Tuesday, 04 May, 2021
Lilydale
Plants with a purpose
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Phone: 5957 3700 Trades and Classifieds: 1300 666 808 12477081-JW03-21
A Star News Group Publication
PROPERTY GUIDE
Did you hear the news?
Lilydale High School year 9 media students Summer, Zoe and Anelise are among those excited to hear that their suburb has a brand new weekly newspaper - the Lilydale Star Mail. 235678
Picture: STEWART CHAMBERS
Kangaroo fight By Taylah Eastwell An outpouring of care and concern by community members over the fate of a mob of kangaroos temporarily halted a planned roo cull at a Chirnside Park golf course. Heritage Golf and Country Club released a statement around 2pm on Tuesday 27 April informing neighbouring residents that a contractor had been hired to conduct a planned shooting at the club that evening. “It is in their best interests not to be out after dark whilst shooting takes place,” the statement read.
Outraged locals took to social media to express their frustration after being notified at the eleventh hour that the shooting would occur between 9pm and 3am that evening. A local group devoted to fighting for kangaroo rights at a Lilydale land development, Save the Kinley Kangas, was one of the first organisations called upon by anxious and horrified residents. Save the Kinley Kangas member Alyssa Wormald said 60 to 80 locals pulled together for a demonstration at the site that evening to prevent the cull going ahead.
85%
“We just said if you can get down there, get down there and had people all around the property keeping an eye out and a big presence at the main entrance with signs and people in fluro just there as a support for the kangaroos,” Ms Wormald said. The cull didn’t go ahead on Tuesday evening, with police allegedly calling it off, but residents remain anxious. “Residents love them and it is well known that kangaroos are at the course. There has been huge community anguish come out of it, It’s just absolutely tormenting the community
because they love these kangas so much,” Ms Wormald said. “There is so much anxiety in the community that if we let up the pressure they are just going to come out and kill them. As an abundance of caution we are keeping eyes on the property until the manager comes and says he’s not going to kill them,” she said. A petition was also set up on 29 April, receiving over 1,000 electronic signatures in less than 24 hours. Continued page 5
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