Thursday 14 January 2010

Tree man given notice to remove tree house

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Tree man given notice to remove tree house
Following a series of complaints from nearby residents about disturbances and a loss of amenity, the City of Gosnells today gave Thornlie tree protestor Richard Pennicuik a notice to remove the tree house structure he has placed in the City’s verge tree.
City of Gosnells CEO Ian Cowie said Mr Pennicuik has placed a range of items in the City’s tree to create a tree house structure without any approval. This is against the law.
As a result, the City has given Mr Pennicuik a Notice, pursuant to section 3.25 of the Local Government Act 1995, requiring him to remove the tree house structure from the City’s tree within seven days.
If he fails to comply with the Notice he will be committing an offence and the City will have no alternative but to commence prosecution proceedings against him.
“The City hopes that Mr Pennicuik will comply with the Notice and avoid legal proceedings”.
“I hope that Mr Pennicuik will come down from the City’s tree so that, through discussion, the matter can be resolved to the satisfaction of both parties” Mr Cowie said.
The City has given Mr Pennicuik every opportunity to come down from the tree to discuss the situation, including providing an opportunity for independent mediation.



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Wednesday 13 January 2010

Bottle thrown at taxi driver

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Bottle thrown at taxi driver

Posted 4 hours 38 minutes ago 
Updated 4 hours 31 minutes ago
A Perth taxi driver escapes serious injury when a bottle was thrown at his cab.
Damage to a taxi after a bottle was thrown at the driver who suffered an eye injury in the attack. (WA Police)
A Perth taxi driver has spoken out after a beer bottle was thrown at his moving vehicle injuring his eye.
The attack happened on Corfield Street at Gosnells just before 3:00 (AWST) today.
The driver Ajay Singh says he had three passengers in the car when two men on the side of the road targeted his cab, smashing the driver's window.
"Fortunate thing like is that I was only in a 60 kilometre zone," he said.
"Maybe if I was on the freeway it would have been very dangerous."



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Tuesday 12 January 2010

Council drops in with ad

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Council drops in with ad

12/Jan/2010
Comments:
THE City of Gosnells has gone so far as to publish a full-page advertisement defending its position on the Hume Road tree protest, in a bid to deflect criticism.
The City has been in the spotlight, engaged in a standoff with the Thornlie resident who has been living in a gum tree for the past month.
Richard Pennicuik moved into the tree as loppers contracted by the council proceeded to remove 20 other eucalyptus melliodora from Hume Road.
Two trees remain, one occupied by a rotating team of protesters, and the other by Mr Pennicuik.
The trees were earmarked for removal under a five-year plan to rid the city of dangerous trees.
A tree of the same species and age in Hume Road dropped a one-tonne limb onto the road in 2008, sparking the removal program.
In the ad, published in today’s Comment News, the City says the evidence shows the trees in Hume Road were all planted at the same time and were all reaching the age when limb drops might be expected.
It also says local residents would now be consulted over the decision to replace the gums with jacarandas, due to community concerns raised.
Mr Pennicuik has spent more than a month in the gum tree and even enlisted a public relations officer of sorts to push his cause last week.
He maintains the council has failed to prove that the tree outside his home is dangerous, and says if it was deemed to be a public threat then he would allow it to be cut down.
Comment News understands a council expert deemed 22 eucalypts in Hume Road to be dangerous because they were about the same age as the one that dropped the heavy limb.
Trees were not individually inspected.
The City has refused to talk to Mr Pennicuik or give him the expert’s report until he gets out of the tree.
However the City has promised to retain the tree until at least March so discussions can be held.


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Councils off their tree

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Councils off their tree

12/Jan/2010
Comments:
RICHARD “the human koala” Pennicuik now knows what we all know – shires can be a cranky lot.
I want to get rid of a tree – my tree on the shire verge – however, I am not allowed to.
A friend wants to plant a tree on her verge to prevent sprinkler damage: she isn’t allowed to because it will hinder pedestrians.
If you take responsibility for any death or damage to people or property caused by the tree will the shire then let you keep it?



