Listen to the People: 50 years of community activism: 1970-2020

Page 43

against coastal erosion at a Save Our Beaches rally organised by the Henley and Grange Residents’ Association. As a member of both groups, I assisted in representations to local council, the local MP and Premier Dean Brown regarding the folly of the West Beach Boat Harbour development. We also had representation alongside the residents’ association and the Marine Discovery Centre on the Coastal Community Reference Group formed by the City of Charles Sturt in the early 2000s. As is the case with many community groups, eventually key members of the dunes group moved away or were unable to continue volunteering, and the group dissolved sometime around 2004. However, evidence of our efforts is easily detected, particularly in the West Beach, Henley South and Grange dunes where there are lovely pockets of diverse native dune species growing, stabilising the sand and providing habitat for birds, reptiles and insects. Wara Wayingga-Tennyson Dunes Conservation Reserve Val Wales

I moved to the coast in Semaphore Park in 1998, and shortly thereafter formed a small group with some neighbours and the support of Charles Sturt Council to clean up the rubbish from the remnant dunes in front of our houses. It took about two years to remove truckloads of rubbish, after which we turned our attention to improving the area by revegetation and weeding. We heard that there was a group that was doing just that at Tennyson Dunes with help from the Environment Department, so I asked if I could join and learn how to revegetate. I soon found that they were an enthusiastic group determined to preserve this rare dune system, which is the last three-tiered dune system in the Adelaide metropolitan area. It is a rare example of what our coast used to look like before white settlement, and contains a habitat for remnant plants, native birds, reptiles and insects of local, regional and state significance. Over the years, the dunes have come under significant pressure from housing developments, with visitor access, off-path activity and littering causing significant negative impacts. Feral animals (such as cats, foxes and rabbits) and off-lead dogs as well as pest plants, including garden escapes, have also been big problems. In an effort to get the support of Charles Sturt Council and the state government to protect this rare jewel, I walked and talked to every environment minister in every government over the years with little success. A state government proposal to construct a walking/cycling path all along the coast was the catalyst for us to seek the support of other groups along the coast such as WACRA, as we were all concerned about the damage this might do to the coast. We had already observed that to create a three-metre-wide path, seven metres had to be bulldozed through fragile dune systems. All the groups got together and a year -long consultation was held in the City of Charles Sturt which I thought was one of the best consultations that I had ever attended, and we thought that we had arrived at a good decision. However, a change of council resulted in a different view which led to a lot of bad feeling all round between councillors and coastal groups, and various new ways of achieving the path were put forward.

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Organisations, department names and acronyms

2min
pages 129-133

Working together for the greater good

5min
pages 122-123

Power of the community

13min
pages 124-128

Energy Friends: ‘From little things big things grow’

2min
page 118

Power to the people

6min
pages 119-121

The pool table men

2min
page 117

Social networks

2min
page 113

Being part of the community

4min
pages 111-112

WACRA’s history in images

2min
page 110

Henley Community Garden

6min
pages 105-108

Poles Apart 2016-17

1min
page 102

Mosaic Stepping Stones 2009

1min
page 101

The Wake following Telstra tower being built

1min
page 96

Telstra tower, Henley Beach 2016-17

6min
pages 93-95

Saving old Grange Primary School

6min
pages 87-89

Saving Estcourt House

2min
page 86

Community Alliance SA

3min
pages 84-85

High-rise construction of the Baju/H2O developments

4min
pages 82-83

Paid parking meters in Henley Square

2min
pages 72-73

Greening Henley and Grange

2min
page 62

Earth Hour

3min
pages 65-66

Saving Menkens Reserve

2min
page 61

Dredging Outer Harbor

3min
pages 59-60

River Torrens – Breakout Creek (Karrawirra Pari

2min
page 58

Ban shark fishing

2min
page 48

Wara Wayingga-Tennyson Dunes Conservation Reserve

4min
pages 43-44

Save Henley Dunes – coastal ecology

2min
page 42

Saving Henley Dunes

7min
pages 53-55

The Coastal Pathway – unfinished business

8min
pages 45-47

Save Our Beaches – impact

5min
pages 37-38

Save Our Beaches – another perspective

6min
pages 39-41

Building healthy communities

3min
pages 27-28

Media is political

2min
page 16

Activism in an age of protest

1min
page 20

In the beginning

2min
page 11

Networking

2min
page 13

Acknowledgements

1min
page 9

What is community activism?

2min
page 12

Fundraising

2min
page 18
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Listen to the People: 50 years of community activism: 1970-2020 by eurekaprinters - Issuu