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Tag: community accountability

Holding the bastards to account begins with looking a little closer

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.

Author Lynne StrongPosted on March 7, 2026Categories Abuse of Power, Behind the Byline, Citizen JournalismTags citizen journalism, civic participation, community accountability, follow the documents, holding power to account, local democracy, local government transparency, Public Interest Journalism

When residents need a guidebook to deal with their own Council

I am now getting at least one message a day from community members asking if I can help them raise concerns with Council because their own attempts have gone nowhere. Different people, different issues, the same story. Long silences. No clear answers. Doors closing instead of opening.

This is not how community engagement is meant to work.

And it should never have reached this point.

This pathway exists for difficult, complex issues.
It exists for serious failures of governance.
It exists for situations where the facts are unclear or the stakes are high.

It should not be necessary for something as simple as a community group asking what happened to their property.
It should not be necessary when the evidence is clear, the police report exists and the matter could have been resolved with one respectful conversation.

And yet here we are, building a guide for the community because a straightforward mistake became a maze.

Yes, it is sad that this is necessary.
But sunlight is a powerful thing.
The more people understand the system, the less the system can ignore them.

Where the community can go when Council will not resolve an issue

When a matter cannot be resolved directly with Council, there are proper pathways available.
The order matters because each agency plays a different role.

1. Office of Local Government (OLG)

This is always the first step.

OLG oversees how councils operate. They look at:
• governance
• fairness
• use of confidentiality
• whether councillors received accurate information
• whether proper process was followed
• whether the community was shut out

They must receive the complaint before any other body, because they decide whether the matter needs referral or review.

2. NSW Ombudsman

The Ombudsman becomes involved only after OLG has assessed the matter.

They examine administrative fairness, including:
• was the decision reasonable
• was the process appropriate
• did the community have a fair opportunity to be heard
• were decisions based on correct information

The Ombudsman does not overturn decisions.
They assess whether the system worked the way it was meant to.

3. Your local Member of Parliament

An MP cannot change a Council vote, but they can:
• ask questions
• seek clarification from the Minister
• request updates from OLG
• support community groups who feel excluded

Sometimes a single enquiry from an MP changes the tone completely.

4. NSW Police (when relevant)

Police involvement is appropriate only when:
• property has been lost
• facts are unclear
• a timeline needs to be confirmed

Police do not decide compensation or policy.
They clarify what happened so other processes can function.

5. Community Legal Centres NSW

For people needing independent advice on their rights, Community Legal Centres NSW and their local member centres remain a strong option. They offer free or low cost support and can help residents understand which laws or policies apply to their situation.

6. Media and community advocacy

Not the first choice for most groups, but a necessary one when all formal pathways lead to silence.

Media is effective when:
• the facts are clear
• the documentation is strong
• the group has acted in good faith

Community advocacy helps residents understand their rights and supports groups who feel dismissed.

See Essential Media Tools for Community Groups here

Why the order matters

Many people go straight to the Ombudsman.
The Ombudsman will send them back to OLG.

The correct sequence is:
Council → OLG → Ombudsman (if OLG decides it is appropriate)

Following the proper order avoids delays and gives the issue the best chance of being handled properly.

Rider

This information is based on my research and on the publicly available guidance for residents navigating unresolved Council matters.
If anyone has further insights, corrections or additional information that could help the community understand this pathway more clearly, please contact me.
My goal is accuracy, clarity and support for anyone who feels their issue has stalled.

#Kiama #KiamaCouncil #CommunityRights #LocalGovernmentNSW
#CouncilAccountability #GovernanceMatters #CommunityAdvocacy
#Transparency #PublicInterest #HaveYourSay #CivicEngagement

Author Lynne StrongPosted on December 5, 2025December 7, 2025Categories Behind the Byline, Citizen Journalism, Community Advocacy and GovernanceTags community accountability, know your rights, navigating council systems, power in knowledge, Share tags community roadmap, when council won’t act2 Comments on When residents need a guidebook to deal with their own Council

Council thought they’d close the lid. But you can’t lock out a community that knows right from wrong

“Integrity is doing the right thing even when the process is stacked against you.”

It has been in the newspaper. It has been on TV. All of Kiama knows about it and, thanks to WIN News, most of Wollongong does too.

