
Council and community oppose state government plans to privatise Callan Park

Image: Community group Friends of Callan Park has fought for the park to host not-for-profit services only, which a new state government draft bill is proposing to change. Photo: Eva Baxter.
By EVA BAXTER
A new draft Bill from the state government has proposed a series of amendments to the Callan Park (Special Provisions) Act 2002.
The Act disallows any private or commercial uses on the site.
The Bill’s amendments to the Act include permitting 50 year potentially commercial leases in the heritage buildings, removing council as the consent authority and giving the minister those powers.
The Sydney Morning Herald reported that the proposed laws would make it easier for arts, culture and food and drink premises to operate at the 61-hectare Callan Park as well as temporary structures such as a marquee to be put up.
Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Robert Stokes said the Act is “restrictive.”
The Act allows for health, educational and community facilities to be carried out at Callan Park, but they must be provided on a not-for-profit basis.
Mayor Porteous tabled the issue in her Mayoral Minute last night and opposed any changes to the Act.
“It’s absolutely critical that we protect the Act. It has protected the park, we need to protect it.
“We’ve probably never seen a risk so great as the risk that we are currently facing.
“Don’t be fooled by coffee carts and the benign proposals that the minister puts forward, this is really a gutting of the Callan Park Act which is being proposed,” she said.
Cafe spin
Cynthia Nadai, Secretary of Friends of Callan Park, said at last night’s meeting that the Act is “broad.”
She said it already allows for restaurants, cafes and temporary structures.
“It has to be by a not-for-profit or social enterprise, which sets the right tone for the site, and which could provide good resources back into the community which is what the site is all about,” she said.
President of Friends of Callan Park Hall Greenland said the focus on cafes is “misleading spin.”
He said the Laneway festival operated for many years in Callan Park in accordance with the Act.
“Contrary again to what the minister says, lease’s longer than 10 years are possible at Callan Park under the Act, but such leases must lay on the table of both houses of state Parliament and either house can disallow them by majority vote.
“The Bill would abolish such protection.
“Under the Act all DA’s at Callan Park must be determined by the local council. This is a further level of protection, residents get a say, and DA’s are decided at arm’s length from the minister.
“The Bill seeks to abolish this protection, too,” he said.
Nadai said the amendments allow the DPIE board the ability to rezone the land, the ability to undertake or facilitate business activities with the GSP estate, to commercialise the properties, to acquire and own supplementary land and enter arrangements with Property NSW.
Restrictive or protective?
