Mercury (Hobart)

Price put on cliff fix

Less than $100,000 for fence repairs

- JACK PAYNTER

REPLACING the fence along the Blackmans Bay cliffs where 17-year-old Margaret Lore fell to her death a full 18 months ago would cost the Kingboroug­h Council less than $100,000.

The Mercury yesterday obtained a quote from a fencing business for a 2m-high chain-wire fence stretching 350m — the approximat­e length of the current structure.

The quote was for $90,000, or $125,000 for a 2m-high bar fence — similar to the one that currently restricts access to the blowhole itself.

Kingboroug­h Mayor Steve Wass is maintainin­g the council cannot do anything to improve safety at the site until the coroner’s report into Ms Lore’s death is finalised.

Cr Wass said nothing had been done in the 18 months since the tragic death because they did not own the land where the fence is erected.

But the council had taken responsibi­lity for the manage- ment and maintenanc­e of the land for decades prior to Ms Lore’s death.

Kingboroug­h Ratepayers Associatio­n president Mervin Reed said the council had lifted rates by an average of 8.5 per cent over the past three years.

Mr Reed said he was therefore at a loss to explain how the council could not fund an improved safety fence to prevent further deaths at the notoriousl­y dangerous cliffs.

The mayor was meanwhile surprised yesterday when the Mercury told him his council also had streets that they have built and maintained on the same parcel of land — with sections of Talone and Blowhole roads on the title that council solicitors are trying to establish the ownership of.

The mayor has said that once ownership is determined, the council will move to acquire it.

At a council meeting on March 14 last year, councillor­s voted to defer leasing the land until after the coroner’s investigat­ion.

But it can now be revealed that at the same meeting, Cr Flora Fox said the end of Talone Rd — which runs over the blowhole passage — was used as a turning circle for rubbish trucks.

“This area is very vulnerable,” she told the meeting.

“For council to have done that without actually owning the land or having a lease over the land put us in a very awkward position if something goes wrong.”

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