The Cairns Post

COUNCIL SPOILS PARTY

Stoush looms over dredge waste plan as State dumps and runs

- chris.calcino@news.com.au CHRIS CALCINO

A FIGHT is brewing between Cairns Regional Council and the State Government over who should bear the cost if something goes wrong with the dumping of dredge spoils from Trinity Inlet.

In the revised draft environmen­tal impact statement for the Cairns Shipping Developmen­t Project the council would be responsibl­e for about 5km of pipelines delivering dredge waste to Holloways Beach.

But Mayor Bob Manning told the Cairns Post that ratepayers should not be held accountabl­e if the State Government’s plan sprung a leak.

The draft EIS lists the council as “assessment manager” for all developmen­t within the local government area.

The designatio­n would confer responsibi­lity to the council for approving the placement of about 5km of on-land pipelines delivering dredge waste from the shore to the Northern Sands quarry at Holloways Beach, as well as a pipeline returning processed water to the Barron River.

“The people of this city shouldn’t have to bear any risk in this,” Cr Manning said. “The concerns here might be that, in what we term the downstream proposals, that something slips through the cracks.”

Treasurer Curtis Pitt said Cr Manning had been one of the project’s strongest advocates, so his “eleventh hour backflip” was both surprising and disappoint­ing.

“I have full faith in council’s officers to profession­ally deliver this technical work but the mayor’s comment that ‘something might slip through the cracks’ if council acts as the assessment manager is particular­ly alarming,” he said.

The dredge line would generally run along existing cane farm headlands, passing under the Captain Cook Hwy through existing drainage culverts and crossing Richters Creek to deliver 900,000 cubic metres of soft clay to Northern Sands.

About 100,000 cubic metres of stiff clay would be sent by barge to Ports North-owned land at Tingira St in Portsmith, to be used as landfill for future industrial developmen­t.

Cr Manning said the Palaszczuk government should handle the process from start to finish, including the controvers­ial business of dumping dredge spoils.

“The port authority is a government instrument­ality, it is a State Government project and the referral agencies will be State Government department­s,” he said.

Submission­s to the EIS close tomorrow.

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