‘BE BRAVE, NOT PERFECT’ – RESHMA SAUJANI The Byron Shire Echo • Volume 40 #53 • June 10, 2026 • www.echo.net.au
Mullum hybrid water plan springs a leak
Catalano’s twin Wategos mansion DA wins court approval
Bruns Old & Gold brings community together
Paul Bibby
Hans Lovejoy
Mullumbimby’s proposed hybrid water supply scheme is in serious doubt after Byron Council staff warned it faces significant public health, regulatory, and cost risks, and recommended Council not proceed with the project in its current form. A report to Byron Council’s Water and Sewer Advisory Committee on 28 May found the hybrid proposal – adopted by Council in October last year – may struggle to secure the state government approval required to proceed, and could even trigger a review of the town’s water extraction licence.
Proposals on the fly The hybrid model was intended to combine a permanent connection to the regional Rous water network with a supplementary local water source drawn from Lavertys Gap weir on Wilsons Creek and treated through a new packaged water treatment plant. But staff say the proposal was adopted without the strategic planning and options assessment usually required for major water infrastructure projects, weakening Council’s ability to justify the scheme to regulators. ‘Pursuit of the “hybrid” scheme was adopted without a full options assessment which weakens strategic justification if not addressed,’ the report states. Under Section 60 of the Local Government Act, Council must ▶ Continued on page 4
Elke and Clover at Sabina’s legendary yard sale at the Brunswick Heads Old and Gold festival on the weekend. Photo Jeff Dawson
Stranded kayakers rescued at Broken Head Volunteers from Marine Rescue Brunswick battled darkness and deteriorating conditions last Tuesday to save three men stranded on Cocked Hat Rock, part of the Three Sisters, at Broken Head south of Byron Bay. Volunteer radio operators at Marine Rescue Port Macquarie received multiple calls reporting people in distress, and lights visible near the Three Sisters just before 9pm on Tuesday, 2 June. Marine Rescue Brunswick was then requested to assist by the NSW
Do you want Call to end damaging the rail trail native logging completed? ▶ p7 agreements ▶ p9
Police Marine Area Command. Marine Rescue Brunswick Unit Commander and rescue vessel skipper Glen Parker said his volunteer crew used thermal imaging technology and floodlights to locate the three men on Cocked Hat Rock. ‘We communicated with them through the hailer. They were relieved to see us but clearly distressed. ‘The men told us they had paddled out to the rock, but their kayak had been swept away by the swell, leaving them stranded.’ Initially, rescuers were going to
First-hand account from Global Sumud Flotilla ▶ p14
wait until daylight to extract the men due to the rocky surroundings; however, deteriorating conditions and risk of hyperthermia ensured a night rescue was initiated. ‘Deteriorating sea conditions slowed the journey back to Brunswick Heads Boat Harbour, with Brunswick 30 arriving shortly after 4am, where NSW Ambulance paramedics were waiting to assess and treat the men,’ said skipper Parker. ■ Read full story in The Echo online: www.echo.net.au.
A controversial dual-mansion development at Wategos Beach has been approved by the NSW Land and Environment Court (L&EC), ending an 18-month battle between media entrepreneur Antony Catalano’s company and Byron Shire Council (BSC). In December 2024 BSC unanimously refused the development application (DA), with Mayor Sarah Ndiaye saying the plans didn’t meet ‘environmental, planning, or community expectations.’ The L&EC issued consent on 4 June for the construction of two detached dwellings at 1 Julian Place and 8 Brownell Drive. The approval was part of a conciliation process, in which Catalano’s company Raes Residences Pty Ltd amended the DA to address BSC’s objections. The approved development remains substantial. The main house on Julian Place will exceed Byron’s nine-metre height limit by up to 2.35 metres – a 26 per cent variation – with the smaller garden house on Brownell Drive also breaching the height limit. Both exceedances were approved under a planning variation mechanism that allows height limits to be set aside where compliance is deemed ‘unreasonable or unnecessary’. The development attracted 204 objection submissions during notification, compared to 47 in support. Arakwal – the Bundjalung of Byron ▶ Continued on page 5
Local small businesses Mandy’s Soapbox: are our favourite Let’s disappear the businesses ▶ p22 outrage farmer ▶ p24
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