And still, somehow, this simple matter became secret squirrel business. Council pushed it behind a confidentiality motion and the community was shut out. What happened behind those closed doors that led every councillor to vote against giving the Kiama Woodcraft Group two and a half thousand dollars. It is a question that deserves an answer.

The Kiama Woodcraft Group never asked for a fight. They asked a simple question. What happened to their library module. A heavy, lockable box they were told would be kept safe during the Joyce Wheatley Centre refurbishment. They returned months later to find it gone. Read the background story here 

What followed is a study in how a straightforward problem becomes something much bigger.

They were given shifting explanations. First, that the box fell over and burst open. Later, that it was opened with keys at the Works Depot. Books were placed in a skip under a disposal order. Some were salvaged by a staff member who recognised their value and later returned them. Others turned up at a Lifeline book fair. The rest were lost.

Throughout this, the outdoor and maintenance staff who were involved have been honest about what happened. Leadership has not shown the same clarity. That contrast is at the core of this story.

When the Group tried to find out what had happened, communication slowed, then stopped. Emails went unanswered. Calls were not returned. Councillors said they could not discuss the matter because it had been declared confidential.

A councillor reportedly suggested the library may never have existed. That is the moment a small loss becomes something much larger.

The Group was later told no books were taken, despite the fact that several had been returned and identified by the Group’s own library markings. They were told there was no liability. They were told the matter was closed.

They persisted anyway. Not because they enjoy conflict, but because they know right from wrong and they were not prepared to be dismissed.

 “Council controlled the motion. The Woodcraft Group controlled their character.”

When an organisation struggles to admit small mistakes, everything becomes harder than it needs to be. Staff learn to defend decisions rather than discuss them. Questions that could be answered in a day get pushed into process. Confidentiality becomes a default shield, even when openness would resolve the issue instantly.

The community sees this. People know when they are being stonewalled. They know when a simple problem has been made complicated.

They know when they are being treated as the problem, rather than people seeking a fair response.

This case shows what happens when the balance of power leans too heavily to one side. When a major venue raises concerns, partnerships are formed to resolve the issue. When a volunteer group raises concerns, the doors close. You cannot miss the contrast.

It is enough to make any resident wonder whether the Kiama Woodcraft Group should hire the same professional negotiators or public relations support that Jamberoo Action Park used. The difference in response is striking.

At one point the suggestion was made that the Woodcraft Group had invented the entire story. As if a community group would spend months gathering evidence, obtaining legal guidance, retrieving returned books and speaking to media outlets for the sake of two and a half thousand dollars. The idea does not withstand a moment’s scrutiny.

When an elected representative accepts a story like that, it reveals a deeper issue. It shows how easily people adopt the most convenient version of events. It shows how uncomfortable it can be to challenge information presented from within the system. This is not personal. It is cultural.

I am not a lawyer or the police but I know people who are and this is what they told me

Fault Clarification

  • Police role: Police investigate whether a crime has occurred (e.g., theft, fraud, misappropriation). Their conclusion that council was not at fault means they found no evidence of criminal wrongdoing.
  • Council responsibility: Even if no crime was committed, councils can still be responsible in a governance or civil sense. For example, failing to manage property properly, poor communication, or not resolving issues with the previous council.
  • Key point: Police findings clear the council of criminal fault, but they don’t resolve questions of administrative responsibility or duty of care. Those are matters for the council itself, or potentially civil claims.

Insurance Responsibility

  • Community group insurance: Councils often require groups to insure their own property when stored in council facilities. That covers risks while the group has custody or use of the items.
  • Council custody: Once the council removed the property and stored it at their works depot, the risk shifted. At that point, the council had custody and control, so they assumed responsibility for safeguarding the goods.
  • Damage at depot: If damage occurred while the property was at the depot, it would generally fall under the council’s insurance or liability – not the group’s. The group’s insurance wouldn’t reasonably apply to items outside their possession.
  • Key point: Responsibility for insuring and protecting the goods transferred to the council once they took possession. Damage at their depot becomes a council issue.

Summary:

  • Fault: Police cleared the council of criminal fault, but governance responsibility remains a council matter.
  • Insurance: Once the council took the property into their depot, they assumed liability for any damage.

I think often about councillors who entered public life because they wanted transparency, fairness and a better way of doing things. Many ran on that promise. Many told me they wanted to lift the standard. Yet here we are. A simple matter spiralled into silence. People with good intentions have found themselves surrounded by the very habits they hoped to change.

