Occasional Newsletter,

May 2024

What’s happening with the swimming pool?

Photo by Alan Shiell

It’s been almost a year since Lorne was up in arms about a new “vision” for the swimming pool on the foreshore. The present operators wanted a 21-year lease as a wellness centre with new private bathing pools installed. The idea was to create a “unique hero attraction as the most upmarket and modern take on saltwater bathing tourism in Australia.” Meanwhile, the community wanted the existing pool to be heated, upgraded, better maintained, and available year-round. Friends of Lorne put in a submission criticising the business case and arguing that now was the time for a re-think not a re-lease for a wellness centre.

What’s happened? All written submissions and community feedback from the two engagement sessions were included as a part of the GORCAPA team presentation to the GORCAPA Board in December.

There is six years to run on the current lease. Any changes to the existing lease can only be made with the agreement of GORCAPA and the pool operator. So, technically, conversations between GORCAPA and the operator happening right now could modify the existing operations (i.e., for the next six years). However, the main benefit of the discussion is to shape a new lease.  

This is because the GORCAPA Board has endorsed a 21-year development proposal on the condition that the operator commits to the redevelopment of the trampolines area of the leasehold. And, that the GORCAPA team progresses a lease renewal with significant special conditions which secure the community interests and aspirations of the site which include community access, school access, trading dates and times, heating, and maintenance.

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Affordable Housing Update

Penny Hawe

Image by Anna McIldowie

In 2023 about 90 people took part in webinars on affordable housing which we hosted with the Committee for Lorne (CfL). We set up a webpage with a link to the recordings and other resources, including an FAQ. We learned from experts and other communities in addressing housing affordability problems. We learned that affordable housing is not the same as social housing. The latter targets particular low-income brackets. The former is about making houses affordable for eligible people (eg., key and essential workers like teachers, nurses, small business owners etc)

What’s happened since? Any plans to build outside the town boundaries have to be ditched. This was reiterated last October by the Surf Coast Shire Council (SCSC) to a deputation from the CfL. The state-driven bushfire overlays are not negotiable. Finding land and building was the most advanced of the options the CfL developed in their report on housing. Private landowners were hoping their land could be rezoned. 

However, the SCSC is keen to work with the Lorne community to see if any public-owned land, within the town, could be made available. This does not necessarily mean green space. It could have buildings on it.

Lorne is the next town  in the Council Housing Officer’s work schedule. Work starts in earnest in July.  A number of possible sites for housing development in Lorne have been listed loosely as ‘placeholders’ or examples in the SCSC current thinking. We’ve been assured that this list is simply to illustrate the range of possible alternatives and to make sure Lorne does not slip off the radar should funding become available and Lorne wishes to proceed in this direction.

A frustrating process 

The process is frustrating, I confess. So, strap yourself in.

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Fast Tracking Small Houses in Lorne

One of the planning officers at the SCSC recently reached out to Friends of Lorne to make sure we were aware of the state government’s new planning laws. They knew we’d be interested because the SCSC’s Lorne Strategy plan, with its commitment to the conservation of neighbourhood character and the protection of green space and vegetation, was the result of advocacy by Friends of Lorne in years gone by. Here’s the gist of our conversation.

So, what is new?              In December last year, the State Government gazetted amendment VC253. This amendment was part of its Housing Strategy. It introduced new legislation for a Small Second Dwelling into the Victoria Planning Provisions and all planning schemes across Victoria. A small second dwelling is 60 square metres or less on the same lot as the main dwelling with its own pedestrian access to the street. It does not have to have a place to park a car. This type of dwelling bypasses some of the usual assessment criteria for new buildings.

How does it affect Lorne?             Although a Small Second Dwelling will need a planning permit because of the Bushfire Management Overlay (BMO) considerations, it does not trigger a planning permit under the Neighbourhood Character Overlay, meaning it does not need to comply with the usual setback and siting requirements, provided it is no more than 5 metres high and it is of muted tones. However, a building permit is required to construct and small second dwelling. That has not changed.  So, the height and colour requirements will be checked twice, once as part of the BMO and by the building surveyor who makes sure it complies with requirements.

