NRE Tasmania – Parks Planning System
Tasmanians have deep concerns for the current and future management and planning in our parks.
Tasmanians have deep concerns for the current and future management and planning in our parks.
In a display of unbridled arrogance in Parliament, Planning Minister Felix Ellis has refused to apologise for the contempt he’s shown to mayors, planners, and community groups.
It seems you have learned nothing from your bungling of the fire levy. Your dismissive approach to community concerns has been on full display once again ...
This is the week of the minister trying to rewrite the way that planning is undertaken in Tasmania. It is the week of handing himself greater powers.
In a new low, the Liberals have announced that next week they’ll be bringing forward legislation which will facilitate the Stony Rise development in Devonport.
Planning Minister Felix Ellis has shown exactly why his government’s Development Assessment Panel agenda is so problematic.
The Minister for Planning must categorically rule out using enabling legislation to facilitate the Stony Rise development in Devonport.
The Clarence community are outraged to hear that you signed off on the Kangaroo Bay Chambroad development being assessed as a major project.
That reminds me of a story that Walker Corporation still owes the State of Tasmania nearly three quarters of a million dollars for the Ralphs Bay POSS assessment.
Regarding state planning provisions, the Tasmanian Planning Commission announced as recently as 5 August a process to amend the state planning provisions in relation to hazards codes. The draft SPP amendment 1 2024 proposes to clarify the interpretation of an exemption in the landslip hazard code and the relationship between the SPPs and the Building Act 2016, those parts relevant to the landslip hazard code, the coastal erosion hazard code and the coastal inundation hazard code.