Why?

The need to dam a highly productive river is yet to be proven...

Why?

Williams Valley

A great place to live

Valley

Williams River at Tillegra

Vital to our community

River

Williams Valley

Area to be inundated if the dam goes ahead...

Valley

Williams Valley

Prime agricultural land

Valley

Dairying

A tradition on this productive land...

dairy cows

Heritage

A living community...

Community Involvement

River water

Vital for biodiversity

river

Williams River

Beautiful...

river

Riverine forest

A rich ecosystem vital for biodiversity

river

A special environment...

Could you vote for a party that would destroy this?

river

Tillegra Bridge

A dead end road? We think not!

protest

No Way!

The need to dam a highly productive river is yet to be proven...

No Way!

Nathan’s Watergate

Jun 28th, 2009 by admin | 0

Nathan’s WatergateTwo recent Newcastle Herald articles as well as repeated attempts by John Kaye of the Upper House indicate that the NSW Labor Government is withholding key documents that can shed light on the pre-announcement planning/discussions around the Tillegra Dam proposal.  According to an old African proverb, only a fool tests the water with both feet – and this is just what Iemma did. Now the coverup and denial is reminiscent of another power drunk and desperate politician. Following the path of least resistence is what makes both polticians and rivers crooked. This corrupt government will ignore the advice of the respected Sir Laurence Street at their own peril – the electorate will send them a watershed result.

A SECRET Tillegra Dam memo that Hunter Water has tried to keep under wraps should be made public, a retired Supreme Court judge has found.
The water authority had claimed legal privilege over the memo, which was sent from general manager Kevin Young to senior staff in the office of then water utilities minister David Campbell on September 29, 2006. Retired judge Sir Laurence Street, who was commissioned by the upper house of Parliament, the Legislative Council, dismissed the privilege claim, saying the public interest outweighed the commercial concerns and recommended it be made public.

That advice was given last January 20 but the memo was not released and Sir Laurence’s recommendation was kept secret until Wednesday night, when the Greens won a motion to have it released. It came in a tumultuous night for the Government in which the Shooters Party voted against Labor on pieces of legislation and motions put by other parties. John Kaye, of the Greens, said the Government’s decision to stop Parliament a day early, adjourning to September, had stopped the further release of the memo.

“The Government has shut down Parliament to avoid a number of embarrassing outcomes, one of which would be us getting the documents on Tillegra,” Mr Kaye said.

The memo was among a box of documents produced in the upper house but not made public, because of the privilege claim. Sir Laurence concluded the memo should be released in order to contribute to an informed public debate about any need for Tillegra Dam. Mr Kaye said it fell to Mr Young to say why the memo should not be released. Mr Young said yesterday his hands were tied. “Hunter Water must respect the processes of parliamentary privilege, so at this stage I am unable to comment,” he said.

“As I always am, I would be happy to comment once the parliamentary process is concluded.”

Release Tillegra memo: ex-judge – Ncle Her – 26 Jun 2009 By Julieanne Strachan

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