Karaaf Wetlands info session: questions and answers

Karaaf Wetlands

Here are responses to questions, grouped by themes, that were asked at the Karaaf Wetlands and stormwater information session on 27 October 2022. 

To avoid repetition, we have consolidated similar questions.  However, if you feel your question hasn't been answered, please let us know.

You can also watch a recording of the info session.

Condition of the Karaaf Wetlands

How long might it take for the vegetation to regenerate? I.e. If freshwater volume reduced by half? A quarter? Three quarters?

Doug Frood’s response:

I think we need to see this as a process rather than a specific action.  In the top north to west corner, there are a lot of areas with 30% - 50% dieback or mortality of salt marsh shrubs. If it doesn’t pond deeply with freshwater, we’ll get recoupment pretty soon, a few years to reach maturity.

Where we have 100% mortality, there’s a question of do we actually have a state change – a tipping point reached where there’s a lens of freshwater and it’s flushed saltwater out of the system. I’m hoping that’s not the case over the most of it, but what I think you’re going to see is a process of recovery in from the edges, so it’s hard to put a timeframe on that.

Where you’ve got remnant plants, you’ve got a lot more seed fall, it’s a lot more available to regenerate.  Where you’ve got a big dead area, it may take a lot more. Where you’ve got intertidal action, that should recover pretty well – I think to a level that reflects the current tidal regime.

Because there is excess freshwater, it requires getting the western end of the Karaaf to dry out again and hoping that salinity levels will re-establish.

The ideal solution for me is to not have stormwater going in there at all, and I’m purely talking from a botanical viewpoint.

Can the Karaaf recover to original condition?

Doug Frood’s response:

Depends what you mean by original.  It certainly can’t go back to 1750.

What is the timeframe before we are too late to rectify the Karaaf? Years, decades or months?

Doug Frood’s response:

You always have values, and parts of that saltmarsh are probably resilient, and could be elevated enough.

Or also, they’re getting the intertidal flushing, which will work.

Other parts, who knows, with the cumbungi (or Typha, an invasive plant), how long it will take for the western part brackish wetland to convert back again or whether we do have a tipping point.

The cumbungi should die out if it’s kept dry. Cumbungi does not like sustained dry conditions over summer.

We can see this more an in indicator of change, rather than a problem in itself.

 

What percentage of the Karaaf is salvageable and how much is too far gone?

Doug Frood’s response:

It’s hard to know where the dieback level is. If you’ve got 50% dieback, I can’t see why that can’t fill in again.  That can just be a blip in time.  Because if the remaining plants are still healthy, that means the event has passed.

If you’ve got 70% and the plants are looking really sick, maybe you’re getting close to that turning point.

With the spread of freshwater species such as Typha, Aster Weed, Yellow Buttons and many others from east to west, how realistic is it to hope to restore the Karaaf without addressing the problems in the rest of the saltmarsh?

Doug Frood’s response:

There’s two perspectives; one’s process which is related to things that happened across time and pattern which is related to the arrangement of plants across space. So we’re concerned about the pattern – and people often try and change patterns without changing process, so to me we’ve really got to look at the processes here and many aspects of pattern will resolve themselves.

If we get the Karaaf dry over summer and stop the freshwater inputs to the places where the Typha is occurring, it’s going to cease to be problematic.

Some introduced plants such as Water Buttons we may just have to live with. Many weeds can’t survive in the intertidal zones – they don’t survive full on emersion from seawater. So we may have weedy fringes.  But I think if we can restore the salinity, a lot of those (invasive) things will disappear from the currently modified areas.

Invasive weeds

Given that the Karaaf is a portion of the Breamlea Flora and Fauna Saltmarsh which is severely impacted by weed colonisation particularly typha, what actions do you recommend Surf Coast Shire and other relevant agencies such as Parks Victoria and the City of Greater Geelong take to minimise the spread of these weeds?

Doug Frood’s response:

I think it’s a good idea to have a holistic management approach, but many of those things should be seen as symptoms rather than essentially problems in themselves.

