Skip to content

Clover Hill Diaries – Join Me and Be the Change

#Strongwomen. "I write about the power of trying, because I want to be okay with failing. I write about generosity because I battle selfishness. I write about joy because I know sorrow. I write about faith because I almost lost mine, and I know what it is to be broken and in need of redemption. I write about gratitude because I am thankful – for all of it." Kristin Armstrong

  • Home
  • Empowering Sustainable and Just Futures
  • SynergyScape Solutions – Embracing the Grey – My Journey in Values and Communication
Clover Hill Diaries – Join Me and Be the Change

Tag: Hindmarsh Park

Are the CCTV Cameras Working? What Hindmarsh Park Reveals About Council Promises.

When a local parent shared their experience at Hindmarsh Park on our Community Facebook page, it inspired me to take a closer look at Kiama Council’s CCTV policy and what it says about how public spaces are meant to be protected.

The parent had gone there to celebrate their daughter’s fifth birthday, only to find both public barbecues in a shocking state. One was coated in melted plastic. The other gave off a strong smell of sewage when turned on. They ended up abandoning the facilities and using a portable BBQ from home.

Their post asked the obvious question:

“Are Council doing daily inspections of these facilities or leaving a multimillion-dollar new park to deteriorate?”

It’s a fair question, especially when Council’s policies promise proactive monitoring and deterrence through CCTV.

Kiama Council’s CCTV Policy outlines a clear set of objectives: to promote community safety and crime prevention, protect residents, visitors, and Council assets, deter vandalism and antisocial behaviour, and provide footage to NSW Police when required.

The accompanying Street Surveillance Code of Practice commits to annual audits, clear signage, and transparency about where and how cameras operate. These are good principles on paper, but they depend entirely on follow-through.

❓If CCTV is installed near Hindmarsh Park or the surrounding main street, was it operating when the vandalism occurred?

❓Has Council reviewed any footage?

❓Are inspections of new facilities being carried out daily, as they should be?

❓If the cameras weren’t working, or if the footage wasn’t checked, it raises deeper questions about accountability and maintenance, not only of the park but of the systems meant to protect it.

Hindmarsh Park is one of Kiama’s newest public investments, designed as a safe, family-friendly space. Incidents like this undermine public confidence and point to a gap between what Council says it does and what residents experience on the ground.

It’s time for Council to confirm whether the CCTV systems are operational, whether inspections are happening as promised, and how it plans to prevent future incidents. Policies don’t protect public spaces; people and accountability do.


#KiamaCouncil #HindmarshPark #CommunitySafety #CCTV #PublicAccountability #CloverHillDiaries

Author Lynne StrongPosted on October 28, 2025October 28, 2025Categories Behind the Byline, Citizen JournalismTags CCTV monitoring, community safety, Hindmarsh Park, Kiama Council accountability, Public Trust

SEARCH

Recent Posts

  • If this is renewal, Angus Taylor needs a new speechwriter
  • We Keep Arguing About Grace Tame and Ignore the Real Question
  • The cloud leaves tracks on the ground.
  • When corporate failure scrambles trust in science
  • This is about asbestos. It is also about memory, power, and who gets protected.

Follow Blog via Email

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,390 other subscribers

Categories

  • Citizen Journalism (116)
    • Abuse of Power (32)
    • Behind the Byline (78)
    • Community Advocacy and Governance (19)
    • Follow the Money (5)
    • Local Heroes (5)
    • Section 7.11 (9)
  • Farm, Food and Environment (611)
    • AGvocacy (525)
      • Marketing Faux Pas (8)
      • Social Justice (6)
    • Cows (32)
      • Animal wellbeing (9)
    • Environment (82)
    • In the community – beyond the farmgate (179)
    • Milk Price Wars (11)
    • On the farm – behind the farmgate (76)
    • Paradise (23)
  • Health and Wellbeing (48)
    • Digital Literacy (5)
    • Domestic Abuse (10)
    • Gratitude (5)
    • Hamstring Injury Challenges (4)
    • Mental Health – The often Hidden Battles (8)
    • Wise Women Project (14)
  • History and Heritage (59)
    • Chittick Family History (3)
    • Irvine Family – Clover Hill (4)
    • Jamberoo Dairy Factory (15)
    • Kiama, Jamberoo, Gerringong LGA (12)
    • Lindsay Family History (14)
      • John Lindsay (7)
    • Sharpe Family (1)
    • Valley of Voices (1)
  • Learning and Exploration (46)
    • Education (12)
    • IGNITE TALKS (14)
    • Research (22)
  • People and Profiles (444)
    • Feature Stories – Kiama (1)
    • Guest blog (24)
    • Inspirational people (129)
    • Lifetime Highlights (34)
    • Success is a journey (344)
    • Travel Diary (24)
      • Alex and Philippe (2)
      • Balkans (3)
      • Italy (2)
      • Malta (2)
      • Spain (7)
        • Portugal and Spain 2025 (2)
    • Traveller's Refection (18)
  • Society, Justice and Change (235)
    • Action4Youth (27)
    • Community of Practice (3)
    • Creating a Better World Together (198)
      • Alex Reed Guest Blogger (30)
      • EdenFairywren Guest Blogger (16)
    • Housing Dilemma (12)
    • Media and Society (2)
    • SDGs (8)
    • Social Licence (9)
    • Sustainable Development Insights (2)
  • Thought Leadership and Opinion (596)
    • Food for thought (232)
    • Open Access Advocacy (4)
    • Opinion (11)
    • Quirky (249)
      • Uncategorized (212)
    • Reviews – the thought provokers (24)
    • SynergyScape Solutions (104)
      • Advocacy (70)
      • Embracing the Grey (2)
      • Leadership (12)
      • Moral Uncoupling (14)
      • Politics (13)
        • State Election (11)

Archives

  • Home
  • Empowering Sustainable and Just Futures
  • SynergyScape Solutions – Embracing the Grey – My Journey in Values and Communication
Clover Hill Diaries – Join Me and Be the Change Powered by WordPress.com.
 

Loading Comments...