Section: 2.4.2
Transactions
by
some
Ministers and Others
Part: (B)
(1)
The
Duaringa-Apis Creek Road
The
Mackenzie River runs through or along the “Ten Mile” and “Crystal
Waters”, and the Duaringa-Apis Creek
Road runs northward from near the Capricorn Highway at Duaringa,
through “Crystal Waters” and the
“Ten Mile” to meet the Sarina Road and the Bruce Highway near the
the town of Marlborough. The road
passes through the Shire of Livingstone and the Shire of Duaringa, in
which both properties were initially
located. Bjelke-Petersen
discussed the condition of the road with local residents and, early
in April, 1982, he met the
Chairman of the Duaringa Shire Council in Brisbane to discuss the
funding of road improvements. It was
decided to request the Main Roads Minister, Hinze, to take steps to
have the road declared a main road,
so that
the cost of maintaining it would be met by the State Government, not
the Shire Councils. Bjelke-Petersen
“probably” passed on to Hinze his “concern on behalf of all the
people who live there”, who
were not residents of his electorate. Despite
his expressed code of conduct, he considered that there was no need
to inform Hinze of his family interest.
In his evidence to this Inquiry, he said:
“Everybody
from here to Perth to kingdom come knows about the Ten Mile and
who
owns it. Everybody would know that. He would know that without me
telling
him
....
He would know that
through the Main Roads Commissioner with whom
I
discussed the details of
this road ....”.
On
1 July, 1983, a declaration of the Duaringa-Apis Creek Road as a
secondary road was gazetted, with the effect
that the Commissioner of Main Roads assumed responsibility for the
upkeep and construction of the road. On
the previous day, there was a decision by the Governor in Council
that $377,000 should be spent on improvements
to the road. That decision was not gazetted until 2
July, by which time
the declaration of the
road as a secondary road had been gazetted. Altogether
more than $1.5M was
spent on the road. In
August, 1983, Bjelke-Petersen became Treasurer as well as Premier. On
9 June, 1984, an allocation of $609,000 for further improvements to
the road was gazetted; on 24 April, 1986,
further works at an estimated cost of $209,000 were approved; and, on
21 April, 1988, after Bjelke-Petersen
ceased to be Premier and Treasurer, further improvements of $358,000
were approved. Whatever
the reasons, and there may have been a number in each instance, there
were significant improvements
and changes in the area after Ciasom Pty Ltd. acquired the
properties.
(2)
Shire Boundaries
On
21 April, 1984, a change in the boundaries of the Shires of Duaringa,
Fitzroy and Livingstone was gazetted.
Both
the “Ten Mile” and “Crystal Waters” were excluded from the
Livingstone Shire and included wholly within
the boundaries of the Duaringa Shire. One
result was that Ciasom Pty. Ltd. became liable for less by way of
rates, an initial saving of about $4,145.22
per annum. That
seems an unlikely reason for the change particularly as the rate
position could change in subsequent years.
(3)
The Tartrus Weir
When
Ciasom Pty. Ltd. acquired the “Ten Mile”, it had “adequate”
water supplies, according to Water Resources
Commission estimates, but the river flats were undeveloped and
covered in brigalow scrub, there were
no water pumping or irrigation facilities on the land and there was
no regular supply of
water from the
Mackenzie River. In
1983 investigations were carried out in relation to a proposed weir
on the Mackenzie River. In
November, 1983, discussions took place between the Department of
Primary Industries and the Water Resources
Commission, in the course of which the Water Resources Commissioner
advised an officer of the
Department of Primary Industries that there was no need to delineate
specific imgable areas because of representations
which Bjelke-Petersen had made.
When
Cabinet met on 6 February, 1984, the Minister for Primary Industries,
the Hon. Neil John Turner, M.L.A.,
and the Minister for Water Resources and Maritime Services, the Hon.
John Philip Goleby, M.L.A., presented
a joint submission recommending that Cabinet give approval in
principle for the construction of a
weir at Tartrus on the Mackenzie River at an estimated cost of
$4.02M. The Ministers’ submission noted that
discussions had not been held with landholders who would benefit from
the construction of the weir but
proposed that, upon completion of the weir, water would be released
as required and that landholders wishing
to irrigate would be required to hold a current waterworks licence.
Cabinet decided to defer a decision.
Bjelke-Petersen was present at the meeting. After
the Water Resources Commissioner discussed the Ministers’
submission with Bjelke-Petersen, it was decided
by Cabinet on 13 February
that the project should be discussed with landowners and that a
further submission
should be prepared. Bjelke-Petersen was again present at the meeting. In
late 1984, on the advice of the Water Resources Commission, Ciasom
Pty. Ltd. applied for a number of licences
relating to the Mackenzie River and an anabranch. Licences were
issued in January 1985, prior to Cabinet
giving its approval for the construction of the Tartrus Weir. On
16 April, 1985, after Bjelke-Petersen left the Cabinet room, Cabinet
gave its approval for the construction of
the Tartrus Weir on the Mackenzie River, which was completed by late
1986. The “Ten Mile”, and other properties
in the region, have benefited significantly from the weir’s
construction.
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