Can we burn off the Typha? If so, will is cause more damage?

Doug Frood’s response:

Typha will burn when the foliage is dry (after summer), however that will not kill the plant and is not actually addressing the issue which is changes to salinity and water regimes.

Stormwater

What are the plans to capture, store and re-use excess 600megalitres of water currently going into Karaaf?

Council’s response:

We need to understand our options for diverting water in the short-term, while we work towards long-term plans to re-use the water 

The surplus of stormwater presents an opportunity. We are working with Barwon Water on a concept to divert the stormwater away from the Karaaf Wetlands, to mix it with recycled water from the Black Rock Water Reclamation Plant, and to use it to support high value agricultural activities in the Thompson Valley.

 

Could Council elaborate further on what investigations need to be undertaken to investigate diversion options to Deep Creek?

Council’s response:

At a broad level, it’s a clear opportunity.

Currently the infrastructure that it relied upon is not functioning anymore.  There are some pump systems and power to those pump systems that no longer function. 

We also need to look at the volume of water that we would be sending to a new catchment, so that work is about to commence.

We need to look into making sure this would not create other environmental issues.

We know that there were environmental issues in the past, and that’s part of the reason the water was diverted.

 

Can the Esplanade Ponds hold more water in storm events if the drainage to Deep Creek is feasible?

Council’s response:

Historically there was flooding around that Esplanade area, and we’ve got to be mindful of not bringing back a problem that seems to have been successfully addressed, so that may prove to be an issue in terms of the holding capacity of the Esplanade wetland.

There’s also a strong relationship to the Sands.

Based on the data we have, the Sands only use a little bit of the water that’s going in.  They generally use water they capture from their own setting.  Part of our discussions with the Sands will be on their future water needs, because at the moment the Sands is a thoroughfare, and unlike housing estates, a golf course has a lot of capacity to take water but depending on the climate and the time of year too.

 

How much impact does the pollutants in the stormwater have compared to the stormwater volume?

Doug Frood’s response:

I think the drowning and becoming more fresh is clearly the issue. Also for example, Typha does love nutrients, so the volume and pollutants are not independent.  To me, the largest impact is coming from the volumes of water. 

 

Is it possible to divert storm drain flow into the sanitary sewer system to treat and remove all pollutants and avoid any storm water entering the Karaaf or the ocean?

Jason Sonneman’s (Design Flow) response:

No, the volumes are too great. Also the sewer system does not remove many nutrients through the process, so this is not an option.

Are there feasible options to significantly reduce freshwater inputs from the western area other than the longer term option of water re-use?

Council's response:

We believe there are feasible options to redirect some level of stormwater directly to the ocean instead of through the Sands and Karaaf. These are being investigated as part of the next stage of the project.

Options to reduce stormwater inflows to the Karaaf include stormwater re-use and diverting/pumping stormwater runoff to alternative discharge points (i.e. Deep Creek). The feasibility of these options will be considered by Council in the next project phase.  The manipulation of the constructed wetland water regimes would have no impact on the stormwater volume discharged to the Karaaf.

To reduce water volume into the Karaaf is it possible to bypass the Karaaf with a pipeline from the Sands outlet to the Thompson Creek?

Council’s response:

This option would be unlikely to be viable as at first glance the only way to achieve this would be to run a stormwater pipe through the middle of the Karaaf. The construction for this would likely cause significant damage to the wetland. 

 

Is there an option for Council to make subdivision utilise the stormwater on site (houses needing to have water tanks, etc) rather than having it flow into wetlands?

Council’s response:

As the majority of the subdivisions upstream have already been developed this would only be an option for the section of development yet to proceed and would likely have minimal impact overall.

How does Council propose to facilitate quality of water coming out of stormwater system to prevent damage to Karaaf?

Council’s response:

The next stages of the overall project are focussed on looking at both improving the stormwater quality and reducing the volume to the Karaaf. 

 

Is the Barwon Water Thompson Valley irrigation infrastructure options report able to be shared?