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Upgrade for reserve

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Upgrade for reserve

29/Dec/2009
Comments:
WALTER Padbury Reserve will get a big upgrade after a City of Gosnells council decision this month.
More than $315,000 will be spent removing the internal car park and green waste bins and replacing them with turf, providing a veranda for the Cassidy Road Pavilion and adding an all-ages children’s playground.
The money will also be used to remove internal fencing and replace with a retaining wall near the Hume Road Oval.
Cricket practise nets will also be replaced. Picnic shelters, barbecues and a new toilet block will be added later.
Mayor Olwen Searle said the improvements planned for Walter Padbury Reserve would give local families a great area in which to relax and have fun as well as boosting facilities for the football and cricket clubs.
“The new improved playground will be great for local families and will be designed for children over pre-school age,” Cr Searle said.
“Under the plans the area will be made safer and illegal dumping will be addressed.
“The cricket club will benefit from an extra pitch as well as better training facilities and Gosnells Football and Social Club will welcome the new veranda.
“Offering top class recreational facilities is important to the City of Gosnells and these improvements fit the bill.”



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Sunday 10 January 2010

Perth's most prized suburbs

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Perth's most prized suburbs

CANNING Vale was in demand in 2009, with more houses sold in that suburb than any other, but Guildford delivered the biggest median house price rise.
Landgate Valuation Services' figures show Canning Vale was way out in front with 506 houses sold, ahead of Thornlie with 340 and Ellenbrook with 330.

Real Estate Institute of WA president Alan Bourke said the result was to be expected because of the first homebuyer's boost stimulating outer-metropolitan suburbs.

Business migrants Roland and Lina Ting said they decided to rent when they arrived in Australia in 2008 to see what Perth's property market was like.

``Having stayed (in Canning Vale) about a year we decided it was a very good suburb,'' Mr Ting said.
The couple moved their three children, Melissa, 20, Stephanie, 17 and Nicholas, 16, into the property they bought in August last year.

``We looked around a lot of suburbs and found Canning Vale was a newer suburb -- more organised. It didn't have neglected gardens, was very family-friendly and peaceful.''

The best performing suburbs in terms of median price rises last year were Guildford, Mt Richon and
Victoria Park.

From 2008 to 2009, Guildford saw a rise in its median house price of 17.26 per cent, from $565,000 to $662,500. The median in Mt Richon increased 16.86 per cent from $422,500 to $493,750, and Victoria Park's median increased 15.65 per cent, from $575,000 to $665,000.

The suburbs whose median prices were hit the hardest were North Beach, with its median price falling 35.38 per cent ($1.22 million to $790,000), Ascot, which fell by 32.14 per cent ($766,250 to $520,000), and Mt Lawley's median price fell by 28.28 per cent ($1.22 million to $875,000).

Mr Bourke said North Beach was just one example of the many top-end suburbs ``hurt'' during 2009.

``There was more activity in the bottom end of the market so the median moved down (in the top end),'' he said.

``There was also a lot of land released across the road from the Ascot Racecourse, which would have pushed the median price down there.''

Peppermint Grove retained its crown as being Perth's most expensive suburb, with a median house price of $4.2 million, while Medina, near Kwinana, was the least expensive suburb with a median of $230,000.

Most recent REIWA data showed more than 31,500 properties were sold last year.

About 80 per cent were houses and 20 per cent multi-residential, including apartments and units.

Properties in the Fremantle area took the longest to sell with an average of 86 days on the market, while Joondalup, Beldon, Craigie, Duncraig, Greenwood, Hillarys, Kallaroo, Kingsley, Marmion, Mullaloo, Padbury, Sorrento, Warwick and Woodvale, had the quickest turnover with an average of 44 days.

Housing stock also dropped last year from about 16,000 properties available in December 2008 to just over 11,000 last month.

Mr Bourke said the next financial quarter was traditionally WA's busiest for real estate.

``We're marginally under supplied . . . so buyers are really going to have to hunt hard and make decisions quickly to secure the home they want,'' he said.

