12th January 2015

Page 8

NEWS DESK In brief Frankston Waterfront Festival Saturday 17 and Sunday 18 January. Live music and fireworks; visit sand sculptures; try paddle boarding, canoeing, scuba diving and skimboarding; swim with a mermaiden; enjoy Mornington Peninsula produce; market stalls and art exhibition. Festival runs from 11am-10pm on 17 January and from 11am-6pm on 18 January. Details: frankston.vic.gov.au Circus fun Tuesday 20 January at Cube 37, Frankston Arts Centre. Program for 5-7 year olds 10.30am-midday and for 8-13 year olds 1-3pm. Youngsters can try tumbling, hooping, juggling, spinning plates, acro-balance, aerials and more, learning from experienced circus trainers. Details: thefac.com.au Holiday social badminton 9.3011.30am Wednesdays in January at Frankston South Community Recreation Centre, 55 Towerhill Rd. Get active and have fun with the help of coaches. All equipment supplied. Children under 16 free with a paying adult ($8.50 a session). Hot arts for cool kids 10am-12.30pm until 16 January at Cube 37, Frankston Arts Centre, Davey St. Hands-on fun workshops for ages 5-12 to engage, experiment and explore. Children must be accompanied by an adult. Cost $15 a session and $10 each additional child. Bookings: 9784 1060. Don’t Leave Kids in hot cars Frankston Council is working with Kidsafe Victoria to raise awareness of the dangers of leaving children unattended in cars. Inside a car it can be 20-30 degrees warmer than outside, with the temperature rising quickly within five minutes. Young children are more sensitive to heat than adults. If people see children locked in cars they should call police on 000.

Compromise on cabin park lease Neil Walker neil@baysidenews.com.au RESIDENTS at Seaford Beach Cabin Park may be able to stay at the emergency accommodation after Frankston Council agreed to offer owner Michael Hibbert a new 10-year lease. Negotiations between Mr Hibbert and Frankston Council had appeared to stall late last year (‘No end in sight for cabin park site deal’, The Times 22/12/14) but council announced on Christmas eve that it would extend the cabin park’s lease. Mayor Cr Sandra Meyer said “this is great news for the cabin park residents”. “We have listened to their views and decided to renew the cabin park’s lease on Crown land.” Deputy mayor Cr Glenn Aitken and councillors Rebekah Spelman and Colin Hampton attended a public meeting hosted by the Seaford Community Committee in November to hear residents’ concerns that they would be evicted if council pressed ahead with plans to build a car park on the Crown land portion of the cabin park. Council said it would work closely with Mr Hibbert to ensure cabins comply with planning, health and building regulations. Another condition of the 10year lease would include “a requirement that any future tenant rental increases are minimal”, according to council. Mr Hibbert said he is “relieved” coun-

cil decided to extend the lease since it would give the disadvantaged and marginalised residents who live at the cabin park some “certainty” about their living arrangements. The cabin park owner said there are still some aspects of the lease to be “nutted out”. He told The Times council is demanding a $50,000 bond and a year’s worth of rent upfront, totalling about $90,000. He said council had also requested he “replace the cabins”. Mr Hibbert said this would cost “about $3 million to $4 million” and was not viable with a 10-year lease. He said council had subsequently suggested “2 or 3 cabins” be replaced each year. “I’m trying to keep the costs to residents down and would have to pass on the costs to residents if that was the case,” Mr Hibbert said. “Yet council are telling me I can’t increase rents by any more than the CPI [consumer price index] rate.” Cr Mayer said “we are proposing terms and conditions in the lease to ensure improvements are made to enhance the site and upgrade facilities to better support resident wellbeing”. Council and Mr Hibbert will discuss the terms of the new 10-year lease at a meeting in mid-January. Mr Hibbert hoped the situation could be resolved “but they’re making it hard for me”.

Hope for cabin park residents: Kevin Marley, left, Stewart Seadon and Colin Starkey hope they can stay at Seaford Beach Cabin Park. Picture: Gary Sissons

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