As Barwon Water has commissioned this report it’s to them to determine what information will be shared publicly.  We can then share this information with approval from Barwon Water.

Constructed wetlands

Why are sediment basins designed too small?

Council’s response:

The constructed wetlands have generally been built to the requirements set under the 2010 plan. We now know a lot more about how stormwater systems need to be designed, and we are applying what we know to future developments.

We have strengthened our processes for planning, approving and monitoring constructed wetlands.

 

Jason (stormwater consultant) said 20% of litter has to be removed. Was an assessment of the litter removed done and gross pollutant traps?

Jason Sonneman’s (Design Flow) response:

No, an inspection of the gross pollutant traps was not undertaken. Generally speaking, there are some gross pollutants getting through the system and into the wetlands, but not the sorts of volumes we’d expect to see if those systems were grossly failing.

 

What remedial measures can be done to help current problems?

Jason Sonneman’s (Design Flow) response:

We identified a number of rectification actions that will help make the wetlands work harder and function better than they are currently (these are outlined in the wetland assessment report).

In future developments what can be done to avoid past mistakes? Is Council giving the developers a say in what standards are adopted in the future stormwater management in Torquay North?

Jason Sonneman’s (Design Flow) response:

In future developments, the most recent guidelines for wetland design should be adopted (i.e. Melbourne Water wetland design manual). The designs for the existing wetland systems were based on older wetland design guidelines, which weren’t quite as robust as the current Melbourne Water wetland design manual. We recommend, going forward, that Council adopts the design guidance provided in the Melbourne Water wetland design manual. It provides a rigorous design process to ensure that the wetlands are correctly sized and configured.

 

In terms of prevention and mitigation versus repair, Jason states the existing constructed wetlands are too small and repair looks to be neverending as a result. What preventative measures are going to be undertaken?

Council’s response:

This will be considered as part of the next stage of the projects. There are a number of options that can be looked at including modifications to the wetlands, adding non-wetland treatment devices and increased cleaning regimes.

Jason Sonneman's (Design Flow) response:

A range of issues associated with the constructed wetland designs were identified including wetland size and configuration, sediment pond performance, vegetation cover and wetland storage depths. Although little can be done to increase the size of the wetlands, it is expected that Council will undertake works to rectify many of the identified issues to optimise wetland functional performance.

Thompsons Creek

The Karaaf system is dependent on the Thompson Creek estuary – both level and salinity, as a function of the mouth opening. What is being done to address these issues outside shire boundaries?

Council’s response:

We acknowledge that it’s part of a wider system, and in terms of the management plan, whilst there’s benefit in focusing solely on the Karaaf, a better understanding of the hydrology of the wider area is going to be an input to that.

We’ve got all the agencies sitting around the table, recognising the issues and committed to working on it.

In some respects, Council is a bit limited in terms of the extent of our boundary and knowledge, so that’s where the other agencies are going to really important in understanding the best way to develop a management plan that focuses on how the entire system works.

 

What is the plan in the future in keeping the creek mouth open? It is my understanding the trigger to open the mouth of Thompsons Creek is where damage may be caused to human built structures, that is roads, houses, etc. How can we arrange for the trigger to take into account damage to the environment?

Corangamite Catchment Management Authority's response:

There are 28 estuaries in the Corangamite region, only 10 need to be artificially opened through a permit and CCMA if the regulator of those openings.

The only 10 that are permitted for opening are the ones that have a human interface, so where there’s some sort of human interaction with that system.  All of the rest, where there’s no human assets as play, they’re just left alone.

The systems are dynamic and it’s important to leave them alone, which is overwhelmingly the scientific evidence.

In this situation, we’re dealing with human interactions, such as increased stormwater entering the system and a weir on the lower Thompson Creek, and when there’s that human interaction with the system things get a lot more challenging.

It is possible through some of the short-term measures that are looked at through the agency partnership that estuary openings could be considered to make sure factors are protected in the short-term, whilst those longer term actions are considered.

