Issue 171 of COAST Community News

Page 1

NOVEMBER 16, 2017

YOUR INDEPENDENT COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER

Demolition work constantly delayed by asbestos removal

-

PH: 4325 7369

ISSUE 171

65.7 per cent of Central Coast voters put in a yes vote

How Central Coast voted

T

he results are in on the Same Sex Marriage Survey, with 61 per cent of Australians voting to expand the definition of marriage to include two consenting adults, regardless of gender.

Rubble on the site of the former Gosford Youth Centre on the corner of Baker St and Georgiana Terrace where more asbestos has been found Photo: Justin Stanley

C

entral Coast’s Deputy Mayor, Clr Chris Holstein, wants Council staff to explain why the demolition of the Waterside development site that spans Gosford’s Baker St, Mann St and Georgiana Terrace has continued to be such a stop-start affair. “We are asking questions now on why, on the old Spurbest site, there is a stop and start on the demolition,”

Clr Holstein said. “I saw a couple of months ago they started to demolish and that has now stopped,” he said. “I have asked the staff why. “Is this stop and go a delaying tactic to put back doing something with the site?” he said. Mr Cain King from CKDS Architectural services said the demolition delays were due to the discovery of asbestos. “It hasn’t stopped, but we have needed to attend to WorkCover and Council

requirements to remove the asbestos, and that has been causing the delays,” Mr King said. “It seems like each step uncovers more asbestos on the site and I would not expect WorkCover or Council to behave with any less than due diligence about its removal,” he said. “The demolition work has uncovered more asbestos in the Froggys site and in the former youth centre building,” he said. Continued P6

Central Coast voters put in a 65.7 per cent yes vote compared to a NSW average of just 57.8 per cent, making both the Central Coast federal electoral divisions of Dobell and Robertson among the more pro-equality electorates in the State. The largest pro vote in the state of NSW was Sydney CBD, where 81 per cent of voters voted ‘yes’, while, in a surprising result, Parramatta

was among the electorates that recorded a 61 per cent ‘no’ vote. All states and territories recorded a majority ‘yes’ response: 133 of the 150 Federal Electoral Divisions recorded a majority ‘yes’ response, and 17 of the 150 Federal Electoral Divisions recorded a majority ‘No’ response. Member for Robertson, Ms Lucy Wicks, indicated that she would respect the vote of her electorate, despite voting ’no’ in the survey. In a twitter question with local SeaFM radio journalist, Emma Horn, Ms Wicks tweeted: “Hi Emma, you’re right, I voted no. “After 10:00am, if the Australian people say yes, I will respect and reflect the decision and say yes to facilitate a bill

through Parliament,” Ms Wicks said. “I’d ask others to respect the result too - whatever way Australia decides.” The national participation rate was high, as nearly 8 out of 10 eligible Australians (79.5%) expressed their view. The survey was undertaken by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) rather than the Electoral Commission, as it is officially a non binding survey rather than a binding plebiscite. The link to the ABS website for the marriage survey is marriagesurvey.abs.gov.au/ results/ Source: Website, Nov 15 Australian Bureau of Statistics Twitter account, Lucy Wicks Dave Abrahams, data analysis

The Human Rainbow at the Terrigal Skillion

Office: 120c Erina Street, Gosford Phone: 4325 7369 Mail: PO Box 1056, Gosford 2250 E-mail: editorial@centralcoastnews.net Website: www.centralcoastnews.net Mobile Website: www.coastcommunitynews.com.au


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Issue 171 of COAST Community News by Central Coast Newspapers - Issuu