A small community is refusing to let the toilet at its beloved park be demolished by serving the Mackay council with a petition.
Mount Charlton residents first learned of plans to remove the Windyloo toilet facilities at Boulder Creek Park in an email from Mackay Regional Council on April 14.
The letter stated the toilet was in “very poor physical condition” and was at risk of becoming airborne in high winds because of cracks to the fibreglass roof and failed structure mountings to the foundation slab.
There were also concerns about the elevated water tank’s “badly corroded” platform and deteriorated timber framing.
Insanity plea from former Liberty woman charged with raping child wfmj.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wfmj.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Copy to Clipboard
Mark and Delores Stepp with Francine Stepp (L) and Francine in prison (Discovery+/Oklahoma Department of Corrections)
Content Warning: Violence Where Murder Lies is the latest series to be released by Discovery+ among its true-crime programming. Compared to other true-crime offerings, Where Murder Lies focuses on cases that are not as well known in the country, but nevertheless, remain just as intriguing. The series focuses on exposing murder investigations as one truth after the other is revealed, laying out a terrible betrayal of trust or a shocking indiscretion.
The second episode of Where Murder Lies focuses on the 1988 murder case of Mark and Delores Stepp, whose daughter ran to a neighbor screaming that her parents were killed in Stillwater, Oklahoma. On the outside, the Stepps seemed like the average American family Mark worked at the Sooner Power Plant in North Central Oklahoma as an Instrument and Controls employee, and Delores worked on the thi
Premium Content Indie Fitzgerald is turning 9 this week, a birthday doctors feared she would not make. Proud godmother and close family friend Sue Wynn said she wanted to make Indie s birthday spectacular and has called on the Coast to help. Indie has a rare disease called infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy, which is terminal and affects brain and motor function, sight and hearing. Heartbreakingly, the disease robbed her of the ability to walk and talk by the time she was 4-years-old. Proud godmother Sue Wynn said Indie was the âtoughestâ person sheâs ever met. Just weeks ago, Indie was in a hospital intensive care unit with her mum Bec Lawford and dad, Dean Fitzgerald, being told to prepare for the worst.