So it’s really important to make that distinction between a natural system and a system that’s impacted by humans and how the action taken will be different in those situations.

 

Flow study

Will the flow study that will inform an understanding of the hydrological requirements of the Karaaf in order to achieve rehabilitation include the whole Karaaf-Breamlea wetland system multiagency? And address the concern that even with a fast flowing Thompsons Creek, the western end ponds and affected adventive brackish wetland will be holding fresher water (and more water) with the increase of tall marsh and brackish wetland?

Corangamite Catchment Management Authority's response:

If a FLOWS assessment is undertaken it would inform an understanding of the hydrological requirements of the whole Karaaf-Breamlea wetland system. However, the first step is to assess if opening the estuary mouth is likely to increase the salinity in the saltmarsh affected areas identified in the vegetation assessment. A more comprehensive FLOWS assessment would only be undertaken if salinity could potentially be increased in the impacted areas.

 

Impact on wildlife

As well as the effect occurring to plants, what effect is this having or could have on animals / birds / fish?

Council's response:

The focus of our initial assessments within the Karaaf has been on vegetation extent and quality to understand the direct impacts stormwater inflows is having on the wetland system, however we know that altered conditions in the Karaaf has the potential to impact on fauna species as well.   

Increased total volumes of freshwater and freshwater inputs over the summer when the saltmarsh was naturally drier, leads to changes in vegetation composition which in turn can impact the suitability of the habitat for saltmarsh dependent fauna.  Similarly, the increased frequency and extent of prolonged inundation within areas of the Karaaf may also change the availability of specific habitats for fauna species throughout the year.

Will these changes affect mosquito numbers?

Council's response:

There are many factors which influence mosquito numbers. Some of these include the way wetlands are constructed and the mosquito predator population (such as fish and frogs).

Mosquito numbers are not expected to increase if changes are made in accordance with ‘mosquito risk assessment and management in constructed wetlands guidelines’ and fish and frog numbers remain healthy.

Have there been studies done regarding the impact the chemicals in the stormwater have on fauna?

Council's response:

In terms of the quality of the stormwater, the primary concerns are the nutrient levels e.g. phosphorus and nitrogen bound to sediment particles, fertilisers and treatments from gardens and sport facilities and the like.  Impacts to fauna from changes in water quality have not been assessed, however there are no known chemical concerns with the stormwater inflows beyond altered nutrient and salinity levels.

 

The Sands lakes

What is the role of the Sands Lakes? And what is Council doing about algae and build up of silt and nutrients in the Sands lakes system?

Council’s response:

The Sands acts as a buffer between the stormwater system and the Karaaf.

There are five lakes, and evidence of the upstream impacts is more visible in the lakes that are closer to the Torquay north development than the Karaaf, so it’s clearly playing some kind of role.

One of the challenges we have here is where do we best invest our time, effort and money in the first instance – is it downstream or upstream?  The Karaaf is well and truly the focus.  We’ve got a list of actions that can be taken in the constructed wetlands to get them working as well as possible to prevent any downstream impacts.

However we need to understand more about the role and the condition of the Sands amenity lakes as they are part of that system.  

In the short-term our focus is upstream, but let’s also keep a close eye on how the Sands performs as part of that system.  We are committed to improving the overall system.

*Please note, we received several variations of questions about the Sands lakes system, which we have tried to consolidate here, but please let us know if you know if you feel your question hasn't been responded to.

What work is Council intending to undertake to make the wetlands under their design and control effective and large enough to control silting and nutrient run-off into the Sands Lakes system and the Karaaf wetlands?

Council’s response:

We are assessing our options to improve the quality of stormwater from our network and will begin implementing some of the actions identified in the North Torquay Constructed Wetland Assessment to improve the effectiveness of the constructed wetlands.

Why is the Sands responsible for water quality and sediment under a section 173 agreement when the system is clearly a stormwater issue that is normally managed by Council. What does a modernising this agreement mean?

Council’s response:

The section 173 agreement is 20 years old.  It doesn’t make the Sands responsible for the stormwater passing through, just that it has to allow it to pass through.

