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NOTICES for the compulsory acquisition of more than 500 coastal land lots have been placed in newspapers.
Wellington Shire Council has not been able to find the owners of the blocks along the 90 Mile Beach, which are not able to be developed.
Six notices of compulsory acquisition, one each for different land groupings, plus a statement of rights and obligations, was published in the Government Gazette and covered two pages of the
Herald Sun on Thursday, as well as today’s
Gippsland Times.
The owners have three months to consider the offer or claim compensation.
It is part of the final stage of the compulsory acquisition process for 704 undevelopable lots, where owners’ addresses are unknown or unable to found, despite extensive searches.
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Alan and Leah Wolford s farm worker had to travel some distance in their tractor to find some of the drowned calves.
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Caught between the floodwaters of the Thomson River and Rainbow Creek, both fed from Cowwarr Weir spill, the yearling and autumn-drop heifers on Alan and Leah Wolford’s farm didn’t stand a chance.
Of 50 missing heifers, the family has found 10 all dead and caught with flood debris on neighbours’ farms some of them found kilometres from the paddocks they were grazing.
“I had to get the cows up first. By the time I went back for the young cattle, they were gone,” an emotional Alan Wolford said.
David Braithwaite
WELLINGTON Shire Council is examining issues preventing the supply of residential land in key townships across the shire.
Council has outlined its priority strategic land use planning projects for the 2021-22 financial year, and will implement the recommendations of residential land stocktake workshops and its growth management and economic development strategy.
Two residential land stocktake workshops were held online in May, involving councillors, local developers, builders, real estate agents and statutory authorities.
The workshops looked at infrastructure, land development economics and other issues preventing the supply of residential land in townships across the shire.
For more read Friday’s Gippsland Times.