This blog is part of an ongoing effort to unpack local government processes and help our community feel informed and confident to ask the right questions. The more we understand how things are meant to work, the better equipped we are to participate meaningfully and constructively.
Today’s focus is on a detail that sounds small – a Construction Agreement that was signed but not dated – but which highlights a bigger issue: clarity, process and the role of good governance.
Let’s start with the basics. How is a community building like this usually delivered? 🧱
Here’s a simplified version of the standard process for building on public land, especially when external taxpayer funding is involved:
1. Planning and consultation 📋
Early conversations between the surf club and Council
Site selection, concept design and project scope
2. Development Application (DA) submitted 📨
Includes building plans, reports and intended use
Lodged with Council as both landowner and consent authority
3. Development consent granted ✅
This is the go-ahead to build – not to occupy
Conditions of consent are attached. These often include:
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A Lease agreement signed before use of the building
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A Construction Agreement signed before fit-out or internal access
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Requirements for public access and accessibility
4. Construction Certificate issued 🔨
Confirms the building complies with safety and planning standards
Issued by a certifier – either Council or a private professional
5. Construction Agreement signed (and dated) ✍️
Essential when the club is managing the build, not Council
Covers:
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Roles and responsibilities
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Insurance and liability
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Compliance with funding agreements
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Handback terms once construction is complete
6. Occupation Certificate (OC) issued 🏠
Allows the building to be legally used
Certifier must confirm that all conditions of consent are met
What happened at Gerringong? 🤔
Council’s own development consent required a Lease to be in place before occupation, and a Construction Agreement to be executed before the building could be used.
But here’s what occurred:
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The club took possession on 20 December 2024 without a Lease
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A Construction Agreement was signed, but it was not dated
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A private certifier issued the OC
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In February, councillors were informed of a temporary licence, not the Lease required under the DA
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In May 2025, Council passed a motion to begin Lease negotiations – months after the building had been occupied
Why do dates on legal documents matter? 🕵️♀️
When a legal agreement is left undated, it creates uncertainty:
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No clear timeline for when responsibilities begin
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Ambiguity about compliance with planning conditions
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Questions about whether the certifier had enough documentation to issue the OC
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Potential for audit or grant compliance issues under public funding rules
A dated, executed agreement is a basic governance step that protects everyone involved — the surf club, Council, and the wider community.
Why this matters to all of us 🌱
When we understand the process, we can see where it worked and where it didn’t. These aren’t technicalities — they’re signals of how well systems function and whether safeguards are respected.
This is about learning and improving how community projects are managed.
Asking questions helps everyone.
It supports councillors, keeps staff accountable, and helps ensure that future projects are even better governed.
Some questions worth asking 🧭
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Were all conditions of consent met before the building was used?
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Why weren’t councillors given a full briefing on the Lease and Construction Agreement status?
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How does Council plan to ensure this kind of thing doesn’t happen again?
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Will future community projects include a final accountability report?
This blog is about building trust ❤️
Trust grows when processes are transparent, communication is honest, and public expectations are respected.
If you care about local assets, accessible facilities and well-run public projects, you’re in the right place.
Let’s keep learning together.
Let’s keep asking the right questions. 🤝
#Kiama #GerringongSLSC #LocalGovernment #CivicEngagement #PublicAccountability #CommunityInfrastructure #TransparencyMatters #AskTheRightQuestions #CouncilWatch #DevelopmentConsent #BuildingTrust