As part of the overall project, we will look at the agreement given how much has changed, and the role of the Sands and Council.

We will have the conversation with the Sands Owners Corporation about what the appropriate agreements are to have in place now.  

The polluted stormwater entering the Sands is now a critical issue. Can the reserve between Stretton and the Dunes constructed wetlands and Zeally Sands become an extended constructed wetland?

Council’s response:

This is an option that will be considered as part of the next stage of the project. There are challenges as this area is currently considered unencumbered open space. If a wetland were to be constructed in this location Council would be required under the planning scheme to replace the equivalent open space elsewhere within the area, which will increase the cost of such an option.

Jason Sonneman’s (Design Flow) response:

Constructed wetlands are designed to capture sediments from stormwater runoff from the developed urban catchments. Construction sites such as Stretton estate are subject to erosion and sediment control plans which dictate that all sediment associated with stormwater runoff must be captured onsite. The construction of additional wetlands within the reserve between the Dunes Wetland (Horseshoe Bend Rd) and the Zeally Sands Wetlands would be difficult due to site slope (in excess of 6m), existing underground infrastructure and the narrow width of the reserve.

Management plan and Council’s role and responsibility

What is the plan going forward to prevent further damage and repair damage done? Is there a management plan in place/being developed?

Council’s response:

The quality of stormwater needs to be improved and the volume entering via The Sands lakes system needs to be reduced. We are now exploring options that are better for the Karaaf Wetlands and will improve our community’s future water security.

We’re working with Barwon Water on a concept to divert stormwater away from the Karaaf, mix it with recycled water from Black Rock Water Reclamation Plant, and use it to support high value agricultural activities in the Thompson Valley.

In the meantime we are starting a new project to assess our options to improve the quality of stormwater from our network and to divert some water away from the Karaaf Wetlands.

We will also begin implementing some of the actions identified in the North Torquay Constructed Wetland Assessment to improve the effectiveness of the constructed wetlands.

We are partnering with Wadawurrung Traditional Owners Aboriginal Corporation, land managers (including The Sands Owners Corporation) and agencies responsible for the Karaaf Wetlands on a holistic and adaptive management plan.

We need to make sure that any actions we or others take are effective. This means that all agencies and partners will also need to gather more information before making any decisions that might change the way the Karaaf Wetlands functions.

How could Council get it so wrong (excess water into Karaaf)?

Council’s response:

Council’s master planning of the stormwater network from over 10 years ago focused on managing peak flow rates rather than total volume.

Therefore the plans underestimated the amount of water that would be generated from north Torquay developments and did not identify the potential for it to affect the vegetation in the Karaaf Wetlands.

We know a lot more now than we knew then and are committed to learning from and addressing this.

Does the management plan include regular feedback reporting or performance to the community stakeholders?

Council’s response:

We will provide regular (at least monthly) updates about progress of this work to both key stakeholders and the community through our website, emails to subscribers, media releases and project meetings. We will establish a community reference group.

What steps will/can Council take to ensure that the right folks are engaged? Regarding Council’s infrastructure options and action plan, isn’t future action also dependent on the Karaaf environment report?

Council’s response:

As part of the scoping of the next stages of work, we will be seeking advice from other agencies and experts in the appropriate fields who specialise equally in both the ecological complexities and engineering complexities to ensure we have the right balance and spread of expertise to achieve the best possible outcomes.

Timeline

If short term actions are taken to reduce water in the system, what does success look like and how long will it be before we see it? What is Council’s timeline about what will be done and when it will be done?

Council’s response:

The easier modifications and maintenance work in constructed wetlands can be done now. But we need to know exactly what those things cost as the money that’s available could be burnt through really quickly and remove the opportunity to do anything else.

But there are things like the weed removal that could be done within weeks.

In terms of the discovery work (such as diversion options), this will take some time, more into the months.

And in the even longer-term – the opportunity to work with Barwon Water to reuse the stormwater - we could be looking at a multiple years timeframe.   This solution appears to be the silver bullet to the worst of the problems.