The Kiama Woodcraft Group’s experience is not isolated. It is part of a broader pattern in which bureaucracy attempts to control the narrative and shut down dissenting voices instead of addressing the issue directly.

I know this pattern well. I raised concerns of my own in the past. I was assured the matter would be investigated. I provided every document and every detail. Council already held information confirming what had taken place. Yet when a councillor tried to raise fair questions, they were silenced. That was the day I realised what I was dealing with. I left a job I cared about because it became clear that truth was negotiable and silence was preferred.

I will not be silent now.

The Woodcraft Group has shown what accountability looks like from the ground up. They stayed calm. They stayed factual. They stayed polite. Their account has been consistent and supported by several sources. They kept going when the system hoped they would give up.

They were treated as if the real problem here was their persistence rather than the mistake that caused it all. Yet they kept going. And that, more than anything, is why this story matters.

Addendum

A councillor reportedly said to the Woodcraft Group, “You cannot even prove the books existed.”

For the sake of accuracy, here is what the Group can prove.

They have a full catalogue list maintained by their librarian, showing every book and magazine stored in the library module. They have long term members willing to sign statutory declarations confirming the library’s existence and contents. They have 45 books returned by a Council employee, all carrying the Group’s own library markings. They have another eight books retrieved from Lifeline, also marked as belonging to the Group. They have staff witnesses who saw the module opened, saw the books inside and saw what followed. And they have a valuation list that was shown to the CEO, who agreed it was fair and reasonable.

If the books never existed, none of this evidence would exist either.

The Woodcraft Group has provided everything a reasonable person would accept as proof.
The issue was never the evidence.
The issue was the willingness to acknowledge it.

#KiamaCouncil #CommunityAdvocacy #LocalGovernment #Transparency #Accountability #Kiama #Jamberoo #KiamaWoodcraftGroup #CouncilCulture #NSWLocalGov #CommunityVoices

Author Lynne StrongPosted on December 2, 2025December 3, 2025Categories Abuse of Power, Behind the Byline, Citizen JournalismTags community accountability, community strength, council culture, Kiama Council, local voices, power imbalance, standing up for fairness, transparency matters2 Comments on Council thought they’d close the lid. But you can’t lock out a community that knows right from wrong

Does Kiama Council Only Listen When WIN News Turns Up?

I’ve been away for a few weeks, so I may have missed something. But looking through my Facebook feed, it seems a lot can change when a story makes it to WIN News.

On 22 October, Kiama Council issued a firm statement about Jamberoo Action Park, the kind of compliance language you’d expect when someone’s been caught doing the wrong thing. They’d refused a Development Application to store vehicles on-site and warned of enforcement action under the EP&A Act.

A few days later, WIN 4 Illawarra ran a segment they promoted on Facebook  announcing the Jamberoo Action Park  was “firing back at Council.” That Facebook post drew nearly 900 comments, most of them critical of Council’s stance.

Photo source Region Illawarra 

Then, one week later, Council issued something I can’t recall ever seeing before, a joint press release with the same business it had just publicly reprimanded. Suddenly, both parties were “working together constructively and transparently” and “seeking positive outcomes.”

As someone who used to cover council meetings and write civics stories for The Bugle, I find this fascinating. These days, like most people, I rely on my Facebook feed to see what’s going on. And what I’m seeing is that if you want a response from Council, you might be better off going through WIN News than the usual channels.

Only last week, locals were discussing the apparent lack of CCTV coverage in Kiama, something that affects community safety and private business interests. No public statement. No follow-up. No joint press release about “positive outcomes.”

So it’s hard not to ask:

Does Council act faster when there’s a TV camera involved?

Because if that’s what it takes to get a response, maybe we all need a media crew next time we raise a concern.

#KiamaCouncil #JamberooActionPark #LocalGovernment #CommunityVoice #Accountability #CCTV #WINNewsIllawarra #Kiama

Author Lynne StrongPosted on October 30, 2025October 30, 2025Categories Behind the Byline, Citizen JournalismTags CCTV, civic engagement, community accountability, Jamberoo Action Park, Kiama Council, local governance, transparency, WIN News

Asking for Accountability – Why I lodged a formal complaint with Kiama Council

Something is not right. And when something is not right, it is up to all of us to speak up.

