CHRONICLE WYONG REGIONAL
Issue 108
January 17, 2017
Your independent community newspaper - Ph: 4325 7369
Council has done nothing to generate employment - Mehan The proposed development looking down Beach Pde
Application lodged for iconic development at Canton Beach $22.5 million application has been lodged with Central Coast Council for the construction of a five-storey shop top h o u s i n g development on the corner of Beach Pde and Crossingham St, Canton Beach.
A
Until recently the land, located at 5 to 7 and 8 Beach Pde, has been used as a caravan park, but is currently vacant, according to the Central Coast Council’s Wyong DA tracker. According to a Statement of Environmental Effects
(SEE) submitted in support of the DA: “The proposal … includes a contemporary building that comprises one basement level containing 68 car parking spaces (49 residential, 10 commercial and 8 visitor with five accessible, to be confirmed), four commercial units at ground level and 36 units on the upper levels.” According to the SEE, the development will include 24 two bedroom units and 12 threebedroom units, including four adaptable units. “Council has identified the subject site as part of a key site … prescribed for significant uplift in height and floor space
ratio,” according to the SEE. “This is reflected in the development standards applied to the site by the Wyong Local Environmental Plan (WLEP) 2013… intended to stimulate the redevelopment of the Canton Beach foreshore as a tourist precinct, to provide active street-frontage uses and to supply additional residential accommodation. The provisions of the WLEP also required the preparation of a Development Control Plan (DCP) for any redevelopment of the site. However, in this
instance, a DCP has not been prepared because the applicant’s proposal “does not rely on the key sites’ provisions and instead is predicated on the development standards that would otherwise apply under the WLEP. “As Council has identified the subject site as a key site, its redevelopment for higher scale development is not only appropriate, but is anticipated by Council and residents. “The key sites’ controls seek design excellence, encourage amalgamation, Continued P5
T
he new Central Coast Council must develop the Wyong Employment Zone (WEZ) at Warnervale if it is serious about i n c r e a s i n g employment on the Coast, according to the State Member for The Entrance, Mr David Mehan.
Mr Mehan made his statements about the WEZ in response to questions about the poor recent performance of the tourism industry on the Central Coast. “The tourism industry is over-rated as a local employer,” Mr Mehan said. “The biggest employer on the Central Coast is retail, followed by health, and then community services,” he said. “We should make sure all employment opportunities are fully promoted and I think Council is doing the right thing with its current review of how it spends to promote the region,
but we haven’t had a big employer move to the Coast since Woolworths opened its distribution centre at Warnervale in 2009-10. “The major problem is that Council has not gone ahead with the Wyong Employment Zone in the manner in which it should have. “The former Wyong Council held it back in favour of its own pet projects, such as the idea we were going to get a new university there, and it seems that everything the former Wyong Council wanted to do in that northern area is still being supported by the Central Coast Council,” Mr Mehan said. Mr Mehan said he believed, in terms of the WEZ and the generation of local employment opportunities, the new Central Coast Regional Plan “throws it all back on Council” to get anything done. “But Council has done nothing to generate employment.
Office: 120c Erina Street, Gosford Phone: 4325 7369 Mail: PO Box 1056, Gosford 2250 E-mail: editorial@centralcoastnews.net Website: www.centralcoastnews.net
Continued P3