The following is a lightly edited transcription of a letter that was sent to the CoGB Council on 10 November, 2014.
Only two Councillors have so far contacted us to acknowledge receipt. We note here that Cr Elise Chapman actually asked why we didn't just contact the mine and offer to sell them our property and go and live somewhere where there was no mine (!). We replied that our property is contiguous with a family property that has been farmed continuously since Selection in the 1850s and would not be sold...
What was she thinking?
Only two Councillors have so far contacted us to acknowledge receipt. We note here that Cr Elise Chapman actually asked why we didn't just contact the mine and offer to sell them our property and go and live somewhere where there was no mine (!). We replied that our property is contiguous with a family property that has been farmed continuously since Selection in the 1850s and would not be sold...
What was she thinking?
***
To the City of Greater Bendigo Council – Re: Admittance
refused to Costerfield ERC meeting
Dear Councillor,
On November 6, 2014, as I, a landowner and ratepayer
in Costerfield, attempted to attend the Mandalay Resources Environmental
Committee Meeting, I was confronted and asked to leave by the General Manager.
I had not entered the meeting room. I had already greeted and shaken hands with
Mandalay Resources’ Sustainability Manager, but was
then met by the General Manager. He refused to shake my hand or greet me personally.
"Please leave my mine," he said.
I asked why I was being barred from attending and was advised:
"You are writing a blog attacking my mine, you are not welcome. Please
leave my mine." I replied: "The blog is attacking the regulators not
the mine. I wish to talk to you about it, please". He repeated his
request. So I left. I spoke to the DSDBI Principal Facilitator on
my way out and related this information to him.
This is a wholly unsatisfactory state of affairs. As all Councillors will be well
aware, I have at no time attacked the present mine or its current operators. I am
and have been intensely and vociferously concerned with the under-regulation of
the mine and the regulators themselves. I have also been providing documentary
evidence to back my concerns. And I am unapologetic for my vehemence. In fact
my ejection from the site is further evidence of the regulatory inadequacy that
plagues this operation and needs addressing immediately.
On numerous occasions over the past decade, local resident
Members of the ERC have urged that meetings be held at a public venue so that
this very thing could not happen. This common-sense action would have removed
from the mine the temptation (and ability) to exercise its absolutely
justifiable right to refuse entry to particular people it does not want on its
site. That site is, of course, private property.
The fact that this has not been done indicates a
lack of respect for the people of Costerfield by, and their further
disenfranchisement at the hands of, the regulators and Public Servants. Why has
Council allowed a situation to occur where ratepayers and landowners are
silenced in expressing their objections by prevailing, unjustifiable and
much-protested conditions?
I do not blame the General Manager of the mine at all for this occurrence or
criticise his actions. Of course, he has every right to keep people whom he
feels may pose a threat to his mine or his workers from his property, no matter
how mistaken I think he may be. Once again, it is the fault of the regulators
who have allowed this unfortunate event to occur through a failure to ensure
fairness and equability for the citizens of Costerfield.
I had attended the previous ERC meeting – my first –
as an observer and had been active in discussion. I still have an unaddressed
matter of business arising from the previous Minutes – which should therefore not
be accepted at this time on that basis alone – that will now have to wait until
the next meeting. Will I be barred from attending that meeting, too? I do not
intend changing my position on the mine’s regulation unless I am given evidence
that contradicts my position. I am not anti-mine or anti-mining. I have worked
for the Division of Geo-mechanics at the CSIRO’s Queensland Centre for Advanced
Technologies, a government-mining industry CRC, for goodness sake! But no one
would know that because no one engages with me.
Councillor, even if I were "writing a blog
attacking the mine", is this cause to be excluded from debate? In a
democracy? Is it Council's and the other regulatory authorities’ position that
only those who are supportive of the standard of regulation of this mine should
be allowed at the table? Or to even observe.
I was,
quite frankly, surprised by the General Manager's reaction. I had been hoping to be able
to engage with him in some way regarding our, the landowners and ratepayers’, concerns.
I realised he wouldn't be very happy with me, of course, but I certainly didn't
expect him to merely put his fingers in his ears and pretend I am not here. He
is allowed his opinion and I, mine. I am allowed to disagree with him and with the
regulators of the mine. I should not be able to have my concerns discounted
simply because I have voiced them.
I was not in attendance and so cannot comment on the manner in which the
meeting was chaired, but it seems questionable to me that the meeting should
have even been allowed to proceed in such an exclusionary atmosphere. No wonder
there was anger on the day!
Because of our concerns, and the
way they have played out over the last few weeks, the frustration of all of the
residents at the meeting should be viewed with some sympathy. We said there
would be dust: there was dust; and the roads and the noise were, like us,
ignored, and we had to chase around madly on Public Holidays to get anyone
anywhere to respond or even reply to us. My near neighbour, Mr Brian Leehy has
lived with these same issues of noise, dust, water and property rights, for
over a decade and is absolutely furious that no lessons have been learned. By
anyone. I am not condoning or excusing Mr Leehy (I was not there… I had been
excluded, you will recall) but I do understand why he is angry and I feel he
has some justification. I note that Mr Neil Harris offered Mr Leehy his full
support.