This week, I lodged a formal complaint with the Public Officer of Kiama Council. My concern is with how our Council handled a referral to ICAC, how that information became public, and what did or did not happen after the referral was dismissed.

Here is what we know.

Three elected councillors were referred to ICAC by the Council’s CEO. At least one of them found out not through a formal notice, but by reading about it in the media. That is unacceptable. Referrals of this nature are meant to be confidential unless ICAC decides to take further action.

ICAC has now dismissed the referral.

But the damage was already done. Reputations were questioned in public. The community was left to speculate. And when the matter was resolved, Council remained silent. No public clarification. No formal communication. No apology.

That is not good enough.

My complaint calls for a proper investigation into how this information became public. It also asks Council to review how it responded once ICAC decided to take no action. Confidential processes must be respected. Individuals should not be left to carry the cost of poor process. The community deserves honesty and accountability.

This is not about whether the referral was appropriate. That decision has already been made. This is about whether Kiama Council fulfilled its responsibilities fairly and lawfully.

Good governance depends on trust. Trust depends on action. The systems only work if we insist they do.

#Kiama #LocalGovernment #CouncilWatch #TransparencyMatters #PublicTrust #CommunityVoice #ICAC #Accountability #CivicDuty #GovernanceMatters #SpeakUp #NSWPolitics

Author Lynne StrongPosted on June 15, 2025June 15, 2025Categories UncategorizedTags civic engagement, community accountability, ICAC, Kiama, Kiama Council, local government

How Kiama lost $970,000 in developer contributions and no one explained why

We live in a world where most of us are juggling a lot. We rely on others to shine a light on issues that matter, especially the ones buried in council reports or tangled in planning jargon.

For anyone trying to raise these issues, the first step is making sense of them. The next is explaining them clearly enough that people without a law or planning degree can understand why they matter.

This is one of those issues.

In February 2023, Kiama Council issued a  draft development consent for 15 Golden Valley Road, Jamberoo. ( Golden Valley Draft Consent Feb 2023.) That consent included a condition requiring the developer to pay $1 million under Section 7.11 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act.

That figure was based on Council’s adopted Section 94 Contribution Plans, also known as 7.11 plans. These plans require developers to contribute to local infrastructure that supports growth, in addition to the infrastructure built within the subdivision.

Later that year, Council repealed its 7.11 plans. The development was still before the Land and Environment Court. See previous post 

Because the 7.11 plans no longer existed, the Court applied a flat Section 7.12 rate of just over $30,000.

Section 7.11 contributions are calculated per new lot and paid by developers at the subdivision stage. In contrast, Section 7.12 applies a flat percentage to individual development applications, which means the cost is passed on to future homeowners when they lodge a DA to build.

As a result of the switch, the community lost around $970,000 in developer contributions that would have been collected upfront to support local infrastructure. While some funds may later be collected from home builders under Section 7.12, this shift places the burden on individuals and leaves the community with a major funding gap.

Kiama’s growth target is 900 new dwellings over the next five years. If each lot contributed $20,000 under a new 7.11 plan, that could generate $18 million for community infrastructure. Under the current 7.12 rate, the return is closer to $6.75 million.

The Mayor has committed to a formal investigation into how this happened. That is a good step. But transparency is not a one-time announcement. It requires consistent, honest communication.

In the next post, we will look at the December 2024 Council report admitting overcharges under Section 7.11, and how those errors were handled.

Disclaimer: I am not a developer, a town planner, or a property lawyer. My blog posts are written in good faith and based on publicly available documents, council records, and conversations with professionals who work in planning, development, and legal fields. Every effort is made to ensure accuracy and clarity. These posts are offered to support greater public understanding of complex issues that affect our community.

#Kiama #Section711 #DeveloperContributions #LocalGovernmentTransparency #CommunityInfrastructure #PlanningMatters #PublicInterest #AccountabilityInCouncil #IndependentVoices #KiamaCouncil

Author Lynne StrongPosted on May 31, 2025June 1, 2025Categories Advocacy, Behind the Byline, Section 7.11Tags community accountability, Developer Contributions, housing growth, Infrastructure Funding, Kiama, Kiama Council, local government transparency, planning decisions, Section 7.11, Section 7.12

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