But there’s a decision point in the next six to 12 months: what do we invest in now versus waiting.

A sign of success will be an improvement in the condition of the Karaaf Wetlands, particularly at the western end. Ongoing monitoring of its condition as part of a management plan will be crucial.

Australian Government funding

How much of the $1.98m will council access promised by Federal MP Libby Coker?

Council’s response:

We’re grateful for the federal government’s support with the commitment of the $1.9 million, and we’re finding out more about the timing.

We know there’s money in the program spread across four years, and we’re hopeful that it’s in the 2022-23 budget.

We need to draw on the findings of the next pieces of work to determine the best use of this money.

We acknowledge that we need to reach agreement with the federal government on the exact scope of works it will fund.

Question for Doug Frood: What is your opinion, would be best use of the $1.9M committed to the Australian government for Karaaf under the Urban Rivers and Catchment Program ?

Doug Frood’s response:

This is outside my brief, but hopefully that sort of money could go a long way towards protecting the Karaaf from stormwater inputs as the most immediate concern.

Community's role

What do you see as the role of the community in the process? What can the community do to help ensure the wetlands are protected as much as possible going forward?

Council’s response:

There’s expertise that lives within our community, and we’re really blessed to have this. So if there is knowledge that can be contributed that supplements what we know, then we would love to have that.

We need to look at what kind of reference groups or advisory groups can be established to maintain that connection to the work that’s been done. If we can create the forums for healthy debate and critiquing the information that’s developed, that would be really helpful.  We’re open to ideas on the form this takes.

Development/construction impacts

Why is construction silt allowed to flow downstream?

Council’s response:

Council is undertaking measures in this space, including increased street cleaning and monitoring of building sites with education and, if required, issuing of warnings to builders.

Have any builders been penalised for breaching environmental requirements in any developments in North Torquay?

Council’s response:

No infringements have been issued to date. We have increased surveillance and issued a number of warnings. So far, builders who have been warned have complied to those warnings. Our preference is to warn and educate in the first instance before resorting to fines.  

Legal framework may (probably) require amendments to the State Planning Scheme to enable measure and enforcement on developers. Has work began on that and will it include amendments to stop developers sending their responsibilities downstream to the Sands as the last buffer?

Council’s response:

The legal framework referenced in the Karaaf program refers specifically to the Sands development and in particular, the drainage and environmental obligations agreed to when the Sands development occurred in the early 2000s.

At a local level, the existing legal framework includes local planning scheme provisions and a legal agreement (and by extension, approved management plans). 

The composition of a new legal framework will be heavily dependent on the proposed solutions coming out of stage 3 of the project.  While it would be would be premature to speculate on what those proposed solutions might be, we do not expect it to be necessary to advocate to the State Government for reforms to the state planning provisions.

We assume that the second part of the question posed around developer responsibilities, refers to water quality related to construction management rather than where stormwater is directed.  These kinds of developer obligations are set out in planning permits (and by extension, any endorsed documents and legal agreements).  It is therefore, unnecessary to rely on a change to the state planning provisions in order to alleviate pressure on the Karaaf wetlands.  

In relation to downstream impacts and pressure on the Sands drainage network, these matters will be further investigated in the stage 3 project.

What does enforcement look like and who is responsible agency/authority?

Council’s response:

Council is the responsible agency.

For subdivisions, requirements are set out within planning permits, including preparation of a Construction Management Plan, which includes requirements for site management during construction.

For building sites, builders must comply with Council’s Community Amenity  Local Law No 1.

Why has council failed to require all building sites to have a skirt surrounding the development to prevent the run off silt?

Under Council’s local law, the person in charge of a building site must deliver appropriate controls as recommended in the EPA’s ‘Civil construction, building and demolition guide’. This is an extensive document which includes many requirements on sediment control. Council has increased its proactive monitoring to help ensure compliance with these requirements.

 

Project governance

How has the program been governed and how has Council influenced the findings of the two assessments?

