Friday, 21 January, 2022
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40-page liftout Property Guide
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PR OP ER TY
Australia Day splash The popular Noosa Australia Day Festival is back for 2022, presented by Tewantin Noosa Lions Club at Lions Park, Noosaville. There will be plenty of live music, entertainment, and food for the whole family to enjoy on Wednesday 26 January along the banks of the Noosa River. Read more on page 2
Australia Day celebrations go ahead on Wednesday 26 January.
Picture: ROB MACCOLL
Gateway in crisis By Phil Jarratt
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As one of the most hectic summer holiday seasons on record draws to a close, locals, councillors and stakeholders are predicting that the Noosa North Shore, gateway to the Great Sandy National Park, is at a dramatic crossroads.
Faced with peak period ferry queues that extend all the way back to Tewantin, a low tide sand highway clogged with speeding 4WD drivers which is forcing swimmers, fishermen and walkers off the beach, and camping areas littered with human waste and refuse, despite new state government regulations, many families who have enjoyed their slice of paradise on
the other side of the river for generations are saying enough is enough. Some are even advocating full or part-time beach closures so the country can regenerate and future uses reassessed. To get to the heart of the problems facing the North Shore, there are more roadblocks than there were at the state border, in the form
of commercial in confidence and non-disclosure agreements and simple, old-fashioned no comments, but Noosa Today dug deep and over this two-part article, we’ll examine what’s really going on now, and what a vision of the future might hold. Continued pages 4-5