The Gold Coast Bulletin

Spit bridge plan mooted

Cruise ship terminal link emerges in workshops

- PAUL WESTON paul.weston@news.com.au

A BRIDGE is being considered to link a oceanside cruise ship terminal at Philip Park with vacant land near Sea World on the western side of the Broadwater to protect Federation Walk.

Future Jobs for Our Kids founder Lindsay Jackson is championin­g the solution as a deal breaker after it emerged during closed-door community feedback for The Spit master plan.

The retired Gold Coast businessma­n remains confident the proposed oceanside cruise ship terminal (CST) put forward by Mayor Tom Tate would proceed despite green groups dominating debates and surveys during the master plan process.

“They’re having a tremendous impact on the overall result. I don’t think that’s fair,” Mr Jackson said.

“I’m not in the pocket of Tom Tate and developers. I want good infrastruc­ture so we can have jobs for our kids.”

Mr Jackson said workshop guests were asked to provide solutions if the CST was to be approved after the master plan.

“The suggestion was a bridge over the top of Federation Walk. We want to protect it. They would extend it to the (former) ASF land and Sea World.”

The bridge could accommodat­e pedestrian­s and light traffic providing food and supplies to ships, Mr Jackson said.

Participan­ts were later asked to show their preference­s and a majority used their vote to oppose the CST.

“We had some good suggestion­s. We did get knocked down by the

Jackson said.

Save Our Broadwater president Alan Rickard said increasing recognitio­n was being given to the value of natural assets to attract tourists rather than “putting up structures”.

“Lindsay was in the minority,” Mr Rickard said. “He kept arguing his point of view. We thought because of the natural attributes, it (the CST) was inappropri­ate.”

Workshop attendees were told the government was neither for or against a CST but greenies,” Mr the council insisted it needed to be discussed as part of the master plan.

“That was one of the conditions of the council coming to the party,” Mr Rickard said.

At the recent launch of the draft master plan options, Mayor Tate said the CST was “on pause” with the business case not starting until after the master plan was completed.

Mr Jackson has urged the government to stage more sessions for the public away from the coastal strip, arguing that having most of the sessions close to the beach could deliver a misleading result.

About 800 people have visited community sessions with the next one scheduled tomorrow at Stockland Burleigh Heads.

State Developmen­t Minister Cameron Dick said that in less than a week “we’ve spoken to more than 800 people and more than 400 surveys have been done through our online hub.”

“Overwhelmi­ngly people have been telling us the area needs better access to the Broadwater and better pedestrian pathways along and across The Spit,” he said.

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