At 8am on Cup Day I was forced to
report to the EPA horrendous noise from Lot 2 (I’d been woken by the racket at
7am)… on [Melbourne] Cup Day, a Public Holiday – noise we measured at 67dB… the limit for a
Public Holiday is 36dB. I am over a kilometre from Lot 2. Mr Leehy also
reported the noise. He is further from Lot 2 than I am. As video and audio I
have of the morning shows, after the call was made the work quietened down to
very acceptable levels (at my place at least), but why did the call need to be
made in the first place? Where was the monitoring of this new project? Who was
watching on our behalf? Who was regulating?
Water is being sprayed on the
South Costerfield-Graytown Road. Where is that water sourced? Who is ensuring
that the source remains constant? If it is sourced from rainwater, where is the
testing to confirm that no subsequent contamination through contact with
tailings or other mine waste during its collection and storage has occurred? No mine water is to be used for dust suppression; is this being adhered to? These
are questions you, as the Responsible Authority should require answers to. For
the sake of our health and wellbeing.
By the time this meeting arrived,
we had already waited three months, and then a further three months, for the
announcement of an ERC community member. A community voice. And that
announcement was still not forthcoming. This is indicative of yet another lack
in community engagement. Please do try to put yourself in our shoes. People
were frustrated because the choice of venue had allowed the mine to exclude us
from the site and, after six months, Council has still not chosen a community
representative.
While
this mine is something that crosses your path only sometimes (more frequently
recently, I’m sure) it is something that the community lives with each and
every moment of the day. The noise is always there. Always. Not just from
Splitters Creek. From the mine. The noise does not stop.
Why do
you think I keep annoying all of you, all of the time? It’s to show you what a
mining operation in your backyard sounds like.
Ms King was barred for abusing
mine staff. This is something she admits: shouting down a phoneline. Once
again, I was not there, but I think her reactions, while perhaps not being very
polite or considerate, are forgivable if one knows and understands the
circumstances. The call took place on the day that works commenced at Splitters
Creek… which was the morning after the passing of Mr Leask’s mother, Mrs Mary
Leask, at the age of 100. So Mr Leask awoke, on his first morning without a mother, to the overwhelming roar of heavy machinery and a mouthful of dust from Lot 2. By the time the ‘abusive phone call’ took place, Ms King had called many
numbers and sent many texts but had received no response from anyone.*
[* This is not strictly correct. We admit and apologise for our mistake. Ms King managed to speak to both the Mayor, Cr Barry Lyons, and Cr Helen Leach. Certainly, then, contact was made, but the 'response' was to commit to following it up the next day... when the horse races were over.]
[* This is not strictly correct. We admit and apologise for our mistake. Ms King managed to speak to both the Mayor, Cr Barry Lyons, and Cr Helen Leach. Certainly, then, contact was made, but the 'response' was to commit to following it up the next day... when the horse races were over.]
It was a Public Holiday in Bendigo and so the world stopped. But not the dust and noise in Costerfield.
When she eventually got through
to Mandalay, Ms King was grief-stricken, livid and frustrated that those very
things she had taken to VCAT were now unfolding and no one was listening. And
the dust was falling and the noise was hammering. And a pregnant mare she had
moved to a distant paddock to calm her was so distressed by the noise she
delivered a premature, dead colt. Ms King let loose. Not wise or polite... but,
surely understandable?
Still no
one has contacted her, Councillor. No one from the City of Greater Bendigo has
instituted in any way the Community Engagement Policy detailed in the city’s policy document that I have attached so you may refresh your memory. Has anyone asked Ms
King about her and Mr Leask’s pain and grief and offered to facilitate things
at this very difficult time? No. No one has.
Mr Leask and Ms King require
sampling and monitoring at Glenlea. They have a chemical-free farm to
protect. And a Shetland pony stud. But they want it done according to their
requirements for their businesses, rather than being limited by the mine's
narrow testing scope that does not address their livestock concerns. Is this
really too much to ask? No discussion has been entered into by the mine. It is
their way or no way.
Once again, we are angry and
frustrated at the game of catch up the various departments are running with
this project. Despite it being months since the VCAT decision was handed down,
next to nothing was in place to look after us, the residents, our health and
wellbeing or our property rights. Again. And for weeks leading up to this we
have been running a blog telling the regulators and you about this need to pay
attention to the regulations. Regulations that are supposed to protect us, the
citizens. You’ve ignored us.
Engagement works both ways. At
present, everyone must engage with the mine (but only at the mine… if they are
allowed to attend!) or they are barred from taking any part in the
conversation. Perhaps if Council had engaged more appropriately with Ms King
and Mr Leask it may have been able to inform Mandalay of the turmoil in Mr
Leask and Ms King’s lives, so that things may have been undertaken
differently...
I understand that there are moves
afoot to have police attendance at ERC meetings in future. Please don't bring
in the police. It really will be very demeaning for everyone and will only
serve to inflame things. The ridiculous casting of the regulators and the mine as
victims facing radical, anti-mining activists was tried successfully in 1998;
it won’t work in 2014.
I have related that sorry tale of unwarranted public shaming on the blog with contemporary newspaper clippings
and other supportive documents. It would be an insult to the people of
Costerfield to think that this would be attempted again. There is no need for
the police. No need to over-react. No violence is pending, just anger because
we are not being served well or listened to.
If you would like to meet to
discuss these things face-to-face please do contact me. My pen’s bark is much
worse than my real bite, I assure you.
We just want things done
properly, at last, Councillor. That's all.
Please do something to help us
get that accomplished…
Sincerely
Steve Blackey
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