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Lorne Theatre is Bringing Joy 

Photo supplied by Lorne Theatre

Why travel for half an hour in Melbourne and then queue for tickets to see a film, which you can’t see properly anyway because someone invariably sits in front of you?  At the revived Lorne Theatre you can pretty much rock up 10 minutes before the film starts, choose any seat and see clearly. They have a range new releases and classic film showings. Over the school holidays they had a program of kids’ films. They had a Mary Poppins singalong screening and pictures from the film chalked out on the pavement in front of the theatre. You know, like in the days before kids only drew on iPads.  Plus, you can join the Locals Film Club. Film Club members get discounts, free popcorn and early access to special events. 

It’s a bit unusual for Friends of Lorne to plug a business. But film is an art form. Film is culture. And Lorne’s cultural activities are in our remit.  Besides, we support the Lorne Sculpture Exhibition every time it comes around, and they don’t sell popcorn.

The owners of the Lorne Theatre are committed to bringing the old girl back into the swing of life in Lorne. It’s wonderful because we’ve always been worried that the theatre would be levelled and turned into townhouses. The theatre is already bringing in crowds with live music performances as well. They’re also looking at other “unique arts experiences they can bring to the Lorne community”. 

Lorne Theatre will remain open over winter on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

We would love to see the theatre used as a regional location for the Melbourne International Film Festival. That would be a real treat. So, take note of their website and make plans to be a theatre goer.  For you and for keeping Lorne’s heritage.

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NATURE NOTES  New Holland Honeyeater

Eva Janice Youl

Photo by Paul Jackson

BirdLife Australia has recently published their report  A Decade of Rainbows – 10 years of the Aussie Bird Count.  While the Rainbow Lorikeet has maintained the most counted bird, comparing the results of different states is interesting.

The top three birds counted in Victoria 14 – 20 October 2023 are:

  1. Rainbow Lorikeet
  2. Australian Magpie
  3. Noisy Miner

The results for WA were:

  1. Rainbow Lorikeet
  2. New Holland Honeyeater
  3. Galah

This got me thinking about why the New Holland Honeyeater only featured strongly in Western Australia. Phylidonyris novaehollandiae is honeyeater, mostly eating nectar from flowers, and are found in Southern parts of Australia. They very active and dart from flower to flower and in doing so are good pollinators. They are not strictly nectarivorous because they also need a protein source. They gain protein in their diet from invertebrates such as spiders and insects.

Perhaps Western Australia has more sources of native flowers including Banksia, Grevilleas, Correas and Eremophila – emu bush. In our front yard their habitat is a large willow leafed Hakea. They also frequented our neighbour’s ironbark Eucalyptus crebra until it fell over.

Bird lovers will be familiar with the BirdLife Australia website and our members have probably read the BirdLife Australia Website News Section “Lorne welcomes first ever Hooded Plover Family”. By way of update, only five hooded plover chicks were raised successfully to adulthood on the Surf Coast this year. So, for Lorne to have raised two of these chicks is a huge contribution to retaining the population.

Finally, the next backyard bird count will be 14th – 20th October 2024, so be a participant in this largest Australian citizen science project.

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Join Friends of Lorne.

If you are not a Friends of Lorne member, think about joining please. Our members are full or part time residents of Lorne, or anyone who supports our purpose. Our members are a source of information, views, and capacity.  The size of the membership gives us encouragement, legitimacy, and clout. Think of it as joining an AFL footy club, but much cheaper, and without quite as much heartache!

We have a vacancy on our Committee at the moment too. We meet about eight times a year (by Zoom if necessary). The Committee drive the day-to-day business of the organisation. It’s hard to make any committee work sound fun, as such. But it’s not onerous. It’s important.  Just look at all the stuff you know now, that you didn’t know before you read this Newsletter!

NOTE: All articles are by the Committee unless otherwise indicated. Contact us at committee@friendsoflorne.org.au