9 supporters are talking about petitions related to Koalas!
Being one of the closer neighbouring property owners affected by this quarry proposal I respectfully ask the Mid Coast Councillors and their respective regulatory department to investigate the illegal activities that are currently being conducted on the site for the past year or so. Apart from the complete disrespect shown to the environment and community already this proposal must be rejected in it’s entirety I invite the councillors if they are unfamiliar with Shallow Bay to the site in question.
Having a quarry within 500m of our property and other Nieghbour is unacceptable in an area sits on Wallis Lake and the Wallingat River. The impact on our environment, roads and noise will be unbearable
Coomba Park, Shallow Bay and Charlotte Bay are beautiful quiet residential areas full of wildlife and beautiful national parks. Coomba Road is a winding narrow road through these areas and not fit for large trucks of any kind. Coomba Road already has a reputation of being dangerous and there are many accidents. We don’t want the noise, the dust and dirt and damage to our environment. This quarry will impact the whole environment and the residents quality of life. It would be a travesty if this is allowed to go ahead. Please do not support it.
We have just lost koala and other animal habitats in Harrisville QLD to accomodate acreage lots. Not a housing crisis build as blocks are too expensive for homeless crisis. So many animals lost their homes in the many trees and bushes and we saw them crossing roads into yards with dogs trying to get away from bulldozers and chainsaws. They are sitting at the construction fence confused and scared, just very sad times where councils and developers greed out way beating hearts.
The government's unreliables power plan rollout will scrape 1 million square kilometres of landscape -13% of Australia's land mass - but a little less if sea born windmills are used. When this is nearing completion in the 2030s to 40s millions of marsupials, birds, reptiles, insects and plants (and fish) will have been destroyed and hundreds of species made extinct. This is not a "green" energy plan. It is destroying our fragile ecology to "save" the planet. It is hard to see what is "renewable" about such extraordinary wildlife devastation.
For many thousands of years, our First Nations people have done an exceptionally good job of preserving Australia's natural environment. This has made it possible for Australia to become a highly urbanized multicultural nation with one of the best health and welfare systems in the world. Therefore, isn't it time that we really start listening to and learning from our indigenous Australians so that we can all work together to preserve our native flora and fauna? After all, Australia remains the driest continent on Earth, with eighty-five percent of its land area already classed as arid. This means that we must do our best to preserve what little fertile land remains.
As a local resident, the overdevelopment of an area where human and natural coexistence has flourished for so many years is saddening and sickening. What we have in the greater springfield area of Ipswich is amazing and the nature is arguably the best part about it. We really need to care for our animal neighbours and protect their habitat. Enough is enough. If possible, woogaroo forest should become a reserve/national park. Leave the Koalas and Roos alone please
For many thousands of years, our First Nations people have done an exceptionally good job of preserving Australia's natural environment. This has made it possible for Australia to become a highly urbanized multicultural nation with one of the best health and welfare systems in the world. Therefore, isn't it time that we really start listening to and learning from our indigenous Australians so that we can all work together to preserve our natural environment? After all, Australia remains the driest continent on Earth, with eighty-five percent of its land area already classed as arid. This means that we must do our best to preserve what little fertile land and precious waterways remain.