale should use the 2 excellent playgrounds that Tamworth have as an idea as we travel to Tamworth most weekends for my young child to have somewhere to play outside that is exciting, engaging and safe.”

  • “Outdoor gym equipment. Better flow of water.”

  • “Lighting and security cams. Wifi hotspot.”

  • “I would love to see what Tamworth did with their animal park. Not the animals but the park have school or kids come buy a brick or a post and have them put their name on it. Have a day were the whole community can come along and help so kids feel good that they did something to help. Get all the work for the dole people in there building or planting. I hate having to drive to Tamworth just to spend the day at the park as in our parks, our kids are bored after a half hour.“

  • “Deciduous trees near water will likely mean that the water will need more cleaning due to leaf litter.”

  • “There are ways in which both shade cloth and trees can be useful and in different situations one might be better than the other Water, if shallow and hidden by grass growth, is dangerous because adults supervising children might not realise it is there. Water needs to be obvious to be safe.”

  • “I do not feel we need to focus on parking as much as encouraging bike or foot.”

  • “Other attractions and installations.”

  • “Please get rid of the reeds in the creek which distract from its beauty.”

  • “The redesign of Armidales creek lands in relation to Dumaresq creek in its existing state needs a well thought out and staged development process. I absolutely feel the inclusion of recreation areas is of high importance, however children playgrounds only form part of the needs for recreational areas.”

SurveysJames ScottComment
We're keen to respond to the draft Master Plan ...

See this recent article from the Armidale Express about our association’s plans to respond to the draft Master Plan being developed by Armidale Regional Council’s consultants.

We are still not sure when the draft Master Plan will be released by Council but Visions for Armidale Creeklands Inc intends to call a public meeting to gather responses from our members and the general community.

We have been told by Council that the draft Master Plan has been delivered to them but they are seeking some changes by the consultants.

Keep an eye on our website and/or Facebook pages to ensure you don’t miss your chance to contribute to our combined response to the draft Master Plan. We are certainly looking forward to it with eager anticipation! You may not know that the first Creeklands Beautification committee formed in 1927! We are keen to contribute our community’s ideas so that we get the best outcome for all.

Sale (Vic) Common Nature Conservation Reserve

Again, our Facebook friends have told us about other inspiring sites.  This one - in Sale, Gippsland, Victoria has some wonderful features such as large billabongs, waterholes, birdlife, boardwalks and long paths for exploring over 300 ha including large areas of freshwater marshes.  An information sheet can be found here and a website here.