Labor councillors ram through the commercial use of Camperdown Memorial Park

November 21, 2024
Issue 
View of Camperdown Memorial Rest Park, with the restaurant on the right. Photo: Peter Boyle

The Labor-majority Inner West Council has rammed through a controversial plan to begin the creeping commercialisation of Camperdown Memorial Rest Park in Sydney鈥檚 inner west.

Council voted 9-5 on November 12 to allow a restaurant, sandwiched between residential properties that back on to the park, to use a section of the park to sell non-alcoholic drinks and snacks. It also expanded its opening hours.

Earlier, on July 31, council officers had granted Comedor its development application (DA) for outdoor seating, signage and an extension of hours of trade on Sundays to 9pm up to July 31, 2029, effective immediately.

It was granted 鈥淓1 zoning鈥, a NSW zoning category to 鈥渆ncourage a variety of small-scale retail, business and community uses鈥.

A former Greens councillor went public and the community immediately started asking questions about how the approval had come about.

Residents tried to get answers at a Damun/Stanmore local ward meeting in August on who had issued the DA and why there had been no community consultation.

Even the to the restaurant had no idea until they received a letter authorising trucks to deliver construction materials for the restaurant deck.

The community outcry forced council to slow everything down as they wanted to appear to be listening to residents before the September local government election. The for not holding a community engagement process.

Comedor was told the building of its $2000 deck on public land had to be put on hold.

Meanwhile, residents spoke to councillors and circulated a opposing part of the park being privatised.

However, Labor councillor Chloe Smith鈥檚 motion to the November 12 meeting, framed as a 鈥渃ompromise鈥, supported Comedor being allowed a deck in the park.

Real estate agent Charles Bailey, representing the restaurant owner, told that meeting that the community had been adequately consulted, and pointed to the DA which had been letterboxed to nearby residents in June.

After the community uproar, council did hold a 鈥渃ommunity consultation鈥 meeting on October 3, to which only a handful of people turned up.

Council took this to mean that not many people were unhappy with the commercial lease, even though most of those living on the park鈥檚 edge said they had not received any notification about the meeting.

An opt-in online survey on park use had however found 315 thumbs-down pins and 123 hearts in support. Council also received 78 emails opposing the development, compared to 37 in support.

As several speakers told council on November 12, even with its poor consultation, a large majority of residents who did respond said Comedor should not be allowed to construct a deck in the park, as it .

鈥淥ver 70% of feedback was opposed to this proposal but council staff not only write in favour of it but inexplicably determine to extend Comedor鈥檚 hours,鈥 Newtown resident Jason Gray said.

Council鈥檚 amended motion, which passed on Labor councillors鈥 and independent Victor Macri鈥檚 votes, allows Comedor to serve food and drinks from its rear window from 7am鈥6pm seven days a week, with a later closing time of 8pm on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays.

Smith, who works in NSW Premier Chris Minns鈥 office as a senior community engagement adviser, told the November 12 meeting that the engagement process had been 鈥渆xtensive and considered鈥. She said it was in the community鈥檚 interests for the deck to go ahead because it would add 鈥渁dditional vibrancy and offerings to our community鈥.

Smith also said there were many precedents as other parks have cafes.

However, locals argued that each of these 鈥減recedents鈥 had a context. For example, cafes built into a swimming pool complex were different, as was the Sydney Park鈥檚 cafe, which was built when there were no coffee shops nearby 鈥 and it went to tender. There are at least six cafes in short walking distance to Camperdown Memorial Rest Park.

Many locals believe a deal had already been done flowing from an out-of-court Land and Environment Court settlement after the IWC initially refused a restaurant proposal in a residential area.

Given this history, it is concerning that the DA to privatise part of a well-used park was granted by council officers with no Independent Hearing and Assessment Panel.

da_comedor.jpg

Comedor's Development Application was determined by IWC officers on August 1. It lapses in 2029.

Residents are disappointed with council鈥檚 decision, particularly as many had submitted new ideas to council鈥檚 plan of management review, including a coffee cart social enterprise and tables and chairs as in Camperdown Park, several blocks away.

[Pip Hinman, a local resident, spoke at the Inner West Council meeting against Comedor being given permission to build a private platform in Camperdown Memorial Rest Park.]

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