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Snakes, crocs, sharks: Would you let your child camp here?
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Snakes, crocs, sharks: Would you let your child camp here?
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Large mine pits left on the Isaac River flood plain after the shut down of a Central Queensland mine âwould meet rehabilitation goalsâ, Environment Minister Meaghan Scanlon says.
Greens Maiwar MP Michael Berkman submitted a Queensland parliament Question on Notice to Ms Scanlon asking how the approval of the Pembroke Resources Olive Downs mine met the Department of Environment and Scienceâs expectations and best practice environmental management.
Last month, the Daily Mercury reported RTI documents revealed the department repeatedly flagged concerns with the then Co-ordinator-General during the mineâs environmental approval process in 2018 and 2019 about the serious risks of leaving large mine pits â also known as âvoidsâ â on the Isaac River flood plain after the mine shuts down.
Residents aim to âredress power imbalanceâ over character homes
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Heritage officers from Queenslandâs Environment Department should proactively advise communities which âworthyâ character homes facing development assessment could be heritage-listed, residents are suggesting to government.
Toowong residents, led by retired Queensland Health deputy director-general John Scott, have put forward a concept where a more proactive Environment Department could help communities identify character homes early, so submissions can be forwarded to a better-resourced Queensland Heritage Council.
Behind Montague Road at West End, Brisbane, where contemporary units are bordering older tin-and-timber character homes.