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

Page 65

• • •

How do we enable business and industry to prosper as rainfall intensity increases, heatwaves increase in frequency and intensity, and sea levels rise? How do we maintain the amenity and function of inland waters? How do we maintain the function of estuarine waters?

AdaptWest was one of WACRA’s first collaborations with Charles Sturt Council. Possibly it signals a shift in our position from community reaction towards collaboration. Globally, climate scientists have recognised that the best decisions on adaptation are likely to be made when local communities are involved in the process. Earth Hour Andrea Rankin

Earth Hour is a global movement but the concept originated in Australia, the first event taking place in 2007 in Sydney. In 2008, the movement went worldwide. View the website for more information: https://www.earthhour.org/. According to Wikipedia: The event is held annually, encouraging individuals, communities, and businesses to turn off non-essential electric lights, for one hour, from 8:30 to 9:30 pm on a specific day towards the end of March, as a symbol of commitment to the planet.

I first became interested in Earth Hour in 2009. In 2010 myself and Richard Smith, both members of WACRA and on the committee, organised the inaugural event in Grange. It was held at Kirkcaldy Park and was a tiny affair. About 20 friends got together with picnic rugs, food, wine and, of course, candles to celebrate this beautiful planet we call Earth. We continued to hold Earth Hour events each year until COVID struck in 2020. However, the event changed in terms of participants and format over time. We recruited Angie Starr onto our team. Angie is an MC extraordinaire as well as a talented musician with a huge network of generous talented musicians and artists. The event grew by the sheer dint of her personality! In 2014 (the event’s 5th year), we successfully applied for our first Discretionary Ward Allowance from Charles Sturt Council with WACRA as the auspicing body. We received a grant of approximately $1,500, using this money to pay the bands a nominal fee (they had played for nothing in previous years), buy solar lights and other sundries, and pay insurance. Charles Sturt Council printed flyers for us, which I mostly letterboxed in the area surrounding Kirkcaldy Park. Some locals from the surrounding streets came which was great. The rest were friends (mostly local, but some from further away) and WACRA members. At the high point, there were over 100 people. I remember us dancing to a DJ at 10.30 pm (we would start at 7.30 pm). It was surreal – the park was festooned with solar lights, candles flickered everywhere, and the feeling of goodwill and love for our planet was felt by all. They clamoured for more. In 2015, we successfully applied for a second Discretionary Ward Allowance. Angie was fired up. What an organiser! We were a great triumvirate, each with a complementary skillset. Angie was an outrageous MC and the audience loved her! A big thank you goes to the bands and individual performers: The Dudleys, the GovGlees Choir, the Weeping Angels, SaSamba (Brazilian beats drumming group), Willy Didgeridoo and

58

58


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

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
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Listen to the People: 50 years of community activism: 1970-2020 by eurekaprinters - Issuu