The Kiama Municipal Council Draft Delivery Program and Operational Plan 2026 to 27 is open for submissions. Here’s why this one needs your voice and how five minutes of your time can make it harder for our council to pretend nobody cared.
You have until 24 May 2026 to be on record. After that, you handed your say to someone else.
Every four years, a newly elected council makes promises to the community. The Delivery Program is where those promises get written down, funded and turned into actual actions. The Operational Plan is the year by year version, spelling out exactly what gets done, when, and what it costs.
This is not a planning document for planners. This is the document that decides whether the footpath outside your house gets fixed, whether the community program your kids rely on keeps running, whether council is actually spending your rates on what it said it would.
The NSW Office of Local Government sets out what a Delivery Program must contain. It must demonstrate commitment to the community. It must show how services will be prioritised and measured. It must address ongoing improvements to efficiency, financial management and governance. It must identify services council will review during its term.
This draft falls short of those requirements. This is a question of whether the document meets the standard it is legally required to meet.
“If your accountant handed you a budget this vague, you would find a new accountant. Kiama deserves better than this.”
This is your moment. Your name belongs on this. Get in the room
Maybe you’ve submitted before. Maybe you’ve spoken at meetings, written letters, shown up. And maybe it felt like your words went nowhere.
Submissions that name specific items, in your own words, from real residents, create a paper trail that cannot be buried. They go on the public record. They get read aloud at meetings. They become evidence.
And if you’ve never done it before and don’t know where to start, that’s exactly why this post exists. We’ll walk you through it, step by step. It’s simpler than you think.
Look at the draft sitting on the council website right now. See that word: UPDATED.
That happened because people spoke up, council listened, and the plan changed. This is exactly how it is supposed to work. And it worked here, in Kiama, because residents chose to show up.
So when you submit this time, you are adding your name to something that is already moving. You are part of a community that has already proved it can shift things.
And there is a second reason, just as important. Every submission goes on the public record. If any decision in this plan is later challenged, reviewed, or examined by the Office of Local Government, by a journalist, or by a future council, your submission is proof that the community was paying attention. That the people of Kiama saw this, understood it, and said something about it.
That record belongs to all of us. Make sure your name is in it.
Check yoursay.kiama.nsw.gov.au for confirmed dates as these can shift.
What to write
You don’t need to be a planner, a lawyer, or a political scientist. You need to be a resident who has noticed something.
Here’s a simple submission template (adapt freely)
- Who you are. Your name and suburb. If you want to remain anonymous to the public but not council, say so. You can request your name be withheld from published submissions.
- What you’re responding to. Name the specific item, project, or section of the plan you’re commenting on. Vague submissions are easier to dismiss.
- What you want changed or protected. Are you asking for something to be added? Removed? Better resourced? More transparent in its reporting? Be specific.
- Why it counts. One or two sentences. This is your voice. Use everyday language.
- What you’d like council to do. End with a clear ask. “I ask council to…” is a sentence that’s hard to ignore in a formal process.
Things worth asking about
When council says it will improve community wellbeing, how will anyone know if that actually happened? What does success look like in a way a normal person can check?
When a commitment in this plan is not delivered, what happens? Who is responsible and what does the community get told about it?
When plans change mid year, how do residents find out? Is there a phone call, a letter, a post on Facebook? Or does it just get dropped without a word?
The plan talks about financial recovery. But is this council on track for long term financial sustainability, or just a one year result that looks good on paper? A single year back in the black is not a strategy. The community deserves to know the difference.
What does the executive leadership of this council cost, and how is that performance measured and reported to residents?
Is the community engagement in this plan genuine, or is it a checklist? What changes when the community says something council does not want to hear?
If those questions don’t have clear answers in the plan, that’s your submission.
The plan doesn’t just describe what council will do. It describes what council thinks the community will accept.
Should this plan go back to the drawing board?
Yes. And you are allowed to say so.
The NSW Office of Local Government sets out what a Delivery Program must contain. It must demonstrate commitment to the community. It must show how services will be prioritised and measured. It must address ongoing improvements to efficiency, financial management and governance. It must identify services council will review during its term. This draft falls short of those requirements.
Councillors have the power to send this back for a rewrite before it is adopted. This is exactly what the process exists for. If you believe this plan is not good enough, tell council this. Tell your councillors this. Use these words:
“I ask council to defer adoption of this plan and rewrite it to meet the requirements set out by the NSW Office of Local Government.”
More voices, harder to ignore
Individual submissions are powerful. Collective submissions are formidable. Both count.
If you have neighbours, friends, or a local group who share your concerns, coordinate. Not to copy each other (unique submissions carry more weight), to ensure the same theme appears multiple times from multiple people. That volume is hard to dismiss as a fringe view.
Share this post. Print it. Leave it where people will see it. The consultation period is short. The plan is long. But you don’t need to read all of it. You just need to find the part that affects your street, your family, your community, and say something about it.
That’s democracy. And it works best when people actually use it.
How to submit
Your name on the record is harder to ignore than your opinion on Facebook





Ash our tour guide, Dino our bus driver and Lucky our driver’s assistant, spotter, and passenger support.

