Western Port News 8 November 2023

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NEWS DESK

Indigenous names sought for shire’s 11 new wards Keith Platt keith@mpnews.com.au MORNINGTON Peninsula Shire councillors want Indigenous names for the 11 new municipal wards being created on the peninsula by the Victorian Electoral Commission. A majority of the shire’s 11 councillors last week agreed to ask the Local Government Minister Melissa Horne to “implement” and a local government municipal panel to “consider” Boon Wurrung language place names for the wards. Councillors at the Tuesday 31 October public meeting agreed to “seek advice” about Boon Wurrung ward names from the Bunurong Land Council. The Bunurong Land Council Aboriginal Corporation is locked in a legal dispute with the Boon Wurrung Land and Sea Council over a native title claim to more than 13,000 square kilometres of territory. The ward boundary and name changes are part of a VEC review that will see 11 single councillor wards replace the existing two three-councillor, one two-councillor and three single-councillor wards. The VEC has proposed three “models” for the ward changes and lists possible ward names as Briars,

Moorooduc, Mount Eliza, Nepean, Red Hill, Rosebud, Safety Beach, Seawinds, Tanti Creek, Warringine, Watson Creek, Capel Sound, McCrae, Somerville, Balcombe and Truemans. Horne will be told that council wants Boon Wurrung language place names “as this council considers that recognition of Indigenous culture is an important part of our history as recognised in our local state sponsored reconciliation action plan”. Cr Despi O’Connor said Boon Wurrung was “actually the language and the Bunurong Land Council appreciate that as well and is something they talk about”. Asking the Bunurong “to lead” in suggesting ward names would build the shire’s relationship with the land council. O’Connor said the land council would not make up words if there was not one appropriate for a ward. “There may not be a name they think is especially necessary and I don’t think we should just put a different name, a Bunurong name, if it’s not from the heart and real.” Cr David Gill, who suggested inviting the Bunurong Land Council to help name the new wards, said the shire now had a cross section of Aboriginal names for its wards and Kangerong was “quite an obvious area name for Dromana”.

Choosing Aboriginal names for wards would “send a signal to our land council, and they have their difficulties … that we seriously understand issues and want to do something”. The Bunurong Land Council (Aboriginal Corporation), now being run by a special administrator, has received $200,000 from the shire over the past two years plus an unknown amount for conducting archaeological field assessments as part of a cultural heritage management plan (CHMP) process (“Administrator to ‘fix’ land council woes” The News 30/10/23). Gill said work done by shire CEO John Baker showed “that there is some, not an understanding I suppose, but some leaning towards what we are suggesting or what I am putting up for us to consider - to have First Nations names, place names [for our wards]”. He said it was the names of wards, not places like Red Hill, Rosebud, Sorrento, Shoreham, Mornington, Hastings, Mount Martha, Dromana, Flinders and Mount Eliza, which were going to change. “What we’re considering here is not tossing everything out, what we’re considering here is ward names, not the other names of where we live on the peninsula,” Gill said. Continued Page 8

Pictures: Yanni

Walk for reconciliation MORE than 200 students from around the Balnarring area took part in The Little Long Walk at Balnarring Primary School to promote reconciliation. The Little Long Walk on Wednesday 25 October - a shortened version of the long walk by indigenous former AFL player Michael Long - aimed to support the continued educational growth of young people from a First Nations’ perspective. In 2004, former AFL player Long walked from his home in Melbourne to Parliament House in Canberra to draw attention to the plight of the Indigenous community. The Long Walk was born, with

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money being raised to support Indigenous education programs across the country. Long is a Anmatyerre, Maranunggu and Tiwi Aboriginal man who has dedicated much of his life to advancing the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cause. The recent Little Long Walk at Balnarring included a welcome to country by an elder, Aunty Caroline Martin (inset), before the walkers set off. There were also workshops run by First Nations people. Balnarring Primary teacher Georgia Minotti said it was an important occasion for the school and the reconciliation process.

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