BEST PERFORMING SUBURBS
Suburb Median Sale Price
2008 -> 2009

1 GUILDFORD $565,000 -> $662,500
2 MOUNT RICHON $422,500 -> $493,750
3 VICTORIA PARK $575,000 -> $665,000
4 DARLINGTON $515,000 -> $590,000
5 ORELIA $297,500 -> $339,000
6 MAYLANDS $670,000 -> $754,000
7 SOUTH FREMANTLE $825,000 -> $925,000
8 STONEVILLE $457,500 -> $511,250
9 FREMANTLE $795,000 -> $880,000
10 JOONDANNA $633,000 -> $697,500

WORST PERFORMING SUBURBS
Suburb Median Sale Price
2008 2009

1 NORTH BEACH $1,222,500 $790,000
2 ASCOT $766,250 $520,000
3 MOUNT LAWLEY $1,220,000 $875,000
4 MOSMAN PARK $1,522,500 $1,150,000
5 FORRESTDALE $520,000 $395,000
6 APPLECROSS $2,075,000 $1,602,500
7 PERTH $875,000 $690,000
8 MARMION $885,000 $698,750
9 KALLAROO $660,000 $545,000
10 SWANBOURNE $1,600,000 $1,322,500

SUBURBS BY VOLUME SOLD
Suburb 2009
Sales

1 CANNING VALE 506
2 THORNLIE 340
3 ELLENBROOK 330
4 CLARKSON 277
5 GOSNELLS 275
6 BALLAJURA 256
7 BALDIVIS 238
8 PORT KENNEDY 235
9 BUTLER 224
10 TAPPING 218



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Friday 8 January 2010

Is This A Tipping Point?

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Is This A Tipping Point?

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“Have we reached a tipping point in community attitudes?”  Professor Glenn Albrecht, Dean of Murdoch’s School of Sustainability, asked the audience of a recent Murdoch University School of Sustainability lecture.
The subject of Prof. Albrecht’s question was Thornlie resident Richard Pennicuik, who has been living in a tree in his home street since early December 2009.
IMG_6044
Richard Pennicuik in 'his' tree

Richard petitioned the City of Gosnells against removing over 20 native trees from his street but when council chainsaws started, he had no choice but to climb into his tree to remain until it was declared safe.
Neighbours and friends are supporting Richard bringing him food, water and clothing.
The City says it identified 22 trees as being possibly dangerous, mainly because of falling branches but according to Mr Pennicuik, the issue is one of  taking a stand for personal choice and environmental survival.
“I don’t mind if other people want their trees down, but I like mine.”
Prof. Albrecht said this decision is indicative of an important social issue.
“This issue is global but also intensely Western Australian. We can have alternate pathways as outlined by Prof. Peter McMahon in the WA2020 vision.
“Richard Branson has offered a million dollars for someone to invent technology to take CO2 out of the air and mitigate climate change. Trees do that naturally. The technology is out there and proven to be safe over billions of years.
“How do we define trees as ‘potentially dangerous’?
According to Mr Pennicuik, two tree experts have declared his tree as nothing more than a perfectly healthy example ofEucalyptus melliodora.
“The council plans to replace the eucalypts with jacarandas, which are native to Brazil. Is this symbolic of the end of indigenous identity?” Prof. Albrecht said.
Mr Pennicuik said his tree has been visited by magpies and cockatoos, with a pair of black-faced cuckoo shrikes raising their young in it.
“The idea that other members of the community have come out to support this guy is interesting, maybe a sign that by 2020 we are going to see the emergence of a humanitarian ethic,” Prof. Albrecht says.
“Richard shows an unusual degree of fitness. There are few people who would be prepared to put their comfort and safety on the line to save a tree, so there is an ethic here of environmental philosophy.
“Here’s a man who felt a sense of overwhelming distress at the possibility that his tree was about to be removed. He’s not willing to be authoritarian and say I’m going to stop everyone else’s tree from being cut down, he just wants his tree. He’s defined it in a sense of his existentialist state and if it’s removed it will cause distress.
“The WA2020 vision takes us away from the simple acceptance of a globalised, homogenously bland environment and the extraction economy, and leads us to think about what it means to be a West Australian."
“With the publication of the Special Report by Prof. McMahon as part of the WA2020 Project and amazing stories in the WA newspaper about the ‘man in the tree’ we are moving in the right direction.
“The dedication and strength of will of people like the ‘man in the tree’ in Thornlie and Prof. McMahon at Murdoch University show a commitment to the sustainability of this place and share a vision for the future which is worth looking at.”



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Day one ..

the following reply was given ...

Thankyou for your enquiry. Council meetings are conducted under the provisions of the City of Gosnells Standing Orders Local Law 2003, a co...