Council's response:

A key part of the Karaaf program of projects has been the development of an overarching governance structure to manage its delivery in a structured and coordinated way following best practice project management principles.  The project is set up with a structure that sees the “program sponsor” General Manager Place Making and Environment as the key decision maker of the program who is supported by a Program Control Group (PCG) whose membership is made up representatives of key agencies and stakeholders. 

The PRCG provide a very specific support role to the program sponsor.  Their roles and responsibilities are outlined via an agreed terms of reference, which define their primary role as providing strategic oversight of coordinated planning and implementation of the project charters for each of the four projects including broader stakeholder engagement, procurement, budgetary strategy, and monitoring risks, quality, scope, issues and timeliness.

In addition, under the overarching program each of the four projects has its own subject matter specific project sponsor and project specific governance tailored to suit the size, scope and subject of the project.

For the first two projects that have been completed (projects 1 and 2: environmental assessment and stormwater assessment), both had their own project specific Project Control Groups which consisted of varying membership but broadly included members of the community, key stakeholders and agency representatives.

The role of the subject matter specific PCGs for projects 1 and 2 was to provide advice to the project sponsor of each project based on their expertise and areas of interest and stakeholder involvement. This included more specifically the following throughout the duration of the project delivery phase:

  • Input and assistance into the development of the scope and brief for procurement of the specialist consultant services before it was sent out to market.
  • Review of initial report draft and feedback for consideration by the specialist consultant.  The PCG members were asked to provide their feedback to the relevant project teams for each report.  This feedback from the PCG members was consolidated into a response which was sent to each specific consultant for consideration.

Feedback provided to the consultant was a combination of seeking additional clarity in findings and observations, charts, images and or general presentation. Clarifications on and or any amendments and adjustments to the report based on the feedback were at the discretion of the authors of both reports.

Changes made to the drafts by the author following their review of the feedback generated a new revision of the report to ensure ‘version control’ so that the latest information available was always clear. 

Updated versions of the reports were issued to the respective PCG groups for information following any updates as determined by the authors following feedback.  These were still considered ‘drafts’.

Before public release the reports were reviewed by Council for the purpose of accessibility, clarity, and publish readiness prior to public release with the Council agenda.  Approval of the reports for inclusion in the agenda and subsequent public release the reports changed the reports status from draft to final.

Project communication and engagement

Why has the briefing of environmental groups and the community open forum been rolled into one event?

Council's response:

The initial communication plan proposed a small briefing of members from key environmental groups in addition to and prior to the public information session.  However it became clearer as the public information session was developed that there was likely duplication of attendees and that providing access to the expert consultant authors for all was going to provide a better outcome for both the environmental groups and broader community.  This would provide a better opportunity for everyone to have access to the same information at the same time and to observe different perspectives.   

What is the purpose of your meetings with developers?

Meetings were held as part of the communications plan and release of the reports for projects 1 and 2 with the current developers in north Torquay who are responsible for maintaining several of the constructed wetland systems and or have remaining stages to complete. 

These meetings were an opportunity to provide the developers with a summary of the audit information from the stormwater assessment report as well as the environmental report findings to start conversations about how we can progress and improve the outcomes from the system.  It also provided an opportunity to advise of the pending public information session and release of the full reports.

Resourcing

How many Council staff are working full time on developing the solutions/plan?

Council’s response:

It’s difficult to say as it’s very rare to have one staff member working on only one thing at one point in time.

Six months ago we didn’t have a stormwater co-ordinator, but now we do. We’re increasing our capability in this space.  There are other stormwater issues that this co-ordinator will be working on.

Importantly, we have funding in the program budget to draw on the expertise of others such as Jason and Doug who completed the stormwater and environmental assessments, because we don’t have all of the expertise in-house.

We have around a dozen staff working on this project including a project manager, engineers, ecologists, planners, communications staff, senior managers. In addition we have operational staff in our civil maintenance and open space maintenance, waste and local laws teams doing work to assist the project.