The Gold Coast Bulletin

Have your say on canal management in the Tweed

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Tweed Shire Council manages nine canal estates – comprised of both navigable and non-navigable waterways – and the foreshores adjacent to several hundred residentia­l allotments.

Within canals, facilities such as pontoons, boat ramps and beaches present maintenanc­e considerat­ions that affect both Council and residents. While being constructe­d waterways, canals also support environmen­tal values, and are significan­tly affected by events such as floods.

The draft outlines Council’s position on a number of matters relevant to canals, including maintenanc­e of beaches, unapproved structures and use of vessels.

Importantl­y, the policy also describes Council’s licensing of pontoons and the fees charged.

Council has now resolved to begin charging an annual licence fee for pontoons, commencing at the beginning of 2022. The annual pontoon licence fee will be used to fund the maintenanc­e required in Council’s canal estates.

The fee is a flat annual fee of $255 per year for the pontoon license and $196 for a pontoon license applicatio­n or transfer, indexed to CPI.

The majority of the canal systems are more than 30 years old and located in an environmen­t where deteriorat­ion can have a significan­t impact on their safety and functional­ity.

Currently Council budgets $40,000 annually for canal works and this will need to increase in the future.

In recent years funding has been allocated to projects such as navigation dredging in Endless Summer and Seagulls canals, beach nourishmen­t at Anchorage Islands and flood debris removal at Oxley Cove.

Tweed canal residents have been invited to make submission­s on Council’s draft

Increasing the revenue available to maintain canals and public waterway facilities will improve the safety and durability of these assets.

The charging of an annual licence fee for private structures in Council-owned canals is consistent with NSW Government practice, where fees are charged for private structures in Crown waterways.

The NSW Government applicatio­n fee is currently $626, with an annual base fee of $240, plus a rate of $4.65 per square metre. A 30-square metre structure on a Crown waterway reserve would currently cost approximat­ely $380 per annum, plus GST.

Council resolved to apply an annual pontoon license fee in 2008, however while the fee was adopted, it has not been charged.

For more informatio­n and to make submission­s on the draft policy, visit

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