The September 2023 Update is now available for download from our website. This edition was produced by a new stand-in editor, Peter Stevens (a man of many talents), and we apologies for the fuzziness of some images due to insoluble technical problems.
Following the fantastic news about the $13 M in the budget to complete Wolli Creek Regional Park, it gets just a brief mention on page 2. This Update had already been ready to publish when we got the news. The Update also announces our new website going live, introduces you to the new WCPS committee, and updates you on other issues in the valley that WCPS continues to monitor. And check out our calendar for all the upcoming events we have planned.
The State budget delivered on 19 September 2023 included a commitment of $13 million for the completion of the Wolli Creek Regional Park.
“We are overjoyed by the announcement”, said Peter Stevens, Vice-President of the Wolli Creek Preservation Society and long-time campaigner for the Park. “We have been campaigning to ensure the protection of the Wolli Creek bushland for four decades and have had to fight off two motorway proposals and numerous other threats.
“Over those decades we have seen many State Governments come and go and heard many verbal commitments to the formation and completion of the Regional Park. Now for the first time we have verbal undertakings backed up by a significant commitment of funds.
“There can be no doubt about the public backing for protecting the bushland: our campaign against destruction of one part of the bushland gathered over 5,000 signatures. And there is no question that a lot of people have devoted a lot of time to bring about the current outcome.
“It has taken the efforts of the many past and present WCPS committee members, WCPS members, and wider circles across the Sydney Basin and beyond to gain the recognition of the significance of this substantial area of inner-urban bushland that it warrants. A protected future should now be assured for this natural gem of Sydney’s inner south-west.
“We are thankful to have had the support of local MLAs Chris Minns, Sophie Cotsis, Steve Kamper, Jo Haylen, and Jenny Leong, MLCs Penny Sharpe and Sue Higginson, and the backing of the Councils of Bayside, Canterbury-Bankstown City, Georges River, Inner West, and the City of Sydney, all of which have residents that engage with the Wolli bushland. Numerous community organisations and individuals have lent their support. There are too many to list but we thank them all.
“We are keen now to see the timetable for completion and the details of how the funds will be used. People who want to stay in touch with how things develop can visit the newly re-vamped website of the Wolli Creek Preservation Society at www.wollicreek.org.au.
Wolli Creek Preservation Society encourages Australians to give generous consideration to the case for a Yes vote in the upcoming referendum to recognise the First Nations people of Australia by establishing an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice.
The following is our statement in support of a YES vote. Links to further information and resources follow.
We support a First Nations Voice to Parliament
The Wolli Creek Preservation Society aims to ensure the preservation of the natural and cultural heritage of the Wolli Creek Valley. Wolli Creek flows through the cultural landscape of the Cadigal and Bidgigal clans, who are among the many first peoples of Australia who have cared for this country for more than 60,000 years.
Colonisation has threatened the wellbeing of both the land and its First Nations people. The evidence of this is compelling. Australia’s colonial history is also replete with failures to listen to and learn from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
The upcoming referendum is an historic opportunity to make a modest but important change that will promote the self-determination of First Nations people. The Voice will allow First Nations people to offer advice to parliament on policies and decisions that affect their lives, including their health, education, employment, and housing.
To remain silent about this referendum would be to support an unacceptable status quo. To oppose the constitutional change would be to miss an historic opportunity to right some wrongs and extend the achievements of the 1967 referendum.
We acknowledge that for some, the Voice to Parliament does not go far enough. There are also those who seek to stoke uncertainty, fear, and division among Australians ahead of the referendum. However, the purpose of the Voice is clear. It will enable all Australians—and indeed the very land we share, and all the life it supports—to benefit from Indigenous cultural heritage and knowledge.
For these reasons, the Committee of the Wolli Creek Preservation Society supports a YES vote in the upcoming referendum. We encourage all Australians to get informed and to get involved. To this end, we provide a list of information and resources below.
Information and Resources
Yes 23 is a grassroots coalition led by Australians for Indigenous Constitutional Recognition Ltd. The website has resources, information about the referendum, and provides opportunities to learn, volunteer and donate.
The Uluru Statement from the Heart was born from a series of regional dialogues between First Nations people held across the country, culminating in a National Constitutional Convention at Uluru in 2017. The website explores the statement, the history, and the dialogues that underpin it, and provides a supporter kit which steps through how you can help spread the message of the Uluru Statement and encourage other Australians to accept the invitation.
Together, Yes invites people from all walks of life to gather in small group discussions and engage in an honest reckoning of the harm and injustice of our colonial past; Australia’s history of constitutional indifference, and how a Voice to parliament can make a difference.
Reconciliation Australia has a useful site on the Voice referendum with clear and concise information. One topic it explores is the nearly 100 years that First Nations people in Australia have been asking for a Voice.
This article in the Conversation answers ten frequent questions about the Voice, providing a great resource before talking with friends and family who may have unanswered questions.
Allies for Uluru provides tools and resources for talking to communities, including multicultural resources, social media assets and more.
Walking Together: Workshops and training developed by Youth Off The Streets’ trainers (First Nations and non-Indigenous) give people from all cultural backgrounds the tools they need to walk with First Nations Australians towards a fairer and more just Australia.
“Reckoning with Australia’s Settler Colonial History”: In this podcast from ABC Radio National’s Big Ideas, we hear from Aboriginal legal experts Megan Davis and Teela Reid, who believe a First Nations Voice to Parliament in the constitution is the necessary first step.
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