I care about fervently about transparency and accountability in local government.
Planning decisions, infrastructure spending, environmental protection, community facilities. Councils shape the places where we actually live.
Yet in many places the system does not invite scrutiny. In my area, community members are often treated a bit like mushrooms. Kept in the dark and given information only on a need-to-know basis.
“Community engagement” frequently looks like a few pop-up consultations, some glossy boards and the appearance of listening. The real decisions tend to happen somewhere else.
That is why supporting community members to put their hands up to advocate on their own behalf is a the top of my list of “must do”.
Transparency and accountability don’t happen by accident. They happen when people are prepared to ask questions, read documents and follow issues long enough to understand how decisions are actually made.
It is hard work. It takes patience. And it helps enormously if you know what you are doing.
Over the years I have been grateful to work alongside a cohort of what we respectfully call loud and proud rabble-rousers. In truth they are diligent readers, persistent question-askers and people who refuse to walk away when something does not add up.
Here are a few of the habits they use to keep the bastards honest.
Holding the bastards to account rarely begins with a campaign. It usually begins with someone deciding to look a little closer.
A question asked.
A document read.
A thread followed further than most people bother to.
People sometimes ask how ordinary people make a difference in public life. The answer usually begins the same way every time. A journey where questions become steps, and steps become habits.
Find your tribe
Working alone drains energy. When people who care about the same issue find each other, knowledge grows quickly.
Relationships build the network. Contacts open the path. Sources and trust reveal the story.
People are the most important tools any journalist has.
Be clear about the outcome
Know what you are trying to change. A decision, a policy question, a development proposal, a lack of transparency.
Clarity keeps the work focused.
Recognise the story
Move past who, what, when and where. Ask why it matters.
A public announcement, press release, or promotional event is only the doorway. Walk through it. The real story is inside.
Do your due diligence
Read the documents. Understand the process. Know who holds the authority to act.
Follow the money. That is often where the clearest evidence sits.
Stay in it for the long haul
Being first is different from being smart.
Wait. Watch. Talk. Listen. Think.
Headlines appear quickly. Stories take time to develop.
Be willing to pivot
Skills developed in one place often become useful somewhere else.
Mark Corrigan’s work for example shows how persistence and curiosity can travel far beyond the original issue.
Most people already carry the instincts needed for this work.
The trick is recognising the small steps that turn concern into action.
It is rarely glamorous.
Then the documents speak, the story opens up, and the truth has nowhere left to hide.
And when the world feels ridiculous, sometimes you just need a vending machine for outrage. Select flavour, vent, carry on.










Dr Tony Gilmour ( Vice President) and Sue Eggins ( President) who led the conversation on the history of the Pilot’s Cottage which houses the Kiama’s Maritime Museum – Composite photo





