Friday, 27 November 2009

NCA a 'failure' as funding slashed

as posted here


NCA a 'failure' as funding slashed

27 Nov, 2009 07:52 AM
Starved of funds by every Commonwealth government for the past 20 years the National Capital Authority was a dismal failure, former National Capital Development Commission chief Tony Powell said in a fiery blast last night.With eyes fixed on seven NCA executives including chairman Don Aitkin and chief executive Gary Rake at a public forum, Mr Powell said it was time to shine a light on the issues confronting Canberra.
''In 20 years you have been dismal failures, you have to face up to that,'' he said.
The Commonwealth had abandoned the national capital, which was dying and was not in the minds of Australians as it was 20 years ago.
''All the NCA is now is an undertaker, it builds a few memorials every now and then.''
Mr Powell said massive developments under way in NSW would further erode Canberra's standing as the national capital.
Professor Aitkin said across Australia the notion of having a national capital had faded.
Overseas, people thought Sydney was the national capital and it was true, the NCA would love to have more money to lift the city's standing.
At its first ever public forum the NCA promised a more collaborative approach to planning, admitted mistakes in consultation and to being short of money.
Mr Rake told The Canberra Times Mr Powell was passionate about Canberra but from a different era, when one body controlled all the territory's planning.
Had the NCA been starved of money?
''We've put it on record that our maintenance budget has not kept pace with inflation.''
Lack of consultation over proposals to redevelop the Albert Hall precinct, a new pedestrian bridge across Lake Burley Griffin and a surprisingly big, $600 million headquarters for ASIO dominated the meeting.
Professor Aitkin said while the NCA would try to be more open it was the guardian of the national interest and the Commonwealth's decisions would prevail.
Campbell resident Mark Anderson said this implied a one-way street, where the national interest railroaded the local interest.
Speakers congratulated the NCA on being more receptive to the Canberra community, but urged it not to roll over for the Commonwealth and to put more ''grunt'' into its planning, with architects, planners and cultural advisers overseeing developments, as happened with the NCDC.
Dr Bruce Kent of the Walter Burley Griffin Society said this approach was better than being ''out-gunned by ASIO and outflanked by the airport''.

Walter Burley Griffin Society spokesman Brett Odgers said overhauling consultation protocols was too important to leave until 2010 and 2011, as Mr Rake had offered, but the NCA chief said he did not have the staff to act sooner.
Friends of the Albert Hall spokeswoman Georgina Pinkas said although plans for Albert Hall had been abandoned one element, the proposed Immigration bridge, was still on the agenda.


as posted here

Canberra Times: NCA faces roasting over ASIO HQ

as posted here


by NCCC
Artist's impression of the ASIO building on Constitution Avenue (Source: ASIO)
Tonight, 26 November 2009 the National Capital Authority will hold a public forum (at Parliament House) to provide an opportunity to begin a continuing dialogue about planning in Canberra and ensuring Canberra’s “place” as the national capital.
The Canberra Times is reporting that despite the issuing of a formal order of proceedings, the ASIO building is likely to be the main topic of discussion at the meeting with many angry Campbell residents intenting to demand answers from the NCA about its overall involvement in the project.
The Canberra Times article has been reproduced below:

NCA faces roasting over ASIO HQ

The National Capital Authority will be grilled tonight on why it allowed the controversial ASIO headquarters to go ahead in Parkes, even though the $606million monolith clashes with planning guidelines.
Campbell residents say the NCA was steamrolled by the headquarters’ proponent, the Department of Finance, into approving the project and will ask the NCA when it first knew of the size of the building, and whether it objected.

While the NCA has called tonight’s meeting to explain its role, the ACT Property Council says the agency is so under-resourced it cannot do basic work such as ground maintenance, or fulfil its core function of championing Canberra as the national capital.
Property Council executive director Catherine Carter said Canberra was overlooked when new agency headquarters, such as Infrastructure Australia and the National Broadband Network, were established outside the national capital.
Reviews announced last year were to look into the functions of the NCA and simplifying the territory’s planning system by removing duplications, were stuck in a bureaucratic bottleneck.
”The number one issue is about harmonising the National Capital Plan and ACT Territory Plan,” Ms Carter said.
”The property industry needs a well-resourced agency for information on the sequence of land release and for timely works approval.”
Ms Carter said the NCA was attached to the Attorney-General’s Department which was engaged in pressing issues around the country, while its planning agenda for Canberra in the national interest was rudderless at the Commonwealth level.
An NCA spokesman said 180 people had responded to the invitation to today’s forum, to be held at Parliament House at 6pm.
He said most questions raised were on the ASIO headquarters and proposed new Immigration Bridge over Lake Burley Griffin.
Former acting chairman Professor Don Aitkin revealed in The Canberra Times on Monday he had recently been appointed chairman for two years.
Professor Aitkin, members of the authority’s board and chief executive Gary Rake will respond to questions.
Mr Rake said this was the first public forum of its kind for the agency, which was making a bigger effort to explain its decisions.
Campbell residents, Canberra politicians and architects say ASIO’s five-story building on Constitution Avenue is bigger than intended in the Griffin Legacy, a planning blueprint for the city’s centre for the next 50 years.
Under original architect Walter Burley Griffin’s design the landscape was to dominate, but critics say this building will make architecture dominant. The NCA has dismissed claims the building is inconsistent with the National Capital Plan and impedes views of the lake and significant heritage views of Parliament House.
In its annual report, ASIO notes residents’ complaints and says it will continue confidential briefings with the Public Works Committee.



as posted here